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TatileUcak · City Brochure May 31, 2026
France, Europe

Nice

Queen of the Côte d'Azur — palm-lined bay in front of Belle Époque hotels, Matisse's blues and the Old Town scented with socca

Overall
4.5 / 5
Population
343K
Currency
EUR
Best Time
May, June

Must-See Places

01
Promenade des Anglais
7-kilometer coastal walk along the Baie des Anges (Bay of Angels). It bears this name because it was built in the 19th century with the money of the British aristocracy — the Niçoise still call it simply 'la Prom'. The turquoise sea on one side, the pink-white dome of Negresco and the Belle Époque hotels on the other. Joggers and children on roller skates in the early morning, tourists holding creamy ice cream in the afternoon, locals with glasses of rosé in their hands at sunset. Rent a bike and ride from end to end, you'll feel like you've gone to another city.
Promenade des Anglais, 06000 Nice · 24 hours · Free
★ 4.8
02
Vieux Nice (Old Town)
The heart of the city, a historical settlement with narrow streets. Buildings with yellow-orange facades, balconies where laundry is hung, streets like cats. Italian influence is in the air — building colors are from Liguria, street names are both French and Niçoise. Cours Saleya market is the backbone of this neighborhood. In the evening, local people fill the terrace for apero, and at night musicians take to the streets. Don't try to find your way, get lost — there's something around every corner.
Vieux Nice, 06300 Nice · 24 hours · Free
★ 4.7
03
Castle Hill (Colline du Château)
92-meter hill erected east of the Old City. It has 'castle' in its name, but there is no castle — the French destroyed it in 1706, only the foundations remain. In its place is a park with waterfalls, a children's playground and the best panoramic views of Nice. You can go up by walking (Lesage Stairs, 213 steps), by elevator (free, on the Rauba Capeu side) or by mini tourist train. From above, the orange roofs of the Old Town, the bow of the Baie des Anges and the yachts in the harbor are gathered in one painting.
Colline du Château, 06300 Nice · 08:30 - 20:00 (summer), 08:30 - 18:00 (winter) · Free
★ 4.7
04
Saint-Paul-de-Vence (Daily)
Inner part of Nice, 1 hour by bus 400. The walled medieval village became artists' royalty in the 20th century — Chagall, Matisse, Picasso, Léger spent time here. Today there is a gallery on every street, the quality is real. La Colombe d'Or hotel is legendary: Since Chagall paid the room fee to the hotel in exchange for paintings, there are real Picassos, Léger, Miró on the walls, and a million Euro painting hangs behind you while you drink a glass. Chagall is buried in the village cemetery.
Saint-Paul-de-Vence, 06570 · Village 24 hours a day, galleries 10:00 - 19:00 · Bus round trip 3 EUR, village free
★ 4.7
05
Cours Saleya Flower Market
The main artery of the Old Town, flower and fruit market in the morning, restaurant terraces in the evening. On Mondays, it turns into an antique market — Belle Époque postcards, silver forks, old Provencal furniture. Other days, fresh mimosa, lavender bouquets, dried olives, sausage-style saucisson, Niçoise vegetables. The market stallholders speak a mixture of French, Italian and Niçoise — it's a rare place where you can hear these three languages ​​in one cafe. Here you'll find the best socca in the world, at the Chez Thérésa counter.
Cours Saleya, 06300 Nice · Tuesday-Sunday 06:00 - 13:30 (flowers/food), Monday 07:30 - 18:00 (antiques) · Admission is free
★ 4.6
06
Chagall Museum (Musée National Marc Chagall)
The world's largest Chagall collection is here. The artist himself chose it - he said which wall the works would be on when he designed the museum. The 'Biblical Message' series, consisting of 17 giant paintings, is illuminated with natural light in a single room. The stained glass windows (blue-purple glass depicting creation) in the concert hall should not be missed. 10-minute walk to the Matisse Museum — it makes sense to do both on the same day.
36 Avenue Docteur Ménard, 06000 Nice · 10:00 - 18:00 (Closed Tuesday) · 10 EUR
★ 4.6

