10 High-Altitude Lakes in the Écrins and the Story Behind the Postcard

Lac Bleu Valgaudemar

Altimood, Updated on

Turquoise water at 2,500 m, total silence, nobody on the trail at 7 AM. Or 200 tents pitched along the shore on an August Saturday. The lakes of the Écrins are both of these things. It all depends on when and how you get there.

As mountain guides based in the Southern Alps, we're not going to pretend we're revealing secret spots. These lakes are well-known, well-documented, and some are suffering from overcrowding in peak summer. We're sharing them anyway: hiding a place doesn't protect it, but knowing it well does. The real problem is everyone showing up at the same time, without knowing the alternatives, sometimes with inappropriate behavior (fires, wild camping, swimming, disturbing wildlife). Our role on the ground is to dig into what lies behind the postcard and to shift schedules, choose less-traveled routes, and suggest 2-3 day combinations that spread out the pressure.

This selection is inevitably subjective, built on hundreds of outings across all seasons. For each lake, we note its crowding level and, where relevant, the best times or routes to enjoy it in peace, plus a few pointers for getting past the clichés and discovering less obvious aspects.

#LakeElevationTrailheadDurationElev. GainDifficulty
1Lac de Lauvitel1,530 mLa Danchère1h30+500 m2/5
2Lac de la Muzelle2,105 mVénosc4-5h+1,200 m4/5
3Lac d'Eychauda2,514 mChambran (Pelvoux)2-2h30+800 m3/5
4Lac du Glacier d'Arsine2,450 mCol du Lautaret3-3h30+450 m2/5
5Lacs de Pétarel2,080 mLa Chapelle / Andrieux3-5h+850 to +1,500 m4/5
6Lac du Lauzon2,008 mGioberney1h+450 m1/5
7Lacs de Crupillouse2,630 mLes Baumes4-5h+1,400 m4/5
8Lac Lautier2,360 mVillar-Loubière4-4h30+1,350 m4/5
9Lac du Goléon2,438 mValfroide1h30+570 m2/5
10Lac Lérié (Emparis)2,410 mLe Chazelet1h30-2h+450 m2/5

Lac de Lauvitel: the giant of the Écrins

Lauvitel is the largest natural lake in the Écrins massif. Covering 35 hectares with depths exceeding 60 meters, it sits in a glacial basin above the Vénéon valley at 1,530 m elevation.

The trail starts from the hamlet of La Danchère, near Bourg-d'Oisans. Count on 1h30 of climbing for about 500 m of elevation gain. The path is steep in places but well-marked, doable for occasional hikers in good shape. Suitable for families with children aged 7-8 and up.

The lake sits at the entrance to a strict nature reserve of the same name. Due to the heavy foot traffic at the site, Park rangers enforce close surveillance. Check with the local tourist office for any regulations currently in effect.

Behind the postcard, Lauvitel is a scientific site. The strict nature reserve, created in 1995 across 689 hectares, is classified IUCN Category 1a (the most restrictive). The CNRS has been tracking ecosystem evolution here without human intervention for over 30 years. The lake level fluctuates by 20 meters depending on the season, a rare phenomenon in alpine environments. Around 50 bird species have been recorded, micromammals have been monitored since 1992, and alpine meadow diversity increased between 1998 and 2014. This is what makes the restrictions less frustrating once you understand them: you're walking through a space where nature is observed, not simply decorated.

Practical info: 1h30 hike from La Danchère (Bourg-d'Oisans), 500 m elevation gain, moderate difficulty. Accessible June to October. Free parking at the trailhead.

800 m1000 m1200 m1400 m1600 m0 km2 km4 km6 km8 kmLac de Lauvitel · 1530 m

To extend the day, a loop hike passing by both Muzelle and Lauvitel lakes offers a more demanding circuit (about 6-7h) with open views above the lake. You can also combine Lauvitel and Muzelle over 2 days with bivouac or with a night at the Refuge de la Muzelle.

Lac de la Muzelle

At 2,105 m elevation, Lac de la Muzelle occupies a stark corrie beneath the Roche de la Muzelle (3,465 m). It's the stop on the GR54, the Grand Tour des Écrins, that tempts you to take a rest day before wrapping up the circuit. The Refuge de la Muzelle, perched at the lake's edge, welcomes hikers from June to September.

