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Provence

Light, stone and the long lunch — the cultivated heart of the French south.

Culinary Wine Cultural Wellness
Suggested stay
from 4 · 6 ideal · up to 10 nights
Currency
Euro (EUR)
Language
French, English (widely spoken in hospitality)
Best season
Mid-May to late June and September into early October are the connoisseur's windows: warm days, cool evenings, vineyards and markets at their fullest, and the worst of the August crowds avoided. Lavender on the Valensole plateau peaks roughly late June to mid-July. July and August are hot and busy; winter is quiet and many fine kitchens close, though the Alpilles light in low season is exceptional.

Provence is less a single destination than a state of mind held in stone and light — the cultivated, slow-living heart of the French south, where the day is organised around the table, the market and the long shadow of a plane tree. It is the country of the Alpilles and the Luberon, of Aix and Arles, of vineyards and olive groves, Roman ruins and ochre villages, and the particular clear light that drew Van Gogh and Cézanne and still does the work of any sightseeing itinerary. What distinguishes it for the discerning traveller is not grandeur but refinement: this is a place that rewards staying still.

It is best experienced from a single, well-chosen base, with days that unspool rather than fill up. Mornings belong to the markets and to the great estates — a private cellar in Châteauneuf-du-Pape, the sculpture walk at Château La Coste, the antiquaires of L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue. The middle of the day is given over to lunch, which in Provence is not an interruption but the point; the region holds one of France’s finest concentrations of serious kitchens, crowned by Glenn Viel’s three-star Oustau de Baumanière beneath the citadel of Les Baux. Afternoons are for the pool, the spa, or a slow drive between perched villages, and evenings for the cool of a terrace and a bottle of something local.

The rhythm rewards patience and a degree of discretion. Four nights is enough to take the measure of one corner — the Alpilles, say, or the Luberon — but six allows the region to open properly: a day in the Camargue, a balloon over the lavender, a long lunch booked weeks ahead, a morning given entirely to wine. The finest addresses, from Villa La Coste’s art-strewn vineyard to Baumanière’s grande-maison estate, are destinations in themselves and reward the traveller who treats them as such rather than as a bed between excursions.

The shoulder seasons are the connoisseur’s choice. Late spring and early autumn bring warm days and cool nights, full markets and vineyards, and the soft northern light at its best, without the August crush. Come for the food and the wine, stay for the unhurried civility, and leave, as visitors have for two centuries, reluctantly.

Ideal for
Gastronomes and wine collectors · Art and architecture devotees · Couples seeking a slow, discreet escape · Cultural travellers pairing Provence with the wider south of France

Where to stay

The Houses

Villa La Coste

Vineyard art-estate hotel · Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade, north of Aix-en-Provence

Ultra Premier

Set within the 200-hectare Château La Coste vineyard and sculpture park, this is the most singular address in Provence: 31 private suites, each with its own terrace and plunge pool, scattered among works by Tadao Ando, Frank Gehry, Louise Bourgeois and Alexander Calder. The hotel reads as a living museum that happens to pour its own wine. Architecture, art and a serious cellar are the whole point of the stay.

Why Nowhere else fuses world-class contemporary art, architecture and wine into a single residence.

31 suites with private terraces and plunge poolsChâteau La Coste art-and-architecture walk and biodynamic winery on the estateSpa Villa La Coste and multiple restaurants including Francis Mallmann's open-fire table

Dining: Louison (the estate's gastronomic table; held one star under Hélène Darroze and reopens under Florent Pietravalle in 2026 — star status to be confirmed)

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Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence

Relais & Châteaux · Country house estate · Les Baux-de-Provence, in the Val d'Enfer beneath the citadel

Ultra Premier

A storied family estate of 53 rooms and suites set across five buildings at the foot of the medieval citadel, anchored by one of France's great three-star kitchens. Olive groves, a Sisley spa and three pools spread across the valley floor. The benchmark against which Provençal luxury is still measured.

Why The region's definitive grande maison, with a three-star table on the doorstep.

L'Oustau de Baumanière, three stars under Glenn VielSisley spa, three outdoor pools and an estate kitchen gardenSecond table, La Cabro d'Or, for relaxed Provençal cooking

Dining: L'Oustau de Baumanière (three Michelin stars, Michelin Green Star; chef Glenn Viel)

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Coquillade Provence

Relais & Châteaux · Hilltop wine-village resort · Gargas, in the Luberon

Premier

A restored 13th-century hamlet on a Luberon ridge, surrounded by its own vineyards and the Ventoux beyond. The rooms are large and contemporary, the spa among the best in the region, and the resort doubles as a serious cycling base with a professional bike centre. Quietly grand without ceremony.

Why The finest base for the Luberon, pairing a hilltop vineyard setting with a destination spa.

