Catered vs Self-Catered Chalets: The Real Cost Comparison

Catered vs Self-Catered Chalets: The Real Cost Comparison

A catered chalet looks more expensive on paper. Once you add up groceries, restaurants, and wine, the maths gets interesting.

A catered chalet looks more expensive on paper. £1,200pp for the week against £700pp self-catered for the same property — the catered premium seems obvious. Then you start adding up groceries, restaurants, and wine, and the maths gets a lot more interesting.

What "catered" actually includes

A standard catered week, by most British chalet operators:

  • Breakfast every day — usually cooked, often impressively so
  • Afternoon tea with home-baked cake when you come off the mountain
  • Three-course dinner six nights a week with house wine included
  • One staff day off (usually Wednesday) — you're on your own for dinner that night

That's roughly 19 meals plus wine for the week per person.

The real cost of self-catering

Take an 8-person chalet in Morzine for a peak week. Self-catered headline price: £700pp. Now add:

| Item | Per person | Notes | |---|---|---| | Supermarket food shop | £140 | Auchan run on Sunday | | Restaurant dinners (3 nights) | £180 | Allowing £60pp/night including wine | | On-mountain lunches × 6 | £150 | Tartiflette costs more than you think | | Wine/beer for the chalet | £80 | Conservative | | Catered breakfast you wish you had × 7 | £0 | But also no croissants | | Total food/drink | £550 | | | All-in self-catered | £1,250 | |

Compare that to catered at £1,200pp all-in, plus three lunches on the mountain (£75) — call it £1,275 total.

Catered is, on these numbers, about £25 more expensive. For which you get: no shopping, no cooking, no washing up, someone else figuring out the menu, and consistent wine pours.

When self-catered makes sense

The numbers swing in favour of self-catering in three scenarios:

  1. You have a serious cook in the group who'd rather cook than ski some afternoons
  2. You're a couple or a family of four — economies of scale work against you when chalet hosts price per person
  3. You're staying in a resort with great restaurants you actually want to visit (Megève, St Anton, Verbier)

When catered is the obvious call

  • Mixed groups where someone always wants something different
  • Families with small children where dinner-time is a battlefield
  • First-time chalet holiday — the all-inclusive experience is what people remember
  • You earn more than the host's cook saves you — your time off skiing has a value

The hidden third option

A growing number of hosts offer part-catered weeks: breakfast and one or two dinners, with the kitchen yours the rest of the time. Often the best value-for-experience of the three. Filter for "flexible catering" when you search chalets to find them.