Levasset Haut: The Levasset blue runs all the way from the top of Roche de Mio down towards the foot of the Champagny sector (excluding the final red home run, Les Bois). At full length it’s just over 5.2km — but for clarity it’s split into three distinct parts: Levasset Haut (this page), Levasset Mid, and the Champagny Levasset section.
You can access Levasset Haut from any lift that reaches the top of Roche de Mio: the Roche de Mio gondola, Carella or Inversens chairs. To join the run, head down beneath the Inversens chair then take a left near the Inversens café (on your right). From there it opens out into a super-wide piste with mellow undulations and loads of space for big, open turns.

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La Plagne intermediate piste Levasset Haut: This is the first (and highest) part of Levasset — a spacious, open blue that feels almost endless on a quiet day. It’s more about flow and speed control than technical challenge, which makes it brilliant for intermediates who want room to practise carving.
To keep things clear, the full route is split into three: Levasset Haut, Levasset Mid, and Champagny Levasset. For the full overview route guide, see: Roche de Mio to Champagny via Levasset.
This section is ideal for intermediates (and fun for advanced riders who want to let rip) — but it’s not really suited to total beginners. The top section finishes at the Plateau de Carella rope tow, which pulls you up a short rise to continue onto Levasset Mid, before eventually transitioning into the Champagny part of the Levasset blue.

Quick tip: Terrain varies a lot across La Plagne, and the wrong setup can turn an easy day into hard work. Booking ski or snowboard hire in advance means the right kit is ready, sizes are available and rental prices are cheaper online — plus you can choose a shop close to where you’re staying.
Prefer to go straight to Skiset? Book here
Levasset Haut blue: A huge, open, confidence-boosting run with loads of width and sunshine — great for cruising turns, but don’t expect technical terrain or much variety underfoot.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Very wide piste | Uninteresting terrain |
| Fast, open turns | Not particularly testing |
| Sunny all day | |
| Great scenery | |
| Huge, long run |
Quick tip: Even straightforward pistes can change quickly with weather, visibility and traffic. Good cover means lift evacuation, medical help and rescue costs are handled if something goes wrong — which in the Alps can otherwise be expensive.
If you haven’t sorted cover yet, it’s worth doing before your trip.
Connecting pistes and lifts: Where you can go next once you finish this section.
| Connecting pistes | Connecting lifts |
|---|---|
| Levasset Mid blue | Télécorde rope tow |
Levasset Haut stats: Length, altitude and gradient at a glance.
| Quality | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length: | 2.1km / 1.3m |
| Start alt: | 2705m |
| End alt: | 2402m |
| Vertical drop: | 303m |
| Max gradient: | 18° |
| Graded: | Blue |
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