Provence, France
France · Europe

Individuelle Reisen nach Provence

Lavender fields, Cézanne's light, and Roman ruins in the olive groves.

Reiserouten ansehen
Ab 2,400/Person·Beste Reisezeit: May–June (lavender), September–October·★★★★★ 500+ Reisende vermittelt
Foto von AXP Photography auf Pexels

Was ist eine Individualreise nach Provence?

A custom Provence tour times the Valensole lavender visit for peak bloom (late June to mid-July), walks the Luberon's Gordes and Roussillon ochre cliffs with an art historian, arranges a private olive oil tasting at a Les Baux mill, and walks the Pont du Gard Roman aqueduct at dawn before tourist coaches arrive. The key is the Tuesday morning market in Apt for regional produce and the private wine tasting at Châteauneuf-du-Pape.

Provence is the lavender field photographed on every French travel calendar, but the real region is more specific and more interesting than that image suggests. The lavender blooms in the Valensole plateau for six weeks in July — the rest of the year, Provence is the Luberon hilltop villages, the Tuesday market in Apt, the olive oil mills of Les Baux, the Roman aqueduct of the Pont du Gard, and the street life of Aix-en-Provence's Cours Mirabeau. A custom Provence tour designs around the season you're actually visiting.

The region divides naturally into the Luberon (hilltop villages — Gordes, Bonnieux, Lacoste — and the ochre cliffs of Roussillon), the Alpilles (the olive groves around Les Baux, the Roman Glanum, and Saint-Rémy where Van Gogh was institutionalized), and the Camargue (the flamingo delta where the Rhône meets the Mediterranean). Each area deserves at least a day; together they make a 10-day itinerary feel properly full.

May through June delivers the best conditions without the July lavender crowds — poppies in the wheat fields, mild temperatures, and the Tuesday Apt market at its peak produce season. September brings the grape harvest. Tours start at €2,400 per person. Avignon (2 TGV hours from Paris) and Marseille (3 hours from Paris) are the natural entry points.

Was ist die beste Reisezeit für Provence?

Unsere empfohlenen Monate sind May–June (lavender), September–October. Hier ein monatlicher Überblick mit Planungshinweisen.

Jan
Nebensaison — beste Verfügbarkeit und Preis-Leistung.
Feb
Nebensaison; ruhig und oft günstiger.
Mar
Zwischensaison; das Wetter verbessert sich.
Apr
Zwischensaison; ideales Wetter beginnt.
May
Empfohlen
Hohe Zwischensaison; frühzeitig buchen.
Jun
Empfohlen
Hochsaison; tolles Wetter, höhere Preise.
Jul
Hochsaison; viel Betrieb, aber lebendig.
Aug
Hochsaison; Urlaubsmonat in vielen Teilen Europas.
Sep
Empfohlen
Hohe Zwischensaison; unser Lieblingsmonat.
Oct
Empfohlen
Zwischensaison; schönes Licht, weniger Gedränge.
Nov
Niedrige Zwischensaison; ruhig und atmosphärisch.
Dec
Nebensaison außer Weihnachten und Silvester.

Highlights in Provence

Handverlesene Erlebnisse unserer lokalen Veranstalter. Jede Individualreise beinhaltet eine Auswahl davon — oder etwas noch Besseres.

