Top facilities
Stunning views
Traditional charm
Top facilities
Stunning views
Traditional charm
Top facilities
Stunning views
Traditional charm
Top facilities
Stunning views
Traditional charmKvitfjell was purpose-built for speed. Carved out of the mountains above the Gudbrandsdalen valley for the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics, this is where the men's downhill and super-G events were staged - and that Olympic pedigree still defines the mountain's character. Set in the heart of inland Norway, about 45 minutes north of Lillehammer, Kvitfjell combines a genuinely impressive 854m vertical drop with a relaxed, family-oriented atmosphere at the base. It's a resort that's taken its Olympic infrastructure and made it work for everyday skiers - the same steep, well-groomed runs that tested the world's best now host families, weekend skiers, and powder days in equal measure.
The ski area covers 31km of piste across 36 runs, served by 12 lifts including two high-speed six-seaters and a high-speed quad. The terrain splits broadly into three zones: the Olympic side with its famous Olympiabakken downhill course, the family-friendly Kvitfjell Vest (west) area, and the freeride terrain between. Nearly half the runs are graded beginner, but the vertical and the expert terrain at the top give the mountain serious credibility for stronger skiers too. The season runs from late November through to mid-April, with cold, reliable inland conditions and 140km of groomed cross-country trails in the surrounding area for Nordic enthusiasts.
The base area at Kvitfjell is built around cabin accommodation and a small service centre rather than a traditional village - it's a Norwegian hytte (cabin) resort through and through. Families rent spacious self-catering cabins in the forest, ski to the lifts in the morning, and return to cook dinner together in the evening. It's a pace of life that suits the Norwegian approach to winter - outdoors by day, cosy by night, with cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, and the northern lights as part of the experience. For UK families looking for something different from the typical Alpine resort, Kvitfjell is a refreshing change. Check out Kvitfjell ski deals to start planning your trip.
Kvitfjell was purpose-built for speed. Carved out of the mountains above the Gudbrandsdalen valley for the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics, this is where the men's downhill and super-G events were staged - and that Olympic pedigree still defines the mountain's character. Set in the heart of inland Norway, about 45 minutes north of Lillehammer, Kvitfjell combines a genuinely impressive 854m vertical drop with a relaxed, family-oriented atmosphere at the base. It's a resort that's taken its Olympic infrastructure and made it work for everyday skiers - the same steep, well-groomed runs that tested the world's best now host families, weekend skiers, and powder days in equal measure.
The ski area covers 31km of piste across 36 runs, served by 12 lifts including two high-speed six-seaters and a high-speed quad. The terrain splits broadly into three zones: the Olympic side with its famous Olympiabakken downhill course, the family-friendly Kvitfjell Vest (west) area, and the freeride terrain between. Nearly half the runs are graded beginner, but the vertical and the expert terrain at the top give the mountain serious credibility for stronger skiers too. The season runs from late November through to mid-April, with cold, reliable inland conditions and 140km of groomed cross-country trails in the surrounding area for Nordic enthusiasts.
The base area at Kvitfjell is built around cabin accommodation and a small service centre rather than a traditional village - it's a Norwegian hytte (cabin) resort through and through. Families rent spacious self-catering cabins in the forest, ski to the lifts in the morning, and return to cook dinner together in the evening. It's a pace of life that suits the Norwegian approach to winter - outdoors by day, cosy by night, with cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, and the northern lights as part of the experience. For UK families looking for something different from the typical Alpine resort, Kvitfjell is a refreshing change. Check out Kvitfjell ski deals to start planning your trip.
Skiing Kvitfjell feels bigger than the piste map suggests, and the reason is the vertical. An 854m drop from summit to base gives you long, sustained runs with genuine variety in gradient - particularly on the Olympic side, where the terrain holds its pitch for an impressively long way. The mountain is oriented across two main faces: the east side with the steeper Olympic terrain and the west side (Kvitfjell Vest) with gentler, family-friendly slopes. Both are served by modern, fast lifts, and the layout is logical enough that you'll have it mapped within a morning.
Snow conditions here benefit from Kvitfjell's inland position. Temperatures are reliably cold throughout winter, which means the snow stays dry and well-preserved long after it falls. The grooming is thorough - as you'd expect from a SkiStar-operated resort - and the pistes are maintained to a high standard. On clearer days, the views across the Gudbrandsdalen valley to the Rondane mountains are spectacular, and the quality of light in the Norwegian winter - low, golden, and dramatic - makes every run feel cinematic.
Kvitfjell Vest is where beginners should head, with a generous selection of wide, gentle slopes served by their own lifts and separated from the steeper Olympic terrain on the east side. The runs are well groomed, uncrowded, and have a consistent gradient that's ideal for building confidence with snowplough turns and progressing to parallel. The cold, dry snow holds its condition well, giving you reliable, predictable surfaces to learn on.
