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Guide / Tour Things To Do in Morzine — 6 of Our Favourites

Find your perfect Morzine activities. Book directly or with help from our local experts

The main draw for people coming to Morzine in winter is, of course, skiing and snowboarding in the vast Portes du Soleil area, with 600 km of pistes spread across 12 different ski resorts in France and Switzerland.

Find loads of top tips and local insights in our Morzine Activities Guide.

Pointe de Nyon, Morzine

1. Pointe de Nyon hiking and trails

Location
Morzine

The Pointe de Nyon area is dedicated to hiking trails and discovering the fauna that lives in the mountains.

Things to do at Pointe de Nyon:

  • Access to the Pas de l'Aigle from the top of the Pointe de Nyon chairlift
  • A new, fun and educational walking trail, of around 40 minutes, to learn all about the fauna that lives in our beautiful mountains
  • Starting point for many hikes of varying difficulty, some of which are accessible to all abilities
  • Mountain lake
  • Restaurants

The lifts are open every day from mid June to early September although check the website for details. The Nyon cable car is typically open from 10:00 to 17:30 and the Pointe de Nyon chairlift is usually open from 10:15 to 16:45.

The ticket office is situated at the base of the Nyon cable car and is generally open from 10:00 to 15:00 every day. All these timings are subject to change, so always check the weather, websites, and at the ticket desks for updates before setting off.

There is also free parking at the base of Nyon cable car.

A group of people riding bikes on a trail with a mountain in the background

2. Guided mountain biking tour

Location
Morzine

Private mountain bike guiding for groups of up to eight people.

A full or half day with one of Ride Ability's experienced local guides all for yourself.

Ride Ability don’t mix groups, so it would be just you and your friends or family, ensuring a day that will fit your level and wishes perfectly.

It can be a guiding only day, or you can opt to mix it with some skills practice. The choice is yours.

Prices are excluding bike rental, meals, lift passes, or insurance. The team will be more than happy to book your lift pass on your behalf, or help you rent bikes.

A person is hanging from a rope over a waterfall

3. Canyoning

Location
Morzine

Fancy diving, swimming, sliding, abseiling and discovering how the water dug its paths along the river and the rocks? Canyoning is for you!

The activity takes place on the Dranse river and will last approximately two hours. You can be collected from Morzine or Avoriaz and taken to the start of the activity. There will be a maximum of 12 people per group.

You'll descend into the canyon in several ways - walking, jumping, swimming, abseiling, sliding, etc. This activity can be done during the summer months and is a fun activity for all the family and friends!

Canyoning is suitable for all abilities from the age of 12 upwards, however, you must be able to swim and have a reasonable level of fitness.

For families with children from 8 to 11 years old, you can take part in this activity in the easier Balme canyon next to Cluses (45 minutes drive from Morzine).

Private Mountain Biking Tuition, Morzine

4. Private mountain biking tuition and guiding

Location
Morzine

Receive the full attention of a private guide, and tons of personalised feedback, to help you improve your riding skills.

There are a lot of topics you can work on; body position, bike/suspension setup, braking, cornering (flat turns/berms), off camber, jumps, and more.

In order to have a good balance between exercises and riding, the instructors recommend a minimum of two hours per session.

Prices are excluding bike rental, meals, lift passes or insurance, but the team will be more than happy to book your lift pass or help you rent bikes.

a woman climbing metal steps on a rock face

5. Via Ferrata in St Jean d'Aulps

Location
Saint Jean d'Aulps

Built in the First World War, Via Ferrata (translating to ‘Iron Road’) was once used as a mode of transport for the soldiers at war. Now a hundred years later, it is a free activity for hiking and climbing enthusiasts who are willing to brave the cliff for the beautiful views that it provides. Each step taking you up the small metal rungs which cling to the rock face.

Once we got to the car park in St Jean, the journey began with a 20 minute steep hike following the trail through the forest to reach the cliffs edge. With the climb itself then taking an average of around an hour and a half non-stop to complete, followed by a 30 minute even steeper hike back down, it was definitely a good work out! 

