The seven hamlets occupy a four-mile long valley which is bordered on the west by Mt. Chenevier, and on the east by the impressive and snow-capped Tournette massif. Local legend states that Noah's Ark landed at the Col de l'Aulp, whose valley is indeed shaped like a ship; Noah is claimed to have planted the lakeside vineyards of Talloires which produced wines and brandy until the 1950s. The mean elevation of the village is 1000 meters, or 3250 feet above sea level. First settled in the early Middle Ages, shortly after the year 1000, the hamlets were farming communities that existed almost entirely independently of the outside world until the advent of modern transportation.
With the arrival of modern roads and vehicles, Montmin has become a tourist attraction reknowned for the scenic Col de la Forclaz mountain pass, one of the premier hang gliding and paragliding sites in Europe. Montmin hosted the 1995 Hang Gliding Championships of France. And in July 1997 Montmin watched the Tour de France bicycle race come through the community, up from Faverges, over the Col de la Forclaz and back down toward Bluffy and the high Alps to the east.
Unlike its neighbors in the high Alps (La Clusaz, Megève, etc.), Montmin has not become a vast urbanized winter playground crisscrossed with ski lifts and dotted with large hotels and apartment buildings. Cautious zoning and deliberately limited development have allowed Montmin to retain much of its charm as a quiet agricultural community, even though it is a mere twenty minutes from downtown Annecy.
A hotel and several restaurants at the Col de la Forclaz mountain pass receive thousands of tourists who come to enjoy the excellent view of Lake Annecy. These facilities offer comfortable accommodations and traditional Savoy country cooking. The local cheese dairy farms produce the reknowned Tomme and Reblochon cheeses for which the area is famous.
At the dawn of the 21st century, Montmin's population is beginning to grow again as the village finds a new role as a bedroom community for the cities of Annecy and Faverges, though it retains much of its rustic charm.