Lavender fields (mid-June to mid-July) — Provence
Erlebnis 1
Lavender fields (mid-June to mid-July)
Gordes viewpoint at 7 a.m. before the tour coaches: the most photographed Provençal hill village, with the Sénanque Abbey's lavender-ringed monastery below. Your guide positions you for the light before competing cameras arrive. The lavender is genuine — the monks have farmed it since the 12th century.
Luberon village cooking class — Provence
Erlebnis 2
Luberon village cooking class
Valensole lavender plateau: the largest lavender-growing area in France at peak bloom, with a distillery visit explaining the difference between lavender and lavandin. The beekeeper whose hives follow the bloom across the plateau. Walking the farming rows in morning light, before the tour buses reach the first field.
Avignon and Pont du Gard with historian — Provence
Erlebnis 3
Avignon and Pont du Gard with historian
Les Baux olive oil mill: stone wheels pressing the first cold-press AOC olive oil in a valley that has been doing this since Roman times. The tasting is the same as a wine tasting — terroir, vintage, variety — except the product has been harvested here since before France was France.
Gordes and Roussillon ochre villages — Provence
Erlebnis 4
Gordes and Roussillon ochre villages
Van Gogh's asylum garden at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole: the enclosed garden where he painted Irises and Starry Night's olive trees. The landscape around Saint-Rémy is identifiable from the paintings — your guide walks you to the exact positions. Then Glanum below the Alpilles: Rome in miniature, the best-preserved Roman arch in France.
Aix-en-Provence Cézanne trail — Provence
Erlebnis 5
Aix-en-Provence Cézanne trail
Châteauneuf-du-Pape estate tasting: the wine the Avignon popes made for 70 years, from galets roulés (large white pebbles that retain the Rhône valley heat) and 13 permitted grape varieties. The papal castle ruins above the village provide context for why this specific hill matters.
Wine tasting in Châteauneuf-du-Pape — Provence
Erlebnis 6
Wine tasting in Châteauneuf-du-Pape
Camargue at dawn: Camargue white horses in the morning mist, flamingos in the salt lagoons, and a gardian (Camargue cowboy) who has been working these marshes since he could ride. The naturalist guide tracks the flamingo colony. The rice paddies and black bulls at noon. The delta that is neither France nor Mediterranean but somehow both.

Musterreiserouten

Zwei Ausgangspunkte — Ihre echte Reiseroute ist individuell. Wir bauen darauf auf.

7 Tage Klassiker

  1. 1
    Tag 1: Arrival & Aix-en-Provence Cours Mirabeau
    Aix-en-Provence is Provence's most elegant city — a 17th-century Bourbon royal capital with a continuous café culture on the Cours Mirabeau (plane tree-lined boulevard, café tables, and newspaper kiosks). Check in, walk the old town, and find the Atelier Paul Cézanne: the painter's hilltop studio preserved as he left it, with his coat and apple still on the table. Cézanne was born in Aix and painted Mont Sainte-Victoire from the Bibémus quarries above the city more than 80 times. Dinner at a brasserie: bouillabaisse from Marseille's supply chain, rose rosé from the Côtes de Provence.
  2. 2
    Tag 2: Luberon Villages — Gordes & Sénanque
    Private car into the Luberon: Gordes, the most photographed Provençal hill village, its limestone houses stacked above a valley with the 12th-century Sénanque Abbey below — the lavender-ringed monastery visible in the photograph on ten million postcards. Your guide walks you to the viewpoint before 8 a.m. to have it without competing cameras. Then Sénanque itself, a functioning Cistercian monastery where monks have farmed lavender commercially since the 12th century. Afternoon in Roussillon: ochre cliffs in seventeen shades of red, orange, and yellow.
  3. 3
    Tag 3: Apt Tuesday Market & Bonnieux
    The Apt Tuesday market is the finest regional market in the Luberon: crystallized fruit (Apt is the world capital of fruit confiserie), Provençal herbs, local lavender honey, the Banon cheese wrapped in chestnut leaves, and the Luberon cherries in season (May–June). Your food guide buys ingredients for a picnic and explains the agricultural geography of the Luberon. Afternoon in Bonnieux: the cedar forest walk above the village, the old Jewish community's medieval buildings, and a view across the Luberon valley that Peter Mayle described but can only be stood in.
  4. 4
    Tag 4: Valensole Lavender & Honey
    Drive to the Valensole plateau — the largest lavender-growing area in France. Peak bloom runs late June to mid-July; your guide times the visit for the optimal bloom window and knows which fields allow walking (many are working farms). Private visit to a lavender distillery: the difference between lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) and lavandin (the commercial hybrid) and why it matters for perfume. Then: the lavender honey of a beekeeper whose hives are moved with the bloom across the plateau.
  5. 5
    Tag 5: Les Baux Olive Oil & Roman Glanum
    Les Baux-de-Provence: a fortified hilltop village above the Alpilles olive groves, with a 13th-century castle in ruins and the valley below planted with the olive trees that give the Vallée des Baux its AOC olive oil designation. Private tasting at a mill where stone wheels still press the first cold-press oil that has been produced here since the Romans. Then: Glanum, the Roman city at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, excavated from the foot of the Alpilles. The mausoleum and arch at Glanum are the best-preserved Roman monuments in France outside of Nîmes.
  6. 6
    Tag 6: Van Gogh Saint-Rémy & Pont du Gard
    Van Gogh spent 14 months at the Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy (1889–1890) and produced 150 paintings and 100 drawings in conditions of alternating crisis and extraordinary productivity. The asylum is open; the garden and Van Gogh's room are accessible. Your guide walks the landscape where the actual paintings were made — the olive groves, the wheat field, the hospital garden. Then: the Pont du Gard Roman aqueduct at dawn or dusk, when the three-tier bridge is reflected in the Gardon River without the tourist boats.
  7. 7
    Tag 7: Châteauneuf-du-Pape Wine & Departure
    Private tasting at a Châteauneuf-du-Pape estate: the appellation whose name means 'new castle of the Pope' (the Avignon papacy relocated here in 1309, and the vineyards supplied the papal table). The galets roulés (large white pebbles on the vineyard floor) retain heat and are the visible sign of the terroir. Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre in 13 permitted blends. Then Avignon: the Palais des Papes (the largest Gothic building in the world), the Pont d'Avignon, and the TGV to Paris or transfer to Marseille airport.

