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When summer heat becomes suffocating, most travelers head for breezy beaches — but true travel pros look up to the mountains. Up there, millennia-old, pristine snow still shimmers even as the sun draws near.
Down below, tourists mill around in T-shirts, but a 20-minute cable car ride lifts you into subzero air and wide-open snowfields. Here are the can’t-miss perennial-snow spots you can reach from the heart of Europe.
Chamonix–Mont Blanc, France

Mont Blanc straddles France, Italy and Switzerland, and its name literally means “white mountain.” The clearest, easiest way to see Mont Blanc’s permanent snow is to take the cable car from Chamonix up to the Aiguille du Midi viewpoint.
The cable car rockets you to 3,842 m (about 12,599 ft), where massive glaciers and snowfields drape the rock faces. If you’re nervous about heights, be cautious on the glass observation deck — the plunging drops can unsettle even seasoned travelers.
Another highlight is the Mer de Glace, the “sea of ice.” Hop on the mountain train to enter a glacier cave carved fresh each year.
※The viewpoint is roughly 20°C (36°F) colder than the town below. If the village feels hot, don’t dress too lightly — pack a lightweight down jacket or windbreaker. Also, the sun reflects strongly off the snow, so high-quality sunglasses are essential.
Zermatt, Switzerland

The Matterhorn — a Swiss icon recognizable from the Paramount Global film studio logo — crowns Zermatt and offers some of the Alps’ most spectacular perennial-snow scenery. Here you’ll find Europe’s highest cable-car station, the Glacier Paradise.
Even in midsummer, people flock here to ski and snowboard, enjoying warm sunshine with firm, compact snow underfoot — a surreal, very Swiss experience. A glacier-cave tour gives a vivid sense of ice shaped over millennia.
No hiking required: ride the Gornergrat mountain train to relax and take in the Alpine snow. If you’re an experienced hiker, get off at Rotenboden and trek to Riffelsee — the upside-down reflection of the Matterhorn on the lake makes for an unforgettable photo.
※Zermatt limits motor traffic to electric vehicles to protect the environment — so from the moment you step off the train at the village station, breathe in the crisp air and the cool breeze blowing down from the snowfields.
Dachstein, Austria

The Dachstein glacier, near Hallstatt in Salzburg, is one of the Eastern Alps’ most iconic perennial-snow areas. What makes it special is how human imagination has layered structures atop the natural snowfields.
Most notable is the Skywalk, perched on a cliff edge at 2,700 m (about 8,858 ft), with vertigo-inducing views of snowy valleys below. You can also explore dead-end staircases and an Ice Palace carved inside the glacier.
※You must reserve the Dachstein cable car in advance. Consider pairing the trip with nearby Hallstatt for a doable day trip!
Perennial snow is one of Earth’s most special gifts — but climate change is slowly melting these vast ice gems. As you soak in these wonders, consider supporting conservation efforts so future generations can experience them too, and leave with a renewed appreciation for nature’s power and fragility.











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