Feb 25, 2026
12 minutes
Can You Ski on All 7 Continents?
Yes, you can ski on all seven continents — but it requires strategic seasonal planning, major travel logistics, and an Antarctic expedition. This in-depth guide explains where to ski, how difficult each continent is, and what it really costs.

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Yes, you can ski on all seven continents — but completing the challenge requires a mix of commercial resort skiing, backcountry touring, and full expedition travel in Antarctica. Unlike the Seven Summits mountaineering challenge, skiing all seven continents is informal, but it has become a recognised global milestone among adventurous skiers.
To complete the objective, you must ski in:
Each continent varies dramatically in cost, access difficulty, technical requirement, and seasonality. Below is a continent-by-continent breakdown, followed by a difficulty comparison, cost model, and realistic planning framework.
North America is the most accessible and logistically straightforward continent for skiing. The United States and Canada offer world-class infrastructure, avalanche forecasting systems, lift networks, and backcountry access.
Major regions include:
Technical difficulty can range from beginner resort skiing to advanced heli-skiing or ski touring.
Cost range:
No unusual permits are required beyond standard resort access or local backcountry regulations.
For most skiers, North America is the simplest box to tick in the seven-continent objective.
South America’s ski terrain lies primarily along the Andes in Chile and Argentina. The ski season runs from June to September, making it the Northern Hemisphere’s off-season complement.
Popular destinations:
Snow reliability depends heavily on El Niño and regional storm cycles. In strong years, Andean snowfall is excellent; in weak years, coverage can be inconsistent.
Estimated cost:
Technical requirement: resort skiing is accessible to intermediates.
South America introduces seasonal complexity but remains commercially straightforward.
Europe — particularly the Alps — provides the densest network of ski resorts globally. France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy dominate the continent’s ski infrastructure.
Key advantages:
Cost range:
Europe is typically completed during December–April.
For most skiers, Europe is logistically simple and requires no expedition-level skills.
Asia’s strongest ski destinations are in Japan and parts of Central Asia.
Japan (Hokkaido, Nagano):
Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan):
Cost range:
Asia can be completed at resort level in Japan without advanced mountaineering skills.
Africa is the least developed ski continent, but skiing is possible in Morocco at Oukaïmeden in the Atlas Mountains.
Characteristics:
Cost is relatively low compared to Alpine resorts, but access requires international travel and flexible timing.
Does skiing on a small Moroccan resort count? Yes — the informal challenge simply requires skiing on the continent.
Africa is typically the easiest continent technically, but snow reliability can delay completion.
Oceania includes ski resorts in Australia and New Zealand, operating from June through September.
Australia:
New Zealand:
Estimated cost:
Oceania is commercially accessible and often combined with extended travel itineraries.
Antarctica is the defining continent of the challenge. There are no permanent ski resorts.
Skiing involves:
Access routes:
Cost range:
Permits operate under Antarctic Treaty regulations, and guiding is mandatory for most visitors.
Technical requirement:
Antarctica transforms the challenge from tourism into expedition travel.
Because ski seasons differ by hemisphere, completing the challenge requires coordinated timing.
Northern Hemisphere:
Southern Hemisphere:
Antarctica:
A realistic completion timeline often spans 2–5 years unless significant resources allow rapid travel.
Attempting to combine South America, Oceania, and Antarctica within 18 months is feasible with careful sequencing.
Poor seasonal planning is the most common failure point.
The seven continents differ in access, skill, and cost:
Easiest & lowest cost:
Moderate:
Logistically unpredictable:
High cost & expedition level:
Technical difficulty generally remains moderate until Antarctica, where glacier travel and extreme weather increase risk exposure.
Understanding this gradient helps allocate preparation time and financial planning.
Six of the seven continents can be completed using standard lift-access skiing.
Does the challenge require expert-level skiing? Not necessarily — until Antarctica.
Recreational skiers can complete:
Antarctica requires backcountry touring competence and professional guides.
The primary barrier is cost, not technical ability.
Estimated minimum cost (excluding flights):
Antarctica represents over 70% of total cost.
Without Antarctica, the challenge is expensive but manageable over multiple years.
With Antarctica, the financial barrier becomes the primary limiting factor.
Skiing on all seven continents is fully possible, but it requires:
For most skiers, the true challenge lies in accessing Antarctica rather than skiing the other six continents.
When approached methodically — beginning with accessible continents and building toward Antarctica — the seven-continent ski goal becomes achievable rather than abstract.
Skiing all seven continents is less about extreme technical skiing and more about global travel strategy, resource allocation, and disciplined planning.