What Are Typical Expenses For A Weeklong French Holiday?

2025-10-27 13:56:19 282

6 Answers

Graham
Graham
2025-10-29 12:48:25
I travel light and like to live cheaply when I can, so I think in daily averages. For a week in France I budget about €40–€70 per day if I mix hostels, supermarkets, and a couple of cheap cafés. That covers a dorm bed or cheap private room, groceries for breakfasts and a picnic lunch, one or two modest dinners out, and public transit.

If I want to upgrade even slightly—private apartment or three-star hotel, a few museum entries, and a day trip to somewhere like Versailles or the Loire—I bump that to €100–€140 per day. Train tickets for a couple of day trips (booked early) add maybe €60–€150 total. I always keep a small cash reserve for market finds and tiny boulangerie splurges; those croissants feel like essential purchases. Tipping is minimal here; rounding up or leaving small change at cafés is normal. Overall, my week usually ends up costing €300–€1,000 depending on choices, and I love how easy it is to scale up or down on the fly.
Xenia
Xenia
2025-10-29 13:56:30
When I plan a week with my little crew, the numbers change because kids lower some costs but raise others. Accommodation that’s family-friendly often means an apartment rental or a hotel room with two beds, which typically runs €120–€250 per night in decent neighborhoods. Eating out with kids becomes simpler—pizzas, crêpes, picnics—so food might average €40–€80 per day for the family if we mix cooking and restaurants.

Transport costs include regional trains for day trips (tickets can be €20–€60 per person for popular routes) and occasional taxis if we’re carrying strollers. Museums and attractions often have family or child discounts—some kids under a certain age get in free—so activity spend can be reasonable, around €50–€200 for the week depending on special excursions like a river cruise or a guided chocolate/wine tour for adults. Don’t forget small extras: baby supplies, laundromat fees, or a last-minute cab can add up.

All told, a comfortable family week in France often lands between €1,200 and €2,800. I always pack snacks and plan lower-cost afternoons in parks; it keeps everyone happier and stretches the budget, which is a relief when you’re juggling little ones and big monuments. I come home exhausted but full of good memories.
Ulysses
Ulysses
2025-10-30 13:18:37
I have a soft spot for the indulgent trips, so I tend to figure costs at the top end. A boutique hotel or château stay can easily be €350–€1,200 per night depending on location and season. Dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant frequently costs €120–€300 per person without wine; add rare bottles and you’re looking at significantly more. Private chauffeurs, guided art tours, and exclusive wine tastings will push the weekly bill into the €3,000–€10,000+ bracket.

For me, the value is in time and experience: skip queues with private entrance, enjoy a chauffeured drive through Burgundy, or have a half-day private guide in Paris who knows shortcuts and hidden galleries. I still like to mix in relaxed afternoons—sitting at a riverside café, wandering small markets—which keeps the trip balanced and more rewarding despite the splurges. In the end, splurging feels completely worth it for a celebration or once-in-a-while trip; you come home with stories that feel as rich as the meals.
Oliver
Oliver
2025-10-31 22:49:01
Budget-wise, I like to break things down so I don’t get sticker shock halfway through the trip.

For a week in France I usually tally flights, lodging, transport, food, activities, and a miscellaneous buffer. Flights from within Europe can be as low as €50–€200 roundtrip on a budget carrier; transatlantic fares often sit between €400–€900 depending on season. Lodging ranges wildly: hostels or budget hotels €20–€80/night, mid-range hotels or private rentals €90–€220/night, and boutique or luxury places start at €300+. For seven nights that can swing from roughly €150 to well over €2,000.

Daily expenses matter: grocery breakfasts and sandwiches can keep food to €15–€30/day, versus €40–€100/day if you eat out at bistros and have a few nicer dinners. Local transport (metro passes, buses) is usually €7–€15/day in big cities; intercity TGV trains vary €25–€120 per leg if you book ahead. Museums and attractions are typically €10–€25 each, with special tours and wine tastings adding €30–€100. I always add a 10–15% buffer for unexpected costs, and factor in travel insurance at around €15–€50 for the week. For me, a realistic range is: backpacker-style €350–€700, comfortable traveler €900–€1,800, and splurge vacations €2,500+. Personally, I find a mid-range plan gives the best mix of comfort and local flavor without constant penny-pinching.
Sabrina
Sabrina
2025-11-01 16:37:39
Here’s a compact breakdown I keep in my head when planning a seven-day trip to France — I like quick, concrete numbers because it stops me from overspending while letting me enjoy things.

Daily basics usually fall into three tiers per person: budget €50–€90/day (shared dorm or cheap private room, bakeries and markets, walking/metro), mid-range €120–€220/day (private hotel/airbnb, mix of cafés and restaurants, a couple of paid tours or day trips), and comfort/luxury €300+/day (nicer hotels, fine dining, private transfers or car rental). For a week that becomes around €350–€630 for budget, €840–€1,540 mid-range, and €2,100+ for luxury. Add travel to/from France: short-haul flights within Europe €40–€200 return if booked early, long-haul €400–€900 or more.

Other costs to slot in: intercity trains or a rental car (TGV fares vary a lot — book ahead for best prices; car rental maybe €25–€60/day plus fuel and tolls), museum and attraction fees (plan €10–€30 per major site), travel insurance (€20–€60 for the week), and small extras like a SIM (€10–€30) and souvenirs. Personally, I try to pick one memorable splurge — a nice meal, a wine tour, or a river cruise — and keep the rest simple. That balance usually gives me the best value and the most memorable moments.
Orion
Orion
2025-11-02 16:54:08
Wandering through French neighborhoods in my head always brings up the same practical question: how much will a week actually cost? I tend to plan trips by breaking expenses into clear chunks — travel to get there, where you sleep, how you eat, getting around, sights and small extras — and then I compare three realistic tiers so I can pick what I’m comfortable with.

For accommodation, expect a wide spread. In big cities like Paris a basic hostel or budget private room can be around €25–€60 per night, a modest hotel or Airbnb often runs €80–€150, and a comfortable mid-range hotel is €150–€300. If you’re in smaller towns or the countryside, prices fall noticeably. Food is flexible: breakfasts from boulangeries can be €3–€8, casual lunches €10–€18, and a sit-down dinner at a mid-range bistro €25–€50. Splurge at a nicer restaurant and you’re easily into €70–€150 per meal. Transport inside cities is cheap — a single metro ticket in Paris is roughly €2 (buying a pack of 10 saves some money) — but intercity TGV trains or flights between regions can be €25–€120+ depending on how far ahead you book.

Typical attraction costs: museums like the Louvre are around €15–€20, Palace of Versailles has entry and grounds fees if you want the audio guide or extras, and guided tours or wine tastings often start at €30–€60. Don’t forget extras: local SIM or roaming, about €10–€30; travel insurance roughly €20–€60 for a week; and incidentals (coffee, souvenirs, tips) which I usually budget €10–€25 per day. If I put numbers together, a budget traveler might manage a week in France for roughly €350–€600 (sticking to hostels, cheap eats, walking and a few free sights). A comfortable mid-range trip where you stay in a decent hotel, eat out a few times, take 1–2 paid tours, and use trains would be around €900–€1,500. A luxury week can easily be €2,500+.

Season, region, and who you travel with change everything: Paris is pricier than Normandy, Provence, or smaller wine regions, and summer peak weeks spike prices. Simple savings I love: picnic lunches from markets, city transport passes, booking trains in advance, and free museum days. After crunching numbers I always feel more relaxed — and excited to taste more croissants. I still get a little thrill imagining that first café espresso in the morning.
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