Must-Try Flavors

01
La Petite Maison · Niçoise / Mediterranean
The international star of Niçoise cuisine. Christian Louboutin, Karl Lagerfeld, Bono — everyone who comes to Nice stops here. Its name is 'little house' but it also has branches in London and Dubai. Pissaladière (sardine-olive bread), pasta with pistou (pesto), stuffed squash blossoms, Saint-Pierre fish with beurre blanc sauce — the menu is the summary of the entire Mediterranean. Reservations are difficult, arrange the evening 1 month in advance. Prices are high, but this is Niçoise in its purest form.
80-150 EUR (per person) · 11 Rue Saint-François de Paule, 06300 Nice
★ 4.7
02
Chez Pipe · Niçoise / Street Food
A shop that has been producing only one thing, socca, since 1923. Socca, a large tray of pancakes made with chickpea flour — cooked over a wood fire, topped with freshly ground black pepper, and eaten with your hands. The unofficial national dish of Nice. The secret of Chez Pipo is its 100-year-old oven and chickpea flour ratio. One socca + one glass of rosé = 7 EUR. There are places selling 'tourist socca' on the side streets, don't be fooled - here's the truth.
5-10 EUR · 13 Rue Bavastro, 06300 Nice
★ 4.6
03
Le Bistrot d'Antoine · French Bistro
The original version of the classic French bistro experience in the heart of the Old Town. Wooden chairs, menu written in chalk, cramped tables, waiters speak French, if you ask in English they get a little sullen but helpful. Daube de boeuf (Provencal red wine stew), tartare, Niçoise salad, profiterole. Be sure to make a reservation, evening hours are full. The wine list is predominantly Provence and affordable.
30-55 EUR · 27 Rue de la Préfecture, 06300 Nice
★ 4.5
04
Acchiardo · Traditional Niçoise
It has been run by the same family since 1927, the fourth generation is now in the kitchen. Right in the middle of Vieux Nice, it's inconspicuous from the outside, but inside you'll find a book version of Niçoise cuisine. Stocafi (dried cod stew), trippes à la Niçoise (tripe), gnocchi à la daube (gnocchi with stew), pissaladière. The menu is also written in Niçoise language. The staff is warm, they have their own wine. A Sunday lunch classic for local families.
25-45 EUR · 38 Rue Droite, 06300 Nice
★ 4.5

Shopping Points

01
Galeries Lafayette Nice Massena · Premium
France's famous department store chain is adjacent to Place Masséna. Luxury brands (Gucci, Dior, Saint Laurent) are on the ground floor, cosmetics and perfumery are very strong, mid-segment fashion is on the upper floors, gourmet dining area and champagne bar are on the last floor. Tax refund (détaxe) is valid for tourists with Turkish passports over 175 EUR, they are made upon departure. The most practical point for gifts.
6 Avenue Jean Médecin, 06000 Nice · Luxury segment
★ 4.3
02
Avenue Jean Médecin · Popular
The city's main shopping artery runs north from Place Masséna. Tram 1 line passes right in the middle. Galeries Lafayette, FNAC, Zara, H&M, Sephora — all the big chain brands are here. The pedestrian section is long, with restaurants and cafes. Christmas Market is held here between November and December. Even if you're not looking for souvenirs, it's worth seeing with the tram tour — the modern heart of the city.
Avenue Jean Médecin, 06000 Nice · Variable
★ 4.2
03
Rue Masséna (Pedestrian Street) · Popular
Pedestrian shopping district stretching between Avenue Jean Médecin and Promenade des Anglais. Where Avenue Jean Médecin leads to luxury, where Vieux Nice leads to authenticity — this is the middle segment. Boats, souvenirs, beach clothes, ice cream shops. Restaurant terraces are busy, there are street musicians in the evenings. Summer evenings are hot but cheerful with palm trees.
Rue Masséna, 06000 Nice · Variable
★ 4.1
04
Nice Etoile Shopping Mall · Local
Indoor shopping mall on Avenue Jean Médecin. Three floors, about 100 shops, food court, cinema. Suitable for those who want to take shelter on a rainy day or do shopping in one go. The brands are mostly international chains. There is a tax refund point. Adjoined to the tram stop.
30 Avenue Jean Médecin, 06000 Nice · Variable
★ 4.0

