Curated luxury rentals across the village and lakes — the multigenerational solution. One address, six bedrooms, kitchens, private hot tubs, and a concierge that bridges hotel and rental.
"Curated luxury rentals across the village and lakes — the multigenerational solution."
Tremblant Sunstar is not a hotel. It is a vacation-rental management company that has spent two decades quietly assembling the most coherent portfolio of high-end private accommodation in the Laurentians. Around forty-plus curated condos and chalets sit on its books — slope-side suites in the pedestrian village, water-line cottages on Lac Tremblant, and the bigger family chalets along Lac Duhamel and the lateral roads above the resort. The smallest is a one-bedroom suite with a balcony onto the cabriolet at roughly CAD $300 a night. The largest is a seven-bedroom lakefront with private dock, boathouse, hot tub and bunk-room basement that prices out around CAD $3,500 in peak ski week.
The reason this address keeps appearing on our short-list for multigenerational groups is mathematical. Three couples and four grandchildren cannot share the Fairmont without burning sixteen thousand Canadian dollars in five nights and still eating breakfast separately at three different tables. The same group inside a Sunstar six-bedroom chalet pays roughly half, cooks one breakfast for everyone, runs the children's bath in the basement bunk-room while the adults sit in the hot tub, and walks the same hallway at the end of the night. One address. One front door. Six bedrooms.
The choice within the portfolio comes down to village versus lakefront. The village condos put you thirty seconds from the gondola, the ski school meeting point and the patisserie — the right call if the trip is fundamentally a ski week with adolescent children who want to come and go without parental shuttling. The lakefront chalets are a different proposition: quieter, larger, twelve to fifteen minutes by car from the lifts, and built around fireplaces and water views rather than ski-rack logistics. Anniversary couples and bachelor groups gravitate to the lakefronts. Families with toddlers or teens-and-toddlers typically take the village.
What separates Sunstar from booking the same property through Airbnb is the on-property management layer. Every chalet is vetted, photographed honestly, and stocked with hotel-grade linens and a standardised toiletry kit. Arrivals are met. Heating, hot tubs, fireplaces and Wi-Fi are tested before keys go out. If the dishwasher fails on a Saturday, someone is there inside the hour rather than three days later. The concierge desk books ski rentals, restaurant tables, snowmobile excursions and the Scandinave Spa shuttle in advance, and — the genuine differentiator for occasions — coordinates an in-residence chef who will arrive with groceries, cook a five-course tasting menu in the chalet kitchen, and leave the dishwasher running on his way out.
The trade-off, honestly stated: this is not a hotel. There is no lobby, no spa down the corridor, no breakfast buffet, no daily housekeeping unless arranged. Anniversary couples who want a turndown service and a champagne ice bucket waiting at check-in are better served at Quintessence. Sunstar is for the trip where the structure of a hotel is the wrong shape — where the group needs a kitchen, multiple bedrooms, a hot tub, and the ability to be loud without disturbing strangers. For that specific trip, in this specific town, nothing else competes.
Three generations under one roof — the trip a hotel cannot solve. Take a six-bedroom village chalet so the adolescent skiers are ninety seconds from the cabriolet, the toddlers nap in a separate wing, and breakfast happens once around a single table. Concierge will pre-stock the fridge, book ski school, and arrange a Saturday-night chef so the parents are not on dish duty.
Take a two-bedroom Lac Tremblant cottage with private dock, request the in-residence chef for the actual anniversary night — five courses, paired wines, dishes done — and leave the rest of the trip unscheduled. The lake at dawn from a private dock with no one else in sight is a quieter piece of theatre than any hotel restaurant can stage.
Eight friends, one seven-bedroom lakefront chalet, two hot tubs, a games room and the loudness budget that no hotel will tolerate. Concierge handles snowmobile rental, restaurant tables in the village, and a private-chef dinner on the headline night. The cost per head undercuts any equivalent Tremblant hotel block — and the group never has to behave in a hallway.
Rates checked May 2026. Price varies by property and date.
Tremblant Sunstar is the multigenerational solution — one address, six bedrooms, kitchens, hot tubs, and a concierge that bridges hotel and rental.
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