
Five days of vacation, not one more. That's often where the planning starts: can you really complete the 170 km Tour du Mont-Blanc in five days without having to run?
The answer is yes. But there are real trade-offs.
Without a buffer day, a thunderstorm or a fog-bound pass can knock out a stage and derail your entire plan. And in the mountains, pushing through bad weather to stay on schedule is a call that safety simply won't allow.
Before you commit, you need to understand what this express pace actually involves, and especially what you won't have time to see.
At Altimood, we've hiked the TMB and all its variants. We've tested every pass, every shortcut, every possible transfer. This article lays things out honestly: here's the realistic 5-day itinerary, the sections you'll have to sacrifice, the fitness level required, and why, as professionals, we'd rather take you on the 7-day format.
| Day | Stage | Distance | Elev+ | Elev- | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Les Houches → Les Chapieux | ~36 km | +2,400 m | -1,850 m | 10-12h |
| 2 | Les Chapieux → Courmayeur | ~28 km | +1,450 m | -1,700 m | 8-9h |
| 3 | Courmayeur → Champex-Lac | ~24 km | +1,600 m | -1,300 m | 7-8h |
| 4 | Champex-Lac → Trè-le-Champ | ~28 km | +1,700 m | -1,800 m | 9-10h |
| 5 | Trè-le-Champ → Les Houches | ~22 km | +1,400 m | -1,700 m | 7-8h |
| Total | ~138 km | +8,550 m | -8,350 m | 41-47h |
The reasons tend to be the same: a tight window between two work weeks, a smaller accommodation budget (two fewer nights is significant), or simply the draw of a physical challenge. The standard duration for the Tour du Mont-Blanc is 7 to 10 days. The 5-day TMB attracts trail runners who want to experience the route at a sustained hiking pace, without tipping into racing territory.
All of those reasons are valid. The problem isn't wanting to go fast. It's not realizing what the clock takes away from you.
To fit into 5 stages, you need to merge certain days and use transfers (bus or taxi) on the least alpine sections. Here's a realistic itinerary, tested on the ground. The 138 km total (versus 170 km for the full TMB) is explained by the Swiss Val Ferret being replaced by a bus ride and shortcuts from merging stages.
Some agencies offer a "TMB in 5 days" that only covers the northern half of the circuit (Courmayeur to Chamonix, roughly 75 km), with van transfers to skip the French sections. That's not the same trek. The itinerary below covers the complete loop.
Two stages in one. From Les Houches, climb to Col de Voza (1,653 m), descend to Les Contamines-Montjoie, then continue directly to Notre-Dame-de-la-Gorge and the Col du Bonhomme (2,329 m) and Croix du Bonhomme (2,479 m).
This is the longest day. Two passes above 2,300 m in a single day, starting from 1,010 m. An early-morning start is mandatory. You'll most likely need to arrive in Les Houches the evening before.
Combining stages 3 and 4. Col de la Seigne (2,516 m) marks the Italian border. The landscape shifts immediately: Beaufortain alpine pastures give way to the south face of Mont-Blanc, with vertical walls and hanging glaciers. The descent crosses Val Veni, follows Lac Combal, and reaches Courmayeur.
Crossing Col de la Seigne is the highlight of this day. If you're ahead of schedule, stop at the Rifugio Elisabetta terrace for a caffè with a view.
The climb to Refuge Bonatti (2,026 m) is steep, but from the terrace, the Dent du Géant (4,013 m) and Grandes Jorasses (4,208 m) stand less than 10 km away with nothing blocking the view. The trail continues to Grand Col Ferret (2,537 m), the Italy-Switzerland border, then descends to La Fouly. From La Fouly, postal buses take you to Champex-Lac in 45-50 minutes (connection at Orsières), skipping the Swiss Val Ferret stage.
Two options from Champex: the classic trail via Bovine (more accessible) or the Fenêtre d'Arpette (2,665 m, more demanding). Both lead to Trient. Then continue over Col de Balme (2,204 m), back into France with the Chamonix valley below. Descent to Trè-le-Champ.
A turning-point day. The Fenêtre d'Arpette is tempting, but after three days of serious effort, Bovine offers a more sustainable pace without sacrificing the Col de Balme panorama.
Final day. Climb to the Refuge de la Flégère then traverse the south balcony of the Aiguilles Rouges, facing the Mont-Blanc chain. The Grand Balcon trail passes over Le Brévent (2,525 m) before the long descent to Les Houches.
The Flégère-Brévent traverse rolls out 12 km of balcony trail facing the Aiguille Verte, Les Drus, and the Aiguille du Midi. If fatigue sets in, the Brévent or Flégère cable car can shorten the descent.
The 5-day TMB is Mont-Blanc on fast-forward. You'll see all three countries and the major passes. But here's what gets cut:
The Swiss Val Ferret (stage 7). The trail between La Fouly and Champex crosses flowering meadows, follows the Dranse river, and passes through timber hamlets darkened by age. It's the most distinctly Swiss stage of the TMB, the one where the pace drops a notch. In 5 days, it gets replaced by a bus.