I stood there in the 30 degree heat in my harness and helmet, looking up at the 200 metres of vertical rock that I was about to climb. It is imperative for any climb to ensure that you have all of the correct equipment, so my climbing partner and I had rented ours for a half day from Intersport in Morzine for just 10 euros.

“Once you start..” my friend warned, “..there’s no going back.” Slightly nervous, I slipped on my gloves and clipped my harness to the metal cable that followed all the way up to the top. If you were to lose your footing you are attached at all times to the metal cable, so falling to oblivion is not an option. Instead if you were to fall, a thick piece of rope is released from your harness on impact and lets you drop five metres, acting as a shock absorber and although it may still hurt, you would be theoretically fine. Except you can only use this option once, after that there is no shock absorber – it just hurts. “What if I fall?” I called up to my climbing partner. “Just don’t fall.” He casually stated, already five metres up the cliff and counting.

Already feeling like my fitness levels were being tested from the hike, I stepped on the first metal rung clipping my harness to the highest point of the metal cable that my little arms could reach and began to climb up the steep rocky cliff. At first I worried that the continuous clipping of the two attachments on the harness to the metal cable would be a nuisance, but after a couple of metres you get into the routine of climbing, clipping, unclipping and admiring the view and I began to find it fairly easy. The trick is to always clip your harness to the next highest point of the rope that you can at all time and to check that you are clipped on securely before continuing to climb.

There are six levels of difficulty, from easy to extremely difficult. Feeling that that might be a bit much for my first time on the Via Ferrata, we opted for Level D, difficult. And although difficult, the views on the way up, if nothing else made the challenge all the more worthwhile.

As we climbed higher and higher up the vertical cliff we began to wonder who implements the metal rungs and hooks for the metal cable and how do they do it – risking their lives by hanging out an helicopter maybe or did they quite literally just climb the cliff and stabilize mini metal steps as they went along? It was at that point, at just over half way up, we came across the aerial walkway. A single, slim wooden beam that reached around two metres across to the other side of the rock, with only the metal cable to hold on to you walk across it. Maybe they made them with the helicopters after all. You would think this the scariest part of the climb, and for those who do not have the best relationship with heights to begin with, perhaps it would be. Yet I personally found it the most thrilling, giving you the best views from such a height – providing you also keep one eye on your feet as well!

With no rest stops available, I began to feel my arms weaken. Mixed with the heat and dehydration, each step up and pulling my body up action began to take its toll. I advise that if you were to complete this climb, then bring water, preferably in a container that you could clip to your clothes/harness so it is easily accessible whilst climbing. “Just 6 more parts, you’re almost there!” my climbing partner called down to me. I looked up and could see the tip of the top edge and climbed as fast, and accurately as I could, not underestimating any step, yet equally in a ferocious bid to reach the top and successfully finish the climb before my arms gave way.

When we reached the top, the amazing view was more than worth the journey to get to it. Adrenalin pumping and bodies aching, we sat down to take it all in. Each fear, shot of nerves and ‘don’t look down’ moment had been forgotten and all that was left was the eureka feeling of completing the climb, mixed with excitement at being ready to do it again – as soon as my arms recovered that is!

At the top of the mountain, with a plastic cup of champagne in hand, my climbing coach and I cheered to steep cliffs – and the people who set the set the routes on them, those guys deserve a raise!

Cheese making in Morzine

6. Cheesemaking tours

Location
Morzine

Join a free guided visit to the local Fruitière to see how local Savoyard cheeses are made. It’s a great way to learn about alpine traditions and pick up a tasty souvenir.

Every Wednesday morning, you can take a free guided tour of Morzine’s fruitière, the village cheese dairy and watch how traditional local cheeses are made. The tour lasts around 30 minutes and gives you a behind-the-scenes look at the production process, with a chance to ask questions along the way. In season, you can also visit freely without a guide.

The dairy was revived in 1996 by Nicolas Baud and his team, who still make cheese here every day. You’ll see how they produce local favourites like Tomme, Abondance and Reblochon, which are all made with milk from the surrounding valley. Because Morzine lies within a protected AOP (Appellation d’Origine Protégée) zone, much of the cheese carries this quality label.

There is a shop next door, where you can taste and buy cheese to take home.