3 Day Trip Plan

Day 1Old Town, seaside and Castle Hill

09:00 - 10:30 · Cours Saleya flower market
10:30 - 13:00 · Explore Vieux Nice
13:00 - 14:30 · Noon — Acchiardo
15:00 - 17:00 · Castle Hill (Colline du Château)

Day 2Matisse, Chagall and Roman ruins

09:30 - 11:30 · Chagall Museum
11:30 - 13:00 · Matisse Museum
13:00 - 14:30 · Noon — Cimiez Arenas area
15:00 - 16:30 · Roman ruins and Cimiez Monastery

Day 3The eagle's nest village and the shine of the principality

08:30 - 09:30 · Èze by bus/train from Nice
10:00 - 12:30 · Èze village and Jardin Exotique
13:00 - 14:30 · Noon — Departing by train from Èze or Monaco
15:00 - 18:00 · Monaco — Monte Carlo + Prince's Palace

Practical Information

Visa & Transportation

TR Passport (public) Visa Required
Nearest AirportNCE
Time DifferenceTR +2 hours
Plug TypeType E (230V, 50Hz)

Summary Information

LanguageFrench, English, Niçoise
CurrencyEuro (EUR)
Annual Average17°C
Average Flight Ticket320€
Budget$$$··

Best Months

MayJuneSeptember
Nice · Editor's Notes

About

Nice is the queen of the French Riviera. It is also the capital of this coastline called Côte d'Azur. It makes Cannes a film festival, Monaco a principality, Saint-Tropez a jet set; Nice stands in the middle of the three, making it a big city to live in on its own, all of which can be reached on a daily basis. It is a compact center with a population of 343 thousand, but 1 million people live in the metropolitan area. It dates back to the Kingdom of Italy until 1860 — that's why the cuisine is Italian, the street names are bilingual, and the mountains in the north are the Alps.

When the British aristocracy "discovered" the Côte d'Azur in the 19th century, Nice was a fishing port. Queen Victoria spent winters here, Tsar II. Alexander paid for the design of the Promenade, and Belle Époque hotels (Negresco's pink and white building are their symbol) were built. The so-called "golden years" of the Rivierra, between 1880 and 1914, transformed the city into what we still see today.

The paradox of this city is that it lives simultaneously with facades from the Belle Époque, a modern French metropolis, a Mediterranean port that still retains its Italian flair, and a contemporary technology center (Sophia Antipolis is nearby). In Cours Saleya, market stallholders speak a mixture of French, Italian and Niçoise, while startups are making presentations in English in the neighborhood's co-working building.

Nice is a little less preferred for Turkish tourists - tickets are expensive due to the burden of Schengen visas. But easy access for special/service/diplomatic passport holders. And a practical fact: It can also be called the free version of Monaco. It's nearby, the view is the same, the prices are half as much. He sees the same beaches, watches the same yachts, eats at three in the evening for less money. The Belle Époque grandeur and art trio — Matisse, Chagall, Picasso have museums within 10 kilometers of each other — have a high cultural density.

When to Go

Nice's climate is Mediterranean: mild winters, hot summers, generous sunshine all year round. Average 300 sunny days.

Period Weather (daytime) Density Otel Fiyatı Notes
January-February 7 / 13° Low Low Month of Carnival and Menton Lemon Festival. the sea is cold
March 9 / 15° Low-Medium Low-Medium Mimosa is blooming, parks are coming to life
April 11 / 18° Medium Medium Ideal start; few tourists, clear days
May 14 / 21° Medium-High High Cannes Festival + Monaco GP — prices ceiling
June 17 / 25° High High The most beautiful month; The sea is warming up, it's not too crowded yet
July 20 / 28° Very High Very High Warm and full; Jazz Festival; the coast is full
August 21 / 28° Very High Very High The French are on holiday, the city is full of tourists
September 18 / 25° Medium-High Medium-High Second best period; the sea is still warm
October 14 / 21° Medium Medium The autumn light is magnificent; calmer
November-December 8 / 15° Low Low It may be rainy; Christmas market end of november

Our general recommendation is May (excluding festival weeks), June and September. During the Cannes Festival and Monaco GP weeks in mid-May, the area becomes completely full and prices increase threefold. If you prefer this, reservations are required 2-3 months in advance. July-August is hot and crowded, but it's also good if you want to enjoy the summer. In winter Nice is quiet but still open; The only disadvantage during the carnival period is the prices.

