Seasoned.info

Madonna di Campiglio

Italy · Dolomites / Alps

46
Score

Seasoned
Score

The Mountain

Madonna di Campiglio offers solid terrain for a four-month season, though you won't find the sprawling skiable area of larger Alpine resorts. With nearly 1,000 metres of vertical and 315cm of annual snowfall, you're looking at reliable conditions and enough variety to keep progression interesting—the resort leans groomer-forward with dedicated beginner zones, but blacks exist for confident riders. The 138-day season (typically late November to mid-April) is respectable for Italy, and the top-notch snow-making system means you won't be staring at bare patches even in lean years. That said, with 11 lifts serving the terrain, you'll develop an intimate knowledge of the mountain by month three; this is a place to build mileage and skill rather than chase new descents every day.

Living in Madonna di Campiglio

Living costs are reasonable by Alpine standards: groceries run around €65 weekly, and the village maintains affordable eating options (pizza around €6, wine €5.25) despite its polished reputation. Madonna di Campiglio sits at 1,550 metres as a self-contained mountain village rather than a separate town, so you won't commute to everyday shops—delis, chocolatiers, and home goods are within walking distance of the lifts. The nearest international airport is Verona (173km away), which is manageable but not on your doorstep; you'll need transport sorted from day one. Rent figures for seasonal workers aren't publicly detailed, so you'll need to contact employers or local agencies directly, but the presence of serviced residences and shared apartments suggests options exist beyond luxury hotel rates.

The Seasonaire Scene

The seasonaire scene here revolves heavily around ski instruction—there's consistent demand for English-speaking instructors across Madonna and the linked Pinzolo area, plus hospitality roles in hotels and restaurants, lift operations, and equipment rental. Staff accommodation isn't formally branded as such, but seasonal workers typically rent private apartments or shared units in the village. You'll find a mixed international community, likely skewing British and Northern European given the English-language ski school presence and airport proximity, though exact nationalities aren't documented. The vibe is polished and lifestyle-focused rather than party-heavy, which suits people serious about skiing progression; if you're a beginner or intermediate looking to improve, the confidence-boosting groomed terrain and quiet morning runs make this an ideal learning ground, though experienced riders seeking steep technical terrain may feel limited.

Terrain

Skiable area

No data

No comparison data

Vertical drop

977 m

More vertical than 62% of resorts

Base elevation

852 m

Lower base than 70% of resorts

Top elevation

2,504 m

Lower peak than 50% of resorts

Lifts

11

Fewer lifts than 73% of resorts

Snow & Season

Avg annual snowfall

315 cm

Less snow than 61% of resorts

Season length

138 days

Longer season than 60% of resorts

Pass Prices

Day pass

EUR 72

~$83

Cheaper day pass than 51% of resorts

Season pass

No data

No comparison data

Getting There

Nearest airport

VRN

No comparison data

Airport distance

173 km

Further than 73% of resorts

Cost of Living

Avg monthly salary

EUR 1,250

~$1,433 / mo

Lower pay than 76% of resorts

Avg monthly rent

No data

No comparison data

Weekly groceries

EUR 65

~$75 / wk

Cheaper groceries than 50% of resorts

Vibe & Scene

Nightlife

No data

No comparison data

Staff accommodation

No data

No comparison data

Beginner-friendly

4

More beginner-friendly than 61% of resorts

Gnarliness

2

MellowGnarly

Groomed vs off-piste

5

Groomed pistesOff-piste / powder

Backcountry access

1

Less backcountry than 89% of resorts

Data collected July 2026

How we score

Seasonaire Reviews

Write a review →

No reviews yet — be the first to share your season here.

Write the first review