Avignon
City Guide

Avignon

Francia · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €65.00/day
Best season Apr-Oct
Language French
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Paris
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

From the Palace of Popes to the Edge of the Broken Bridge

09:00

Palais des Papes

Landmark
Duration: 1h15m Estimated cost: €0

From Gare d'Avignon Centre, pass through Porte de la République and walk straight up Rue de la République for twelve minutes — Avignon reveals itself in layers, from modern shopfronts to medieval stone, until the street opens onto Place du Palais and the largest Gothic palace ever built fills the sky. At nine in the morning the sun hits the south facade at a low angle, turning the pale limestone amber while the square is still nearly empty. Circle the entire exterior clockwise; the western rampart side, where the palace meets the cliff above the Rhône, is the most dramatic stretch.

Tip: The best photo angle is from the southeast corner of Place du Palais near the Conservatoire, where the full facade fills the frame with the Cathédrale Notre-Dame des Doms bell tower rising behind. Skip the interior visit (€14.50, 90 minutes) — for a day-tripper, the exterior tells the bigger story.

Open in Google Maps →
10:15

Rocher des Doms

Park
Duration: 45m Estimated cost: €0

From the north side of the palace, take the stone stairway behind Cathédrale Notre-Dame des Doms — a gentle five-minute climb through Mediterranean pines that opens onto Avignon's secret balcony. From the northern railing you look straight down at Pont Saint-Bénézet and across the Rhône to Fort Saint-André in Villeneuve-lès-Avignon, and on a clear morning Mont Ventoux floats on the horizon like a white-capped ghost. This is where you plan your next move: the bridge you see below is your next stop.

Tip: Walk to the very northern tip of the park past the duck pond for the postcard shot: Pont d'Avignon in the foreground, the Rhône bending behind it, and Villeneuve's medieval tower across the water. Midmorning light eliminates the backlit glare you would get in the afternoon.

Open in Google Maps →
11:00

Pont Saint-Bénézet

Landmark
Duration: 1h15m Estimated cost: €0

Descend from Rocher des Doms through Porte du Rocher and walk ten minutes downhill to Pont Édouard Daladier, then cross to Île de la Barthelasse and follow the riverbank path north. Within ten minutes the entire postcard materializes: four surviving arches frozen in mid-river, the massive ramparts behind, the Palais des Papes crowning the skyline, and Rocher des Doms where you stood moments ago. This is the angle that made Avignon famous, and in late morning the light falls perfectly across the city face.

Tip: Walk 200 meters past the first viewpoint where tourists cluster. A quiet gravel clearing directly across from the Chapelle Saint-Bénézet on the bridge's second pier gives the cleanest angle with no railings or lamp posts in the frame. Do not pay €5.50 to walk onto the bridge itself — it dead-ends in mid-river with nothing to see that you cannot see better from here.

Open in Google Maps →
12:15

Les Halles d'Avignon

Food
Duration: 45m Estimated cost: €12

Cross back over Pont Daladier and walk fifteen minutes south through the western alleys of the old town to Place Pie, where Avignon's covered market hides behind Patrick Blanc's extraordinary living green wall. Eat standing at the food counters inside: a fat wedge of pissaladière — Provençal onion tart baked dark and sweet (€3.50), a paper cone of socca straight from the oven (€4), and a glass of Côtes du Rhône (€3.50). Budget around €12–15 for a full Provençal lunch that no restaurant can match.

Tip: The market closes at 13:30 and is closed on Mondays — arrive before 12:30 to catch the stalls in full swing. Head to the charcuterie counter on the left as you enter for an assiette of local saucisson and olive tapenade (€8) if you want something more substantial.

Open in Google Maps →
13:15

Rue des Teinturiers

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From Place Pie walk southeast along Rue des Lices, then turn left where the cobblestones begin and a canal appears alongside — seven minutes on foot. Avignon's most photogenic street follows a branch of the Sorgue beneath century-old plane trees, with three massive iron waterwheels still turning in the current — relics of the dyers and silk-weavers who gave the street its name. Walk the full 400-meter length slowly in the early afternoon when dappled light falls through the canopy onto stone walls and cafe terraces.

Tip: The best waterwheel photo is from the small stone footbridge near No. 28, where you can frame a wheel with the plane tree canopy overhead. Avoid the restaurants on the western end near Place des Corps-Saints — they charge tourist prices for microwaved plats du jour. The real dining is one block south on Rue Guillaume Puy.

Open in Google Maps →
19:00

Numéro 75

Food
Duration: 1h30m Estimated cost: €45

Walk three minutes south from Rue des Teinturiers to 75 Rue Guillaume Puy, where a discreet door in an 18th-century townhouse opens onto a candlelit courtyard draped in climbing plants — one of the most beautiful dinner settings in Avignon. Order the slow-braised Provençal lamb shoulder with thyme jus (€24) or the pan-seared sea bream with summer ratatouille (€22). A full three-course dinner with a glass of Châteauneuf-du-Pape runs €45–55.

Tip: Reserve by phone for a courtyard table — the indoor room is pleasant but misses the point entirely. Arrive at 19:00 sharp; by 20:00 every courtyard seat is taken in summer. The Gare d'Avignon Centre is an eight-minute walk south from here; on the way back through Porte de la Ligne, street sellers push overpriced lavender sachets and €15 'hand-painted' fridge magnets — keep walking.

Open in Google Maps →
Trip builder

Plan this trip around Avignon

Turn this guide into a bookable rail itinerary with FlipEarth.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Avignon?

Most travelers enjoy Avignon in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Avignon?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Avignon?

A practical starting point is about €65 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Avignon?

A good first shortlist for Avignon includes Palais des Papes, Pont Saint-Bénézet.