From Vénosc (reachable by gondola from Les Deux Alpes), the ascent takes 4 to 5 hours through the Muzelle valley. The trail passes first through larch forest before opening onto alpine pastures, then the lake. It's long and steep in spots, but arriving at the lake makes it worth the effort.

Behind the postcard, Muzelle is a lake under scientific watch. It belongs to the Lacs Sentinelles network, an observatory tracking 34 high-altitude lakes in the Alps to measure the impact of global changes. Between 2021 and 2023, the National Park and the OFB (French Biodiversity Office) conducted an in-depth study here. Only two fish species inhabit the lake (Arctic char and brown trout), both reproducing naturally since stocking ceased in 1996, though their growth remains slow due to limited food supply. The lake shows signs of warming: rising water temperatures, shorter ice-cover periods, and a downward trend in deep-water oxygen levels. Good news for now: neither pastoralism nor tourist activity appears to have measurable impact on the aquatic communities.

The lake has made headlines in recent years for another reason: summer overcrowding. Up to 200 tents on some August weekends, with the sanitary and ecological problems that implies. The National Park has since tightened camping regulations in this area. If you're heading up on your own, check the current rules before you go.

The Muzelle-Lauvitel loop via the Col du Vallon is a classic 2-day outing that we offer as part of our weekend refuge trips in the Écrins.

Lac d'Eychauda

Perched at 2,514 m, Lac d'Eychauda sits in a closed glacial cirque, tucked between the Montagne des Agneaux and the Dôme de Monêtier. The feel is mineral, austere, very different from the other lakes on this list.

The most common approach is from the Chambran parking area (Pelvoux, Vallouise valley): about 2h to 2h30 of climbing for 800 m of elevation gain. You can also reach it from Le Monêtier-les-Bains (Serre Chevalier) via the Col d'Eychauda (2,425 m), a longer route (3h, 900 m gain) over rockier terrain that climbs back up from the col to the lake (90 m additional gain).

Practical info: 2h-2h30 from Chambran (Pelvoux), 800 m elevation gain, intermediate difficulty. Alternative via Le Monêtier: 3h, 900 m gain. Accessible July to September.

Behind the postcard, Eychauda is a lake with near-polar conditions. It stays frozen 9 to 10 months per year, and icebergs sometimes persist until August. Unlike most alpine lakes, it's not retained by a moraine but by a granite bedrock sill. Its outlet stream doesn't stay on the surface: the water vanishes into a network of faults and scree. Fed by the Séguret-Foran glacier, its waters are loaded with rock flour, low on oxygen in winter, and the lake is classified as oligotrophic (extremely nutrient-poor). A few trout survive here, descendants of stocking from the 1950s-60s, but the environment remains inhospitable. The biological window is limited to 2-3 months per year.

This is a less-visited lake than Lauvitel or Muzelle. You'll mostly encounter experienced hikers and the occasional mountaineer heading for the glaciers.

Lac du Glacier d'Arsine

Lac du Glacier d'Arsine is a proglacial lake, formed by the retreat of the Arsine glacier over recent decades. Its milky color, loaded with sediment, shifts with light and season. It sits at 2,450 m elevation in a vast mineral cirque ringed by moraines.

The hike starts from the Col du Lautaret (2,058 m) along the Sentier des Crevasses, a balcony trail above the valley. Count on 3h to 3h30 of walking for about 450 m of elevation gain. The modest elevation gain is deceptive: the distance is long (7-8 km one way) and the terrain uneven.

Practical info: 3h-3h30 from Col du Lautaret, 450 m elevation gain, moderate difficulty but long distance (7-8 km one way). Accessible July to September.

1500 m2000 m2500 m0 km5 km10 km15 kmCol d'Arsine · 2340 mLac d'Arsine · 2450 m

Behind the postcard, Lac d'Arsine nearly caused a disaster. Formed by glacial retreat, it was held back by a massive moraine system inherited from the Little Ice Age (1550-1850). By 1985, the lake covered 6 hectares with 800,000 m³ of water, and its level was rising about 50 cm per year. The moraine threatened to give way, with the village of Le Casset downstream. In spring 1986, emergency works lowered and stabilized the level. The lake remains under surveillance today.

The Arsine glacier has become a "black glacier": covered in rock debris that insulates it and slows its melting. Its moraine system is considered one of the best-preserved in the western Alps. It's an iconic site for hiking in the Écrins and seeing glacier evolution up close.

