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Cannes, France
Cannes

French Riviera (Cote d'Azur)

Cannes

Base near the Carre d'Or for two or three nights, take the 15-minute ferry to the Lerins Islands most visitors skip, ride the train along the coast, and avoid mid-May festival prices.

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

Best length

2-3 nights, or a day trip from Nice

Airport

Nice Cote d'Azur (NCE), ~27km northeast

Airport to centre

81 express bus ~45 min, or train via Nice-Ville ~25-40 min

Best base

Carre d'Or / central Cannes; Le Suquet for old-town character

In short

Cannes at a glance

Cannes works best as a 2- to 3-night Riviera base or a day trip from Nice: stay in or near the Carre d'Or for walkable beaches and shops, take the 15-minute ferry to the Lerins Islands for the part most visitors skip, use the train rather than a car along the coast, and avoid mid-May entirely unless you are there for the Film Festival and paying festival prices.

The short version

  • Base yourself in the Carre d'Or or central Cannes near the station, not on La Croisette itself, for walkable beaches plus better-value food and rail links.
  • The Lerins Islands ferry is the standout half-day: Sainte-Marguerite for pine woods and swimming, Saint-Honorat for the working monastery.
  • Get in from Nice airport (NCE) by the 81 express bus in about 45 minutes, or take the frequent coastal train once you reach Nice station.
  • The train along the coast is the right way to see Antibes, Nice and Monaco; do not hire a car for a Cannes-based trip.
  • Avoid the Film Festival fortnight in May (roughly 12-23 in 2026) unless you are attending: hotel rates jump 200-400% and rooms vanish months ahead.

Cannes is two towns sharing a seafront. There is the one the Film Festival sells — the grand hotels on La Croisette, the private beach clubs, the superyachts in the bay — and there is the one most visitors enjoy more: the cobbled climb of Le Suquet, the Forville market a street back from the port, and the 15-minute ferry to the Lerins Islands, where pine woods and a working monastery replace the glamour entirely. A good first trip treats La Croisette as a walk rather than a day, and spends the saved money and time on the islands and the old town.

Two nights is plenty to see the town properly, and Cannes also works as a day trip from Nice. The bigger planning call is timing: the Film Festival fortnight in mid-May pushes hotel rates up 200-400% and books out months ahead, so unless you are attending, come in late May, June, September or early October instead. Crucially, treat Cannes as one stop on a train-led Riviera trip — the coastal TER runs frequently to Antibes, Nice and Monaco, so a hire car is a parking liability you do not need.

The structured planning below — where to stay, the Lerins ferry, getting in from Nice airport, and a realistic budget in pounds — 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 Cannes

Lerins Islands (Sainte-Marguerite & Saint-Honorat)

A 15-minute ferry from Cannes lands you on two contrasting islands. Sainte-Marguerite has pine forest, quiet swimming coves and the Fort Royal that held the Man in the Iron Mask; tiny Saint-Honorat is a working Cistercian monastery you can loop in about 90 minutes. Different operators serve each island, so check which boat goes where before you buy.

A full day From about €16-€20.50

La Croisette and the beaches

The palm-lined Croisette is a promenade to stroll, not a beach day. The free public sand is Plage du Midi, west of the centre; the famous Croisette beach clubs are private and charge €25-plus for a lounger. Know which stretch you're walking onto before you settle, and treat the walk itself as the attraction. It costs nothing.

An hour or two to…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Carre d'Or / Centre-ville

££ mid-range

The practical first base: minutes from the beaches, the Rue d'Antibes shopping, the port and the train station, with mid-range hotels rather than only five-stars. Saves you money on food versus the seafront and keeps the coastal train on your doorstep.

Best for: First-timers, couples, train-led Riviera trips

Browse hotels Central, 5-10 min walk to beach

La Croisette

£££ premium

The famous seafront boulevard with the grand hotels and private beach clubs. Choose it only if a beachfront balcony is the whole point; it is the most expensive sleep in town and quieter for evening food than the centre.

Best for: Splurge beach stays, special occasions

Browse hotels Beachfront

Le Suquet

££ mid-range

The old town on the hill behind the port: cobbled lanes, small restaurants and harbour views. More character and a steeper walk; good for couples who want atmosphere over beach-step convenience.

Best for: Atmosphere, food, couples

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk from port

La Bocca / Plage du Midi end

£ value

West of the centre towards the free Plage du Midi sands. Better value and quieter, but a longer walk or short bus to the action; useful for families wanting a free supervised beach over the Croisette scene.

Best for: Families, value, free-beach access

Browse hotels 15-25 min walk / short bus west

Airport to city centre

Cannes airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
81 express bus (Zou!) from NCE to Cannes station ~45 min about €19 single Direct, luggage space, runs roughly half-hourly
Tram + train via Nice-Ville ~40-55 min total tram about €10 + TER about €6-7 Cheapest if comfortable with one change
TER train (once at Nice-Ville) ~25-40 min Nice to Cannes about €6-7 single Frequent; up to ~88 trains a day on the line
Taxi / private transfer ~40-55 min usually €80-€100+ Fixed-fare transfers worth it with luggage or a group
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May (outside the Film Festival fortnight), June, September and early October are the sweet spot: warm sea, long sunny days and far better hotel value than peak July-August. September keeps the warm water with thinner crowds.

July-August is hot, busy and pricey; the Film Festival fortnight in mid-May (roughly 12-23 in 2026) sees hotel rates jump 200-400% with rooms gone months ahead, so avoid it unless you are attending. Winter is quiet and mild but not a swimming trip.

What it costs

There are no direct UK flights to Cannes itself; you fly to Nice (NCE), where UK returns are often £50-£140 outside school holidays when booked ahead. Summer weekends and festival-week May push fares and onward transport much higher.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Cannes break for one person, flying to Nice, is roughly £430-£640 before shopping: £80-£180 flights, £200-£320 hotel share, £80-£110 food and local transport, and £40-£60 for the Lerins ferry and a museum or beach club.

The fastest way to overspend in Cannes is eating on La Croisette and renting a private lounger every day. Walk a few streets back to the Carre d'Or and Marche Forville, and use the free Plage du Midi sands for at least one beach day.

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

Also in France

See the full France guide

Cannes FAQs

Is Cannes worth visiting outside the Film Festival?
Yes, and it is cheaper and calmer. The Lerins Islands, Le Suquet old town, the Forville market and the beaches are all year-round draws. Two nights covers the town comfortably, and the coastal train opens up Antibes, Nice and Monaco.
How do you get from Nice airport to Cannes?
The simplest option is the 81 express bus from NCE to Cannes train station, about 45 minutes for roughly €19. Otherwise take the tram to Nice-Ville and the frequent TER train down the coast, which is cheaper but involves one change.
How much is the ferry to the Lerins Islands?
A return crossing to Sainte-Marguerite starts from about €16, and Saint-Honorat is around €20.50 return when booked online, with the trip taking roughly 15 minutes each way from the old port. Tickets are typically valid all year, so you can pick your departure on the day.
Do you need a car in Cannes?
No. Central Cannes is walkable, parking is expensive, and the coastal TER train reaches Antibes, Nice and Monaco directly. Only consider a car for the inland villages, and even Grasse is reachable by direct train in about 30 minutes.

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