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Bordeaux, France
Bordeaux

Where to stay in Bordeaux

Saint-Pierre puts the medieval old town on foot for first-timers, while Chartrons rewards a slower wine-led stay and the Triangle d'Or suits a smarter central base.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Bordeaux

For a first Bordeaux trip, stay in Saint-Pierre: it puts Place de la Bourse, the Miroir d'eau and most bistros on foot, with the tram for everything else. Choose Chartrons for better-value, more local wine-bar evenings just north, the Triangle d'Or around the Grand Theatre for smart shopping and higher-end hotels, and Saint-Michel only if the cheapest bed and the Capucins market matter more than a quiet night.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: Saint-Pierre.
  • Best value: Chartrons.
  • Best atmosphere: the old lanes of Saint-Paul beside Saint-Pierre.
  • Best for a smart, central base: the Triangle d'Or around the Grand Theatre.
  • Avoid booking on the quays between Place de la Bourse and the river just for the view; you overpay and lose the evening to terrace crowds.

Best areas to book

Saint-Pierre

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The medieval core and the cleanest first-timer pick: car-light lanes, Place de la Bourse, the Grosse Cloche and the densest run of bistros all on foot, with tram lines A, B, C and D a few minutes away. The trade-off is weekend night noise, since this is where Bordeaux comes out to eat and drink.

Best for: First-timers, couples, walking everywhere

Saint-Paul

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The quieter half of the old town immediately south-west of Saint-Pierre, around the cathedral lanes and Porte Cailhau. You keep the medieval texture and the five-minute walk to the Miroir d'eau but step back from the loudest bar streets. Choose it for old-city atmosphere without booking on top of the rowdiest square.

Best for: Atmosphere, couples, slightly calmer old-town nights

Browse hotels Old city, 5 min walk to Place de la Bourse

Chartrons

ยฃ value

The old wine-merchant quarter strung along the river north of the centre: village feel, antique dealers on Rue Notre-Dame, wine bars and the Sunday quayside market by the Marche des Chartrons. Better value than the old core and a short C-tram hop or 20-minute riverside walk to the centre. The best base for a food-and-wine trip that wants local evenings.

Best for: Value, wine bars, slower food-led stays

Browse hotels 10-15 min by C tram or 20 min walk to old town

Triangle d'Or and Quinconces

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The smart 18th-century shopping triangle bounded by Cours Clemenceau, Cours de l'Intendance and the Allees de Tourny, around the Grand Theatre. Polished, well connected by tram and home to most of the higher-end hotels, but pricier and quieter in the evenings than the old town once the shops shut.

Best for: Shopping, upmarket hotels, a central but calm base

Browse hotels Central, 5-10 min walk to Place de la Bourse

Saint-Michel

ยฃ value

A scruffier, more lived-in district around the Marche des Capucins and the Saint-Michel basilica with its detached bell tower. The cheapest beds in the centre and a genuine neighbourhood feel by day, but rougher round the edges and noisier after dark. Pick it for the market on your doorstep and the lowest price, not for a polished stay.

Best for: Budget travellers, the Capucins market, local atmosphere

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to Place de la Bourse

Bacalan and the Bassins a flot

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The regenerated dock area north of Chartrons, built around La Cite du Vin and the Bassins des Lumieres digital art space. Newer apartment-style stays, more space for the money and the B tram straight into town, but it is a 25-30 minute tram ride from the old core and dead in the evening. Worth it only if La Cite du Vin and modern rooms are the draw.

Best for: La Cite du Vin, apartments, more room for the money

Browse hotels 25-30 min by B tram to the old town

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for Saint-Pierre first, then check Chartrons if the prices look high. That one rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying a premium for a quayside room you mainly use to sleep, or staying out at Bacalan or near the airport to save a little and then losing the saving back in tram time. Everything a short Bordeaux break needs, the old town, the Miroir d'eau, the Capucins market and a tram stop, is within fifteen minutes of a Saint-Pierre base on foot.

Bordeaux's historic core is largely pedestrianised, so a hire car is a parking liability in the centre. If your trip is built around driving the Medoc or Graves, base in town without the car and collect it on your way out rather than parking it overnight.

Safety and noise

Bordeaux is generally safe, and the day-to-day risk for UK visitors is pickpocketing in crowds rather than anything worse, as GOV.UK's France advice flags for French cities and stations. For where you sleep, the real variable is noise: Saint-Pierre's bar streets run loud on Thursday-to-Saturday nights, so ask for a room off Rue du Pas-Saint-Georges or Place du Parlement, or shift one quarter over to Saint-Paul or Chartrons. Saint-Michel is the one area where the cheapest beds come with the most after-dark edge, so it suits confident budget travellers more than families.

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Where to stay in Bordeaux FAQs

Is Saint-Pierre or Chartrons better for a first trip?
Saint-Pierre for a first trip: it is the medieval old town, so Place de la Bourse, the bistros and most landmarks are on your doorstep. Chartrons is the smarter pick on a second visit or a food-and-wine weekend, when better value and quieter, more local wine-bar evenings matter more than being inside the old core.
Should I stay near La Cite du Vin?
Usually no. La Cite du Vin sits up at Bacalan, 25-30 minutes from the old town by B tram, and the dock area is quiet at night. Stay in the centre and ride the tram out for your half-day visit; only base at Bacalan if you specifically want a modern apartment and more space for the money.
Do I need to stay near Gare Saint-Jean?
Not for a city break. The station is about 20-25 minutes south of the old town and the area around it is functional rather than charming. It only makes sense if you are catching very early trains to Saint-Emilion or Arcachon; otherwise the tram from a central base reaches the station easily.

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