Restored medieval hamlet with estate vineyardsTwo Michelin Keys and an extensive spa and wellness centreGastronomic table plus a vineyard bistro and on-site winery
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Domaine de Manville

Small Luxury Hotels of the World · Golf and country estate · Les Baux-de-Provence, in the Alpilles

Premier

A 40-hectare estate in the valley below Les Baux, built around an 18-hole golf course, olive groves and a serene olive-oil-themed spa. The mood is that of a privately owned Provençal mas grown to estate scale, calm and unshowy. A strong choice for those who want space and quiet within striking distance of the great tables.

Why Space, golf and quiet in the Alpilles, minutes from Baumanière's kitchens.

18-hole golf course set among olive grovesOlive-oil spa and large heated poolGourmet restaurant and bistro using estate produce
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L'Hôtel Particulier

In-town private mansion · Arles, old town

Premier

An intimate 18th-century townhouse, formerly the residence of the Baron de Chartrouse, hidden behind walls in the heart of Arles. A handful of individually decorated rooms surround a courtyard garden, pool and small spa. The ideal urbane base for Arles's Roman monuments, the LUMA campus and the Camargue.

Why The most refined address inside Arles, for travellers who want culture on the doorstep.

Discreet walled garden with courtyard pool and spaAntique-filled rooms in a listed Baron's residenceWalking distance to the Roman arena, Van Gogh sites and LUMA Arles
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Château des Alpilles

19th-century park mansion · Saint-Rémy-de-Provence

Premier

A 19th-century manor set in a seven-hectare park of century-old plane trees and rare species on the edge of Saint-Rémy. Family-run, gracious and timeless, with a pool, tennis and a quiet bar. A classic Provençal château stay for those who prefer heritage to design statement.

Why Old-Provence château living a short stroll from one of the region's loveliest towns.

Seven-hectare arboretum park with heated pool and tennisPeriod salons and individually styled roomsWalking distance to Saint-Rémy's markets and galleries
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Where to dine

The Tables

L'Oustau de Baumanière

3 Michelin stars

Modern Provençal / Mediterranean · Destination fine dining

Glenn Viel's three-star cooking, rooted in the estate's own oil and gardens — the region's culinary summit.

Hard to book Three Michelin stars (2026)Michelin Green Star for sustainabilityRelais & Châteaux

L'Auberge de Saint-Rémy — Fanny Rey & Jonathan Wahid

2 Michelin stars

Contemporary Provençal, seafood and plant-led · Auberge fine dining

Fanny Rey's lyrical, market-driven cooking is the Alpilles' most exciting kitchen and recently rose to two stars.

Hard to book Two Michelin stars (2026)Led by one of France's foremost women chefs

La Chassagnette

1 Michelin star

Garden-to-table Provençal · Vegetable-garden restaurant

Armand Arnal cooks almost entirely from the estate's own gardens — the purest expression of Camargue terroir.

Reserve ahead One Michelin star (2026)Pioneer of restaurant self-sufficiencyThree hectares of permaculture gardens

Le Vivier

1 Michelin star

Modern French · Riverside fine dining

A polished one-star table on the water in L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, ideal after a morning among the antiquaires.

Reserve ahead One Michelin star (2026)Terrace over the River Sorgue

Francis Mallmann en Provence

Argentine open-fire · Open-fire estate dining

Live-fire asado theatre from a legendary chef, eaten amid major contemporary sculpture.

Hard to book Mallmann's only restaurant in EuropeSet within the Château La Coste art park

La Cabro d'Or

Provençal · Garden bistronomy

Relaxed, beautifully sited Provençal cooking for the days you want Baumanière without the full three-star ceremony.

Reserve ahead The Baumanière estate's second tableGarden terrace beneath the Baux cliffs

La Table de Pierre Reboul

1 Michelin star

Creative French · Hotel fine dining

Aix's most inventive kitchen, with olive oil threaded through both the room and the plates.

Reserve ahead One Michelin star (2026)Set in the Renaissance hotel, Aix-en-Provence

What to do

Experiences

Private Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Rhône cellar day

Private guide, by-appointment estate access

Wine

A chauffeured day through the southern Rhône — Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Gigondas and Vacqueyras — with cellar visits and tastings arranged privately at domaines that do not normally receive the public, tailored to the collector's palate.

Why Access to benchmark Rhône estates and verticals that are otherwise closed to visitors.

Sunrise hot-air balloon over the Luberon

Private or small-group charter

Adventure

A dawn flight above the ochre cliffs, perched villages and (in season) lavender of the Luberon, followed by a Champagne landing breakfast in the fields below.

Why The only way to grasp the full sweep of the Luberon's villages and colours in a single hour.

Château La Coste art-and-architecture walk

By-appointment, private guide available

Cultural

A walking circuit of the open-air collection — Ando, Gehry, Bourgeois, Calder, Serra and more — set among working biodynamic vineyards, ideally guided and paired with a tasting.