The progression through the beginner terrain is natural - you can move from the very gentle nursery slopes at the base through to longer green runs higher up without any sudden jumps in difficulty. The mountain's cabin-based layout also means the base area is relaxed and unhurried, with no intimidating parade of expert skiers swooping past. It's a comfortable, pressure-free environment that works well for first-timers of all ages.
WeSki insider tip: The Kvitfjell Vest beginner area has its own dedicated parking and base facilities, so you can drive directly there and avoid walking through the main resort area with equipment. It makes the first-morning logistics much smoother, especially with children.
Intermediates will find Kvitfjell's terrain rewarding, with well-groomed runs that make the most of the vertical drop. The runs on the upper mountain are the standouts - long, flowing descents with enough pitch variation to keep things interesting, sweeping through open terrain and between stands of birch. The 3.5km longest run provides a sustained, satisfying descent from summit to base that's well worth repeating. The east side of the mountain has steeper pitches that give confident intermediates a taste of more challenging terrain.
The grooming quality is a real asset here. SkiStar's approach to piste preparation means you can carve confidently on smooth, well-maintained surfaces, and the cold inland temperatures keep the snow in excellent shape throughout the day. For intermediates looking to push themselves, the upper sections of the Olympic course are accessible and exciting without being overwhelming - you're skiing the same mountain that hosted Olympic downhill, just at your own pace.
WeSki insider tip: Ski the full summit-to-base descent on the east side first thing in the morning, when the grooming is fresh and the pistes are empty. The cold overnight temperatures set the surface perfectly, and you'll have the mountain largely to yourself before the day-trippers arrive.
The Olympiabakken - the 1994 Olympic men's downhill course - is the headline run and it's properly steep. The top section drops sharply through open terrain with sustained pitch that demands confident, committed skiing. It's maintained as a timed race course during the season, and skiing it top to bottom gives you a real sense of what Olympic speed events feel like - the gradient, the compression changes, and the sheer length of the run are all impressive. Seven advanced and three expert runs give you enough variety to fill several days of focused skiing.
Beyond the marked pistes, Kvitfjell has freeride potential in the terrain between the groomed runs and in the birch forests flanking the Olympic side. After snowfall, the trees hold cold, dry powder, and the steeper lines off the summit ridge provide some genuinely challenging descents. The resort's approach to off-piste is relatively open by Scandinavian standards, though marked closures should always be respected. For the most challenging lift-accessed terrain, stick to the east side's upper reaches.
WeSki insider tip: The Olympiabakken course has a timing system you can use to race yourself down the Olympic downhill. It's a fantastic way to benchmark your skiing and feel the mountain as the Olympic athletes experienced it. Ask at the lift station for details.
Kvitfjell works well for snowboarders, with the long vertical drop providing sustained fall-line riding and the two terrain parks giving freestyle riders dedicated space to progress. The groomed pistes are wide and well maintained for carving, and on powder days the birch forests between the runs hold cold, dry snow. The surface lifts that serve some of the lower slopes can be a nuisance on a board, but the high-speed chairs and six-packs cover the main terrain comfortably.
Kvitfjell's off-piste is concentrated in the birch forests and open terrain flanking the Olympic side of the mountain. The cold, dry inland snow preserves well in the trees, and after a storm the powder can be excellent - light, consistent, and largely untracked given the resort's moderate visitor numbers. The terrain is not as steep or extensive as Alpine backcountry, but it's rewarding and accessible. For more serious off-piste, guided touring into the surrounding Rondane and Jotunheimen mountain ranges is available from operators in the area.
Kvitfjell's ski school is operated by SkiStar and runs group and private lessons for all ages and abilities from both the main base and the Kvitfjell Vest area. Instructors speak English fluently - Norway's English proficiency is excellent - so language is never a barrier. Children's lessons and ski kindergarten are well established, with a good reputation for building confidence in younger skiers. Booking ahead through SkiStar's system is recommended during Norwegian school holiday weeks.
Kvitfjell has two terrain parks catering to different levels. The main park has a solid lineup of jumps, rails, and boxes maintained throughout the season by SkiStar's park crew, while a smaller progression park gives beginners and younger riders a safe space to try their first features. The parks are well shaped and regularly updated, making Kvitfjell a better freestyle option than many Norwegian resorts of a similar size.
Kvitfjell is built around the Norwegian family skiing tradition, and it shows. The cabin-based accommodation means families have their own space - kitchens for cooking, living rooms for relaxing, and often a sauna or hot tub on the deck. The Kvitfjell Vest area is purpose-designed for families and beginners, with gentle slopes, a dedicated ski school zone, and a friendly, unhurried atmosphere. Children's ski lessons and kindergarten are well run, and the SkiStar system makes booking straightforward.