Lacs de Pétarel

The Lacs de Pétarel occupy a hanging valley above the Valgaudemar, between 2,080 and 2,100 m elevation. Two main lakes sit at the back of a cliff-walled cirque, with a plunging view over the valley below.

The climb is tough: between 850 and 1,500 m of elevation gain depending on your starting point (Andrieux, Les Portes, or l'Ubac). Count on 3 to 5 hours of hiking. This is a demanding outing, best saved for days when you're feeling strong.

Behind the postcard, Pétarel has been monitored for about twenty years as part of the Lacs Sentinelles network. In 2009 and again in 2017, minnows were detected in the lakes, a surprising find at this altitude. Since 2022, a team from Aix-Marseille University and the National Park has been studying the distribution of these fish: they've been found in two ponds connected to the main lake and in the outflow up to 200-300 m below. The site also harbors alpine newts and dragonflies (common hawker). An initial hydrobiological study of the lake dates back to 1996, making it one of the best-documented high-altitude lakes in the massif.

We've written a full article on this route: Randonnée aux Lacs de Pétarel with GPX track, route alternatives, and practical tips.

Lac du Lauzon and Lac Bleu

From the Chalet-Hôtel du Gioberney, Lac du Lauzon (2,008 m) is reached in 1 hour of walking. The trail is well-marked and the elevation gain modest (about 450 m as a loop including Lac Bleu). It's one of the most accessible hikes in the Écrins for reaching a high-altitude lake.

Lac Bleu, situated a bit higher up, naturally completes the loop. The two lakes have little in common: Lauzon is a green, shallow lake that verges on a pond with its aquatic vegetation, while Lac Bleu lives up to its name with its deep blue water.

Behind the postcard, Lauzon is a glacial over-deepening lake, carved roughly 10,000 years ago into gneiss fractured by a north-south fault. It's what's called a "grassland lake": thawed 4 to 5 months per year, it benefits from relatively mild conditions for the altitude. Aquatic vegetation is abundant here, a sign of good biological productivity. Around the lake, peat bogs bordered by cotton grass round out the picture. Chamois are regularly spotted in the early morning.

You can find the detailed route, GPX track, and alternatives in our dedicated article: Lac Lauzon et Lac Bleu.

Lacs de Crupillouse

Less well-known than their neighbors in the Valgaudemar, the Lacs de Crupillouse are well worth the detour. Sitting at roughly 2,630 m in the Champoléon valley, they offer a wild, preserved setting far from the crowds at the classic destinations.

The standard starting point is from the hamlet of Les Baumes (around 1,300 m). The hike takes 4 to 5 hours for nearly 1,400 m of elevation gain. This is one of the most physically demanding "lake hikes" in the massif. The trail follows the Crupillouse torrent valley, first through forest, then across alpine pastures before reaching the lakes.

Practical info: 4-5h from Les Baumes (Champoléon), 1,400 m elevation gain, sustained difficulty. Accessible July to September.

1500 m2000 m2500 m0 km5 km10 km15 kmLacs de Crupillouse · 2715 m

Behind the postcard, Crupillouse is one of the best sites for witnessing glacial erosion in the Écrins. The cirque was freed from ice relatively recently in geological terms: the rock is still barely weathered, pale, almost lunar. The lakes are over-deepening lakes, separated by rounded humps covered in glacial polish (those smooth surfaces sculpted by the passage of glaciers). The bedrock consists of augen gneiss, rocks with large feldspar crystals that give the site its white-pink hue. The area is also a good spot for observing chamois and ibex, and the rock ptarmigan nests in the scree around the lakes.

Lac Lautier

Lac Lautier, at 2,360 m above Villar-Loubière in the Valgaudemar, is one of those lakes you stumble upon almost by surprise. Less commonly found in guidebooks, it mostly draws regulars of the massif.

The climb from Villar-Loubière (around 1,000 m) takes 4h to 4h30 for over 1,350 m of elevation gain. The trail passes through larch forests, by the Refuge des Souffles (1,968 m, a good intermediate stop), then continues to the alpine meadow around the lake.

1000 m1500 m2000 m2500 m0 km5 km10 km15 kmLac Lautier · 2363 m

Lac du Goléon

Lac du Goléon (2,438 m): on a clear day, the Meije (3,983 m) and its glaciers reflect in the lake's waters, with the Aiguilles d'Arves behind. It's the photo everyone has seen, and the August crowds come with the territory.

