Tucked between the High Tatras and the Belianske Tatras in Slovakia, Zadnie Koperszady Valley is one of the most rewarding yet unspoiled valleys in the entire Tatra range. Stretching roughly 4 km through dense forest, open alpine meadows and rocky gullies, it leads all the way up to the Kopské sedlo pass — and every step of the way feels like a genuine mountain adventure.
The valley announces itself with a narrow limestone gorge called Koperszadzká Branka, a dramatic natural gateway that opens up into a broad, sweeping landscape. The stream Meďodolský potok rushes along the valley floor, fed by numerous tributaries. High above on the northern slopes, two rocky bands of Triassic dolomite — the Vyšné Rendy and Nižné Rendy — catch the light and give the valley its rugged, sculpted silhouette. Higher up, past the Havraní diel ridge spur, the valley floor widens into two large alpine meadows that were once among the most important pastoral grounds in the region — at their peak grazed by 400 oxen and 2,600 sheep. In summer the grass grows thick and lush, in autumn the slopes blaze with colour, and in winter a deep silence settles over everything.
How to get thereThe name 'Koperszady' dates back to at least 1435 and comes from the German 'Kupferschächte' — copper mine shafts. German miners from the Spiš region once worked copper ore here, leaving their mark in the landscape and in the valley's very name.