Where to actually stay, what worked (and what didn’t), and how romantic each place really felt
If you’re looking for the best honeymoon town in Provence, here’s the answer: Gordes.
It’s the most stunning, the most romantic, and the one you’ll remember years later.
At the bottom? Avignon. It’s practical for trains but it doesn’t have the soul you want for a honeymoon.
I know this because I’ve been to Provence multiple times. We had two weddings—one in France, one in Romania—because my husband and I come from different countries.
Between those weddings, we were exhausted and needed to escape. We chose Provence.
First the Gorges du Verdon. Then we came back and stayed in Avignon (which taught me exactly what not to recommend).
That first trip? It rained almost the entire time.
But it was still one of my favorite trips. The right place makes even bad weather feel romantic.
This guide ranks the 10 most romantic towns in Provence—where to stay, what’s nearby, and whether they actually deliver.
I’ll tell you which ones are worth splurging on (Gordes, Lourmarin), which work as detours but not bases (Moustiers, Les Baux), and which one I genuinely regret.
The practical stuff, the romantic stuff, and the mistakes you don’t need to repeat.
Of course I did not stay at all these hotels. I’ll tell you which one I tested personally.
The other ones I found after long nights of research… because the “Avignon episode” just can’t happen again!

Domaine De Manville in Les Baux de Provence is exactly the hotel you imagine when you think of a honeymoon in France
Le Pigonnet in Aix en Provence, because it looks like a description of Provence itself
Airelles Gordes, La Bastide in Gordes, is just… the most impressive hotel I’ve ever seen
Château Des Alpilles for aristocratic fantasy (blue shutters, plane trees, that pool)

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Gordes – 10/10

Oh Gordes… This place is ridiculously beautiful!
It’s made of stone houses cascading down a hillside, golden valley views, the whole thing.
It looks fake, like someone built a movie set, except it’s real and you can walk through it.
Where to stay: Airelles La Bastide if you’re going all in, or Le Jas de Gordes for something intimate and still special.
What’s close: Roussillon (15 min), L’Abbaye de Sénanque (10 min), the whole Luberon basically. About an hour from Avignon.
Why it tops the list: It delivers on every Provence fantasy without feeling manufactured. You wake up to that view and think, yeah, okay, this is worth it.
Lourmarin – 9.5/10

If Gordes is the dramatic beauty, Lourmarin is the effortlessly cool one.
It has jazz festivals, tiny bookshops, shaded terraces where everyone’s drinking rosé at 11am and no one’s in a hurry.
Where to stay: Le Moulin, or Maison de Lourmarin if you want something more boutique-y.
What’s nearby: Bonnieux (20 min), Cucuron (10 min), Aix (40 min).
Why I’m obsessed: After weeks of wedding stress, this is where you want to land. It’s quiet but alive. Refined but not stuffy. Just… easy.
Saint-Rémy-de-Provence – 9/10

If I could redo my honeymoon base, I’d pick this town in a heartbeat.
I didn’t stay here during my first Provence trip—and I still regret it. I’d bookmarked incredible hotels, imagined long dinners under fig trees, but ended up sleeping elsewhere.
We came just for the day. Within a few hours, I knew: this should’ve been our base.
People call Saint-Rémy the “Saint-Tropez of inland Provence,” and yeah, there’s a stylish edge to it.
There are plenty of things to do in Saint Remy. Luxury boutiques, art galleries, roman ruins, perfectly dressed people sipping wine on linen-covered terraces.
But underneath that? It’s still a real Provençal town.
The charm isn’t just for show. Romantic without being sleepy. Upscale but not cold.
Where to stay:
- Château Des Alpilles for aristocratic fantasy (blue shutters, plane trees, that pool)
- Le Petit Hôtel if you want intimate and design-forward—I walked past it and nearly cried for not booking it
- Hôtel Le Saint Rémy & Spa, right in the center of the town with all you expect from a honeymoon hotel
Proximity: Les Baux (15 min), Arles (20 min), the whole Alpilles region basically.
Why it works: Everything’s walkable but never crowded. You want a spa day? Done. A hike in the Alpilles? Easy. A slow morning at the market? Perfect.
It’s the kind of place where you find your rhythm and don’t want to leave.
Don’t make my mistake. If it’s a special trip, Saint-Rémy is worth it.

Roussillon – 8.8/10

The ochre cliffs here are incredible. It was the main reason I wanted to come back on my second visit.
Burnt orange, rust red, yellow—it’s like walking through a painting. (You will actually see people put dirt from the ground in bottles, so they can paint with it).
We went early for the market then did the hike at the ochre cliffs. The vibe of the town was nice, although really, really calm. It has a lot less restaurant options than the two choices above.
Where to stay: Bastide des Demoiselles, or honestly any little chambre d’hôtes with a terrace view.
Distance: 15 minutes to Gordes, hour to Avignon.
The vibe: Earthy, warm, a little artsy. Great if you love color and texture and taking way too many photos. Also surprisingly peaceful once the day-trippers leave.
Moustiers-Sainte-Marie – 7.5/10

