每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Grossarl Valley sits approximately 70 km (43 miles) south of Salzburg. On a clear day, the drive takes around 55 to 65 minutes. The route is straightforward and takes you through the Pongau region with increasingly dramatic mountain scenery as you approach the valley. Having a private driver means you arrive relaxed and ready to make the most of the day, rather than navigating unfamiliar alpine roads or coordinating a train and bus connection.
A full day is the right amount — arriving by mid-morning gives you time to explore the mountain or the gorge, stop at one of the alpine huts for a proper lunch, and still have the afternoon for a second activity before your return. If skiing is the main draw, the 70 km of pistes comfortably fill five to six hours of on-slope time. If you are combining the gorge walk with the mountain, plan for at least six hours on the ground. Your Daytrip driver can hold your luggage and meet you at an agreed time, so you are not watching the clock from mid-afternoon.
The Grossarltal-Dorfgastein ski area covers 70 km of groomed pistes served by 16 lifts, with terrain that skews toward intermediate and beginner-friendly runs. Wide, winding blue and red pistes move through forested slopes that feel scenic rather than exposed. The area added a new 10-seater gondola and a summit restaurant in 2024, giving the mountain a modern feel without losing its village character. A dedicated beginner zone in the valley includes a magic carpet and tubing carousel, making it a solid choice if you are travelling with mixed ability levels.
Non-skiers are well catered for. The illuminated toboggan run at Lammwirt is a highlight for all ages, and the valley has around 25 km of groomed cross-country trails. The Liechtensteinklamm gorge — a 4 km canyon with walls rising up to 400 metres — runs a 1.5 km walkway through tunnels, over bridges, and down a dramatic spiral staircase called the Helix. There is also a leisure centre with a swimming pool and slides in Grossarl village itself. A day here works for groups where not everyone wants to be on skis.
Grossarl Valley delivers an authentic Austrian alpine experience that feels genuinely removed from the tourist trail. Part of the Ski amade network — one of Europe's largest ski regions with 760 km of slopes — the valley pairs serious mountain terrain with a warm, unhurried atmosphere. The landscape is dotted with traditional alpine huts serving homemade regional food, and the Liechtensteinklamm gorge at the valley entrance is one of the longest and deepest canyon walks in the Alps. Whether you come for the skiing, the scenery, or the huts, there is enough variety to fill a full day without any filler.
Public transport connections to Grossarl require a train to St. Johann im Pongau followed by a bus, which adds time and complexity — particularly on the return when you are tired. With a private Daytrip transfer, you travel directly door-to-door on your schedule, with no luggage to haul onto platforms or connection times to stress over. If you want to stop at the Liechtensteinklamm gorge on the way in or out, your driver can accommodate that without any rebooking. For a mountain destination where the day's enjoyment starts the moment you leave, the convenience makes a clear difference.