Andermatt-Sedrun

Modernized car-free village with the Gemsstock freeride mountain and 180 km of pistes across two valleys.

Key Stats

Vertical Drop
1,480m (4,856ft)
The height difference between the top and bottom of the mountain
Summit Elevation
2,961m (9,715ft)
How high the highest lift or peak reaches
Base Elevation
1,444m (4,738ft)
Height of the main base village — higher means cooler, drier snow
Annual Snowfall
700cm (276in)
Average annual natural snowfall — higher is better for powder days
Trails
120
Total number of marked runs on the trail map
Lifts
33
Total number of lifts including chairlifts, gondolas, and t-bars
Skiable Area
1,500ha (3,707ac)
Total groomed and patrolled skiable terrain

Terrain Breakdown

The percentage of marked trails in each difficulty level. A higher beginner percentage means more terrain suitable for novices and families; a higher advanced percentage means more challenge for experts.

Easy
25%
Intermediate
50%
Difficult
25%

Best For

When to go

Average monthly snowfall and snowpack depth, with the typical operating window shaded.

Andermatt-Sedrun's heaviest snowfall lands in November; the snowpack peaks in April.

snowiestdeepestJulAugSepOctNovDecJanFebMarAprMayJun
Snowfall
peaks Nov
Snowpack
peaks Apr
Typical season
Oct – May

Snowfall: SLF IMIS, station observations (1994–2023).

Snow depth: SLF IMIS, station observations (1994–2023).

Location

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