How hard is Alta Via 1?
Moderate. Daily ascents of 600–1100 m, no via ferrata required, but exposure on Forcella de Zita Sud and Forcella del Lago needs steady footing. Anyone fit enough for a long week of UK hill walking can do AV1.
Classic
Alta Via 1 hut-to-hut: 120 km from Lago di Braies to Belluno in 9–11 days. Itinerary, rifugi, elevation, season and a free planner.
Alta Via 1 is the most walked of the Dolomites high routes. It runs roughly north-to-south from the turquoise Lago di Braies down to the Schiara above Belluno, linking some of the range's most photographed cirques: Croda da Lago, Tofane, Civetta, Moiazza, and the Pelmo's north wall.
It is technically the easiest of the Alte Vie — no via ferrata is mandatory — but the daily ascents are real (often 800–1200 m) and weather flips fast above 2,000 m. Most walkers spend 9 to 11 nights in rifugi between Braies and Belluno.
Steep, sustained climb out of the lake basin to a high karst plateau.
Long contouring day through the Sennes-Fanes pastures.
Forcella del Lago and Passo Falzarego; finish on the Lagazuoi cable-car ridge.
Galleria del Lagazuoi WW1 tunnel (head-torch needed), then the Cinque Torri.
Around the Croda da Lago — one of the best ridge walks of the trek.
Forcella Forada under the Pelmo, then the long traverse to Coldai.
Lago Coldai then the spectacular Civetta wall traverse.
Forcella del Camp under the Moiazza.
Longest day — Passo Duran detour or shuttle, then up to the Pramperet basin.
Forcella de Zita Sud — the exposed traverse of the trek.
Long descent through forest to the SS203 road and the Belluno bus.
Moderate. Daily ascents of 600–1100 m, no via ferrata required, but exposure on Forcella de Zita Sud and Forcella del Lago needs steady footing. Anyone fit enough for a long week of UK hill walking can do AV1.
No. AV1 is waymarked end-to-end (CAI sign #1) and the rifugi are spaced for self-guided walkers. A guide is only useful if you want to add via ferrata variants (e.g. Ivano Dibona, Cesco Tomaselli).
Most rifugi open between 15 and 25 June and close around 20 September. Snow lingers on the high passes into early July in heavy winters — check Rifugio Coldai and Pramperet directly before booking June dates.
Strong walkers combine days 1–2, 4–5, and 10–11 to finish in 7 nights. Anything shorter usually means skipping the Schiara finish and bussing from Passo Duran.
Most rifugi accept small dogs on lead with prior agreement, often in a dedicated room. Confirm at booking — a few rifugi (notably Lagazuoi) restrict pets in high season.