Older children and teenagers have the Olympic side to aspire to - the timed race course is a massive draw for competitive young skiers - and the terrain parks provide progression space for freestyle-minded riders. Cross-country skiing is another family activity that Norway does particularly well, with 140km of groomed Nordic trails winding through the surrounding forests and valleys. It's a brilliant way to spend a rest day together, and equipment rental is readily available.
The cabin lifestyle shapes the family experience here. Evenings tend to be spent cooking together, playing games, and enjoying the sauna - it's a self-sufficient routine that many families find more relaxing than the restaurant-every-night pattern of traditional Alpine resorts. The base area has a supermarket and a few restaurants for nights when you don't want to cook, and Lillehammer is a 45-minute drive for a broader selection. It's a different kind of ski holiday, but one that families often prefer once they've tried it.
Kvitfjell's setting in the Gudbrandsdalen valley, with Lillehammer nearby and Norway's most famous national parks on the doorstep, means rest days can be genuinely rewarding. The resort itself is quiet and nature-focused, but the wider area has enough cultural and outdoor options to fill a week. This is Norway's inland heartland - big skies, frozen lakes, birch forests, and a landscape that feels properly wild.
The Norwegian approach to winter goes well beyond downhill skiing, and the Kvitfjell area reflects that:
For days away from the slopes, the Kvitfjell area and nearby Lillehammer have a good range of options:
Dining at Kvitfjell is a mix of self-catering cabin cooking and a small selection of restaurants at the resort base. The Norwegian cabin tradition means most families cook at least some of their own meals, but there are options for nights when you'd rather not. Lillehammer, 45 minutes south, has a much wider restaurant scene for a special evening out.
WeSki insider tip: Pick up brunost (Norwegian brown cheese) from the supermarket and eat it on waffles with jam - it's a Norwegian mountain tradition and one of those things that sounds odd but tastes fantastic. Most slope-side cafeterias serve waffles with brunost too.
Kvitfjell's après-ski is understated and cabin-focused, which suits the Norwegian approach to winter perfectly. After the lifts close, most people head back to their cabins for the sauna, a hot drink, and a slow start to the evening. It's not a resort that throbs with bar music at 4pm - and for most visitors, that's exactly the point. The rhythm here is outdoors by day, warm and cosy by night.
There are a couple of spots at the base for a drink after skiing, and the lodge restaurant fills up in the early evening with families and groups. But the real Kvitfjell après experience is in the cabins - fire on, sauna warming up, perhaps a cold beer on the deck while the stars come out. On a clear night, you might catch the northern lights from your terrace. For a livelier evening, Lillehammer has bars and restaurants that stay open later, though the 45-minute drive means it's more of an occasional treat than a nightly routine.
Après-ski spots to know:
Accommodation at Kvitfjell is predominantly cabin-based, which is central to the Norwegian ski holiday experience. Rental cabins (hytter) range from cosy two-bedroom units to large, modern lodges sleeping ten or more, most with their own sauna, fully equipped kitchens, and ski-in/ski-out access or a short walk to the lifts. Cabins are scattered through the birch forest around the base area, and the higher ones tend to have the best views and most reliable ski access.
There are also apartments and a small number of hotel-style options at the resort base, but cabins are by far the most popular choice - and the one that gives you the full Kvitfjell experience. Booking through SkiStar or specialist operators gives you access to the widest selection. The key decision is location: cabins near the main east-side lifts are most convenient for the Olympic terrain, while those near Kvitfjell Vest put beginners and families closer to the gentler slopes. Either way, the distances are manageable on foot or with a very short drive.
The Kvitfjell lift pass covers all 12 lifts across both the main mountain and the Kvitfjell Vest area. Multi-day passes are available and are the most practical option for a week's stay. SkiStar also operates the nearby Hafjell resort, and combined passes covering both mountains are available if you want to explore further - Hafjell is a 20-minute drive and adds a different mountain to your week.
Check for family and multi-day pass options when booking your Kvitfjell ski holiday package through WeSki to find the best fit for your trip.
The SkiStar rental shop at the resort base stocks a full range of modern skis, snowboards, boots, and helmets. Equipment quality is high - SkiStar's rental operation is well organised and regularly updates its stock. Cross-country ski equipment is also available, which is worth considering given the 140km of Nordic trails in the area. Booking ahead online through SkiStar secures your gear and can save time on your first morning.
Most visitors get around Kvitfjell by car, which is the most practical option for a cabin-based resort. The distances between accommodation, lifts, and the base area are short but can feel long in ski boots, particularly with children. Parking is available at the main lift base and at Kvitfjell Vest. A free shuttle bus connects the main accommodation areas to the lifts during the season, running at regular intervals throughout the morning and afternoon.
