Antibes, France: Complete Travel Guide
| Country | France |
| Region | Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur |
| Type | Town |
| Best months | May, June, September, October |
| Crowd level | Medium |
| Budget | Mid-range |
| Flight (LON) | 2h 00m |
Antibes sits between Nice and Cannes but avoids the worst excesses of both, which is precisely why it deserves more attention than it typically gets. It’s a proper working town with a medieval old city, serious fortifications dropping straight into the Mediterranean, and one of the most quietly impressive small art museums on the Riviera. Come in May, June, September, or October and you’ll find the light extraordinary, the crowds manageable, and the prices fractionally more honest than its glamorous neighbours.
The honest version: Antibes is not undiscovered. Port Vauban, the marina just north of the old town, is where the genuinely obscene superyachts park up all summer, and their owners and crew give the waterfront bars a certain studied loudness. The beaches at Cap d’Antibes are beautiful but interrupted by private stretches attached to hotels that charge considerably for the privilege of a sunlounger. Don’t expect fishing village simplicity. But the old town itself, the Vieil Antibes, has genuine texture — narrow streets, peeling shutters, a covered market that opens every morning and actually sells food to people who live there rather than tourists who want a photograph of tomatoes.
The Picasso Museum is housed in the Château Grimaldi, where Picasso actually worked in 1946, and the collection benefits enormously from that context. The ramparts alongside it are free, public, and offer the particular Mediterranean experience of standing on ancient stone above extremely blue water while fishing boats move somewhere below you. This is worth more than most ticketed attractions on the coast. Don’t rush it.
What most tourists miss is the Commune Libre du Safranier, a tiny neighbourhood within the old town that declared itself a semi-autonomous commune with genuine civic self-seriousness several decades ago. It has its own mayor, its own festival calendar, and a particular atmosphere of unhurried local life that’s increasingly rare on this stretch of coast.
Antibes suits couples and independent travellers who want cultural substance alongside beach days without committing to the full performance of St-Tropez or the urban density of Nice. It’s not ideal for families with young children unless they’re patient, and it’s genuinely not the place to come in August if you value personal space or restaurant tables. But get the timing right and Antibes rewards properly — not loudly, which is exactly its value.
Weather in Antibes
| Month | Avg High | Rainfall |
|---|---|---|
| Jan | 11.5°C | 71.8mm |
| Feb | 11.7°C | 89.6mm |
| Mar | 14.6°C | 82.7mm |
| Apr | 17.4°C | 62.8mm |
| May | 20.2°C | 49.2mm |
| Jun | 24.7°C | 30.3mm |
| Jul | 27.7°C | 21mm |
| Aug | 27.8°C | 16.7mm |
| Sep | 24.5°C | 35.2mm |
| Oct | 20.1°C | 122mm |
| Nov | 15.5°C | 219.3mm |
| Dec | 12.8°C | 80.7mm |
Plan Your Trip
- Hotels: Search accommodation in Antibes on Booking.com
- Tours & Activities: Browse Antibes experiences on GetYourGuide
- Day Trips: Find Antibes tours on Viator