How to get there

Nice's airport, Nice Côte d'Azur Airport (NCE), is the third largest airport in France outside of Paris. 7 km from the city center, right next to the sea — you see the Promenade as you get off the plane.

Flights from Türkiye:

Exit Duration Airline
Istanbul (IST) - NCE 3 hours 15 min THY (1 flight per day)
Istanbul (SAW) - NCE 3 hours 20 min Pegasus (4 times a week, seasonal)

Direct flight network is limited. THY flies all year round, Pegasus flies seasonally. In off-season or if you are budget-conscious, options with connections in Paris, Rome, Milan, Frankfurt or Amsterdam can be found between 200-350 EUR. Easyjet, Lufthansa, KLM, Air France are the main transfer options.

From airport to city:

  • Tram 2 (T2): 25-30 min, stops Magnan or Place Garibaldi, 1.70 EUR. The airport enters the city center at the beginning of the T2 line, following the coast. The most practical and affordable option.
  • Bus 12: From the coastal road, 20-25 minutes, 1.70 EUR. It stops along the promenade.
  • Taxi: 20 min, 35-45 EUR (higher in summer season). There is a fixed tariff system, ask the taxi driver.
  • Uber/Bolt: It works, around 25-35 EUR. It varies depending on traffic.

Our recommendation is Tram 2 — new, fast, air-conditioned, partially underground. Buy your ticket from vending machines and validate it inside.

Train option: Nice station (Nice-Ville) centre. Paris-Nice TGV 6 hours (120-180 EUR), Marseille-Nice 2.5 hours (40-60 EUR), Milan-Nice 5 hours (40-60 EUR). There are Italian Riviera towns (Ventimiglia, San Remo) as soon as you cross the border, ideal for a day trip.

Urban Transportation

Nice's public transport is operated by the Lignes d'Azur company. The city is compact, most places are accessible on foot.

Tram: 3 lines (T1, T2, T3). T1 north-south (Las Planas → Hôpital Pasteur) passes through Place Masséna and Avenue Jean Médecin. T2 east-west, between airport and port — underground along the coastal road. T3 airport-Saint-Isidore. Modern, quiet, air-conditioned.

Bus: It reaches everywhere that the tram cannot reach. Nearby destinations such as Cimiez (number 15), Èze (number 82), Saint-Paul-de-Vence (number 400) are by bus.

Ticket system: Single ticket is 1.70 EUR (with transfer within 74 minutes), block of 10 is 10 EUR (~1 EUR), daily pass is 5 EUR, 7-day ticket is 15 EUR. You can buy it from the bus driver or from the vending machines/app. 1-day airport + tram + bus combo ticket 6 EUR (Tarif Aéroport — airport tram operates at this price).

French Riviera Pass (Côte d'Azur Card): Museum + transportation + some boat and sightseeing tours included. 24/48/72 hour versions (29/41/54 EUR). If you are going to do 2-3 museums + a boat tour, see the bill.

Bicycle (Vélo Bleu): Bicycle sharing system. The first 30 minutes are free, after that it's hourly. There is a bike path on the Promenade des Anglais and it is heaven. Traffic in the rest of the city is a bit hectic.

Taxi/Uber: Uber operates. 10-20 EUR in the city. It may be difficult to find a taxi on the street, taxi stands (Place Masséna, station, airport) are fixed.

Train (TER): Ideal for a day trip to Cannes, Antibes, Monaco, Menton along the coastline. Buy tickets from the SNCF Connect app.

Accommodation Regions

If the location is chosen correctly in Nice, everything will be within walking distance.

