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Avignon, France
Avignon

Provence

Avignon

The best car-free Provence base: do the walled Intra-Muros in a day, book the Palais des Papes, then take tours and buses out to Pont du Gard, the Luberon and the lavender plateaus.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights as a Provence base

Nearest airport

Marseille Provence (MRS), ~80km; arrive ~1h by bus+train

By rail from UK

Eurostar to Paris then TGV; ~7h total to Avignon TGV

Best base

Intra-Muros, the old town inside the walls

In short

Avignon at a glance

Avignon is the practical base for a first Provence trip: a compact walled old town you can do in a day, then day trips out to Pont du Gard, the Luberon hill villages and the lavender plateaus. Stay inside the walls (Intra-Muros), book the Palais des Papes, and decide early whether you want a hire car or will lean on tours and the bus.

The short version

  • Stay inside the walls (Intra-Muros) near Place de l'Horloge so the Palais, the bridge and the restaurants are all on foot.
  • Avignon TGV station is 6km out: take the 6-minute shuttle train to Avignon Centre rather than a taxi.
  • The town itself is a day; the real reason to base here is Pont du Gard, Gordes, Roussillon and the lavender, which are day trips.
  • Lavender peaks in the first two weeks of July on the Valensole plateau; June is too early, August is mostly harvested.
  • Without a car the Luberon villages are awkward, so book a small-group tour day or hire a car for the rural runs.

Avignonโ€™s reputation rests on one building โ€” the vast 14th-century Palais des Papes, when the popes ran the Catholic church from here rather than Rome โ€” and a half-finished bridge from a nursery rhyme. Both are worth seeing, but you can do the walled old town in a single unhurried day. The real case for Avignon is what surrounds it: this is the most practical base in Provence, with the Pont du Gard aqueduct, the ochre and stone hill villages of the Luberon, and the lavender plateaus all within day-trip range.

That changes how you plan. Stay inside the walls (Intra-Muros), ideally near Place de lโ€™Horloge so the Palais, the restaurants and the bridge are on foot, and book the Palais ticket before you go. Then decide early how youโ€™ll reach the countryside: Pont du Gard has a direct bus, but the Luberon villages and the lavender fields are genuinely awkward without either a hire car or a small-group tour. Get that decision right and Avignon earns its three or four nights.

A note on timing, because Provence has two traps. July brings the lavender at its best โ€” the first two weeks, on the higher Valensole plateau โ€” but it also brings the Festival dโ€™Avignon, which packs out hotels and pushes prices up sharply, plus serious heat. Come in June and the lavender is often still green; come in August and much of it is already cut. The structured planning below โ€” where to stay, what to book, how to get in, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Avignon

Palais des Papes

The Palais des Papes is the largest Gothic palace in Europe and the seat of the popes from 1309 to 1377 โ€” but the rooms today are mostly bare stone, so the free HistoPad tablet that reconstructs them in augmented reality is what makes the visit work, not an add-on. Buy the โ‚ฌ17 combined ticket that also covers the Pont Saint-Bรฉnรฉzet (the famous half-bridge) since they sit five minutes apart. Allow 1.5โ€“2 hours, and don't bother booking weeks ahead โ€” it rarely sells out the way Paris sights do.

1.5โ€“2 hours โ‚ฌ14.50

Pont Saint-Benezet (Pont d'Avignon)

The famous half-bridge from the nursery rhyme, now ending abruptly mid-Rhone after floods washed away most of its arches. It's honestly a 20-minute photo-and-audioguide stop, so buy it on the combined ticket with the Palais des Papes rather than paying separately. The free view is from the Ile de la Barthelasse.

About 20โ€“30 minuteโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ5

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Intra-Muros (inside the walls)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The whole point of Avignon: a compact medieval centre where the Palais, the bridge, Place de l'Horloge and the best restaurants are all walkable. First-timers should stay here and nowhere else unless price forces it.

