France Travel Guide: Paris, Provence, Riviera & Where to Go in 2026
France offers a captivating mix of cuisine, art, and historic charm. LocalsInsider reveals hidden bistros, local spots, and boutique hotels that celebrate French culture beyond the tourist trails.
France contains multitudes, and travelers tend to choose poorly. Paris is the obvious move, and the city earns every bit of its reputation — Le Bristol's rooftop pool, Cheval Blanc's recent opening in the Samaritaine building, the bistronomy revolution started by Yves Camdeborde at Le Comptoir du Relais. But the French country opens up the further you get from it. Provence in late June when the Valensole lavender peaks. Mont Saint-Michel at high tide. The Loire valley by bike. Lyon, which most American travelers skip and which has, plausibly, the best food in France.
Our France coverage — 17 articles deep — covers Paris's less-obvious arrondissements, Riviera hotels, Provence trip notes, and the under-traveled regions worth knowing about: Normandy, Alsace, Corsica.
The travel personality: The Refined Wanderer
Quick facts
Live right now
Best time to visit
| Season | Why go |
|---|---|
| May–June, September | Avoid mid-August — much of France closes for vacation |
| April, October | Shoulder season — fewer tourists, often cheaper, weather still good |
| November–March (Paris magical, south quiet) | Off-season — quiet, best deals, plan around weather |
Top cities to visit
Experiences you'll probably love
- Morning markets in Provence (Aix, Lourmarin, Apt)
- Champagne tasting in Reims and Épernay caves
- Saint-Émilion wine villages in Bordeaux
- Skiing the Trois Vallées or Chamonix
- Île de Ré bike rides off La Rochelle's coast
Not many tourists know about…
- Lyon as France's actual food capital — bouchons over bistros
- The Calanques near Marseille — fjord-like Mediterranean coves
- Strasbourg's German-French Alsace influence and Christmas markets
- The Camargue's wild horses and pink flamingos
- Annecy lake — alpine clarity, charming old town
- Brittany's Belle-Île and oysters in Cancale
If you visit only once, make it this
The medieval abbey-island off the Normandy coast — at high tide it becomes an actual island, surrounded entirely by water. Walk the ramparts at dusk after the day-trippers leave. Stay overnight on the island itself for sunrise on the bay before it fills.
Free shuttle from the visitor center. Best to consult the tide tables before you go.
Where to walk & breathe
Europe's deepest canyon (700m) in the Alps-de-Haute-Provence, paired with the world's most photographed lavender fields on the Valensole Plateau just north — peak bloom mid-June through mid-July.
Drive a circuit Aix-en-Provence → Valensole → Moustiers-Sainte-Marie → Gorges du Verdon.
Museums worth your time
The world's greatest collection of Impressionist masterpieces, in a converted Beaux-Arts railway station on the Seine. Less crowded than the Louvre.
Visit website →Frank Gehry's glass sailship in the Bois de Boulogne — one of Paris's most architecturally significant 21st-century buildings. Rotating major contemporary exhibitions.
Visit website →Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers's inside-out building in the Marais. Closing for major renovation in late 2025 through 2030 — visit now before it closes.
Visit website →The Insider's Edit
A few additions for travelers staying longer in Paris or heading to Normandy:
A 2024 opening in a 17th-century convent that has become the most talked-about French opening in years — #27 on the World's 50 Best Hotels 2025.
The classic Norman half-timbered beach hotel reborn under Hyatt's Unbound Collection.
Bernard Pacaud's temple on Place des Vosges — three Michelin stars for four decades, still understated.
François Pinault's collection in Tadao Ando's concrete cylinder inside a Belle Époque rotunda — arguably the most beautiful contemporary art space in Europe.
Frank Gehry's glass sail in the Bois de Boulogne hosts the best blockbuster art shows in Paris.
Where to eat
Three Michelin stars, ranked World's Best Restaurant by La Liste multiple years. Set inside the Monnaie de Paris on the Left Bank with views over the Seine. Signature artichoke and black truffle soup.
Bernard Pacaud's three-Michelin-star institution on Place des Vosges — held three stars since 1988. Classical French at its most refined. Reservations 2-3 months ahead.
Yves Camdeborde's bistro that helped define the bistronomy movement — set dinner menu (5 courses) Mon-Fri, walk-in lunch. The terrace is one of Paris's classic Left Bank tables.
Bertrand Grébaut's one-Michelin-star Green Star restaurant — also Septime La Cave wine bar and Clamato seafood spot next door. The hardest reservation in Paris's 11th arrondissement.
