Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere
Started by TheoBane in France 09-Nov-2009 - 31 Replies
Dorset Boy
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
Unfortunately, £Sterling is now a basket case having fallen from Euro1.6 / 1.0 £ to 1.07 / 1.0 now. That's the main reason we're finding France so expensive as we all convert back into £ at the current rate.
TheoBane
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
Frostbite
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
NellyPS
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
And you can always furnish yourself with extra breakfast to make some lunch :twisted:
TheoBane
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
AllyG
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
I have some of my receipts here, from a couple of weeks ago.
One hot chocolate in Starbucks (the cheapest place we could find) in Geneva airport - 2 euros
One fanta in ditto - 3 euros
Conversion rate - 1 euro = 1.45 Swiss francs.
Lunch in the mountain restaurant at Tignes at the top of the funicular - one plate of chips and mixed vegetables plus one bottle of water = 15 euros (food was cheaper at the bottom, in Val Claret - some people actually went down for lunch!). At 15 euros for lunch each day you would be spending about 200 euros over 2 weeks.
You could stuff yourself internally at breakfast when there, and pack some lightweight cereal bars and bring them out from home if you really want to economize?
Ally
TheoBane
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
Wanderer
reply to 'Prices of Food and Drink in Val D'isere' posted Nov-2009
In my experience, you can eat and drink, not cheaply, but reasonably if you look around. A couple of tips:
- look for menu du jour in the restaurants - these are usually good quality and good value;
- as somebody has suggested, keep an eye out for happy hours but beware of rising prices after happy hour while you should aim to survive on just 1 drink if you venture into the nightclubs (where prices of €10 a drink or more are likely). Apart from the up-market spots/nightclubs, you should be able to get a pint of beer for €6 max in most bars or less during happy hour;
- do not order a bottle of water with lunch - there is absolutely no need and you will rarely see the French do it. Just ask for a carafe d'eau like the locals and get a nice big bottle of lovely cold tap water for free. It really galls me to pay €3 for a small bottle of water.
- watch out for coffee/hot chocolates: I love a coffee after my lunch but it can be a bit much to pay €4 a pop, even if it is very good :shock:
Anyway, best of luck and enjoy yourself. I am very jealous of you getting two weeks on the slopes this early in the season :lol:
Topic last updated on 11-November-2009 at 08:34