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There are many ways to get to the French Alps;
they are very accessible. The most economical
option is to take your own car and drive
down.
Drive
From the UK you have many crossing options. If
you are taking a crossing from the South of
England then there are ferry ports in
Portsmouth, Newhaven, Southampton, Poole,
Plymouth and Dover. Dover has the shortest
ferry crossing time at 90mins (docks into
Calais). There are also routes from the North
of England from Hull into Zeebrugge. Most of
these offer overnight routes, ideal if you have
young children. There is also the ever popular
Eurotunnel from Folkestone (South of England,
Kent) to Calais that takes a mere
35mins.
Fly
If driving isn’t an option then many
budget airlines offer affordable flights from
the UK into the international airports in
France such as Geneva, Lyon, Grenoble and
Chambery. From there it’s anywhere from 1
hour – 4 hours transfer times to the
resorts.
Fly to Geneva for resorts in these areas
– Aravis (1hr), Grand Massif (1hr),
Portes du Soleil (1hr), Mont Blanc/Chamonix
Valley (1h30)
Fly to Chambery for resorts in these areas
– Paradiski (2h20), 3 Valleys (1h45),
Espace Killy (2h30), Maurienne Valley (1h45
– 3hr).
Fly to Grenoble for resorts in these areas
– 2 Alpes (1h50), Vaujany/Alpe
d’Huez (1h30), Montgenevre (2h30), Serre
Chevalier (2hr)
Lyon is further out but is an option for all
areas, just a bit of a trek!
Train
You can travel down to the Alps via the
Eurostar, TGV and local SNCF trains from London
or Kent. There are some direct Eurostar options
to Moutiers or Bourg St Maurice (some
overnight, some with disco train) or trains to
Paris with a change and then onto the likes of
Lyon, Chamonix, Annecy, Chambery, Briancon etc.
If you can afford the first class ticket
it’s definitely worth it for the extras
you get (separate carriage, larger reclining
seats, meals, champagne, coffee etc), but
standard class will do you fine still; you just
have to pay for any snacks.
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