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Jan 10, 2026

Avalanche Risk Raised to Level 4, Triggering Mobility Alerts in Valais and Beyond

Avalanche Risk Raised to Level 4, Triggering Mobility Alerts in Valais and Beyond
MeteoSwiss and the WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF) have upgraded avalanche danger to Level 4 ("high") across much of Valais and adjacent alpine cantons from 8 to 10 January. The warning follows two days of heavy snowfall and biting winds that have already closed secondary roads and prompted Swiss Federal Railways to prepare speed restrictions on mountain lines.([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-08/ch/high-avalanche-danger-in-valais-prompts-federal-transport-warnings-for-8-10-january/?utm_source=openai))

Tourism boards in Crans-Montana—still coping with the reputational fallout from the deadly nightclub fire—have asked hoteliers to brief guests on safe routes and discourage off-piste skiing. Mountain-rescue teams report a spike in call-outs as visitors underestimate wind-slab formation on popular back-country trails.([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-08/ch/high-avalanche-danger-in-valais-prompts-federal-transport-warnings-for-8-10-january/?utm_source=openai))

Business-travel itineraries are also in flux. The cantonal police reserve the right to halt heavy-goods convoys on the Simplon and Lötschberg corridors if snow accumulation exceeds 30 cm, a move that would slow just-in-time deliveries to northern Italy. Geneva-based charter brokers say any further closure of alpine passes will funnel VIP traffic onto already constrained slots at Sion and Bern.

Avalanche Risk Raised to Level 4, Triggering Mobility Alerts in Valais and Beyond


For travel managers juggling sudden reroutes, VisaHQ’s Switzerland portal (https://www.visahq.com/switzerland/) can take the administrative sting out of crisis planning by expediting visa applications, securing same-day passport pick-ups in Bern and providing real-time entry-requirement updates—all services that let teams focus on avalanche safety rather than paperwork.

Companies with staff in ski resorts should issue duty-of-care reminders: validate travel-insurance cover for off-piste accidents, distribute the REGA rescue-app link and confirm that employees carry avalanche transceivers. Tour managers have been told to keep buses below 1,600 m overnight and to stock emergency blankets and chains.

The good news: synoptic charts show the storm moving east by early Sunday. Until then, corporates should treat the Valais region as a ‘watch zone’, postpone discretionary site visits and verify that any urgent visa pickups in Bern or Lausanne occur before afternoon courier cut-offs.
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