The finest towns on the French coast, offering Belle Epoque glamour, sandy beaches, dramatic landscapes or oysters and chilled rose
It’s summer. Maybe you want to go to the French seaside. But where, exactly? Here’s a top 20 of coastal spots. My top 20. I’ve tried to avoid too many of the blindingly obvious. Others are omitted because I’m not keen, such as Cannes (a film festival with an uninteresting town attached), Monaco (a comic opera high-rise ghetto) and St Tropez (over-priced, over-crowded and underwhelming). I’m also, usually, looking for more than just prettiness. I like oomph, and perhaps a story, in a place. In short, these are the seaside towns and villages I get most excited about revisiting.
‘It’s St Tropez without the obnoxious sense of exclusivity’
Population: 7,800
You’re a family, you require a full-tilt holiday, you go to Cavalaire. The resort shares the same sun, sea and insouciance as St Tropez, 12 miles yonder, but without the obnoxious sense of exclusivity. They like families here. Granted, quaint it ain’t. Once a fishing village, Cavalaire is now a mainly post-war creation of apartments and modern streets. But palms and pines, light and sea attenuate the effect, the corniche surroundings are grand – and youngsters don’t care for quaint anyway. They want activity. Cavalaire has every maritime pursuit known to man, short of whaling.