Club Med Ski Holiday 2027 Prices: What Three Weeks of Daily Tracking Shows
A Club Med Valmorel week for two adults departing 14 February 2027 was priced at £5,682 when we began tracking on 26 April. Three weeks later, on 19 May, the same week showed £9,588 — a step up of just under £4,000, or 68.7%, on an identical package at an identical resort. The booking window on that particular departure has effectively closed for early-cycle pricing.
That single movement is the clearest illustration of why timing matters at the resort level. But it is only one of dozens of price shifts we have now logged across the 2026/27 Club Med French Alps season — and the picture is more varied than a single example suggests.
What the data actually shows
Our tracker has collected daily Club Med ski holiday 2027 prices across all eleven French Alps resorts since late April 2026, covering 20 departure dates per resort and three party-size combinations. Three patterns stand out from the first three weeks of observations.
Most weeks are still flat. A clear majority of resort-week combinations have not moved at all over the tracking period. Val d’Isère’s New Year week has held at £13,608 for two adults across every observation. Alpe d’Huez Christmas week has held at £6,994. These prices were set as part of Club Med’s early booking cycle and have not yet shifted.
Some peak weeks have already stepped up sharply. Beyond the Valmorel example above, Grand Massif’s 21 February 2027 half-term week moved from £4,652 to £9,430 — a doubling within the same tracking window. Several of Grand Massif’s mid-January and late-February weeks show similar step-up patterns. Valmorel’s 7 February week moved from £5,042 to £9,260; its 28 February week from £4,578 to £7,982.
A handful of weeks have moved downward. Tignes’ 27 December (New Year) week dropped from £7,476 to £6,798 — a 9% reduction on an already-premium week. Val d’Isère’s 14 March week dropped from £10,590 to £6,862, a 35% downward move on a shoulder-season departure. Peisey-Vallandry’s 14 February week eased from £5,886 to £5,366.
Why prices are moving in opposite directions
The first instinct is that prices should drift one way as the season approaches. The data shows the opposite — and the asymmetry is informative.
Resorts and weeks that show upward movement are typically peak-demand dates where early-booking pricing was set well below eventual peak rates. As initial inventory at the lower price tier sold through, Club Med’s pricing engine moved the displayed package to the next tier. The booking window for the most historically favourable pricing on those weeks has closed — what remains is mid-cycle pricing, which on peak weeks can be materially higher.
Resorts and weeks that show downward movement are typically shoulder-season departures or peak weeks at resorts with comparatively softer demand. Where bookings have not absorbed the early inventory, Club Med has released availability at a different price point, or the displayed lead price reflects a lower-tier room category becoming available.
Neither pattern is random. Both reflect the same underlying mechanism: pricing tied to inventory absorption, with different demand curves at different resorts producing different outcomes.
What this means for the booking decision
For anyone considering a Club Med ski holiday for 2026/27, the practical implication is that the question is not whether to book early — it is whether the specific week you want is showing early-cycle pricing or has already moved.
Three considerations follow from the data.
If your target is a peak week — Christmas, New Year, or February half-term — check whether your specific resort/week combination has already stepped up. Several resorts have. The early booking window for those departures is over, and waiting for further movement is more likely to result in a higher price than a lower one. Resorts where peak weeks are still showing early-cycle prices — including all four Christmas weeks at Val d’Isère, Alpe d’Huez and La Rosière — remain inside the window.
If your dates are flexible, the late-season weeks offer a different calculation. The 18 April 2027 departure at Val Thorens Sensations sits at £3,256 for two adults; the same week at Les Arcs Panorama sits at £3,322; at Tignes, £3,906. These prices have moved modestly upward during tracking, suggesting the optimal booking window for spring departures is now rather than later.
For weeks still at early-cycle prices, the signal-to-act is when prices begin moving — not before. The data shows clearly that Club Med’s pricing engine waits for inventory to absorb before stepping up the displayed price. Setting a price alert on your target week is the practical way to know when the booking window starts to close.
A note on what three weeks of data can and cannot tell us
This is the first published analysis from the tracker, and three weeks is not enough to draw conclusions about the full booking cycle. What we can say with confidence: prices on the 2026/27 Club Med French Alps season are not static, and the movement has already been material on some weeks.
What we cannot yet say: where each week’s final pricing will land, how much further peak weeks will step up, or whether late-season weeks will hold their current values. The historical record we are building is the answer to those questions, and the more daily observations we accumulate, the more precisely we will be able to map the booking window for each resort.
The When To Book Club Med tracker shows live prices and recent movement signals across all eleven French Alps resorts, updated daily. If you have a specific resort and week in mind, the most informative thing you can do is set a price alert — and we will notify you the moment your booking window shifts.
Related reading: When to Book a Club Med Ski Holiday: The Price Window Explained · Is Club Med Ski Worth the Money? · Best Time to Book Club Med Val d’Isère