Where to stay
Oetker Collection's Paris flagship — rooftop swimming pool on the 6th floor (rare in Paris), Epicure restaurant with three Michelin stars, the famous hotel cat Fa-Raon. Featured in Midnight in Paris.
Cesar Ritz's 1898 original, Place Vendôme — Bar Hemingway, Suite Coco Chanel (her residence for 37 years), Espadon Michelin-starred restaurant. The grande dame of Parisian luxury.
LVMH's flagship Paris hotel, opened 2021 in the historic Samaritaine building beside the Pont Neuf. Plenty's Michelin-starred restaurant, Dior spa, river-view suites overlooking the Louvre.
Hidden Montmartre mansion with only 5 suites — secret garden behind iron gates, individual rooms designed by different artists. One of Paris's most private boutique experiences.
Realistic daily budget
Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.
Travel safety & inclusivity
Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.
Major festivals
Need a visa for France?
Many travelers can enter France visa-free, but it depends on your passport. Check your specific requirements:
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Partner link — Locals Insider may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. Always confirm the latest requirements with the official embassy.
Not sure if France is right for your next trip? We'll compare 53 destinations against your travel style. Take our country matcher quiz →
Frequently asked questions about France
Which French wine region should I visit first?
Depends on what you like in a glass. Champagne is the obvious answer for first-timers — just 45 minutes by train from Paris to Reims or Épernay, and the chalk cellars beneath both cities stretch for over 250km of underground bottles aging at the great houses (Veuve Clicquot, Ruinart, Moët, Taittinger). For serious wine pilgrims, Burgundy rewards the deepest study — base in Beaune, taste Pinot Noir and Chardonnay village by village, walk the UNESCO-listed Climats. Alsace is the most scenic for a road trip — the 170km Route des Vins through villages like Riquewihr and Eguisheim, with bike paths between vineyards. Bordeaux is more structured and ceremonial; Provence is rosé country and the oldest French vineyard (26 centuries). Three to four nights in one region beats hopping.
Do I need a visa to visit France?
EU, EEA, and Swiss citizens enter freely under free-movement rules. Citizens of the US, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and around 60 other visa-exempt countries can stay up to 90 days within any 180-day period in the Schengen Area (France included). From late 2026, those visa-exempt travelers will need an ETIAS authorization (online application, around €7, valid three years) before flying. Russian and Chinese passport holders need a Schengen short-stay visa applied for via VFS Global or the French consulate. Travel insurance should cover at least €30,000 in medical expenses across the Schengen area. The 90-day clock counts across all Schengen countries — not 90 days per country.
When is the best time to visit France?
April to June and September to October are when France is at its best — temperatures 18–25°C, gardens at their peak (Giverny in May is unmissable), wine harvest in September, accommodation prices reasonable. July and August are peak: Paris empties of Parisians (many shops and restaurants close in August), the south fills up, and prices double on the Côte d'Azur. Christmas markets in Alsace and Strasbourg run late November through December and are some of Europe's best. Winter is the quiet sweet spot for Paris museums and Burgundy fireside lunches. If you're after lavender in Provence, hit the first two weeks of July before the harvest in late July–early August.
Where do locals actually eat in Paris?
Avoid menus in three languages, restaurants on the immediate Seine waterfront in central arrondissements, and anywhere a host hustles you in from the street. Parisians eat in the 11th (Rue Paul Bert is the bistro spine — Le Servan, Clamato), the 10th (Le Verre Volé, Chez Casimir), the 9th for new-wave (Bouillon Pigalle for cheap brasserie classics, Le Pantruche), and Belleville (20th) for natural wine bars. For the classic experience: a corner café for coffee at the zinc, a bistro at 1pm for the prix-fixe lunch, an apéro around 7pm, dinner from 8:30. Always reserve. Tap water (une carafe d'eau) is free and expected — asking for it is normal, not cheap.
Do I need a car to travel around France?
For Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux, Strasbourg, Nice — no. The TGV high-speed rail network is excellent: Paris to Lyon in 2 hours, Paris to Bordeaux in 2 hours, Paris to Marseille in 3, Paris to Strasbourg in under 2. Book 2–3 months ahead through SNCF Connect for the cheapest fares. Rent a car when you're going rural: Burgundy villages, Loire châteaux, Alsace wine route, Provence, the Dordogne, Brittany. Driving in Paris is genuinely awful — narrow streets, aggressive scooters, expensive parking. Pick up the car when you leave the city, drop it before you return. See our car rental services guide.
Locals Insider's Articles About France
Articles in this section are written by Locals Insider editorial team. Want to share your experience about France? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com.






















