REVIEW · LIVIGNO AND BORMIO
Private Snowboard Lessons
Book on Viator →Operated by Maestri di sci Livigno · Bookable on Viator
One-on-one snow coaching changes everything. These private snowboard lessons in the Livigno and Bormio area put a Snowboard Master at your side for step-by-step technique work, not generic group drifting. I love the 1-hour minimum that lets you scale up (or keep it short), and I love that lessons are built for all levels, with your first slope chosen based on your ability.
The only real drawback to plan around is cost creep: equipment rental and the ski pass are not included, so your total will depend on what you still need to book.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Care About
- Private Snowboard Coaching in Livigno and Bormio: What You Actually Get
- How the 1-Hour-Plus Lesson Works for Beginners Through Advanced
- Finding Your Instructor and Starting on the Right Slope
- Price and Value: Is $39.10 Per Person a Smart Deal?
- What to Bring (and Why Equipment and Ski Pass Matter for Your Budget)
- Using Time Wisely: Picking Hours per Day and Days to Go Further
- English-Friendly Teaching and Small-Group Dynamics
- Meet Maria, Serena, and Gianmarco: Instruction Style You’ll Likely Feel
- Should You Book Private Snowboard Lessons in Livigno and Bormio?
- FAQ
- How long is the private snowboard lesson?
- Is this a private tour or shared lesson?
- What skill levels are these lessons for?
- What is included in the price?
- What is not included?
- Where do we meet for the lesson?
- Is the lesson offered in English?
- When will I get confirmation after booking?
- Can I get a refund if I cancel?
Key Highlights You’ll Care About

- Private, small-group setup: max 6 people, and it works best when levels and ages match if you share
- All levels welcome: beginners to advanced, with your starting point set by skill
- Flexible time: 1-hour minimum, with options for more hours per day and more days
- English instruction available: helpful if you want clear explanations, not guesswork
- Instructor names you’ll see often: Maria, Serena, and Gianmarco are repeatedly praised
- Great rating signal: 4.9 overall with 14 reviews and 100% recommendation reported
Private Snowboard Coaching in Livigno and Bormio: What You Actually Get

This is not a “watch and hope” situation. You’ll have a professional Snowboard instructor who stays with you through the learning phases, teaching technique in a way that matches what you can do right now. If you’ve ever felt lost on a board, this format is built to remove that.
You also get a lesson that can follow your pace. The instruction is designed for beginners and more experienced riders, which matters because snowboarding changes fast once you’re past the basics. And since the starting point is defined by your level, you should spend your first minutes where you can actually learn instead of getting stuck at the wrong difficulty.
The big value here is attention. In snow sports, the difference between feeling awkward and feeling in control is usually one or two body adjustments, the right drill, and fast feedback. Private coaching is the fastest way to get those.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Livigno and Bormio.
How the 1-Hour-Plus Lesson Works for Beginners Through Advanced

Your lesson has a minimum of about 1 hour, but you choose how much you want beyond that. That flexibility is useful if you’re:
- starting from zero and want time to build confidence slowly
- improving a specific problem (turning, edge control, stopping)
- coming back after a break and want to fix old habits
Here’s the typical rhythm you can expect from a well-run snowboard lesson like this: the instructor begins by assessing your current setup and movement patterns, then guides you step by step through drills. You practice, they watch, and they adjust. This “follow you and correct” style is repeatedly emphasized in the instructor feedback tied to the program.
If you’re a beginner, the goal is usually safety and control first: getting comfortable on the board, learning how to balance, and making your movement less random. If you’re beyond the first-timer stage, the coaching often shifts toward cleaner technique, better positioning, and smarter lines. Some riders specifically mention improvements in areas like descending more safely and understanding how small fixes change everything.
And yes, it’s still private even though the activity can include up to 6 people. The key is that the teaching is structured for the group’s needs, and if more than one person is sharing, your level and age should be as similar as possible so the lesson can stay effective.
Finding Your Instructor and Starting on the Right Slope

Your starting point is set according to your level. That detail matters more than it sounds. If you’re placed at a slope that’s too steep too early, you burn time bracing and panicking. If you’re placed somewhere too easy, you plateau.
So even before you ride much, you’ll likely get that first adjustment: where to practice, what skills to focus on, and how to progress from there. The program also runs in the Livigno and Bormio area, so you’re coaching within a real ski setting rather than an abstract lesson concept.
Check-in is at Maestri di Sci e Snowboard Livigno, Via Saroch 810, 23041 Livigno (SO), Italy. The lesson ends back at the meeting point, which keeps the day simple. Also, it’s near public transportation, so you’re not stuck trying to solve complicated logistics right before you gear up.
You’ll get a mobile ticket, which usually means you can keep everything on your phone and show it at check-in without digging through paperwork.
Price and Value: Is $39.10 Per Person a Smart Deal?

