A first-timer’s guide to Brittany, France

The fiercely independent region of Brittany is located in northwest France. Brittany draws visitors to its dramatically beautiful coastline, well-preserved medieval towns and fascinating prehistoric sites. 

Here’s an essential introduction to this under-the-radar part of France.

Saint Cado, southern Brittany. Photo: iStock

Where to go in Brittany

St Malo and Dinard

Brittany’s most popular coastal destination is likely the walled town of Saint-Malo.

In medieval times a fortified island (it’s now inseparably attached to the mainland), the town was the home of the legally authorised pirates known as Malouins, who lay in wait for English ships as they sailed into the Channel.

The city’s buccaneering history lives on in museums and monuments all over Saint-Malo, but the most fascinating are those in the atmospheric Old Town, known locally as intra muros, or “inside the walls”.

Across the Rance Estuary from Saint-Malo lies Dinard, France’s most fashionable seaside resort during the Belle Epoque era (1871-1914), with many impressive villas, houses and hotels dating from this time. 

Côte de Granit-Rose

The northern part of the Breton coast has come to be known as the Côte de Granit-Rose, or Pink Granite Coast, for the glittering blush-coloured granite rocks which are strewn across the shoreline.

The beaches in this area are gorgeous and uncrowded. Nearby you’ll find affordable restaurants and hotels, campsites and castles to explore.

A few miles inland are the charming towns of Lannion and Tréguier – these towns are perfect for a morning market visit to stock up on picnic supplies. 

Typical half-timbered buildings in Vannes, Brittany. Photo: iStock

Vannes and Carnac

The medieval town of Vannes is the highlight of a visit to Morbihan, the southern section of the Breton coast.

With its colorful half-timbered houses, numerous historic sites and gorgeous harbor, Vannes is a delightful place to explore by foot.

A half-hour drive from Vannes is the village of Carnac, home to the world-famous Carnac menhirs – miles of standing stones, more than 3,000 in total, dating from 4,500 – 3,000 BC. The area also has many megalithic burial mounds and tombs.

Nantes

A 20th Century bureaucratic change put Nantes outside the official Breton region, but many still consider it to be Brittany’s capital.

In recent years the city, the largest in northwestern France, has undergone a massive program of creative urban renewal.

As a result, Nantes is increasingly popular with tourists and is regularly voted the city with the best quality of life in France.

Attractions in Nantes include:

  • The wondrous Les Machines de l’île (Machines of the Isle of Nantes). This is a set of gigantic mechanical animals inspired by Jules Verne (a Nantes local) and Leonardo da Vinci
  • Estuaire, a trail of 30 large-scale artworks along the banks of the River Loire. Estuaire is viewable from the road or by river cruise
  • The popular interactive museum at Château des Ducs de Bretagne, the former home of the Dukes of Brittany.
An oyster stall in Brittany. Photo: iStock

What to eat

Everywhere you go in France, you’ll find regional specialities and proud local culinary traditions – and Brittany is no exception.

The coastal region is unsurprisingly famous for its superb seafood. Head to Belon or Cancale to gorge on oysters harvested from the surrounding beds, and to devour the best moules marinières of your life, made with the small, fleshy and extremely tasty local mussels.

Brittany is home to the galette, a thick buckwheat pancake traditionally filled with egg, ham, cheese or vegetables, and they’re available at restaurants and stalls all over the region.

Sweet specialities include Kouign Amann, a cake made with bread dough with layers of butter and sugar folded in, and Far Breton, a fruit-filled baked dessert similar to clafoutis.  

A beach on the Finistere coast, Brittany. Photo: iStock

How to get to Brittany

There’s a reason Brittany is among the UK’s favourite European holiday destinations.

The southern England ports of Plymouth, Poole, Portsmouth and Weymouth offer ferry crossings direct to St Malo and Roscoff in Brittany.

Be aware, though, that this isn’t a short hop: a ferry to Brittany takes at least six hours’ journey time, considerably longer than to Dunkirk or Calais. 

Thanks to France’s brilliant high-speed TGV network, Brittany is easily accessible by train from Paris. Allow two hours to get to Rennes in Brittany’s east, three hours for St Malo on the north coast, and four hours for Brest and Quimper in the far west.

And if you’d rather fly, you’ll find cheap flights from the UK and elsewhere in Europe to cities all over Brittany, courtesy of discount airlines including Ryanair and Easyjet.