12 Chalet-Style Hotels Worth Their Weight in Timber

These mountain properties prove the world's oldest alpine form still has plenty to say

Mountain chalet with wooden balconies, snowy surroundings, and a steaming outdoor pool, framed by evergreen trees.
Enter a warm pool after a full day of skiing at the Four Seasons Megève. Photo: Courtesy of Four Seasons Megève

Before the fur throws and the Ruinart, a chalet was, frankly, a cow shed. The word descends from the Franco-Provençal çhalè, “herdsman’s hut,” and first appeared as chaletus in a 1328 document from the Vaud canton. For five centuries, the form did exactly one thing: stack stone at the base, notch timber walls above it, pitch a low gabled roof with overhanging eaves, keep animals on the ground floor, and keep cheese-making upstairs. It was a summer structure, abandoned every winter.

It took Rousseau’s 1761 Julie to romanticize Swiss pastoral life so completely that English aristocrats began building chalets as garden follies, and it took Charlotte Perriand, who spent 20 years cantilevering 140 apartments into a Savoie mountainside at Les Arcs, to prove the form could be modern.

Somewhere between Rousseau and Perriand, the chalet splintered into a hundred regional dialects, from hütte in Austria to baita in the Dolomites, from bothy in the Scottish Highlands to hytte in Norway, ryokan in Japan’s mountain onsen towns to refugio in Patagonia. Each encodes a different relationship between shelter and slope, domesticity and altitude, but the grammar stays legible in timber, stone, pitched roof, and epic views. The conversation has since gone global and year-round. Below, a dozen properties that speak it fluently.

Rustic dining room with wooden furniture, candles on the table, and vintage decor hanging from the ceiling.
Chesa Marchetta Restaurant. Photo: Dave Watts

1. Chesa Marchetta | Sils Maria, Switzerland

Twenty minutes from St. Moritz, Sils Maria is where Nietzsche summered and Giacometti learned to see mountains. Iwan and Manuela Wirth have opened their second Artfarm hotel here—the exquisite follow-up to Scotland’s Fife Arms. Argentine architect Luis Laplace spent four years inside a 16th-century Engadin farmhouse whose stone-pine ceilings, sgraffito facade, and rubble walls needed restoration, not reinvention. Each of the 13 rooms boast unique designs, including environs where Philip Guston’s Stone Wall hangs beside lace curtains made using the traditional Filetstick technique, and Kentridge shares corridors with ox-blood-stained alpine chests. 

Wooden chalet with balconies against a backdrop of trees, showcasing alpine architecture in a mountainous setting.
The building that houses The Brecon is a timber chalet with ornamental fretwork facade. Photo: Courtesy of The Brecon

2. The Brecon | Adelboden, Bernese Oberland, Switzerland 

Grant Maunder first visited Adelboden in 1977 as a Welsh kid sleeping in a nuclear fallout shelter beneath a guesthouse. Something about the village stuck, because four decades later, the 1914 timber chalet with ornamental fretwork facade he and his brother Craig converted into The Brecon is their evolved “Swelsh” approach. Amsterdam studio Nicemakers drew from 1970s ski culture and midcentury modernism, filling rooms with Jean Gillon vintage chairs, bespoke Vitra sofas, Welsh slate crazy-paved floors hand-fitted by a Pembrokeshire craftsman flown in for the job, and 950 ceramic works hand-thrown by Grant’s wife, Andrea Anderson. 

Cozy living room with modern fireplace, two armchairs, large windows, and a view of a snowy landscape at dusk.
A suite with a cozy living room with a modern fireplace. Photo: Courtesy of Larch House
Snowy path leading to a modern wooden building entrance with warm outdoor lights, surrounded by trees in winter twilight.
Snowy walkway to a cabin, surrounded by trees in winter twilight. Photo: Courtesy of Larch House

3. Larch House | Whitefish, Montana

Whitefish had Glacier National Park and championship skiing, yet zero hotels a design aficionado would actually book. Tom Kundig fixed that in January 2026 with 39 keys across 10 buildings in the historic Railway District, arranged around a courtyard with boulder garden and fire pits. The property exemplifies mountain vernacular dropped into an American rail town with low-pitched rooflines, heavy timber, and local stone. Vintage Scandinavian furnishings sit beside Pendleton quilts, and a permanent collection features David Yarrow and Theodore Waddell alongside local artist Madeline Boyle’s Larch Series in every room. Enga, the signature restaurant, borrows its name and menu from Switzerland’s Engadin Valley—an apt homage for this U.S. complement.

