A while ago, when I was in Paris, I felt in a bit of a hyper romantic mood and decided to leave the crowded city for one day and head to Val de Loire (Loire Valley).
In my opinion, Loire Valley is a real must-do if you have more then 5 days in France. What is it and why do you have to visit it?
The Loire Valley is located about 200 km south of Paris (see the map below) and is considered to be “The Gardens of France”. There are about 1000 chateaux (castles) alltogether JUST there. Some of them are small and private, but some are huge, open to the public and truly outstanding!
The abundance of beautiful landscapes with vineyards, fairlytale castles and rich history that surrounds them makes the place truly an incredible attraction which would be a pity to miss!
RELATED READ: Going to Bordeaux too? Here are 10 things to do in Bordeaux, France – The ultimate guide and here are the best Bordeaux Hotels!
It is no wonder so many tourists take a one day trip from Paris just to see the chateaux of Val de Loire. That is what I did as well. I took a Paris day tour – Loire Valley with City Wonders tours and sat in their bus, filled with expectations of epic landmarks.
While our tour guide, Adam, a flamboyant Canadian who knows absolutely everything about French culture, language and history, was explaining to us a bit about our schedule, my mind started wandering into daydreams of castles with high towers and spiral staircases, labyrinths of gardens and love stories between fair princesses and handsome knights in shining armor…
A little bit of history:
When you wake up from your daydreams, you will hear your guide explaining some rather interesting facts. Seems like Val de Loire used to be quite populated especially by the royal family and nobles at the court in times of war. In case of attacks which would come either from the rivers or from land, the royal family would be like, hmm…
Instead of trying to stay in the castle while it’s being sieged, why don’t we just, you know… move the castle?!
Don’t take that literally. They wouldn’t move the structure itself. But they would move everything in it, together with all the people in the court, the guests, the servants, the livestock (cows, chickens, pigs) and so on. That would make a convoy of a few thousand who had to be moved, and this could happen frequently as once every two weeks, can you imagine?
The guide kept telling us story after story of plots, schemes, arranged marriages, affairs and big egos, the type that in order to copy the Italian Renaissance would order a huge, architecturally beautiful castle with 800 hundreds rooms, which, until modern time, had no real good heating solution on the inside. What am I talking about? Well for example…
First stop: Château de Chambord
Did you ever see the “Beauty and the Beast” movie?
The story goes that this is the castle that inspired the animator for the classic film. It was commissioned by King Francis I to be his 800 room hunting lodge. It was indeed built after he had a failed campaign in Italy and came back wanting to copy the Italian new age architecture (of that time). I’m glad I took the tour as the guide kept telling us all the little side stories that made the visit even more enjoyable. I don’t remember all the names and facts but if you have the opportunity to take an excursion, do it!
Outside, Château de Chambord is magnificent! I mean I just couldn’t stop clicking with my camera! The towers, the walls, the terraces, the outside spiral staircases…
Oh, just stop time and give me a long classic dress!!
Inside the castle there is a different story. Still, there were some cool elements, like a spiral staircase with two flights of stairs made in such a way that if one person goes up one and another comes down on the other one, they will never see each other and they will never know who passed by them. Otherwise, the rooms are too tall, too stony. As the chimneys are too weak and not able to heat up the rooms, the castle stayed so cold throughout its history that almost no one could ever live in it except for a few days at a time.
Though there was an immense amount of money spent on building this chateau, no one ever really lived there, isn’t that sad?
Well, at least it was discovered by tourists and now it is visited all year long!
Once inside, don’t dare skip taking the stairs up to the roof where you will have the opportunity to see the great surroundings as well as all the cool towers from up close. Again, I grabbed my camera and took advantage of all the angles I could find 🙂
Second stop : Lunch at a private château
The tour took us to a second chateau for lunch. This one was much smaller, but had all the mandatory elements to be called a château (= a castle). The lunch was very French and there was plenty of wine to enjoy. At the end, we were offered a few historical facts about the place and a quick tour, presented by the family who owned the castle and some wine tasting (of course!)
Third stop: Château de Chenonceau
This one was by far my favorite!
It is an absolutely gorgeous castle that includes a bridge over the river Cher. The Chateau de Chenonceaux is well known for the rivalry between two famous women – Catherine de’ Medici and Diane de Poitiers, the wife and the mistress of King Henry II respectively.
Seems this mistress was quite an emancipated woman, and hot as hell for those times. She took care of her body and not only that, she bathed regularly (hey, we are talking about medieval France here!) and ate right with a diet based on home-grown fruits and vegetables. She definitely had the looks, and the king adored her, to the queen’s dismay of course!
The queen was quite the opposite. She was short and not pretty at all. She made her enemies’ life hell, especially Diane’s, from whom the vengeful queen took away the castle right after her husband’s death.
