
After the Grand Col Ferret and its 20 kilometers the day before, your legs are asking for mercy. Stage 7 of the Tour du Mont-Blanc answers the call. No major pass, moderate elevation gain, and a trail that threads through Swiss Val Ferret villages between forests and alpine pastures. The arrival at Champex-Lac, with its alpine lake, rowboats and botanical garden, feels like a vacation within a vacation. The "little Canada" nickname will ring true the moment you see the conifers lining the lake shore.
Mountain hiking guides, we know this shift in rhythm well. It catches hikers off guard after the demanding efforts of the previous days. This "easy" TMB stage should not be underestimated, though: it is the one where you take the time to look around, discover Valaisan mountain architecture, and recharge before the Fenetre d'Arpette or Col de Bovine that awaits the next day.
| Distance | ~15.3 km |
| Elevation gain | +592 m |
| Elevation loss | -794 m |
| High point | ~1,630 m (after La Fouly) |
| Estimated time | 4h30 to 5h30 of actual hiking |
| Difficulty | 2/5 |
| Start | La Fouly (1,593 m) |
| Finish | Champex-Lac (1,466 m) |
Note: This is the shortest and easiest stage on the TMB. It can be merged with the end of Stage 6 (Grand Col Ferret) in 10-day itineraries. Some hikers in a rush combine both, but that would be a shame: arriving late at Champex means missing the lake swim and the botanical garden.
You leave La Fouly on a trail along the right bank of the Dranse de Ferret. The river, fed by the glaciers of Mont Dolent and Saleina, provides a steady backdrop of rushing water through the first section. The trail passes through a forest of spruce and larch before opening onto the hay meadows of Les Arlaches hamlet.
This is where the raccards become a constant presence. These small granaries of darkened wood, perched on stilts and capped with flat stone slabs, were designed to store grain safe from rodents. The slabs, placed on each pillar, created an impassable barrier for mice. Practical and elegant, they have become the architectural symbol of the Valais. You will pass dozens between La Fouly and Champex in varying states of preservation, some converted into residential annexes, others still standing on the sheer quality of their timber framing.
The trail passes through Les Arlaches, then reaches Praz-de-Fort (1,151 m), the most important village in the valley before Champex. The church, the fountains, the facades of wood darkened by time: this is deep Romandie Switzerland, a place that lives on livestock and timber, far removed from mass tourism. A small shop and a cafe let you stop to refill your water bottles.
Praz-de-Fort is also the starting point for alpine routes to the Cabane de Saleina and the Cabane de l'A Neuve, an eagle's nest perched facing Mont Dolent (3,823 m), the summit where three borders meet. These high-mountain refuges are frequented by mountaineers targeting the summits of the Aiguille d'Argentiere (3,900 m) or the Chardonnet (3,824 m). From the TMB trail, you can sometimes spot them, tiny bright dots clinging to the rock.
After Praz-de-Fort, the path climbs gently toward the hamlet of Issert (1,055 m), then crosses a zone of open pastures. The Herens cows, small and spirited, are right at home here. They spar naturally to establish the herd hierarchy, a spectacle that the Valaisans have turned into a cherished local tradition with their "combats de reines" (queen fights).
After Issert, the trail leaves the valley floor and climbs through forest toward Champex. This is the only real ascent of the day: about 400 meters of elevation gain on a switchback trail through coniferous forest. The gradient is steady and shaded, comfortable even in hot weather.
The surprise comes at the top. After hours of walking through a classic alpine valley, you emerge at a lake. Champex-Lac (1,466 m) appears as a small world apart: an oval lake, moored rowboats, hotels with flower-decked shutters, an alpine botanical garden. The nickname "Switzerland's little Canada" makes immediate sense when you walk along the shore lined with conifers and catch the snow-capped peaks as a backdrop. For Canadian hikers, the boreal feel of this lakeside may trigger an unexpected pang of familiarity, thousands of kilometers from home.
Champex-Lac is a quiet resort village, without the buzz of Courmayeur or the austerity of high-altitude refuges. It is the ideal spot for a half-day of recovery.
This is also the time to do laundry, dry your gear, and plan ahead. The next stage, toward Trient, presents a crucial choice between the Bovine alpine pasture (bucolic) and the Fenetre d'Arpette (committed). Champex is the right moment to check the forecast and decide.
Champex offers a wider range of lodging than most TMB stages:
Reservations are essential in July and August. Champex is a popular stop and capacity remains limited. Book at least a week in advance.
Water is easily accessible throughout the stage: fountains at La Fouly, Les Arlaches, Praz-de-Fort and Champex. No dry sections. The shop at Praz-de-Fort allows for light resupply. In Champex, you will find a well-stocked grocery store (note the hours: closed between noon and 2 PM).
This stage presents no particular weather concerns: no exposed pass, trail mostly in forest or on the valley floor. You can afford a late start (9 AM) and arrive in Champex by early afternoon, leaving time for the lake and the botanical garden.
In rain, the forest trail between Issert and Champex can get muddy. Nothing technical, but trekking poles are useful for stability on the climbs.
Allow 4h30 to 5h30 of actual hiking time, depending on your pace. With breaks in the village of Praz-de-Fort and the arrival at Champex, plan for 6 to 7 hours total. This is the shortest stage on the TMB, ideal for recovery.
Yes, and it is common in 7-day itineraries. Combining Grand Col Ferret plus La Fouly to Champex in a single day is doable for fit hikers, but it adds up to roughly 35 km and 1,500 m of elevation gain. You can also combine Champex to Trient with La Fouly to Champex by starting early and going via Bovine (not via the Fenetre d'Arpette, which is too long). In our TMB in 7 days, we use a Champex-La Fouly transfer to optimize the itinerary.
Yes, without question. Champex is one of the rare spots on the TMB where you can truly relax: lake, terraces, botanical garden, shops. After several days of intensive hiking, this break does wonders for both body and morale. Skipping Champex to save time means missing one of the real charms of the Swiss TMB.
From Champex, the next stage leads to Trient with a choice that divides hikers: the Bovine alpine pasture for a gentle option, or the Fenetre d'Arpette (2,665 m) for a serious challenge. It is one of the most debated decisions on the TMB.
To see where this stage fits into the full circuit, our complete Tour du Mont-Blanc overview covers all 11 stages, variants and logistics. If you want to experience the TMB in comfort with selected accommodations and a dedicated guide, the TMB in 7 days with Altimood condenses the best of the circuit into one week.
You have just come from Stage 6, Rifugio Bonatti to La Fouly via the Grand Col Ferret: the Italy-to-Switzerland crossing is still fresh. Ahead, the final stages lead you progressively back toward Chamonix.