14 Tage Tieftauchen

  1. 1
    Tag 1: Arrival & Aix-en-Provence
    Cours Mirabeau, Cézanne's atelier, bouillabaisse and Côtes de Provence rosé dinner.
  2. 2
    Tag 2: Gordes & Sénanque Abbey
    Pre-8 a.m. Gordes viewpoint, Cistercian lavender monastery, Roussillon ochre cliffs.
  3. 3
    Tag 3: Apt Tuesday Market & Bonnieux
    Crystallized fruit capital, Banon cheese, Luberon cherry season, cedar forest walk.
  4. 4
    Tag 4: Valensole Lavender Plateau
    Peak bloom timing, lavender distillery, beekeeper honey, walking the farming plateau.
  5. 5
    Tag 5: Les Baux Olive Oil & Glanum
    AOC olive oil stone mill tasting, fortified hilltop ruins, best-preserved Roman monuments in France.
  6. 6
    Tag 6: Van Gogh Saint-Rémy & Pont du Gard
    Asylum garden and Van Gogh's room, landscape paintings in situ, Roman aqueduct at dusk.
  7. 7
    Tag 7: Châteauneuf-du-Pape & Avignon
    Papal wine estate tasting, galets roulés terroir, Palais des Papes Gothic masterpiece.
  8. 8
    Tag 8: Camargue — Flamingos & White Horses
    Drive south to the Camargue: the Rhône delta national park of salt marshes, lagoons, and rice paddies. The Camargue is home to the only wild white horses in France (Camargue ponies, born dark and turning white), flamingos in the étangs (salt lagoons), and black Camargue bulls. Private jeep tour with a naturalist guide into the inland marshes. Lunch at a gardian ranch (the Camargue cowboys) with grilled Camargue bull and local wine. Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer for the evening.
  9. 9
    Tag 9: Arles — Roman City & Van Gogh
    Arles is the Provençal city with the most intact Roman infrastructure: the 20,000-seat amphitheater (still used for bullfights), the Roman theatre, and the Alyscamps necropolis. Van Gogh lived in Arles for 15 months (1888–1889), the most productive period of his life, and the city has established a Van Gogh route marking the sites of 300 paintings. The Fondation Van Gogh exhibits contemporary art responding to Van Gogh's legacy in a 16th-century hotel particulier.
  10. 10
    Tag 10: Luberon Cycling Day
    Electric bike rental from Apt or Bonnieux: the Luberon cycling route passes through Lacoste (the Marquis de Sade's ruined castle), Ménerbes (Peter Mayle country), and the cherry orchards below Bonnieux. The Luberon plateau roads are steep enough to justify the electric assist and quiet enough for the bicycle to make sense. Picnic at the Luberon summit with Luberon valley views. Return to the village by late afternoon.
  11. 11
    Tag 11: Marseille Day — Old Port & Bouillabaisse
    Train 30 minutes south to Marseille: France's oldest city (founded by Greek colonists in 600 BC), the Vieux-Port fish market at 8 a.m. where the night's catch is sold directly from boats, and the MuCEM (Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations) in a new building connecting the old fort to the harbor. Bouillabaisse lunch at a Vieux-Port restaurant: the Marseille fish stew with rouille, croutons, and rascasse. The Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde basilica above the city.
  12. 12
    Tag 12: Dentelles de Montmirail & Wine Villages
    The Dentelles de Montmirail are limestone ridges northwest of Carpentras, forming a serrated skyline above the wine villages of Gigondas, Vacqueyras, and Beaumes-de-Venise. Private tasting at a Gigondas estate (Grenache-dominant, peppery, darker than Châteauneuf) and a Beaumes-de-Venise Muscat dessert wine producer. The ridge walk above the vines takes 90 minutes and reveals the Provençal interior that the tourist infrastructure of Luberon doesn't reach.
  13. 13
    Tag 13: Fontaine-de-Vaucluse & Petrarch
    Fontaine-de-Vaucluse is the source of the Sorgue River: a spring that emerges from a 200-meter cliff at enormous volume, one of Europe's most powerful subterranean springs. The Italian poet Petrarch lived here for 16 years in the 14th century, writing the Canzoniere. The village around the spring sells lavender products and nothing else. A kayak on the Sorgue below the spring provides the water-level view of the cliff. Afternoon: the antique markets of l'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue.
  14. 14
    Tag 14: Final Luberon Morning & Departure
    Last morning: the Luberon plateau at dawn from Gordes viewpoint, the valley below in morning mist. A final market coffee in Apt. Drive to Avignon TGV or Marseille airport.

