A Luxury Guide to Bespoke Family Trips in France

Create bespoke family artworks in Paris’ museums, join a truffle hunt in Provence, explore the Loire Valley’s fairytale castles and take kid-friendly hikes through the Alps. Explore these experiences, the best places to stay and much more in our family guide to France.
France is an incredible destination for luxury family trips, rich in heritage and culture and with an abundance of fascinating, and often surprising, wildlife. Hilltop castles and quirky monuments, such as Le Passe-Muraille (the walker-through-walls) in Montmartre, bring history to life. While national parks and the French Alps offer peaceful and accessible hiking trails.
Our France specialists will share their insider knowledge to ensure every element of the adventure is perfectly suited to your family. They will recommend our favourite hotels and resorts in France, some of which offer exclusive private accommodation for families. Our concierge teams will add a special level of care and your expert and experiences guides will lead you on artisanal experiences that dig deeper – and create lasting memories.

Destination highlights: France family travel in 2026
Paris
Best for educational travel for kids
Paris is made for wandering and wonderment – and the French capital has so much to offer families. You’ll find cool architecture and storied monuments at every turn, whether strolling through Grands Boulevards or people-watching from pavement cafes in Saint-Germain-des-Prés.
The Notre-Dame Cathedral and Eiffel Tower seem to have popped from the pages of fairytales. Patisseries, too, are filled with the stuff of dreams. While bespoke, hands-on experiences will get the whole family engaged in art.


Our favourite things to do in Paris with families
Explore the city’s art and culinary scene with exclusive educational experiences
Interactive museum tours
Our carefully curated experiences bring Paris’ world-renowned art scene to vivid life. On a private family tour of the Louvre, set off on an educational treasure hunt where each clue encourages engagement in the gallery’s masterpieces. You can also take a treasure hunt at the Musée d’Orsay. Clues are hidden in paintings, statues and architectural features, leading to a secret treasure.
Hands-on arts and crafts
After viewing Monet’s awe-inspiring Water Lilies at Musée de l’Orangerie, you will all have the opportunity to try out impressionist techniques in a painting workshop. You’ll then visit a private art studio in Saint-Germain-des-Prés – working together with pastels to create your own impressionist masterpiece.
Culinary and baking workshops
Paris’ culinary scene is as alluring as its art and architecture, and its pastries and desserts and especially tempting. Hands-on tours will get everyone engaged going further than simply tasting the city’s specialities. Craft chocolate bears and multi-coloured lollipops at a chocolate-making class. Or learn to make baguettes and croissants at a family bakery in Montparnasse.
The Loire Valley
Best for castles and kid-friendly history
Known as the ‘Garden of France’, the Loire Valley is a patchwork of farms and vineyards – overlooked by castles that barely seem real. The region rolls out from the banks of the Loire River and is filled with possibilities for family adventures.
On a trip tailored to you, explore by bike or by horseback, tour fortresses that inspired fairytales and explore labyrinthine grand chateaux.

Our favourite things to do in the Loire Valley with families
Discover the Loire Valley’s storybook architecture and journey through inspiring landscapes
Hilltop castles and chateaux
The Loire Valley has more than 300 castles. Our experts will help you choose which ones to visit, based on your family’s interests. Kids will be especially charmed by the gothic turrets and forest setting of Château d’Ussé, believed to have inspired Sleeping Beauty. Château de Cheverny inspired the fictional Marlinspike Hall in the Tintin comics. While the vast Château de Chambord has more than 400 rooms, a double spiral staircase and a nature reserve grazed by red deer and wild boars.
Outdoor adventures
The best way to absorb the region’s scenery is to slow down a little. On a cycling tour down country roads, stops chosen by you could include Parc Mini-Châteaux – a theme park with miniature models of castles. On horseback, trace the flow of the Loire River and ride through vineyards (where adults can taste the valley’s renowned wines). Or take a sunrise hot air balloon flight. You’ll get to help assemble and inflate the balloon before climbing aboard for the ascent.
The French Alps
Best for mountain adventures
The European Alps, spanning Austria, Italy, France and Switzerland, are best-known for winter activities. The dramatic, jagged peaks of the French Alps encompass the Northern Alps around Annecy and Grenoble) and the Southern Alps, stretching towards the Mediterranean coastline.
When the snow melts away and wildflowers decorate the valleys, family adventures open up. With fewer crowds in the summer than at coastal areas, mild temperatures and hiking sections of the Grand Tour de Tarentaise opening up, you can hope to spot marmots and Alpine ibex goats in Vanoise National Park. Swim in Annecy’s mountain lake. Or take the Aiguille du Midi cable car in Chamonix for Mont Blanc views.
Our experts recommend
The European Alps are a spectacular, family-friendly playground where breathtaking natural beauty, rich alpine cultures and thrilling outdoor adventures converge. The unique beauty of the Alps lies in how quickly the food, language and traditions change just by crossing a mountain pass. We recommend extending your adventure to follow the ranges as they cut a crescent across Switzerland, France, Italy and Austria.