  • Vieux Nice (Old Town): Narrow streets, authentic atmosphere, restaurants and bars right next to you. Ideal for romantic getaways and first-time tourists. Disadvantages: noise until late at night, summer heat (air conditioning is required), some narrow streets may be unsettling at night for women walking alone.
  • Carré d'Or / Jean Médecin (near V. arrondissement): The modern commercial center of the city, Galeries Lafayette, tram main line. 4-5 star hotels are concentrated here. For those who want shopping and city life. 10 min walk to the beach.
  • Promenade des Anglais (Negresco area): Belle Époque hotels (Negresco, Westminster, Hyatt Regency Palais de la Méditerranée). Luxury budget, sea view room. For family or romantic stays.
  • Cimiez: Upper neighborhood, quiet, green, next to museums (Matisse, Chagall). Belle Époque villas, boutique hotels. 15 minutes by bus to the city centre. For those who want silence.
  • Port (Le Port): More local, restaurants are authentic, prices are reasonable. It is easy to reach the Antibes/Monaco side by bike. For young travelers and long stays.

What we do not recommend: L'Ariane (northeast) and Les Moulins neighborhoods are far from the center and less touristy. The area around Magnan-Madeleine can be crowded during the summer months.

Budget Plan

Nice is significantly cheaper than Cannes and Monaco on the Côte d'Azur, but is in line with Paris. The seasonal difference is big: May (festival weeks) and July-August are the peak, November-March is the base.

Budget Style Accommodation Food Activity/Transportation Total (2 people/3 days)
Economic (hostel/2* hotel, market + 1 bistro) 250 EUR 150 EUR 60 EUR ~460 EUR
Moderate (3-4* hotel, bistro mixed) 500 EUR 250 EUR 120 EUR ~870 EUR
Comfort (4-5* hotel Carré d'Or, gastronomy) 900 EUR 400 EUR 180 EUR ~1.480 EUR
Luxury (Negresco/Hôtel du Cap, fine dining) 2,500 EUR+ 800 EUR+ 300 EUR ~3,600 EUR+

Practical items: Espresso 2-2.50 EUR, socca 3-5 EUR, pan bagnat (sandwich) 6-9 EUR, bistro lunch menu 18-25 EUR, museum 10 EUR, tram single ticket 1.70 EUR, beer in the cafe 5-7 EUR, dinner in the restaurant 35-55 EUR, ice cream 3-7 EUR, beach sun lounger costs 25-40 EUR, taxi within the city costs 10-20 EUR. Train Monaco 4.20 EUR, Cannes 7.20 EUR, Antibes 5.10 EUR (one way).

Practical Tips

Currency: Euro. Cards are accepted everywhere, except small marketers. Turkish card works, but check the rate with your bank. When withdrawing from an ATM, decline a "conversion" offer — your bank's rate is always better.

Water: Tap water is drinkable. You don't need to buy bottled water. Ask for "une carafe d'eau" in restaurants and they will bring you a free water jug.

Scam: In Vieux Nice and Promenade, there is a wrist-based friendship yarn knitting game and a petition signing game. Say "I'm not talking" and walk. Counterfeit products from street vendors may cause legal problems. Do not leave belongings at the beach — take turns with someone on guard during swimming.

Meal times: The French stick to their meal times. Lunch 12:00-14:00, evening 19:30-22:30. Outside of these hours, most restaurants are closed or only serve drinks. If you ask for a table at 18:00 in the evening, they may say "we can't do anything but coffee" — that's French time.

Tip: It says "service included" in the bill (mandatory 15% service). Leaving an extra 1-2 EUR is a courtesy but not mandatory. A rounded EUR 1 to the taxi driver is enough.

Beach types: Nice beaches are pebbly, not sandy — slippers are a must. Municipal beaches are free, private beaches (Plage Beau Rivage, Plage Castel) have a charge for sun loungers, towels and extra services (25-40 EUR/day). The beach management's "not bringing foreign food" rule is strict; sneak a grocery store sandwich or order something.

Spurs - Niçoise language: They may say "Caga blea" (blue rat - Niçoise swear word), "babi" (hoof - spoiled), "mercé" instead of "merci". You can hear local elders speaking Niçoise — it's the Nice dialect of Provençal, a mixture of French + Italian.

Day trip on Côte d'Azur: Cannes (30 min train), Monaco (15 min), Antibes (25 min), Èze (20 min bus), Saint-Paul-de-Vence (1 hour bus), Menton (45 min train), Villefranche-sur-Mer (10 min train). You can visit the entire Côte d'Azur by train.

Travel Guide with Children

Nice is the most practical stop in the Mediterranean for families with children. The combination of beaches, museums, parks and daily coastal villages guarantees fun.