The Garden
Diane de Poitiers took care that extensive flower and vegetable gardens along with a variety of fruit trees would be built around the castle so she would always have fresh food. Her gardens still stand and they look great!
Catherine de’ Medici also commissioned her own gardens, which are a predominant blue, with a bit of pink. Why these colors? Because back then blue was the strong feminine color while pink was a male color. How the times we live in shape our perception, don’t they?
The Castle
The castle is wonderful; if you go there by yourself you can easily spend half a day or more just visiting it and its surroundings. Make sure to visit it all the way to the top floor, where you can see the rooms, especially the “dark” room!
After taking the castle from Diane, Queen Catherine changed many things in it, mostly to have her presence felt and to show she was in charge now. She even put her portrait in the former bedroom of Diane to make her point.
Make sure you visit all the rooms, and pay attention to the traditional kitchen which was placed on the lowest floor!
The wine tasting
When my tour gave us a choice to spend more time in the castle or to continue to the wine tastings, it was so hard to choose! I went for the wine in the end 😉
I tasted 4 good wines and enjoyed every drop. If you want to, you can do the tasting, otherwise, you can walk around the castle more for the duration of the tasting.
Even if I usually go independent, without a tour, I am glad I made an exception this time. I felt otherwise I would miss so much!
The full name of the tour I took is “Full day Loire Valley Castles and Wine Tasting Tours from Paris” by City Wonders Tours. It felt very well organized and not rushed (very important for me). They also divided us into two groups, which made it easier to manage. Even though I usually prefer to organize everything myself, this is a time when I actually do recommend taking a tour for these reasons:
First, you won’t need to worry about transportation to each place (it’s not that easy by public transport to make your way from one chateau to the other) and no need to exhaust yourself and drive there and back (200 km one way).
Second, it is actually cheaper. If you take public transport (I will explain the procedure below) you pay for everything separately – train tickets, lunch, tour guides and entrance tickets to castles so it will be more expensive. Plus, you will have to wait in line, which I did not have to bother with at all, as all the tickets were bought for us in advance.
And third, and the most important, the guides! You will never read all the amount of extremely interesting info our guides shared with us from the Internet or your guide book. Seriously, I pitied those people in the line I passed by, who were reading Wikipedia from their tablets. You will not enjoy it as much, you just won’t!
PRICE: The tour costs 165 EUR per person. Transportation, lunch, guides, tickets to the chateaux and wine tastings are included in the price.
If, after all my reasoning, you still want to have a do-it-yourself-tour, no problem, it is your choice, let me explain how to plan it:
🏰 Best views: | Château de Chambord |
🌼 Best for gardens: | Château de Chenonceaux |
☀️ Best time of year: | May – September |
💵 Avg hotel price: | €100 |
Subscribe here to get up to 35% off your accommodation for your next trip!
How to get to Loire Valley by yourself:
My advice is, if you are going to go by yourself, then plan on more than one day. Go for a few days, rent a car and drive to all the castles you want to see. Alternatively, take a train to Tours, and then rent bikes and cycle around the castles.
As I said, it is totally possible to see the main castles in a one-day trip, but if you have the chance, you should stay in the area for a couple of days; there really is so much to see!
How to get to Tours:
By car:
If you choose to rent a car, check this website, it usually gives the best rates in my experience!
By train:
The route Paris – Tours (the city close to Loire Valley) runs quite frequently. Every 40 mins trains leave from Gare Montparnasse to Tours. You can see the schedule here. The cheapest train ticket, if you buy it in advance, will be 36 EUR round trip. However, take into consideration that this train will also be the slowest (2 hours one way). You will not be able to see much of the castles if you spend 4 hours on the train, right? If you want to get there by fast train in 1 hour, count on at least 90 EUR for a return trip.
From Tours you can get to the most famous chateaux by public transport, but the service is very infrequent. To avoid frustration, I recommend either renting a bike/car from there or taking a local tour from Tours.
Buy your train ticket to Loire Valley here!
– Where to stay in the Loire Valley –
There are many hotels for all budgets right there in Tours, so it might be a good option to stay there overnight.
I can recommend these:
- A hotel for a luxury stay – Manoir de la Touche;
- A hotel with good price/quality – Auberge Du Grand Dauphin;
- A hotel for a budget stay – La Cyrillaure.
Here is a map of the most popular castles in the Loire Valley. I circled the ones I visited on my tour (these 2 are really the most important ones to visit!):
I hope this was useful, thank you for reading this article!
Disclaimer: I was invited to the City Wonders tour as a guest, but as usual, I have stated my honest opinion.
Do you want to know where to stay in Paris? Check out my article about 5 neighborhoods in Paris with hotel recommendations for each here!
Do you want to discover more places in France? Check out my article about 7 best things to do in Saint-Tropez!