Our favourite things to do in the French Alps with families
Get out on family-friendly hikes and take in France’s highest mountain peaks
High-altitude adventures
On a clear day, when the Aiguille du Midi cable car reaches its highest point, you can take in 360-degree views of the French, Italian and Swiss Alps – and see France’s highest peak, Mont Blanc. Brave the glass skywalk for a family photo. For a slower pace and views that unfold as you chug higher, board the Mont Blanc Tramway. France’s highest rack or cog railway boards at Saint-Gervais-les-Bains and ascends to 2,372 metres.
Boating on Lake Annecy
Annecy is known as the ‘Venice of the Alps’ due to the canals threaded through its old town, Vieille Ville. It also has immaculate beaches leading to the gin-clear water of Lake Annecy. With an exclusive private boat charter, pass lakeside villages and medieval buildings like Château de Menthon-Saint-Bernard, stopping wherever you wish.
All-ages hikes
The French Alps has hiking trails that range from relatively easy strolls to challenging, multi-day treks. Gorges de la Diosaz has dramatic views from boardwalks and bridges. Loop around turquoise-hued Lac de Montriond in Morzine. Or follow the boardwalk trail through Réserve Naturelle du Bout du Lac on in Annecy. Signs point out flora and fauna including beavers.
Provence
Best for wildlife and hiking
Provence’s perfumed landscapes are beguiling for all ages. Along with vineyards and, in summer, lavender fields, you’ll find hilltop villages and national parks with glaciers, gorges and galloping white horses.
The biggest city is Marseille, whose ancient port is overlooked by a hilltop church. In Avignon, once the seat of the Catholic popes, wander on foot to see Palais des Papes (Papal Palace) and the medieval arched bridge, Pont Saint-Bénézet.



Our favourite things to do in Provence with families
Delve deeper into Provence’s beauty for unforgettable family adventures
History-filled hikes
Gorges du Verdon, sometimes called ‘Europe’s Grand Canyon’, has relatively gentle trails around lakes and over footbridges. Visit Arles’ Ancient Roman amphitheatre, converted to a fortress in the Middle Ages. Or explore Les Baux-de-Provence, a stone fortress village on a rocky plateau.
Wildlife and wild landscapes
Wild herds of white horses roam Camargue Regional Natural Park, which is also home to flocks of flamingoes and wild bulls. You can explore on an exclusive 4×4 safari through the marshlands. Or take a guided horseback ride through the white peaks, olive groves and vineyards of the Alpilles (‘little Alps’).
Hands-on workshops
From June to August, parts of Provence are blanketed with intensely purple lavender. Find out more about these striking landscapes with a craft workshop in Les Baux de Provence. Families can harvest fresh lavender and, guided by a local artisan, learn to weave traditional wands with colourful silk ribbons.
Immersive culinary experiences
Learn more about Provence’s culinary scene with an immersive cooking class in Avignon. Accompanied by a local chef, you’ll gather ingredients at a local market before preparing your family meal together. Or go behind the scenes of the truffle business, joining a hunter and his highly trained dogs to search the woods for ‘black gold’. This exclusive adventure ends with lunch, laced with truffles.
Biarritz
Best for coastal family fun
On the Basque coast in southwestern France, Biarritz has been a popular seaside resort since the 1850s. Empress Eugénie persuaded her husband, Napoleon III, to build a summer residence there.
The Côte des Basques district, with its sandy, Atlantic-facing beaches, is known as the birthplace of surfing in France. The sport took hold here in the 1950s, and surf schools offer rentals and beginners’ lessons.
On land, cross a footbridge designed by Gustave Eiffel to reach the Rocher de la Vierge, a rock formation topped with a Virgin Mary statue – and with views over the Bay of Biscay.

