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Lerins Islands (Sainte-Marguerite & Saint-Honorat), France
Lerins Islands (Sainte-Marguerite & Saint-Honorat)

French Riviera (Cote d'Azur)

Lerins Islands (Sainte-Marguerite & Saint-Honorat)

A short ferry off Cannes: Sainte-Marguerite has pine woods, swimming coves and the Man in the Iron Mask fort; Saint-Honorat is a working Cistercian monastery you can walk in 90 minutes.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Cannes, France

Opening hours

Ferries run frequently in summer, roughly 9am to early evening, with fewer crossings off-season; the fort and monastery keep their own seasonal hours. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Return ferry from about โ‚ฌ16-โ‚ฌ20.50 depending on the island and operator; the Fort Royal/Musee de la Mer on Sainte-Marguerite charges a small separate entry. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Time needed

A full day to do both islands comfortably, or a relaxed half-day for one. Saint-Honorat is a 90-minute walk; Sainte-Marguerite easily fills several hours with the fort and a swim.

In short

Visiting 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.

Getting out there, and which island

Most Cannes visitors never leave the seafront, which is a shame, because the best half-day is a short hop offshore. Ferries leave from the Quai Laubeuf jetty near the old port, and the crossing is only about 15 minutes. The catch worth knowing before you pay: different companies serve different islands. One operator runs the boat to Saint-Honorat (the monastery), while others go to Sainte-Marguerite, so read the destination on the kiosk rather than assuming a single ticket covers both. A return runs from roughly โ‚ฌ16 to โ‚ฌ20.50 depending on island and operator; the fort charges a small extra entry. Hours and fares shift by season, so confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Sainte-Marguerite is the bigger, greener island: pine and eucalyptus, sheltered swimming coves, and the Fort Royal, the prison that held the Man in the Iron Mask, now the Musee de la Mer. Saint-Honorat is tiny and quiet โ€” a working Cistercian monastery you can loop in about 90 minutes, taking in the abbey church and the fortified seafront monastery.

Planning the day and whether it pays off

To do both well you want a full day: ferry to Saint-Honorat first for the morning calm, then over to Sainte-Marguerite to swim and tour the fort. If youโ€™ve only half a day, pick one โ€” Sainte-Marguerite for a beach-and-history mix, Saint-Honorat for the contemplative walk. Bring water and food, especially on Saint-Honorat, where facilities are minimal, and keep an eye on the last boat back; missing it is the classic mistake.

Is it worth it? Genuinely yes. Itโ€™s the bit of Cannes that feels neither glitzy nor crowded, and the contrast between a swim under the pines and a near-silent monastery island is the tripโ€™s quiet highlight. Just donโ€™t try to rush both into a couple of hours.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Cannes city guide.

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Lerins Islands (Sainte-Marguerite & Saint-Honorat) FAQs

How do you get to the Lerins Islands?
By ferry from the Quai Laubeuf jetty in Cannes; the crossing is roughly 15 minutes. Note that different companies run to each island โ€” one operator typically serves Saint-Honorat (the monastery) and others Sainte-Marguerite โ€” so check which boat goes where, and buy a return.
What is there to see on Sainte-Marguerite?
Pine and eucalyptus forest, quiet swimming coves, and the Fort Royal โ€” the prison that held the Man in the Iron Mask, now the Musee de la Mer with a small entry fee. It's the bigger, busier island and the one for a swim-and-stroll day.
Can you visit the Saint-Honorat monastery?
Yes. Saint-Honorat is a working Cistercian monastery and you can walk the island in about 90 minutes, visiting the abbey church and the fortified monastery ruins. Dress and behave respectfully, as monks still live there, and check the ferry timetable so you don't miss the last boat back.

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