How much does a Dolomites hut-to-hut trek cost?
Plan for €600–€850 per person for 7 nights on the ground in 2026 (rifugi, food, local transport), plus flights. CAI membership saves roughly €100–€150 per trek on hut bills.
Budget
A real 2026 budget for a 7-day Dolomites hut-to-hut trek: rifugi half-board, transport, gear rental, CAI membership and the small costs everyone forgets.
Updated: 2026-06-01 6 min read
Most online estimates for a Dolomites trek either lowball the huts or ignore the transfer days entirely. Here's a line-by-line budget for a typical 7-night Alta Via trip in 2026, with the small recurring costs included.
Numbers below assume two people sharing where it makes sense (taxi, hire car), starting from a European airport, and staying in dormitory beds with the half-board package. Single travellers and private-room bookers add roughly 25%.
Without CAI membership: roughly €750–€850 per person on the ground, before flights and pre/post-trek hotel nights.
With CAI membership: roughly €600–€700 per person on the ground. Membership pays for itself in 3–4 nights and is worth it from your first trip if you'll do more than one Alps trek in the next 12 months — the card is also valid in Austrian, German, French and Slovenian club huts.
Three categories blow the budget more than the rifugi themselves.
Take CAI membership before booking — the discount applies to all bookings. Walk in September instead of August: same rifugi prices but cheaper flights and accommodation. Eat the half-board (it's already paid) rather than ordering off the bar menu after. Carry your own lunch food from a Cortina or Brixen supermarket — 7 × €10 saved is enough for a final-night dinner in a real restaurant.
Plan for €600–€850 per person for 7 nights on the ground in 2026 (rifugi, food, local transport), plus flights. CAI membership saves roughly €100–€150 per trek on hut bills.
€60–€80 per person per night in a dormitory. CAI members get roughly 30% off the bed portion, taking it closer to €50–€60.
Many do, but card machines fail regularly because of weak mountain signal. Carry enough cash for at least 3 nights of half-board (~€250 per person) as a buffer.
Wild camping is illegal in the Dolomites' protected areas and the fine is meaningful. Even if it were allowed, the weight penalty on a hut-to-hut traverse outweighs the saving.