Antibes
Frankreich · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Begin where the bus from the train station almost forces you to anyway — Bastion Saint-Jaume, jutting into Port Vauban, Europe's largest yacht harbor. Jaume Plensa's eight-meter wireframe man, 'Le Nomade,' sits cross-legged on the seawall, his body made of letters, his gaze fixed on the bay. From this single spot you frame the whole town: 16th-century Vauban ramparts rising on your right, billion-dollar superyachts moored on your left, and on a clear morning the Alpes-Maritimes still snow-dusted in the far distance. Nine in the morning is the only window when the seawall is yours alone and the light hits the white stone of the ramparts straight on — by 11 the tour boats and the heat haze take over.
Tip: Walk inside the sculpture — the open letters frame the cathedral belltower exactly through the figure's chest. The cleanest shot is from the seawall's north edge looking south between 9:00 and 9:30, before a cruise group arrives from the IYCA pier.
Open in Google Maps →From Le Nomade, follow the seafront Promenade Amiral de Grasse south for 8 minutes — sea on your left, Vauban's tawny ramparts on your right, the cathedral's pink Italian belltower rising ahead. Drop down the stone steps and you land directly inside the Marché Provençal, Antibes' beating heart since 1881. The wrought-iron canopy filters morning light over olives in twelve grades, lavender honey from the Var, socca vendors flipping chickpea pancakes on blistering cast-iron pans, and the silver anchovies still glistening from the night's haul. This is the market every Riviera town pretends to have and none actually do.
Tip: The market wraps at 13:00 sharp and is closed Mondays from September through May. Walk to the far southern end first — the serious fromager and the best socca stand (Chez Eugène) are buried at the back; tourists never make it past the front-row tomato pyramids. Grab a wedge of brousse cheese and a baguette for the afternoon coastal walk.
Open in Google Maps →Exit the market via Rue Sade, climb three steps to the rampart edge — two minutes. The Château Grimaldi sits on the cliff where the Greek acropolis of Antipolis once stood, and where Picasso lived and worked in the autumn of 1946. Skip the museum interior on a one-day blitz; the magic is outside. The square Saracen tower, the seaward terrace lined with Germaine Richier and Miró bronze sculptures, and the panoramic Place Mariejol balcony that opens onto the Baie des Anges all the way to Nice — all free, all uncrowded. Thirty seconds away, the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception's salmon-pink belltower is a converted 12th-century watchtower; step inside for two minutes for the Bréa altarpiece.
Tip: Walk through the château to the back terrace (Place Mariejol) — most visitors stop at the front entrance and never realize the Richier sculptures stand silhouetted against the open Mediterranean on the seaward side. The light at 11:45-12:15 turns the bay turquoise and the rampart shadows fall away from your photos.
Open in Google Maps →Slip back into the Old Town lanes — Le Vauban is on Rue Thuret, three minutes off the cathedral square. A pocket-sized Provençal bistro run by a family that sources from the same morning market you just walked through. The blackboard changes daily but the foundations hold: a plate of anchoïade with raw garden vegetables (€14), or the daube de boeuf (€18) — beef slow-braised in red wine with orange peel and bay leaf since dawn. The dining room fits twenty; spillover sits on rattan chairs in the alley with a glass of cold Bandol rosé in hand.
Tip: Arrive at 12:30 sharp — by 13:00 every seat is taken and you'll wait 40 minutes that you don't have. Order the plat du jour (whatever was bought that morning) and a glass of local Côtes de Provence rosé. Pay cash and tell them you're walking the Sentier — they'll bring the bill faster.
Open in Google Maps →Head south along Boulevard James Wyllie, then climb the pine-shaded Chemin du Calvaire toward the Garoupe lighthouse — about 30 minutes from the Old Town, mostly uphill through olive groves and bougainvillea-draped garden walls. The Sentier du Littoral (locals call it the Sentier de Tirepoil) traces 4.8 km of raw red porphyry along the cape's eastern flank: hidden coves where locals sunbathe topless on flat rocks, low stone walls that hide €100-million villas where Greta Garbo, Onassis, and the Aga Khan once summered, and Pointe Bacon where the path narrows to a slot between sea-carved boulders. Afternoon light around 15:00 turns the water liquid emerald and lights up the rust-red rock — this single stretch of coast is the reason photographers say the Côte d'Azur is not overhyped.
Tip: Go counterclockwise: start at Plage de la Garoupe, follow the cape to Plage de la Joliette, then loop back inland past the Phare de la Garoupe lighthouse (Antibes' single highest viewpoint, 360° over the Riviera). Total ~7 km, 2 to 2.5 hours. Wear real shoes — the rock is sharp and the path is wet in places even in summer. There are zero shops, zero toilets on the cape; fill your bottle at the public fountain on Plage de la Garoupe before you start.
Open in Google Maps →Walk back from Cap d'Antibes via Avenue Mrs L. D. Beaumont and Boulevard d'Aguillon — about 35 minutes, mostly flat, ending in the lantern-lit Old Town lanes. Le Brûlot has occupied this vaulted stone cellar on Rue Frédéric Isnard since 1969, and its wood-fired oven has been roasting lamb every single night for over fifty years. The agneau du Pays au four à bois (whole leg of regional lamb pulled from the flames at the table, €28) is the dish locals bring out-of-town guests for. The daube provençale (€22) is braised eight hours in red wine. Owner Christian usually works the door; if he likes you, he'll show you the oven.
Tip: Reserve 48 hours ahead — this place sells out every night in season and walk-ins are turned away politely but firmly. Ask for a table near the oven to watch the lamb being carved. PITFALL: walking back through the port you'll pass a strip of touristy restaurants on Boulevard d'Aguillon — multilingual photo menus, €35 microwaved pizzas, hosts who grab your sleeve. Anywhere on the French Riviera with a photo menu is a trap; locals eat exactly one street inland.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Antibes?
Most travelers enjoy Antibes in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Antibes?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Antibes?
A practical starting point is about €100 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Antibes?
A good first shortlist for Antibes includes Le Nomade Sculpture at Bastion Saint-Jaume (Port Vauban), Château Grimaldi & Antibes Cathedral.