The headline price is $39.10 per person for a lesson around 1 hour. That can feel surprisingly reasonable for private instruction, especially because the key cost is the instructor time, not a giant group bus tour.
But here’s the honest value equation: the lesson is only one line item. Equipment rental and the ski pass are not included, so your total will be higher if you need to rent a board and buy lift access. If you already have your own snowboard setup and you’re planning to ride anyway, your effective cost drops fast.
Also, this activity supports small-group use. The max is 6 people, and there are group discounts, so if you can share with others who are close to your level, you may get better value than booking solo. That said, sharing only helps if the levels and ages are similar, because the lesson works best when it can move at a consistent learning pace.
Bottom line: this looks like a strong value when you want real progress quickly, especially if you’re willing to spend more than one hour. If your plan is purely “try it once, maybe cruise down,” a longer multi-day block might not be necessary. But if you want to change how you ride, you’ll usually get your money back in fewer wrong attempts.
What to Bring (and Why Equipment and Ski Pass Matter for Your Budget)

The instructor is included. The board rental and ski pass are not.
So before you show up, sort these two things:
- your snowboard setup (or confirm rental directly if you need it)
- your ski pass for the time you plan to ride
This matters because it changes how your day flows. If you arrive without the right pass, you lose time at the exact moment you want to start practicing. If you haven’t rented or adjusted your bindings, you may spend the first lesson fighting gear instead of learning technique.
If you’re traveling light, do a quick check: do you have warm base layers, gloves, and a helmet? The program notes that most travelers can participate, but snow safety is on you. A private lesson goes faster when you can focus on movement, not cold discomfort.
Using Time Wisely: Picking Hours per Day and Days to Go Further

You can choose how many hours per day and for how many days, with a minimum duration of 1 hour. That’s a big deal because snowboarding is a skill sport. You don’t just learn one moment; you build reliable movement patterns.
If you’re aiming for a noticeable step up, consider how learning stacks:
- One short session can correct your biggest mistakes.
- Two or more sessions give you a chance to practice what you learn and build confidence.
- Multiple days is where technique tends to become natural instead of “remembered.”
Some riders in the program context describe major progress over several days, including getting comfortable enough to ride more advanced terrain safely. Even if your goals are smaller, extra hours help your instructor run different drills in a way that one hour can’t.
And if you’re nervous at the start, extra time is not wasted. Your first session often includes learning how to fall safely and how to manage speed and balance. Once those are under control, you progress faster in the next hours.
English-Friendly Teaching and Small-Group Dynamics

This experience is offered in English, which is a practical advantage. In snowboard lessons, the best teaching is not just what you do, but why you’re doing it. Clear cues make it easier to fix issues on the next run.
It’s also a small-group experience in the sense that it can include multiple people. The max is 6, with a minimum of 1. If you do share, the program asks that levels and ages be as similar as possible. That guidance is smart: mixing a total beginner with an advanced rider often forces the instructor to slow down, or it leaves one person bored while the other person struggles.
If you’re traveling as a couple or a small group, this setup can work well when you’re truly at the same stage. If you’re not, consider going solo (or splitting into separate lessons) so your instructor can pitch the lesson at the right difficulty without compromise.
Meet Maria, Serena, and Gianmarco: Instruction Style You’ll Likely Feel

The names that come up most often are Maria, Serena, and Gianmarco. And across the praise, a few teaching strengths show up again and again: patience, clarity, humor, and coaching that works even when riders start at different levels.
Maria is praised for giving solid advice even to riders who already have a good level. That matters because private lessons are sometimes booked by “almost there” snowboarders who need fine-tuning rather than full basics.
Serena comes up with a consistent theme: energy, patience, and serious technique teaching without making the lesson stiff. One standout idea you can take from that style is that learning snowboarding doesn’t have to feel like homework. You can get better while still enjoying the day.
Gianmarco is noted for both practical and theoretical explanations and being very clear. That combination is ideal if you like understanding what’s happening beneath your feet. He’s also mentioned in connection with dramatic progress for a child over several days, including a learner who started without ever putting the board on their feet. That doesn’t mean every child will progress that fast, but it does suggest the coaching is set up to build competence from the ground up.
So what should you expect in the lesson itself? Expect the instructor to watch you closely, correct positioning, and keep you moving through drills. And if you’re the type who gets stuck mentally, the feedback around patience and encouragement is worth its weight in fresh snow.
Should You Book Private Snowboard Lessons in Livigno and Bormio?
Book it if you want real progress and a lesson that matches your level from the first run. Private coaching is especially worth it when you:
- feel unsure on your current technique
- want to learn safely faster than trial-and-error
- need clear instruction in English
- have a tight schedule and want to choose exactly how many hours to spend
Skip or rethink it if you’re not ready to handle the extra costs of equipment rental and the ski pass, or if you’re hoping for a super casual “sit and watch” experience. With snow sports, spending time on learning pays off, but you should be prepared for a focused, hands-on session.
If you choose the right starting level and you put in a little time beyond the 1-hour minimum, this is one of the more efficient ways to turn snowboarding from frustrating to fun.
FAQ
How long is the private snowboard lesson?
The lesson has a minimum duration of about 1 hour. You can choose to book additional hours in a day and for multiple days.
Is this a private tour or shared lesson?
This is a private activity. Only your group participates, with a minimum of 1 person and a maximum of 6.
What skill levels are these lessons for?
Lessons are suitable for all levels, from beginners to experienced snowboarders. Your starting point is set based on your level.
What is included in the price?
The price includes a professional snowboard instructor.
What is not included?
Equipment rental and the ski pass are not included.
Where do we meet for the lesson?
You meet at Maestri di Sci e Snowboard Livigno, Via Saroch, 810, 23041 Livigno (SO), Italy. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
Is the lesson offered in English?
Yes, the lesson is offered in English.
When will I get confirmation after booking?
Confirmation is sent within 48 hours of booking, subject to availability.
Can I get a refund if I cancel?
No. The experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason. If you cancel or amend, the amount you paid will not be refunded.








