How many days in Bordeaux?
Plan 1-4 days for Bordeaux. 1 days hits the must-sees; 4 lets you eat well, walk neighbourhoods you've never heard of, and take one day trip.
The minimum
1 day
1 days fits the top sights, one good food walk, and one neighbourhood deep-dive — no day trips.
The sweet spot
4 days
4 days adds one day trip, two more neighbourhoods, and three more sit-down meals you'll actually remember.
Slow travel
6 days
6 days is when you leave the to-do list at home and actually live in the city for a week.
The headline things to do in Bordeaux
From the Bordeaux guide — these are the items that anchor a 1-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Bordeaux travel guide.
- Place de la Bourse & Miroir d'Eau — Saint-Pierre, central Bordeaux
The defining Bordeaux postcard. The Place de la Bourse, designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel and built between 1735 and 1755, faces the Garonne with two symmetrical Hôtel des Fermes wings flanking a central pavilion. Directly opposite, the Miroir d'Eau (2006, by landscape architect Michel Corajoud) is the world's largest reflecting pool — 3,450 m² of granite that alternates between 2 cm of mirror water and a sudden mist effect on a 23-minute cycle. Time your visit for the calm-water phase at golden hour for the picture; in summer, kids and the entire city wade across it. Always free, always open, central to everything else.
- La Cité du Vin — Bassins à Flot, north of the centre
The 2016 wine museum is housed in a swirling glass-and-aluminium tower by XTU Architects on the Bassins à Flot dock — a building deliberately shaped to evoke a wine swirl in a glass. Inside, 13,000 m² of permanent exhibition cover wine's 8,000-year history across every wine region on earth, with smell stations, immersive video, and tastings woven through. The 8th-floor Belvédère tasting room is included with admission and serves a glass of any of around 20 global wines with a panoramic view of the Garonne and the city. Allow 2.5 hours minimum. €22 adult, €17 reduced. Reserve a slot online — peak summer weekends sell out.
- Cathédrale Saint-André & Pey-Berland Tower — Place Pey-Berland, central Bordeaux
The 11th–16th century Gothic cathedral where Eleanor of Aquitaine married the future Louis VII in 1137 (and divorced him 15 years later, taking Aquitaine — and Bordeaux — to England with her). The detached Pey-Berland bell tower next door, finished in 1500, separates from the cathedral because the medieval engineers worried the cathedral nave could not bear the weight. Climb the 233 steps to the 50-metre platform for a uniquely flat panorama across the limestone rooftops to the Garonne. €6 adult; the cathedral itself is free.
- Saint-Émilion Day Trip — Saint-Émilion, 40 km east
The medieval wine village 40 minutes east of Bordeaux is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in its own right (since 1999) — the historic core, the surrounding vineyards, and most strikingly the 12th-century monolithic church carved entirely into the limestone bedrock beneath the village square (the largest of its kind in Europe). The village itself is small, hilly, and walkable in 2 hours; the surrounding Grand Cru Classé châteaux, including Cheval Blanc, Ausone, and Angélus, run tours by reservation. TER train from Bordeaux Saint-Jean takes 35 minutes (€10 each way); a guided minibus tour with two château visits and a tasting runs €100–140 per person.
- Bassins des Lumières — Bacalan, north Bordeaux
A 12,000 m² immersive digital art space inside a former WWII U-boat pen — concrete bunkers built by the Germans in 1941–43 that proved too thick to demolish after the war (they were hit and the Allies gave up). In 2020, Culturespaces flooded four of the chambers and projected continuously rotating exhibitions of Klimt, Yves Klein, Cézanne, Sorolla, and Mondrian onto the 110-metre walls and the water beneath. A walk-through experience of about 50 minutes, deeply atmospheric, especially in the off-hours. €16 adult.
- Médoc Wine Route — Médoc peninsula, 30–80 km north of Bordeaux
The D2 road north from Bordeaux through Margaux, Saint-Julien, Pauillac, and Saint-Estèphe is the most famous wine route in the world — a 100-kilometre ribbon of gravelly Cabernet Sauvignon vineyards punctuated by Château Margaux, Château Lafite-Rothschild, Château Mouton-Rothschild, Château Latour, and Château Haut-Brion in nearby Pessac (the five 1855 First Growths). First Growth visits require booking weeks ahead and start around €100–250 per head; smaller cru bourgeois visits are €15–35 with no booking required. A guided full-day minibus tour from Bordeaux runs €130–180 with three châteaux, lunch, and tastings.
- Marché des Capucins — Capucins, southeast of the centre
The working covered food market south of the centre — every chef in Bordeaux shops here, and the place opens at 5:30 weekday mornings. Saturday morning is when the city itself shows up: oyster stalls shucking Arcachon Gillardeau and Marennes-Oléron oysters with a glass of Entre-deux-Mers white at 11:00 (€15–20 a dozen with the wine), Basque charcuterie counters, North African, Vietnamese, and West African vendors, and a fish counter that has the day's catch from Arcachon. Closed Mondays. The most reliable lunch in the city for under €25.
- Dune du Pilat — Bay of Arcachon, 65 km west
Europe's tallest sand dune — 110 metres high, 2.7 km long, 500 metres wide, and migrating eastward at roughly 5 metres a year, swallowing pine forest as it goes. An hour's drive west of Bordeaux on the Bay of Arcachon, the dune is a 30-minute climb up a wooden staircase (or a calf-burning slog up the loose sand) for a 360° view of pine forest, the Atlantic surf, and the oyster beds of Arcachon Bay. Best paired with an oyster lunch at one of the cabanes in Cap Ferret or L'Herbe afterwards. Parking €4 in summer; otherwise free.
Frequently asked
Is 1 day enough in Bordeaux?
1 day is the minimum for a satisfying visit — you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 4, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.
Is 7 days too long in Bordeaux?
7 days is for travellers who want to slow down — eat at neighbourhood spots tourists don't reach, take repeat day trips, and live in the city. If you're a tick-the-list traveller, 4 is enough.
What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Bordeaux?
4 days is the sweet spot for a first visit — long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 1 usually feels rushed; more than 7 is into slow-travel territory.
Should I add Bordeaux to a longer regional trip?
Yes — Bordeaux works well as a 1-4-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.