If you are planning an Alps ski trip for the 2026-27 season, there is a weather story developing right now that deserves your attention. NOAA issued an El Niño Watch on March 12, 2026, with a 62% probability of El Niño emerging by summer 2026 and peaking during the heart of next ski season.
Some long-range forecasters are using the term Super El Niño to describe what may be developing in the eastern Pacific.
This does not mean your Alps trip is in trouble. It does mean where you ski and where you stay matters more than usual. Here is what the science actually says, how it affects the Alps specifically, and which resorts hold up best when El Niño shows up.
What Is Actually Happening Right Now
The ENSO cycle, which stands for El Niño Southern Oscillation, alternates between La Niña, neutral, and El Niño phases over a roughly 2-5 year cycle. Each phase influences global weather patterns in different ways.
We are currently transitioning out of La Niña. NOAA’s current alert status is a La Niña Advisory with an El Niño Watch in place, meaning conditions are evolving toward El Niño faster than the neutral phase many forecasters expected.
The 62% probability figure is meaningful, not certain. It means the scientific consensus leans toward El Niño developing and peaking during winter 2026-27, but it is not guaranteed and intensity remains uncertain.
What is worth noting is the sea surface temperature anomalies in the eastern Pacific that NOAA is currently tracking are consistent with patterns that preceded strong El Niño events in previous cycles, including the exceptionally powerful 2015-16 event.
What El Niño Does to Alps Snowfall
The relationship between El Niño and Alps snowfall is more nuanced than the North American picture, and it is important to get this right rather than rely on oversimplified takes.
In North America, El Niño brings a well-documented pattern: wetter and cooler conditions in the southern US and drier, warmer conditions in the Pacific Northwest and interior British Columbia. For Whistler and Jackson Hole regulars, El Niño winters are often disappointing.
The Alps tell a different story. El Niño’s influence on European winters is less direct and more variable. What the research consistently shows is that a warmer, more southerly flow pattern tends to dominate western Europe during El Niño winters.
Temperatures run above average at lower elevations, the snowline rises, and precipitation that falls as snow at altitude may fall as rain in the valleys. The critical word is altitude.
High-altitude glacier resorts in the Alps are significantly insulated from the valley-level warm spells that make lower resorts marginal. Above 2,500 meters, even in strong El Niño winters, temperatures remain cold enough for consistent snowfall.
The 2015-16 El Niño, the strongest ever recorded, produced poor conditions in many lower European resorts but excellent glacier skiing at high altitude destinations throughout the season.
Which Alps Resorts Hold Up Best in an El Niño Winter
Here are the five major Alps destinations ranked by snow reliability in a warm El Niño winter. This is the practical information your trip planning actually needs. Here are the five major Alps destinations ranked by snow reliability in a warm El Niño winter.
Zermatt, Switzerland
The most snow-reliable resort in the Alps regardless of ENSO phase. Glacier skiing at 3,883 meters on the Matterhorn Glacier Paradise means you are skiing above the elevation where El Niño’s warming influence is felt at all.
Even in the worst warm winters Zermatt delivers consistent, high-quality skiing. If snow certainty is your priority for 2026-27, Zermatt is the answer.
Chamonix, France
The Grand Montets glacier and high-altitude off-piste insulate Chamonix from lower-elevation warm spells, and the timing for 2026-27 could not be better. The new rebuilt Grand Montets tram reopens in December 2026 accessing terrain higher than ever before.
Valley-level conditions in Chamonix can be marginal in warm winters, but the high mountain stays cold and the off-piste remains exceptional especially off the Auguille du Midi lift that rises to over 3,800 meters.
The Dolomites, Italy
The most vulnerable of the five destinations in a warm El Niño winter. The base elevations of Alta Badia and Val Gardena are lower than the Swiss and French Alps resorts and the southern exposure that creates the Dolomites’ famous sunny character also makes them more susceptible to rain-on-snow events in a warm winter.
The Sella Ronda circuit and the scenery remain extraordinary, but if you are going to the Dolomites in 2026-27, go early in the season when snowpack is most likely to be established.
Val d’Isère and Tignes, France
The Tignes glacier sits above 3,400 meters and is one of the most snow-sure lift-accessed skiing areas in Europe. Val d’Isère’s combination of glacier terrain and high-altitude off-piste makes it highly resilient to warm winter anomalies. A strong choice for 2026-27 regardless of what El Niño delivers.
St. Anton, Austria
The Arlberg sits at a meteorological convergence point that intercepts Atlantic storm systems largely independently of broader ENSO patterns. The Arlberg is known for some of the highest snowfall totals in the Alps regardless of El Niño or La Niña conditions, making St. Anton one of the most reliable destinations in the region in any ENSO phase.
Verbier, Switzerland
Verbier holds up extremely well in El Niño winters thanks to its combination of altitude, exposure, and access to the colder upper 4 Vallées. The Attelas–Lac des Vaux zone stays reliable even in warm spells, and when temperatures spike,
Mont Fort (3,330 m) becomes the refuge with its high, north-facing sector that preserves snow far better than most non‑glacier resorts. Verbier doesn’t have the same glacial insurance as Zermatt or Val d’Isère, but its vertical range and aspect variety give it resilience when the freezing level jumps.
Quick Decision Guide (2026–27 Warm Winter)
If you want the simplest possible breakdown:
Zermatt → Best for snow certainty & iconic village
Chamonix → Best for expert terrain & the original ski town
Val d’Isere → Best all‑around warm‑winter choice & mindblowing scale
Verbier → Best for high‑altitude step off the lift freeride & luxury
St. Anton → Best for storm cycles + north‑facing snow & birthplace of skiing
What This Means for Your Trip Planning Right Now
Book higher altitude resorts first. If you are flexible between destinations for 2026-27, prioritize Zermatt, Val d’Isere, or Chamonix over lower-elevation alternatives. The glacier access at these resorts is your insurance against whatever El Niño delivers.
Get travel insurance that covers snow conditions. A warm El Niño winter can produce marginal conditions at specific resorts or during specific weeks. Look for ski-specific travel insurance that covers piste closures rather than generic trip cancellation only. Standard policies will not protect you if the lifts are running but the snow is poor.
Book accommodation early. The Grand Montets reopening in Chamonix combined with elevated demand for high-altitude glacier resorts in an El Niño forecast environment means accommodation in Argentière and Zermatt will be competitive for 2026-27. Do not wait until autumn.
Do not cancel plans based on a forecast alone. NOAA’s 62% probability figure means 38% of scenarios do not involve significant El Niño development. Long-range seasonal forecasts carry meaningful uncertainty at 6-12 month lead times. Plan for it, choose your resort wisely, get your insurance in place, and let the rest of the ski world worry about the weather.
The Bottom Line
El Niño is developing. The 2026-27 ski season in the Alps will likely be shaped by warmer-than-average conditions at lower elevations and variable snowfall across the region. The resorts that will deliver exceptional skiing regardless are the high-altitude glacier destinations: Zermatt, Val d’Isere, and Chamonix at the top of the list.
The expert North American skier’s move for 2026-27 is straightforward: book high, book early, get your insurance sorted, and let the rest sort itself out on the mountain.
Think high resorts for insurance and If you’re booking early for a potentially warm ENSO winter.
See full blog post on MTB.SKi