Austria
Alpine ski region across Tirol, Salzburg, Vorarlberg, Styria and Carinthia | Known for: Ski Arlberg freeride, Stubai Zoo, Absolut Park, Kitzsteinhorn, Sölden glaciers, Fieberbrunn FWT, Innsbruck access and long glacier seasons | Season: October to May at many glacier venues, December to April for most resorts | Best for: park riders, freeriders, glacier training crews, contest athletes, road trip skiers and film crews moving between high alpine venues Arlberg Snow And The Austrian Freeski Spine Austria’s freeski map starts with altitude, density and lift-linked variety. The country does not rely on one destination to carry its ski identity. Tirol, Salzburg and Vorarlberg form a tight Alpine network where a skier can move from glacier park laps to deep snow routes, from valley towns to international contests, and from early-season training to spring filming without leaving the country.... Read more on the Location page
Stubai Zoo
Glacier snowpark venue on the Stubai Glacier in Tyrol Austria | Known for: Gaiskarferner XL autumn setup, Pro Line, Medium Line, Jib and Easy Lines, Gamsgarten Spring Garden, Prime Park Sessions, FIS Freeski World Cup Stubai, and early season training above 3000 meters | Season: October to May on the wider glacier with Stubai Zoo focused on autumn and spring park windows | Best for: slopestyle riders, rail crews, preseason filming, World Cup preparation, and European freestyle trips Gaiskarferner At 3100 Meters And The Preseason Signal Stubai Zoo sits high on the Stubai Glacier above Neustift im Stubaital, with the autumn build positioned on the Gaiskarferner around 3100 meters. That elevation is the reason the venue carries so much weight in European freeskiing. While many lower Alpine parks are still waiting for winter, Stubai can build jump lines, rail sections, and early-season training lanes during the October and November window.... Read more on the Location page
Switzerland
Alpine freeski country from Valais to Graubünden and Central Switzerland | Known for: Verbier Xtreme, Zermatt glacier skiing, Laax freestyle, Saas-Fee autumn camps, Engelberg descents, Andermatt-Gemsstock freeride, and train-linked resort travel | Season: December to April with glacier and spring extensions | Best for: park riders, freeriders, glacier crews, touring groups, and skiers building multi-resort Swiss Alps trips Klein Matterhorn Altitude And The Swiss Alps Freeski Grid The Matterhorn Ski Paradise reaches almost 4,000 meters above Zermatt, with 360 kilometers of pistes, 54 lifts, two countries, and skiing marketed 365 days a year. That altitude gives Switzerland a rare opening statement: the country can support winter resort laps, glacier training, spring park sessions, and high-alpine freeride within a compact rail-linked mountain network. Switzerland works as a freeski region because its strongest resorts do not all serve the same purpose.... Read more on the Location page
Zermatt
Swiss Alps resort below the Matterhorn | Known for: 360 km Matterhorn Ski Paradise network, 3883 m glacier access, Zermatt Cervinia link, Snowpark Zermatt, summer skiing, high alpine freeride, and car-free village logistics | Season: winter plus glacier skiing and summer park windows | Best for: glacier training, park progression, long piste mileage, guided freeride, and cross-border Alpine trips Klein Matterhorn Altitude And The Matterhorn Ski Paradise The Matterhorn Glacier Paradise reaches 3883 meters above Zermatt, placing skiers on Klein Matterhorn among glaciers, high ridges, and the Swiss-Italian border zone. That altitude is the core of Matterhorn Ski Paradise. The connected ski area links Zermatt with Cervinia and Valtournenche, spans two countries, and is promoted through 360 kilometers of pistes and 54 lifts.... Read more on the Location page