Best for: First-timers, no car, short stays

Browse hotels Old town core

Around Rue des Teinturiers

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The southeast corner inside the walls, with the old waterwheel street, independent bars and a more local evening feel than the main square. Quieter at night but still on foot to everything.

Best for: Food-led trips, repeat visitors, value

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk from Place de l'Horloge

Quartier Vernet

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The leafier southwest of the old town, with townhouse hotels, galleries and a calmer street feel. Good if you want walls-in convenience without the square's noise.

Best for: Couples, quiet, art

Browse hotels Inside the walls

Villeneuve-les-Avignon / outside the walls

ยฃ value

Cheaper hotels and easier parking sit across the river or out by the ring road. Fine with a hire car, but you lose the walk-everywhere appeal that makes Avignon worth basing in.

Best for: Drivers, budget, families with a car

Browse hotels Across the Rhone or 10-15 min drive

Airport to city centre

Avignon airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Avignon TGV shuttle train to Avignon Centre ~6 min about โ‚ฌ1.80 The sensible way in from TGV trains
Marseille Provence airport: shuttle bus + TER train ~1h door to Avignon Centre around โ‚ฌ13-โ‚ฌ20 Cheapest from MRS; free airport shuttle to Vitrolles station
FlixBus from Marseille airport ~1h about โ‚ฌ7-โ‚ฌ10 Limited daily departures, check times
Taxi from Marseille airport ~60-65 min โ‚ฌ150-โ‚ฌ180 Only worth it split between four people late at night
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October give the best Provence weather without the worst heat or crowds. If lavender is the goal, target the first two weeks of July on the Valensole plateau; come a fortnight too early in June and the fields are still green, too late in August and most are already cut.

July is peak: lavender, the Festival d'Avignon theatre takeover (which fills hotels and pushes prices up sharply), and real heat. Spring and early autumn are gentler for walking and day trips. Winter is quiet and cheap but the rural buses and seasonal tours thin out, so it suits a town-only break rather than a Provence-touring one.

What it costs

There are no UK flights to Avignon itself; most people fly to Marseille (return fares often ยฃ40-ยฃ110 outside school holidays) or take Eurostar to Paris and a TGV down. Nimes and Montpellier are alternative airports for the western day trips.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Avignon break for one is roughly ยฃ520-ยฃ780 before shopping: ยฃ80-ยฃ160 flights to Marseille plus transfers, ยฃ260-ยฃ420 hotel share inside the walls, ยฃ90-ยฃ140 food and drink, and ยฃ80-ยฃ150 for the Palais plus one full-day Luberon or lavender tour.

The hidden cost in Provence is the day trips, not the town. A small-group Luberon or lavender tour runs roughly ยฃ60-ยฃ90 a head, and a few days of car hire plus fuel and tolls adds up fast, so budget the excursions deliberately rather than treating them as extras.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in France

See the full France guide

Avignon FAQs

How many days do you need in Avignon?
The town itself is a comfortable one day. The reason to stay three or four nights is the day trips: budget a day for the old town and Palais, then a day each for Pont du Gard, a Luberon village run and, in season, the lavender.
Do you need a car to visit Avignon and Provence?
Not for the town, and not for Pont du Gard, which has the 115 bus. But the Luberon hill villages and the lavender plateaus are awkward by public transport, so either book a small-group tour day from Avignon or hire a car for the rural part of the trip.
When does the lavender bloom near Avignon?
Flowering runs from roughly mid-June to late July, peaking in the first two weeks of July on the higher Valensole plateau. Festival dates are not bloom dates: in a hot year fields can be harvested before the mid-July Valensole festival, so plan around early July rather than a fixed event.
What is the difference between Avignon TGV and Avignon Centre stations?
Avignon TGV is the high-speed station 6km south of town where Paris TGVs arrive; Avignon Centre is the smaller station just outside the city walls. A shuttle train links them in about 6 minutes for around โ‚ฌ1.80, which beats a taxi every time.

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