The Col du Tricot variant (stage 1). By merging the first two stages, you'll probably choose Col de Voza (faster) over Col du Tricot. You'll miss the suspended footbridge over the Bionnassay torrent and the view straight down onto the glacier 200 m below.
Time to stop. Watching an ibex on the ridge of Mont de la Saxe, lingering on the Refuge Bonatti terrace while the sun lights up the Grandes Jorasses. All of that takes time, and in 5 days, time is a luxury.
Recovery. With stages of 25 to 36 km and 1,500 to 2,400 m of elevation gain per day, fatigue builds fast. By day 3, your knees and feet are reminding you that your body isn't a machine.
The 5-day TMB is not a beginner trek. To attempt it:
In 5 days, there's no margin for a rest day. If the weather deteriorates on a pass, you don't have a buffer day to fall back on.
Five days means two fewer nights of accommodation. In a mountain hut, count on roughly 60 to 80 EUR per night for half-board. That's a savings of around 120 to 160 EUR. Add the La Fouly-Champex bus transfer (around 15 EUR).
Overall, the 5-day TMB done independently costs between 400 and 600 EUR per person (half-board accommodation, excluding round-trip travel and packed lunches). For 7 days, expect 500 to 750 EUR. The difference is real but modest compared to the overall investment (flights, gear, time off work).
We won't discourage you if 5 days is all you have. The shorter TMB is still a strong experience. But when you have the choice, 7 days changes the very nature of the trek. I completed my first TMB in 3 days with a full pack. Performance done, but I was perfectly happy to do it again right after with a group. The stopwatch didn't leave as many lasting images.
In 7 days, stages go from 28-36 km down to 15-20 km. Daily elevation drops from 2,000 m to 1,000 m. You shift from "performance mode" to "contemplation mode." You have time to take the variants (Col du Tricot, Col des Fours, Fenêtre d'Arpette) without redlining. You sleep better, eat better, and have time to look up.
Doing the Tour du Mont-Blanc in 5 days without a guide is doable if you have experience with multi-day alpine treks and can read a 1:25,000 topographic map. You handle the route, hut reservations, and weather adjustments on your own.
With a mountain guide, the 5-day format becomes more comfortable: no navigation to manage, pace adjusted in real time, and the difficult decisions when fatigue or weather complicate things rest with a professional.
Make the choice that works for you.
Les Houches is accessible by train via the Saint-Gervais-Les-Bains-Le Fayet station, then a local TER connection to Les Houches (10 min). By car, long-term parking is available at the trailhead (Prarion parking lot or Bellevue parking lot). From Chamonix, the Chamonix-Les Houches bus line runs all day during the season. If you're flying from Canada, Geneva is the closest major airport, with bus and train connections to Chamonix in about 2 hours.
The ideal window is between late June and mid-September. In July and August, TMB huts fill up several months in advance. For a 5-day departure, book at least 3 to 4 months ahead, especially for Les Chapieux (Auberge de la Nova) and Refuge de la Flégère, which are the most in-demand stops on this itinerary.
On the French side, the TMB doesn't cross a National Park but passes through nature reserves (Aiguilles Rouges, Contamines-Montjoie) and municipalities with specific regulations. In practice, bivouacking is limited to designated areas near huts (Croix du Bonhomme, Balme) or municipal zones (aire de la Rollaz in Les Contamines, Les Chapieux). Check the rules municipality by municipality before you leave. In Italy (Aosta Valley), bivouacking is strictly prohibited below 2,500 m altitude. In Val Veni and the Italian Val Ferret, you must use official campsites or sleep in huts. In Switzerland, regulations vary by canton: in the Swiss Val Ferret (Valais), bivouacking is tolerated above the tree line but prohibited in nature reserves. Check before you go.
For more details on the best time to go, see our article When to do the Tour du Mont-Blanc.
No. Stages of 28 to 36 km with 1,500 to 2,400 m of elevation gain per day require specific preparation. Count on at least 2 to 3 months of training with long mountain outings (20 km+, 1,000 m elevation gain) before departure. The gym is a solid start but doesn't fully prepare your joints for what they'll face on varied terrain.
Yes, it's essential in summer. TMB huts (especially on the French and Italian sides) fill up fast. Book 3 to 4 months ahead for a July-August departure.
Between 400 and 600 EUR per person for an independent trip (half-board accommodation, excluding round-trip travel and packed lunches). A mountain guide for a private group is an additional cost, but it's shared among participants.
The TMB isn't a technical route, but the 5-day format reduces safety margins. Without a buffer day, a thunderstorm on a 2,500 m pass or a knee injury on day 3 can compromise everything. Accumulated fatigue also increases the risk of falls on steep descents.
No, this format is not suitable for children. Days of 8 to 12 hours of hiking and the daily elevation gains far exceed what a child can handle. For a family TMB, go with a 10 to 12-day format or selected sections.