Modern hillside house with stone and wood facade, surrounded by trees, against a backdrop of misty mountains.
The hotel’s dining room faces India’s second highest peak. Photo: Courtesy of The Kumaon

4. The Kumaon | Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Architect Pradeep Kodikara, a disciple of Geoffrey Bawa, oriented a black steel cantilevered dining room toward Nanda Devi, India’s second-highest peak. Engineered as a box truss, it projects over a 25-foot drop. Below, 10 chalets cling to a terraced ridge, alternating hand-cut stone at lower elevations with bamboo-clad fly ash brick higher up. Earthbound mass yields to lightness as the hillside rises. At peak construction, 93 workers and six mules hauled every material by hand because no road reached the site. If anyone ever wanted proof the chalet was never exclusively Alpine, here it is, clinging to a Himalayan ridge without a single self-conscious reference to Europe.

Luxurious hotel room with checkered flooring, fur-covered bed, modern furniture, large TV, and green curtains.
Room N°5 at Chalet L’Alpensia. Photo: Couresy of Perowne International

5. L’Apogée Courchevel | Courchevel, France

The Oetker Collection property, whose chalet architecture by Joseph Dirand and confidently mercurial interiors by India Mahdavi have long separated it from the Courchevel pack, has just widened the distance. This season, Kelly Wearstler, in her first European hospitality commission, redesigned the hotel’s entire dining program across five spaces for a new Beefbar residency, the brand’s latest haute-altitude outpost after Megève, Méribel, and St. Moritz. She channels what she calls a quiet Brutalist spirit through monumental timber forms and charred pine surfaces, delivering double-height acoustics around a centerpiece Edelweiss piano. A glazed ceramic panel by Pere Noguera and a custom blown-glass chandelier by Nathalie Ziegler do the heavy lifting in a room that could easily have felt like a ski lodge steakhouse. It certainly does not.

Cozy rustic dining area with fur-covered chairs, wooden table, decorative sculpture, and snowy cabin view through large windows.
An exterior terrace at the Ultima. Photo: Courtesy of the Ultima Promenade Gstaad
Cozy wooden cabin bedroom with a large bed, soft lighting, and elegant decor.
Guest accommodations at the Ultima. Photo: Courtesy of the Ultima Promenade Gstaad

6. Ultima Promenade Gstaad | Gstaad, Switzerland

On paper, a four-story residence on Gstaad’s pedestrian promenade scans like any other trophy chalet. The private spa inventory of sauna, hammam, snow shower, and lap pool does little to distinguish it from the neighbors. What does is what the timber shell contains: An exclusive Zuma partnership introduces contemporary Japanese cuisine through bespoke in-chalet dining. A collaboration with Artion Galleries offers guests curated contemporary art calibrated to individual sensibility. Built in 1962 for Prince Karim Aga Khan IV, the residence retains ornately carved timber exteriors and the full Bernese Oberland silhouette, while its interiors feature brushed bronze fireplaces, mirrored ceilings, and a nightclub with a DJ booth.

Modern hotel room with wooden interior, large window opening to a mountain view with a sunset, cozy furniture, and soft lighting.
The view at the Towersuite of the Forestis. Photo: Courtesy of Forestis Dolomites

7. Forestis Dolomites | Brixen, South Tyrol, Italy 

Brixen architect Armin Sader took the chalet and stood it on its side. His three slender timber towers, grafted onto a derelict 1912 sanatorium at 5,900 feet on Mount Plose, push the typology vertical, their mass echoing the spruce canopy rather than crouching beneath it. Constructed stayed CO₂-neutral with local stone, untreated wood, Trentino-woven fabrics, and two saplings planted for every tree felled. All 62 south-facing suites open onto the Dolomites, though the terraced restaurant is the better seat in the house. Each table steps toward glass so chef Roland Lamprecht’s foraged plates arrive with the Peitlerkofel filling the frame. The 21,500-square-foot spa channels Plose spring water, among Europe’s lightest at pH 6.6, through an infinity pool at eye level with the peaks.