Our favourite things to do in Biarritz with families
Get out on the water and hike or bike coastal trails on France’s Basque coast
Coastal adventures
Families with older children can take a private e-bike tour, tracing the coastline with a guide. Immersive walking tours around the town and its fishing port, set within the glistening black rocks, are accessible for all ages. Or try surfing. Most schools offer lessons for ages five and up.
Exploring Basque villages
In Espelette – whose famous pimento peppers decorate the walls of whitewashed homes – you might encounter pottoks, or Basque mountain ponies. While, beyond its colourful, timber-framed hours, Bayonne is considered the chocolate capital of France. Taste bars, bonbons and speciality foamy hot chocolate at chocolatiers along Rue du Port-Neuf.



France's best family stays
The best places to call home while adventuring through France
France offers a spectacular variety of family-friendly accommodations, whether your family prefers a charming countryside escape or a luxury resort hotel on the coast. The best options go beyond just extra beds, providing spacious living areas, activities for kids and extra little touches that make traveling with children seamless.
La Coquillade
Multi-generational families will adore this village-like resort in the Vaucluse, near Roussillon in Provence. Accommodation, restaurants and a wine estate are spread out across 100 acres, while a trio of swimming pools includes plenty of space for kids to play.
Good to know: The onsite cycling centre has bikes and trailers for all ages, perfect for rides out exploring the hilltop villages, vineyards and lavender fields of the Luberon hills.
Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa
This Champagne hotel perches above the striped hills and valleys of the wine region – and adores catering for younger guests. Elegant, thoughtfully designed rooms can be seamlessly interconnected for families, while mini bathrobes, slippers and kids’ menus ensure all ages feel special.
Good to know: The concierge can arrange family experiences beyond vineyard tours, including trips on the Marne River and visits to local chocolate makers.
Four Seasons Hotel George V
Everyone is treated like a VIP at this central Paris property, whose three restaurants hold five Michelin stars. Kids will love details like personalised gifts in the room and their names written in treats. And the chic pool is especially refreshing after days spent exploring.
Good to know: The Seine, and the parks and carousels of Jardin des Tuileries, are steps away.
Sources de Cheverny
A Loire Valley property that perfectly encapsulates the philosophy of art-de-vivre (art of living), Sources de Cheverny appeals to architecture fans and adventurous spirits in equal measure. Wooden cabins and suites are surrounded by ancient forest, while onsite farm animals will charm younger kids.
Good to know: You can borrow bikes and cycle to nearby Château de Cheverny, the inspiration for ‘Marlinspike Hall’ in the Tintin comics.
Royal Riviera
In the heart of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, this refreshingly accessible property perfectly reflects its Côte d’Azur location with wooden shutters, striped awnings and an elegant pool. The hotel has access to a private stretch of sandy beach with shallow entry into the water.
Good to know: The poolside restaurant has a wonderfully relaxed atmosphere and a kid-friendly Mediterranean menu.
Ask the expert
France is a great destination for multi-generational families, offering rich experiences for little ones and older teenagers.
Your dedicated Jacada concierge will ensure everything is arranged before you travel. Expect meals prepared with fresh, regional ingredients that can be used to create different options where required.
Absolutely. We understand that having a private base for your family can enrich your experience, and many of our favourite properties have opportunities for exclusive stays.