Here’s where we stayed between weddings: the Gorges du Verdon region.
We chose to base a birt further away, but Moustiers it’s the place to be!
It’s stunning—this little village tucked into the cliffs above the Gorges du Verdon.
Unfortunetly, I’d imagined sunshine and kayaking. Instead I got rain, cozy interiors, and zero regrets.
Where we stayed: unfortunetly, we stayed outside the town (one hour away) at La Colombière du Château. Run by a local couple, every room has its own terrace, and dinner was this warm, homemade situation that felt like being at someone’s house.
But inside the village itself you will find many beautiful options. La Bouscatière is a great one!
Reality check: It’s far. 2.5 hours to Avignon, 2 hours to Aix. Beautiful? Absolutely. But don’t make it your only base.
My take: Two nights max. Experience it, love it, then head back toward the Luberon or Alpilles.
Bonnieux – 8/10

High up on a hill, views for days, vineyards rolling out below. It’s calm here. Simple. A little sleepy, in the best way.
Where to stay:
- Les Terrasses du Luberon
- Capelongue, a Beaumier hotel & Spa, an impressive complex with an incredible view and excellent services. Definetly a plurge but if you can afford it, you have everything you need here.
Close to: Lourmarin, Roussillon, Apt—all the Luberon classics (my favourite is Saignon).
The appeal: If you want to do nothing but walk to the bakery, sit on a terrace, and stare at the valley, this is your spot.
Les Baux-de-Provence – 7.8/10

Medieval ruins, dramatic cliffs, Carrières de Lumières (the immersive art thing) just down the road.
During the day it’s packed with tour groups, but at night it’s yours.
Where to stay: Hôtel Baumanière if you’re fancy (the pool view alone gives honeymoon vibe); Domaine de Manville if you’re really fancy.
Location: 15 minutes to Saint-Rémy,an hour to Avignon.
Strategy: Stay one night. Wake up early. Walk around before everyone else arrives. Then leave.
Aix-en-Provence – 7.5/10

This is more city than village, but it’s a Provencal city—fountains on every corner, outdoor cafés, art galleries, that golden stone everywhere.
Where to stay: Le Pigonnet (in a historic mansion) or Château de la Gaudee (castle luxury).
Access: Cassis and the coast (30 min), the Luberon (45 min), Marseille (30 min). Great for day trips, wether on your own or booked.
When it works: We ended up here on a return trip and I loved the rhythm of it. Morning espresso, wandering, boutique shopping, good food. If you want culture mixed into your countryside honeymoon, Aix delivers.
L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue – 7.2/10

Canals, antique markets, very cute. Also very crowded, especially in summer.
Where to stay: Grand Hôtel Henri.
What’s nearby: Fontaine-de-Vaucluse (10 min), Avignon (30 min), Gordes (30 min).
Honest opinion: It’s fine. Photogenic. But it doesn’t have the soul of the smaller villages. Go for a Sunday market, then move on.
Avignon – 6.5/10

Look, I’m sorry, Avignon. You’re useful. You have trains. You have infrastructure.
But for a honeymoon? No.
Great for a day visit, but don’t stay there.
Where to stay: Hôtel d’Europe is nice, La Divine Comédie looks really beautiful too.
The problem: It feels urban. Busy. A little gritty. We stayed here the second time we came back to Provence because it was cheap and easy to get to.
I spent the whole time wishing we’d picked Saint-Rémy or Aix instead.
Lesson learned: Don’t book somewhere just because it’s convenient. You’ll regret it.

What actually matters when you’re choosing
I ranked these based on three things:
- Does it feel special? Not just pretty—special. Like you’ll remember it years later.
- Where will you actually stay? A gorgeous village means nothing if the hotel’s depressing.
- What’s around it? You’re not spending a week in one place. You need a good base for exploring.
How I’d plan it if I were doing it again
For your main base: Saint-Rémy, Lourmarin, or Roussillon. Stay 3-4 nights.
For a splurge night or two: Gordes. Just do it.
For a detour: Moustiers or Les Baux—two nights, then leave.
One incredible stay beats five mediocre ones. Trust me on this.
Timing matters more than you think
Late spring (May-June): Everything’s blooming, lavender’s starting, it’s not too hot yet.
Fall (September-early October): Golden light, harvest season, fewer tourists, still warm enough for outdoor dinners.
Summer: Only if you love crowds, heat, and paying double for everything.
Check out my list of the best 18 places to visit in summer in France.
Things you should actually do
- Drive to Sénanque or Valensole for lavender (if it’s the right season)
- Have dinner outside somewhere in Les Baux
- Wine tasting in Gigondas or Vacqueyras (smaller, better than Châteauneuf)
- Rent a vintage car for a day through the Luberon (cheesy but worth it)
- Take a bakery class in some centuries-old farmhouse
Final thoughts
You don’t have to do everything. Pick the places that sound like you. That feel like a pause, not a race.
Provence is easy to romanticize from a distance, but the best version of it is when you slow down, pick a village that speaks to you, and just… exist there for a few days.
We had two weddings, one rainy detour, and one budget mistake. But I’d do it all again. Just maybe not Avignon.

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Hi, I’m Ersilia

Toulouse, France

Originally from Romania

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As a Romanian expat living in the heart of southern France, I guide English speakers to discover authentic French experiences without the language barrier. My unique perspective as both a local and an expat allows me to share insider tips, cultural insights, and practical advice that you won’t find in typical guidebooks.
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