France in 2026
The world's most visited country — and how to do it right
France receives 90 million tourists a year — more than any country on Earth. Most of them concentrate on Paris, the Riviera, and a handful of obvious landmarks, leaving enormous swathes of the country remarkably quiet. The most rewarding France travel is usually regional France: Provence's ochre villages and lavender fields, the Atlantic towns of the Charente coast, Normandy's cliff-edge abbeys, the medieval Languedoc with its Cathar castles, and the Alsatian wine route along the Rhine. Paris is essential; France is much bigger than Paris.
| Location | Budget Daily | Mid-Range Daily |
|---|---|---|
| Paris | €70–90 | €130–170 |
| Nice / French Riviera | €65–80 | €120–160 |
| Lyon | €55–70 | €100–130 |
| Provence / Languedoc / Normandy | €50–65 | €90–120 |
| Atlantic Coast / Corsica | €55–70 | €100–140 |
| French Alps (ski season) | €90–120 | €180–250+ |
Free museum Sundays: Most French national museums (Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, Pompidou, Versailles) are free on the first Sunday of each month. For Louvre and Versailles, this is the busiest day of the year — arrive before 09:00 or accept the consequences. Under-26 EU residents get free admission to French national museums at all times.
When to Visit France
Season by region
May and June are the ideal months across most of France. Paris in May (flower markets, pleasant temperatures at 18–22°C, smaller crowds) is close to perfect. The Loire Valley chateaux, Normandy, Brittany, and Alsace are all excellent. Provence begins warming up — lavender blooms mid-June to mid-July.
July and August are peak season everywhere — highest prices, maximum crowds, and the French school holiday (grandes vacances) which sends the entire country to the coast and mountains simultaneously. If you visit in July/August, focus on cities (which empty as Parisians leave) or the quieter Atlantic coast rather than the Riviera. Paris is actually less crowded in August than usual as locals leave.
September and October are arguably the best months. Temperatures are still good (20–25°C in the south, 15–18°C in Paris), the school holiday ends 1 September, prices drop 30–40%, and the wine harvest (vendanges) begins in September across Burgundy, Alsace, and Bordeaux — the most beautiful time in the wine regions.
Winter is quiet and cold outside the ski resorts. Paris in winter has excellent museums, fewer queues, and lower prices. The Christmas markets of Strasbourg (late November–Christmas) are among the best in Europe. The Alps and Pyrenees peak for skiing January–March.
Paris
The City of Light on a real budget
Paris is one of the world's great cities and one of its most written-about. What makes the difference between a good Paris trip and a forgettable one is usually not which sights you tick off but how much you slow down — sit in a café for two hours, walk the Canal Saint-Martin, explore the covered passages (Galerie Vivienne, Passage des Panoramas), cross into the less-visited arrondissements east of the Marais.
South of France
Riviera, Provence, Languedoc, and the Pyrenees
The South of France stretches from the Italian border west to the Pyrenees — a broad arc of warm, dry Mediterranean landscape covering Provence, the Côte d'Azur, Languedoc-Roussillon, and the Occitan hinterland. This is the France of lavender fields (Provence, June–July), Roman ruins (Nîmes, Arles, Pont du Gard), medieval Cathar castles, and 350 days of sunshine per year. Outside the Riviera resorts, it's also significantly more affordable than Paris.
Atlantic & Western France
Loire Valley, Nantes, La Rochelle, and Bordeaux
Western France is the most undervisited part of the country. The Loire Valley has the highest concentration of Renaissance châteaux in the world — over 300 within a 100km stretch of river. Nantes was named the Most Liveable City in Europe by the European Commission. La Rochelle is one of the best-preserved medieval port cities in France. The Charente coast between La Rochelle and Bordeaux has oysters, cognac, and an Atlantic landscape entirely different from the Mediterranean south.
North & Normandy
D-Day beaches, Mont-Saint-Michel, and northern France
Normandy and northern France are the most historically significant landscapes in western Europe for 20th-century history — the D-Day beaches (Omaha, Utah, Gold, Juno, Sword), the American and Commonwealth war cemeteries, and the extraordinary Normandy countryside that still bears the marks of the 1944 campaign. Beyond the Second World War, Normandy has Mont-Saint-Michel (one of the most striking tidal island abbeys in the world), Rouen's flamboyant Gothic cathedral, and some of the best dairy produce in France.
East France & the Alps
Lyon, Alsace, Annecy, and the French Alps
Lyon is France's second-greatest gastronomic city (Paul Bocuse was born here; it has more restaurants per capita than Paris) and the gateway to Burgundy's wine country. Alsace, on the Rhine border with Germany, has a culture that blends French and German traditions — the food (choucroute, baeckeoffe, tarte flambée) is unique, the wine (Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Blanc) exceptional, and the Christmas markets the best in France. The French Alps peak in winter for skiing and in summer for hiking.
Corsica
The Island of Beauty
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All France Articles
Every destination we cover
- Paris Budget Guide 2026: Real Costs & Free Days
- Paris in July 2026: Bastille Day, Events & What to Expect
- Nice & French Riviera 2026: Real Costs & Day Trips
- Marseille & Calanques 2026
- Provence Lavender Route 2026
- Toulouse & Languedoc 2026
- Carcassonne & Cathar Country 2026
- Montpellier 2026: Mediterranean & Real Costs
- Perpignan & the Pyrenees 2026
- Biarritz & Basque Coast 2026
- Loire Valley Châteaux 2026
- Nantes & Atlantic Coast 2026
- La Rochelle 2026: Atlantic Port Guide
- Normandy Road Trip: D-Day, Mont-Saint-Michel & More
- Rouen & Norman History 2026
- Lille & Northern France 2026
- Lyon Food Guide: Bouchons & Beyond
- Annecy & Alpine Lakes 2026
- French Alps in Summer 2026
- Corsica 2026: The Island of Beauty
FAQ
Common questions about travelling France in 2026
How much does France cost to travel in 2026?
Paris: €70–90/day budget, €130–170 mid-range. Regional France: €50–70/day budget. The regions are significantly more affordable than the capital and equally rewarding. Under-26 EU residents get free admission to French national museums year-round.
When is the best time to visit France?
May–June for most of France. September–October for best value and fewer crowds. Lavender season in Provence: mid-June to mid-July. Christmas markets in Alsace: late November to Christmas. Ski season in the Alps: January–March.
Is Paris worth visiting in 2026?
Yes — Paris rewards slow visits more than fast ones. Many highlights are free (Seine walk, Montmartre, churches, parks). The Louvre and Musée d'Orsay require advance booking. Free first Sunday of the month covers most national museums. Best visited in May or October.
What is France best known for?
Food and wine (baguettes, cheese, wine, haute cuisine), Paris and the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, Normandy and D-Day, Provence's lavender, the Loire Valley châteaux, the French Riviera, and the French Alps. France has the most UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Europe after Italy and Spain.