Recommendations by Age Group

  • 0-3 years: Promenade des Anglais is flat for strollers, with palm trees and facing the sea. The Albert I. Garden (on the Promenade) provides shade. Castle Hill's children's playground and waterfall area are very nice. The elevator on the castle side is free, you can go up by car.

  • 4-7 years: Phoenix Park (Parc Phoenix) — 7 hectares botanical park, animals, children's playgrounds, one of the largest greenhouses in the world. The waves at Plage Castel are ideal for this age. Playgrounds of Castle Hill. Petit Train (tourist train) tours the Promenade and the Old Town.

  • 8-12 years: Marineland (Antibes, 1 hour by bus 200) — dolphins, seals, aquarium. Promenade tour by bike. Èze's cactus garden (Jardin Exotique) is full of adventure. Monaco Oceanographic Museum (shark tunnel).

  • Ages 13+: Art trio (Matisse, Chagall, MAMAC) — appeals to this age. Cannes day trip outside of Cannes festival week (red carpet traces). Hiking the Nietzsche trail in Èze. Walking on the F1 track in Monaco.

Top 5 Kid-Friendly Activities

  1. Castle Hill (Colline du Château) — Park with waterfalls, children's playground, free elevator, panoramic view. It can be done in an hour, but it's fun.

  2. Promenade des Anglais cycling — 7 km of flat, uninterrupted cycling path. Rent a kids bike or tandem from Vélo Bleu. Family beach tour.

  3. Marineland Antibes — Dolphin and seal shows from Europe's largest marine aquariums. Full day trip, can be reached by bus/train.

  4. Phoenix Park — Botanical garden, butterfly house, zoo, playgrounds. Children will not be bored for 4-5 hours. Near the airport.

  5. Petit Train tour — Promenade and Vieux Nice tour car. Little kids love the feeling of riding a train, it's a savior if the weather is hot or they're tired.

Practical Information

  • Baby stroller: Promenade, Place Masséna, Avenue Jean Médecin are flat and wide. The streets of Vieux Nice are narrow and narrow — opt for a light car.

  • Children's menu: Most bistros offer "menu enfant" (ham-pasta, schnitzel, ice cream) 10-15 EUR. Socca is the street food that children love.

  • Child discounts: Public transportation is free for children under 4 years old. In most museums it is free or half price, even for those under 18 who do not live in France. Ask and show passport.

  • Toilet: Municipal toilets (free/paid) at several locations on the Promenade. It's definitely available in cafes (the French usually allow it without ordering anything).

Warnings

  • The beach is pebbly, make sure to wear water shoes or slippers.
  • Note that the bike path on the Promenade is separate from the trolley — cyclists come fast.
  • During the summer noon hours (12-15) the sun is harsh, shade and a hat are required.
  • Vieux Nice late in the evening is tiring for the little kid, the bar noise gets louder.
  • Beach waves are attractive at times — be careful when swimming with small children.

Local Label and Culture Notes

The French seem aloof, but Niçoise is a little warmer — a reflection of the Italian influence. It is mandatory to say "Bonjour" at the first meeting, any conversation started without this is considered rude. Say it even when you enter the market. "Au revoir, bonne journée" on the way out.

Greetings: Acquaintances do la bise (two kisses on the cheek, two in Nice, three in Marseille). People who have never met shake hands. Kissing outside of a work context is normal — don't panic.

Restaurant rules: To call a waiter, a snap of your fingers, a head gesture or a raise of your hand is sufficient. The waiter doesn't feel obligated to come to you all the time — just say what you want. "L'addition s'il vous plaît" (account please). The waiters keep a professional distance, not condescending. Don't think it's cold.

Tip: Service included but 1-2 EUR rounded as a courtesy. 1 EUR to the taxi driver. 1-2 EUR to hotelier bellboy.

French: Don't be offended just because there's "no English" — sometimes there really isn't. “Bonjour, parlez-vous anglais?” ', they often open suddenly. After you tell him that you are Turkish, the relationship usually softens.

Niçoise identity: The local people have a cultural identity like "I am Niçoise, not French". Remind me that the city has only belonged to France since 1860, before being part of the Kingdom of Savoia — their eyes sparkle. Niçoise cuisine is of Italian origin (gnocchi, ravioli, pastry), the city is influenced by Genoa.