Why A world-class sculpture park most travellers never realise exists, on one estate.

Private Camargue safari on horseback and by 4x4

Private guide

Adventure

A guided day through the Camargue's lagoons and salt flats among white horses, black bulls and flamingos, combining the Roman heritage of Arles with the delta's wild edges.

Why Europe's great wetland wilderness, reached privately from Arles in under an hour.

Helicopter tour of the Alpilles, Luberon and Verdon

Private helicopter charter

Adventure

An aerial circuit over the Baux citadel, the ochre of Roussillon, the Valensole lavender plateau in season and the turquoise Verdon gorge, with the option of a remote lunch landing.

Why Compresses Provence's most dramatic landscapes into a single, scenic afternoon.

Private truffle hunt and lavender-distillery morning

Seasonal, by appointment

Culinary

A guided hunt with dogs on a working estate (winter black truffle), or in summer a private visit to a Valensole-plateau lavender distillery, each followed by a tasting or fields walk.

Why Two of Provence's signature crops experienced at the source, well away from the tour coaches.

Shopping

The Maisons

L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue — the antiques capital

Provence's antiques heart, criss-crossed by canals and home to more than 300 dealers. The Village des Antiquaires de la Gare, a hundred galleries in a converted 19th-century spinning mill, trades Friday to Monday; the great twice-yearly fairs at Easter and in August draw collectors from across Europe.

Village des Antiquaires de la GareLe Quai de la GareL'Isle aux Brocantes

Aix-en-Provence — Cours Mirabeau and the Mazarin quarter

Aix is Provence's most elegant shopping town: the plane-shaded Cours Mirabeau and the surrounding Mazarin lanes hold French fashion houses, perfumers, calisson confectioners and design boutiques in 17th- and 18th-century hôtels particuliers.

HermèsFrench and Italian fashion boutiquesCalisson and confiserie houses

Saint-Rémy-de-Provence — galleries and Alpilles markets

A compact town of art galleries, antique dealers and design ateliers, anchored by the celebrated Wednesday-morning market — among the best in Provence for linens, ceramics, olive oil and Provençal tableware.

Independent art galleriesAntique dealers and brocantesWednesday Provençal market

By appointment
Private cellar purchases and shipping from Rhône and Provence wine estates · Estate olive-oil tastings and direct purchase in the Vallée des Baux · Dealer-led private viewings during the L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue antiques fairs

Arrival & departure

Coming & Going

Airports

MRS Marseille Provence Airport

The principal gateway, with two runways including a 3,500 m strip able to take all jet categories; broad European and connecting long-haul links.

AVN Avignon-Caumont Airport

Smaller regional and general-aviation field; for many northern Provence destinations it shortens total door-to-door time versus Marseille.

NCE Nice Côte d'Azur Airport

Far more long-haul and intercontinental connections; a common arrival point when combining Provence with the Riviera.

Private terminals

  • General-aviation / FBO facilities at Marseille Provence (MRS) operated by international handlers
  • General-aviation handling at Avignon-Caumont (AVN)

Meet & greet · gate escort

  • Private meet-and-assist on arrival through MRS, with escort through immigration and baggage
  • Hotel concierge greeters arranged by the leading estates

First-class & arrivals lounges

  • Premium and lounge facilities at Marseille Provence Airport
  • FBO lounges for private-aviation arrivals at MRS and AVN

Private transfers

  • Chauffeured luxury sedans and people-carriers from all three airports
  • Helicopter transfers between MRS and points across Provence and the Riviera
  • Private boat and 4x4 excursions arranged in the Camargue

Private aviation

  • Marseille Provence (MRS) is the main jet gateway, handling mid-size to ultra-long-range aircraft via international FBO operators
  • Avignon-Caumont (AVN) suits light and mid-size jets routing to the Luberon and Alpilles
  • TGV high-speed rail (Avignon TGV, Aix-en-Provence TGV) is a frequent alternative from Paris, roughly 3 hours

Immigration fast-track

Fast-track immigration and security available at Marseille Provence via premium meet-and-assist services; immediate for FBO private arrivals.

Curator’s notes — pending verification

  • Villa La Coste's gastronomic table has reopened as Louison under Florent Pietravalle (March 2026), succeeding Hélène Darroze (who held one star). Michelin still shows the legacy 'Hélène Darroze à Villa La Coste' one-star listing; whether the star carries to the renamed Louison under the new chef in the current cycle is unconfirmed.
  • FBO/handler names at MRS and AVN are described generically by editorial choice; current operators include Jetex and AviaVIP at MRS and Jetex/Sky Valet at AVN if specific naming is preferred.
  • Lavender peak on the Valensole plateau (late June to mid-July) shifts with weather year to year; treat as approximate.
  • Airport-to-destination drive times are approximate and depend on the specific Provence sub-region.
Last reviewed June 2026 17 sources on file