Have you been to Loire Valley? Which castles did you visit? Which ones would you like to visit?
Share your thoughts about the article, I am always very happy to hear from my readers!
If you liked this article, please share!
Yulia
Pin it for later!
My 6 times great grandfather was from the Loire Valley
I would love to visit.
Gwen
Cool
Thank you!
Hi Yulia,
I was wondering if you could provide with me an URL, or a contact where I can look after a one day Loire valley tour. Amboise (Chateau du Clos Luce), Chambord (Chateau de Chambord), Chenonceaux (Chateau de Chenonceau) I am going to be in Paris between 23th an 29th of May so this period of time I am interested.
Thank you for your help.
Hello and thank you for your email!
I’m really glad you have the Loire Valley on your bucket list – it’s so beautiful and it definitely deserves a full day tour!
I made some research and I found some options that seem perfect for what you want. First of all, there’s this Loire Valley Castles Full-Day Tour that will take about 12 hours and you’ll get to see the wonderful valley, including the 3 castles you’re interested in – plus a lunch at an 200-year old inn. If you’re not willing to wait in line with lots of tourists, there’s always the possibility to take the tour named Skip the Lines: Loire Valley Castles & Wine Tasting which will have you skip the lines for Chanbord and Chenonceau. And my last recommendation is this one: Castles of the Loire Valley Full-Day Tour from Paris that will be in a small group and you will depart from Paris, which I find very convenient.
Hope you’ll have lots of fun in Paris!
Yulia
We are going in early May. Will the gardens be in bloom?
not sure, but you might catch it yes!
what a lovely trip you had Yulia! will be in Paris for new year , good photo anyway 😀
Amazing! Did the tour include lunch? How was the lunch? I am going to Paris next Spring 2017 and I was thinking of doing the same tour!
Yes, the lunch was included. you can see some pictures up the post. I cant remember now what we had exactly, but it was good and there was a lot of good wine! 😉
Thank you! I booked the tour, can’t wait! So Excited
How lovely! The photos of you from a distance are especially great..how did you manage them? 🙂
The Loire Valley looks like a perfect getaway from the frenetic streets of Paris. So quaint, charming and medieval in appearance, I wish I had time to visit the region on my previous visit to France. Great post by the way.
There’s no finer way to spend a day than wandering around castles. Loved this – thanks for sharing! 🙂 x
This is such an absolutely gorgeous castle. What a pity that no one has actually lived in it.
Sometimes it is far better to take a tour. The side stories would make the castle visit so much more interesting.
Thanks for sharing! 🙂
~Carl~
This post has me swooning! It’s so beautiful there. I have been to France a few times, but never outside of Paris. There is so much more to discover!
A story full of temptation 🙂 I’d love to enjoy the lunch followed by an afternoon of wine tasting!
Lovely post.
I’ve been to dozens of areas in France. It’s one of my favorite countries to visit, but I haven’t been to Loire Valley. It seems like a great place to take my daughter. I think she’d fall in love with chateau de Chenonceaux.
oh, she definitely would! which girl would not!:)
I’ve wanted to take a trip to France especially for wine tasting and Loire Valley is at the top of the list. Not only do they amazing wine, there are so many other great things to see too, as you’ve shown here.
yes, you get 2 trips in 1 basically! 🙂
The chateau de Chenonceaux looks like it belongs in a fairytale!
Awesome clicks. Loved you style of writing and yes good to have found you.
Following on twitter and FB from now.
This is what I appreciate about Europe, gardens and castles. I love nice gardens. That is something we lack here.
Loved this post because i am a HUGE Beauty & the Beast fan! I had no idea this was the castle it was fashioned from .They all look fantastic to visit. I have no desire to ever see Paris but would gladly visit this part of France any time!
Yes, Val de Loire is the biggest UNESCO heritage area for a reason. And the chateau is so amazing, you should go esp as you are the cartoon fan!:)
Gorgeous photos! Love the classic vibe going on. Thanks for sharing your adventure.
Lovely!! Paris bound this November so will keep this side trip in mind!
Definitely do it if you have a chance! I promise you wont regret!:)
I’ve visited France several times, but sadly I haven’t made it to the Loire Valley. The castles look incredible and I always love a great guide who adds such interesting anecdotal and factual tidbits to the experience. My husband and I had a great guide while on an out-of-Paris couple of days to Normandy.
Normandy is also amazing, but these 2 are different, hard to compare!
Oh, what a lovely day trip you had! When my family and I go to Paris, we like to take trains out of the city for our day trips, but we get nervous even going anywhere further than Versailles because we are beholden to train schedules in terms of getting back to our home base before it’s too late. The bus tour you were on seems like a smart alternative. How big was the group?
The group was not more than 20 people and all of us, we were given headphones so that we can hear the guide even if we’d stop for a photo etc.!