For trips to Lillehammer, the supermarket, or neighbouring Hafjell, a car is essential. Most UK visitors either hire a car from the airport or arrange one through their booking. The roads in the area are well maintained in winter, though winter tyres are required by law in Norway and are standard on all rental cars. In the evenings, you won't need transport - cabin life means everything you need is at home.
The nearest major airport is Oslo Gardermoen (OSL), approximately 170km south of Kvitfjell - around a two-hour drive on well-maintained motorway and mountain roads. Direct flights from London to Oslo run multiple times daily with several airlines. An alternative is to fly to Oslo and take the train to Fåvang station (the nearest rail stop), which takes around two and a half hours and runs through some of Norway's most scenic valley landscape.
WeSki has private transfers to Kvitfjell. Add them to your Kvitfjell ski holiday package for seamless door-to-door travel. WeSki also provides car rental from the airport if you'd prefer flexibility on the ground - and given Kvitfjell's cabin-based layout, a car is particularly useful here.
Kvitfjell is one of Norway's best family ski resorts. The cabin accommodation gives families their own space with kitchens, saunas, and room to spread out. Kvitfjell Vest is purpose-designed for beginners and children with gentle, uncrowded slopes and excellent ski school facilities. The broader Norwegian outdoor culture - cross-country skiing, sledging, dog sledging, and cabin life - gives families a range of activities beyond just downhill skiing, and the safe, relaxed atmosphere suits families with children of all ages.
Yes - the Olympiabakken, which hosted the men's downhill and super-G at the 1994 Lillehammer Olympics, is open to the public throughout the season. It's a steep, sustained run that gives you a real sense of what Olympic speed events involve. A timing system lets you race yourself down the course, which is a highlight for competitive skiers. You'll need to be a confident advanced skier to enjoy it - the upper section is properly steep.
Both are SkiStar-operated resorts in the Lillehammer area, and a combined pass covers both. Kvitfjell has the bigger vertical drop (854m), the Olympic pedigree, and more challenging advanced terrain. Hafjell has a larger base village with more restaurants and facilities, a strong family reputation, and a good terrain park. Many visitors spend time at both during a week - they're 20 minutes apart by car and complement each other well.
Kvitfjell's inland position means cold, dry conditions throughout winter, which preserves the snow well. Temperatures regularly drop below -10°C, so the snowpack stays firm and dry long after it falls. Natural snowfall is supplemented by snowmaking on key runs, and the grooming is excellent - SkiStar's piste preparation is consistently high quality. The season runs from late November through mid-April, with the most reliable conditions from December through March.
Absolutely - and it's exceptional. The surrounding area has 140km of groomed Nordic trails, ranging from gentle valley loops to more challenging routes through the forests and up into the higher terrain. Cross-country skiing is Norway's national sport, and the infrastructure here reflects that - trails are well marked, regularly groomed, and have warming huts along the way. Equipment rental is available at the resort base, and it's a brilliant activity for rest days or for family members who prefer Nordic to downhill.
A car is strongly recommended. Kvitfjell is a cabin-based resort without a traditional village centre, and while a shuttle bus connects accommodation to the lifts, a car makes trips to the supermarket, Lillehammer, and neighbouring Hafjell much more practical. All Norwegian rental cars come with winter tyres as standard. If you'd prefer not to drive, booking a private transfer to the resort and using the shuttle bus during your stay is possible, but you'll have less flexibility for day trips and evening outings.
Kvitfjell sits at around 61°N latitude, which puts it within the aurora zone. On clear winter nights with strong solar activity, the northern lights are visible - and the lack of light pollution in the Gudbrandsdalen valley improves your chances. Sightings aren't guaranteed, but when they happen, the view from a cabin terrace with the lights shimmering above the mountains is extraordinary. The best chances are on cold, clear evenings between December and March.
I usually book flights, transfers, hotel, ski rental and lift passes myself but this year used WeSki for a trip to Morzine. It was so much easier. Everything worked perfectly - transfers arrived on time and there was plenty of feedback throughout the whole process giving you confidence the holiday would go smoothly.
A really useful service that is so much easier to use than other 'all-inclusive' sites. It nicely bridges the gap between a travel agent and booking the trip yourself online. I will use WeSki every time I go skiing from now on.
We booked a late minute skiing trip to Morzine through we ski. We looked at booking the trip ourselves but could get anywhere near the price quoted by we ski. The company was excellent and we had no problems at all from start to finish. I would definitely use them to book another weekend skiing trip.
Seamless experience from start to finish. I was spending ages trying to sort out a weekend break and managed to do it with we ski in minutes and for the same price as booking it all up yourself. Flight, transfer and accommodation was all as expected and faultless.