France travel guide

France’s legacy of history and culture is nothing short of extraordinary and is so widely spread around the country that you will sense its age-old role at the forefront of European progress everywhere from the prehistoric cave paintings in the Dordogne, to the palatial chateaus of the Loire and, in modern day terms, in the incredible amount of outdoor activities that France crams into its acres of open space. Often pitted against each other, the resplendent French Alps with its titanic peaks and sparkling sapphire lakes, and the more rough cut, but equally impressive Pyrenees, actually work in perfect unison to put France in pole position for lovers of mountain sports, cycling and walking among their dramatic river valleys.
A country of regional pride and palpable vigour, even a short visit to France will leave you affected with a powerful sense of its momentous heritage
And those looking to escape to the bucolic France of our archetypal dreams? It exists, and it’s called Provence; a lavender-scented region that fulfils all promises of pretty, perched villages, wise old locals playing petanque, and colourful food markets groaning under the weight of garlic, figs and cheese. Get lost in a world of vacation possibilities in our France travel guide

France is...

a natural playground of mighty mountains, rushing rapids and hiking hotspots

France isn't...

all about Paris

What we rate & what we don't

UNDERRATED

Mercantour

Take a mountain train into the other worldly wonders of …

Rural accommodation

Finding the right vacation accommodation can be fraught with difficulties, …

Champsaur Valley

The Champsaur Valley in the Southern Alps has a really …

Cirque de Gavarnie

Described by illustrious poet, Victor Hugo, as a ‘colosseum of …
RATED

French Pyrenees

The Alps’ edgier cousin, the Pyrenees has a rougher beauty …

Provence

The Provencal cliché: wafting lavender; stone villages; smiling people sipping …

French Alps

To describe the French Alps invites every conceivable superlative: titanic …

The Loire Valley

A wide, smooth expanse littered with grandiose castles with sky-high …
OVERRATED

Lourdes

Wow. Lourdes. A sprawling town of Vegas-esque neon tat mixed …

Courchevel

Unless your happy to remortgage your house for a vacation, …

Trips to Monaco

Monaco: a tiny, very plush and stubbornly independent principality, and …

Nice in summer

With young French creatives moving in by the bucketload, Nice …

Food, shopping & people

Eating & drinking in France
Alpine fondue: it’s really just deconstructed cheese on toast, but who can resist an entire steaming bowl of melted cheese?

‘Cuisses de grenouilles’ = frogs legs. A tasty French stereotype that’s still alive and kicking.

‘A la Provencal’ essentially means tomatoes with an inordinate amount of garlic. Your taste buds will dance, but your breath will honk.

Wine, wonderful wine is everywhere: the winegrowing area around Bordeaux alone is over 1,000sqkm.
People & language
‘Salut’ means both hello and goodbye
In France itself, French is the only official language and is by far the most widely spoken, although several regional variants are spoken as a second language including Alsacian, which has German roots, Breton, a Celtic language and Occitan, a Gallo-Romance language.
French is peppered with funny phrases that manage to sound poetic rolling off the tongue:
‘avoir le cafard’ (to have the cockroach) = down on your luck

'c'est la fin des haricots' (the end of the beans) = the last straw
In homage to the illustrious poet, there is a street named Victor Hugo in every town in France.

Our top trip

French Riviera yoga vacation

French Riviera yoga vacation

Authentic yoga and French hospitality on the Cote d'Azur

From 1000 7 days ex flights
Small group travel:
2024: 24 Mar, 31 Mar, 14 Apr, 5 May, 12 May, 9 Jun, 16 Jun, 30 Jun, 28 Jul, 4 Aug, 11 Aug, 18 Aug, 25 Aug, 1 Sep, 8 Sep, 15 Sep, 29 Sep, 6 Oct, 13 Oct, 20 Oct, 27 Oct, 3 Nov
Travel Team
If you'd like to chat about France or need help finding a vacation to suit you we're very happy to help.
Gifts & shopping
Provence’s markets are a browser’s paradise: strings of pink garlic frame sack upon sack of colorful local produce; stock up on marinated olives, pungent cheese and artisan oils.
Buying wine in France is no longer the stuff of one-day booze cruises: wine tours are an easy and enjoyable way to splash the cash on plonk – you don’t take your car, so you can taste more, and when you’re tipsy enough to order seven cases of Sancerre, it’ll be shipped to your door before you can say ‘a votre sante’.
It is illegal to name a pig ‘Napoleon’ in France.
How much does it cost?
A beer: £4.00
Winery tour for two: £16.00
Basic lunch: £6-9
Snowshoe hire in the Pyrenees:
£6-7 per day
Kilo of fruit: £1.50-3.50

A brief history of France

A key player on the world stage and a country at the political heart of Europe, France paid a high price in both economic and human terms during both world wars. The years that followed saw protracted conflicts culminating in the independence of many French colonies in Africa including Algeria and decolonisation in South-East Asia too.Read more
Written by Polly Humphris
Photo credits: [Page banner: Hervé] [Is/isn't - lavender: Arnie Papp] [Mercantour: Rafal Zelazko] [Rural accommodation: Richard Leeming] [Champsaur Valley: dyonis] [Cirque de Gavarnie: Mathieu Legros] [French Pyrenees: Richard Allaway] [The Loire Valley: Yvan Lastes] [Lourdes: Andy Hay] [Courchevel: Press Start Agence] [Trips to Monaco: Lori Branham] [Nice in summer: Priit Tammets] [Eating & drinking - frogs legs: Ana d'Almeida] [People & language: Huy Phan] [Quote 1: Stephane Mignon] [Gifts & shopping: JohnPickenPhoto] [How much - snowshoes: USFWSmidwest]