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Vieille Ville and Palais de l'Ile, France
Vieille Ville and Palais de l'Ile

French Alps

Vieille Ville and Palais de l'Ile

Annecy's canal-laced old town wanders itself for free: pastel houses, the flower-edged Thiou and the prow-shaped Palais de l'Ile, the town's most photographed building.

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

Where

Annecy, France

Opening hours

Open access (always open) for the streets and canals. The Palais de l'Ile museum keeps its own hours, typically late morning to early evening with seasonal variation; closed some days off-season.

Tickets

Free โ€” no ticket needed to wander the old town and canals. Going inside the Palais de l'Ile costs about โ‚ฌ4โ€“5; under-26s and EU residents may get reductions or free entry.

Time needed

An hour or two to stroll the lanes and canals; add 30โ€“45 minutes if you go inside the Palais.

In short

Visiting Vieille Ville and Palais de l'Ile

The canal-laced old town does itself: pastel houses, the Thiou's flower-edged channels and the prow-shaped Palais de l'Ile, Annecy's most photographed building. You can wander free; only pay the few euros to go inside the old prison if the history genuinely interests you. Go early or late to beat the crowds.

Walking the canals

The pleasure here costs nothing. The Vieille Ville is a knot of arcaded lanes and pastel houses threaded by the Thiou, a short canal whose channels are lined with flowers and overhung by little bridges. You simply walk in and follow the water. The set-piece is the Palais de lโ€™Ile, a stone building shaped like a shipโ€™s prow that sits marooned on a tiny island mid-canal โ€” it has been a courthouse, a mint and a prison, and it is the photograph everyone leaves Annecy with. The best angles are from the bridges just upstream and downstream of it; you donโ€™t need to go inside to get them.

Give yourself an hour or two to drift rather than tick off a list. Cross to the lake end of the old town and you reach the arcades of the Rue Sainte-Claire, busiest on Tuesday, Friday and Sunday market mornings, when the lanes fill with cheese, charcuterie and produce. The Pont des Amours and the lakefront are a five-minute walk on, so itโ€™s natural to pair the two.

Inside the Palais, and timing

You can pay roughly โ‚ฌ4โ€“5 to go inside the Palais de lโ€™Ile, where the old cells and rooms now hold a small museum on Annecyโ€™s history and architecture. Be honest with yourself about whether that appeals: itโ€™s a quiet half-hour for people who like local history, but the buildingโ€™s real magic is the exterior, which is free. Hours shift with the season and it shuts on some off-season days, so check the current schedule before banking on entry.

The single biggest factor is when you come. From late morning the lanes get genuinely crowded, particularly on summer weekends, and the canalside cafes charge a premium for the view. Arrive early and you get mirror-still water and soft light; come back in the evening once the day-trippers thin out and the town feels like its own again.

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

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Vieille Ville and Palais de l'Ile FAQs

Do you have to pay to see the Palais de l'Ile?
No โ€” the building, the canals and the old town are free to walk around and photograph any time. You only pay (about โ‚ฌ4โ€“5) if you want to go inside the former prison, which is now a small museum on Annecy's history and architecture.
Is the inside of the Palais de l'Ile worth it?
Honestly, only if the local history interests you. The famous shot is the exterior from the canal bridges, which costs nothing. The interior is a modest set of stone cells and rooms โ€” pleasant for half an hour, but most visitors are happy admiring it from outside.
When is the best time to visit?
Early morning or early evening. The narrow lanes get very busy from late morning, especially on summer weekends and market days. Going early gives you quiet reflections in the canals and softer light for photos.