Apéro time: 18:00-20:00 is "apéritif" time. A drink + appetizer after work. Locals gather on the terraces at this time. Order a glass of rosé (€5-7), no seating time limit.

Sundays: Municipal markets, small shops, some restaurants are closed. Cours Saleya flower market is open Sunday. Large chain stores (Galeries Lafayette, FNAC) are open Sunday but small shops on Avenue Jean Médecin are closed.

FAQ

How to go to Nice with a Turkish passport, is a visa required? A French Schengen visa is required with a regular (tourist) passport. Application is made through VFS Global France Turkey — appointment + biometrics + document control. Visa fee is around 90 EUR + VFS service is around 30 EUR. It takes an average of 15 business days, but may increase to 4-6 weeks during the festival season (March-May). Special, service and diplomatic passport holders are visa-free for up to 90 days in 180 days.

How to get from Istanbul to Nice? THY has 1 direct flight per day (3 hours 15 minutes, 280-450 EUR depending on the season). Pegasus has direct flights 4 times a week (May-September). During off-season, tickets for around 200-350 EUR can be found with connections to Paris, Rome, Amsterdam and Frankfurt. If the Trans-European train structure is used, TGV via Paris (8-9 hours in total) is an option.

How to go to Monaco on a day trip, how long does it take? SNCF train from Nice-Ville to Monaco-Monte Carlo stop in 15 minutes, round trip EUR 8.40. The train runs frequently (3-4 times per hour). Go in the morning, come back in the evening. Bus 100 goes from Promenade to Monaco in 45 minutes (1.70 EUR) but can get stuck in traffic. The train is much more practical.

Does it make sense to go to Nice during the Cannes Film Festival? The festival is between 12-23 May, hotel prices increase 2-3 times, restaurant reservations become impossible, and there are no rental cars. If you're not in the film industry and haven't booked a festival, avoid this period. Just after (end of May) or before (early May) is ideal. If you want to go to Cannes for a day, choose non-festival periods.

What do Côte d'Azur and French Riviera mean? Are they the same thing? Same thing. "Côte d'Azur" means "Blue Coast" in French, a name coined by writer Stéphen Liégeard in 1887. The British call it "French Riviera". It covers the coastline from Toulon to the Italian border — Saint-Tropez, Cannes, Antibes, Nice, Monaco, Menton. Nice is the largest city on this line and is generally the epicenter for tourists.

Are luxury hotels (Negresco etc.) really worth it in Nice or are more affordable places also good? Negresco is legendary — since 1913 its pink-white dome is the symbol of the city, inside it is a collection of art, period furniture, famous cuisine. 500-1,500 EUR/room for a night experience. Instead of staying here for the whole holiday, it makes sense to spend 1-2 nights in a classic Negresco + the remaining days in a 3-4 star boutique hotel. Hyatt Regency Palais de la Méditerranée is another historic option. You can experience Nice comfortably with 4-star mid-segment hotels such as Hotel Solara on Vieux Nice and Hotel Aria on Carré d'Or — without significant loss in quality.

How does Niçoise cuisine differ from classical French? Hybrid with Italian influence. Classic Niçoise dishes: socca (chickpea flour pancake), pissaladière (olive-sardine bread), pan bagnat (Niçoise salad sandwich), salade Niçoise (fresh tuna + olive + egg + vegetables), daube (Provencal stew), ratatouille (zucchini-eggplant-tomato), farcis Niçois (stuffed vegetables), ravioli à la Common Italian-Ligurian dishes such as Niçoise (meat-filled) and socca + farinata + porcetta. Provence's "Mediterranean" interpretation — much lighter than the Parisian bistro, heavy on olive oil and vegetables.

Does it make sense to go to Nice and see Saint-Tropez? Saint-Tropez is 2 hours west from Nice, reached by bus/car (no direct train). Although it is difficult to go and return in one day, it can be done. If you are staying for 5+ days and are interested in the jet set, yes, try it. But in the off-season, Saint-Tropez is dead — only alive from June to September. If you are staying shorter, Cannes, Antibes, Èze, Saint-Paul-de-Vence should take priority.