Praktische Informationen

Visum
Schengen visa; 90 days visa-free for US/UK/CA
Währung
Euro (€)
Sprache
French
Zeitzone
CET (UTC+1)

Häufig gestellte Fragen

When does the Provence lavender bloom?+

The lavender bloom typically runs late June to mid-July in the Valensole plateau and the Luberon. Peak bloom lasts approximately three weeks and varies by two to three weeks depending on the winter. The highest-altitude fields (above 1,000m in the Lure mountain) bloom later — mid-July to early August. A custom tour books accommodation in the Valensole or Luberon with confirmed knowledge of that year's bloom status. Outside the bloom, Provence is equally worth visiting for its villages, wine, and markets.

What are the best Luberon villages to visit?+

Gordes (the most photographed, best seen at dawn or dusk), Roussillon (ochre cliffs, a short walk through the Sentier des Ocres), Bonnieux (cedar forest above the village, panoramic valley views), Lacoste (Sade's ruined castle, minimal tourism), and Ménerbes (Peter Mayle's house from A Year in Provence, now sold). All are within 20km of each other. The mistake is trying to visit all five in one day — the villages are best experienced with time to sit, eat, and explore the agricultural surroundings.

What wine should I try in Provence?+

Châteauneuf-du-Pape for the most serious Provençal red (Grenache-dominant, concentrated, the papal wine). Gigondas and Vacqueyras for more affordable alternatives with similar character. Côtes de Provence rosé — the region's defining wine style, salmon-colored and dry, best drunk young and cold. Bandol, south of Toulon, for the finest Mourvèdre-based reds in France. Beaumes-de-Venise Muscat for a sweet aperitif wine. Each appellation is within 90 minutes of Aix.

Is Provence better for food, wine, or art?+

All three, at different times of year. Food: September–October (grape harvest, mushroom season, the autumn market produce). Wine: May–September for tastings at estates before harvest. Art: the Cézanne Aix locations, the Van Gogh Saint-Rémy and Arles sites, the Fondation Maeght at Saint-Paul-de-Vence. A 10–14 day itinerary can integrate all three seriously. The Luberon, the Alpilles, and the Camargue each contribute a different chapter.

How do I get around Provence?+

A rental car is essential — the Luberon villages, the Valensole plateau, and the Camargue are inaccessible by public transport at the level of detail a custom tour requires. The TGV reaches Avignon (from Paris in 2h40) and Aix-en-Provence (3 hours), making these the entry points. A private driver is preferable for wine tastings where you'll be drinking. The Luberon villages are connected by narrow D-roads that require comfort driving in France.

Andere fragen auch

  • When is the Provence lavender in bloom?
  • What is the best Luberon village to stay in?
  • Is Provence good for wine tasting?
  • What is Peter Mayle country?
  • What is the Pont du Gard?
  • Can I visit Provence without a car?
  • What food is Provence famous for?
  • Is Gordes or Roussillon better?

Bereit, Ihre Provence-Reise zu planen?

Chatten Sie mit unserem KI-Concierge — zwei Minuten für Ihre Traumreise.

Start planning — free