Cozy wooden living room with fireplace, green sofa, and coffee table with books and decorative bowl.
The Zannier Le Chalet’s cozy Suite 12. Photo: Courtesy of Zannier Le Chalet

8. Zannier Le Chalet | Megève, France 

Arnaud Zannier came to hospitality through luxury footwear, but that shifted after purchasing Marc Veyrat’s three-Michelin-starred La Ferme de Mon Père in 2011. The restaurant kept its name but traded tasting menus for bistronomic Savoie cooking, open Thursday through Sunday only. Three alpine chalets hold 12 residential-scale suites with soft pine walls, oak floors, and wood-burning fireplaces. A Barbara Sturm spa occupies the lower level. Zannier’s portfolio now spans six properties across four continents, with Île de Bendor on the Côte d’Azur launching this summer, but Megève remains the foundational thesis.

Luxury bedroom with canopy bed, plush white bedding, wooden furniture, and mountain view through large window.
Four Seasons Megève. Photo: Courtesy of the Four Seasons Megève

9. Four Seasons Megève | Megève, France

Megève exists because Noémie de Rothschild decided, in the 1920s, that the French needed a ski resort that wasn’t St. Moritz. She hired architect Henri Jacques Le Même to build the first chalet on Mont d’Arbois, and he went further, codifying an entire vocabulary of pitched roofs, deep balconies, and timber-over-stone that the village has been speaking ever since. 

A century later, Four Seasons placed the brand’s sole European mountain hotel on those same Rothschild slopes, with direct access to the Mont d’Arbois pistes, and handed the interiors to Pierre-Yves Rochon, who shaped the George V Paris and entered the Interior Design Hall of Fame in 2025. Across four interlocking chalets and 55 rooms designed with architect Bruno Legrand, he filtered Le Même’s Art Deco geometry through Philippe Hurel furniture, Arpin chevron textiles, and a 14,000-bottle cellar. 

Luxury mountain resort with an outdoor infinity pool, surrounded by pine trees and scenic views under a clear blue sky.
Spa and mountain view at the Rimrock Banff. Photo: Courtesy of Rimrock Banff, Emblems Collection

10. Rimrock Banff, Emblems Collection | Banff, Alberta, Canada 

Carved into rock above the Bow Valley, where elk graze at treeline, and the Rockies form a wall of glacier-capped limestone, the Rimrock opened in 1993 but never quite matched the scenery. That changes in July 2026, when the property reopens as the first Emblems Collection hotel in North America, Accor’s pinnacle brand alongside Raffles and Banyan Tree. Santa Monica-based Studio Collective leads the redesign and is adding a mountainside infinity pool cantilevered over the valley, panoramic saunas, ice immersion baths, and an expedition center programmed around the Rockies’s four-season calendar.

Indoor spa with natural rock decor and large windows overlooking snowy mountain landscape.
Indoor spa with natural rock decor overlooking snowy mountain landscape. Photo: Alex Moling
Cozy alpine cabin interior with wooden decor, overlooking snowy mountain peaks through large glass doors.
View from room 82 at Eriro. Photo: Alex Moling

11. Eriro | Ehrwald, Tyrol, Austria 

With a moniker that derives from Old High German for “entrance of the forest,” this nine-suite property takes its namesake literally. Co-owners Amelie and Dominik Posch, alongside Christina and Martin Spielmann, transformed a 1936 inn at the foot of the Zugspitze with timber expert Andreas Mader and architect Martin Gruber, who shaped three interlocking saddle roofs from wood harvested almost entirely from the owners’ surrounding forest. No CNC machines; 4,000 hand-carved cotter pins and bathtubs hewn from single tree trunks. The Ezzan restaurant cooks over an open fire with zero-waste Alpine-only sourcing, forgoing olive oil and seafood entirely. Every piece is traceable to the slope it came from.

Luxurious vintage-style lounge with plush seating, elegant chandelier, and large window illuminating the room with natural light.
The Tea Room at Ancora Cortina. Photo: Mason Rose

12. Ancora Cortina | Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy 

Cortina’s oldest hotel dates to 1826 and sits on the prime stretch of the pedestrian Corso Italia, which makes it notable that Renzo Rosso, founder of Diesel and president of OTB Group, spent upwards of $20 million acquiring it and then exceeded that on a gut renovation timed to the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. Vicky Charles of Charles & Co., formerly design director at Soho House, reduced 50 rooms to 38, all facing the Dolomites, preserving original painted ceilings and carved alpine woodwork. Molteni&C built every door, headboard, wardrobe, and reception desk as bespoke joinery. With its exceptional carved timber and mountain orientation, The Ancora exemplifies holding steady through two centuries of a town that’s continually reinventing.

Luxurious hotel room with a cozy bed and elegant bathtub, decorated with flowers and gold-accented fixtures.
Executive suite. Photo: Mason Rose