The hike starts from the hamlet of Valfroide, above La Grave. The ascent takes about 1h30 for 570 m of elevation gain. The trail is well-marked and accessible to most hikers, including families with children from age 6-7. The Refuge du Goléon, staffed in summer, lets you extend the trip with a night on-site.

Practical info: 1h30 hike from Valfroide (La Grave), 570 m elevation gain, moderate difficulty. Accessible June to October. Staffed refuge in summer (19 places, reservation recommended).

Behind the postcard, Lac du Goléon is not entirely natural. A dam was built in 1965 on the site of a former glacial lake, creating a body of water of about 10 hectares and 2 meters deep. A larger dam project had been studied by EDF but was never completed. Above the lake, the Glacier Lombard's alluvial plain forms a sandur (glacial outwash plain), one of the best-preserved in the French Alps. You'll find pioneer Arctic plant formations there, inherited from Quaternary glacial advances, protected under Natura 2000 (site "Plateau d'Emparis - Goléon", 7,476 ha). These habitats are fragile: some visitors carve names and dates into the rock slabs, trails get widened by people cutting switchbacks, and unleashed dogs disturb wildlife (chamois, black grouse, rock ptarmigan). This is a site where every hiker's behavior matters.

Plateau d'Emparis: Lac Lérié and Lac Noir

The Plateau d'Emparis is a vast alpine grassland perched between 2,000 and 2,500 m, facing the north side of the Meije. Lac Lérié (2,410 m) and Lac Noir (2,457 m) punctuate this crossing. In calm weather, the Meije's glaciers reflect in their waters.

The shortest access starts from the Le Chazelet parking area, above La Grave. Count on 1h30 to 2h to reach Lac Lérié. The full traverse of the plateau to Besse-en-Oisans (1,500 m) makes for a solid day of walking (5-6h, about 15 km). Once on the plateau, the route is mostly a gentle downhill. The challenge is more about distance than elevation. The terrain is open, no technical difficulty, but exposed to wind and weather.

Practical info: 1h30-2h from Le Chazelet to Lac Lérié, 450 m elevation gain, moderate difficulty. Full traverse to Besse: 5-6h, 15 km, mostly downhill after the lakes. Accessible June to October.

Hike to these lakes with a guide

All these lakes are accessible as day hikes or over 2-3 days. To discover them with a mountain guide who knows the quiet hours and less-traveled alternatives, we offer several options:

See all our hiking trips in the Écrins.

Frequently asked questions about Écrins lakes

Can you swim in the Écrins lakes?

In the core area of the National Park, swimming is not formally banned but is strongly discouraged. High-altitude lakes are fragile environments: the flora and small fauna living in them are sensitive to disturbance, sunscreen degrades water quality, and swimming itself is dangerous (cold water, unsupervised, potentially contaminated by animal remains).

In the Park's buffer zone, several municipalities have issued local ordinances that outright ban swimming:

To cool off in summer, there are designated swimming areas in the valleys around the massif: Lac du Casset, Lac de la Roche-de-Rame, plan d'eau d'Embrun, Lac de Serre-Ponçon, the Orcières leisure center, plan d'eau de Valbonnais, plan d'eau du Champsaur, and Lac de la Buissonnière at Les Deux Alpes.

When is the best time to hike to the lakes?

Most lakes are accessible on foot from late June to early October. July and August offer the most stable conditions but also the heaviest crowds. September is often the best compromise: fewer people, raking light, heather turning red, and larches starting to yellow. The lower lakes (Lauvitel, Lauzon) are accessible from June. For the highest ones (Eychauda, Crupillouse, Emparis), you need to wait for the snowfields to melt, often early July.

Which lakes are family-friendly?

Lac du Lauzon (1h walk, easy trail) and Lac du Goléon (1h30, well-marked trail) are the best suited for families with children. Lac de Lauvitel also works from age 7-8, even though the climb is steep. Lac du Glacier d'Arsine, with its low elevation gain from the Col du Lautaret, is another good option for kids who are used to walking.

Yes. The Muzelle-Lauvitel loop via the Col du Vallon takes 2 days. Our Valgaudemar bivouac trip links Pétarel, Lauzon, and Lautier over 3 days. The Écrins Traverse in 5 days passes by several of these lakes. The GR54 is the full circuit for seeing (almost) all of them.

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