South-West France (Nouvelle-Aquitaine)
Dordogne
A first self-drive through the Dordogne for UK travellers: where to base yourself, real drive times between Sarlat, the caves and the bastide towns, and why you genuinely need a hire car here.
In short
Dordogne at a glance
The Dordogne is the British self-catering heartland of France: gîtes and farmhouses scattered across walnut-and-duck country, with Sarlat's golden old town, the Vézère valley caves and a string of clifftop villages all within an hour's drive. You fly into Bergerac (Ryanair from several UK airports) or Brive, pick up a hire car at the airport, and base yourself once — the region is too spread out and too thin on public transport to do without a car. Allow a week to cover the Vézère caves, the Dordogne river villages and a bastide town or two without rushing.
The Dordogne is the corner of France that generations of British families have quietly colonised with gîtes and farmhouse holidays, and it earns the loyalty: honey-stone villages on river cliffs, the painted prehistoric caves of the Vézère valley, and a kitchen culture built on walnuts, duck and Bergerac wine. The classic trip is a slow self-drive from one base — Sarlat for the medieval old town and the market, or the Vézère valley to wake up next to the caves — looping out each day to the river villages, a bastide town and a cave or two before heading back for dinner.
The mistake first-timers make is treating it like the rest of France and assuming the train will do. It won’t: the line reaches Sarlat and Bergerac, but the caves, the canoe put-ins and the clifftop castles all sit on rural D-roads with no useful bus, so a hire car isn’t a nice-to-have here, it’s the whole holiday. The second trap is leaving the headline caves to chance — Font-de-Gaume, the one cave still showing original paintings, caps numbers to a few dozen a day and sells out weeks ahead in summer, so book it before you book anything else. Fly into little Bergerac or Brive rather than Bordeaux, pick the car up at the airport, and you’ll be on those slow scenic roads within the hour.
The route
A relaxed week from a single base in the eastern Dordogne, pairing the Vézère valley caves with the clifftop river villages and a bastide-town day. Drive times are from a Sarlat base on the D-roads, which are slow and scenic rather than fast — add time behind tractors in autumn.
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Days 1–2
Sarlat & the Saturday market
Settle into your base and walk Sarlat's honey-coloured medieval core — it's compact and best at dawn before the coaches. If you're here on a Wednesday or Saturday, the market fills Place de la Liberté with foie gras, walnuts and cheese. Pick the hire car up at Bergerac (about 1h10 drive east) or Brive (about 45 min) on arrival.
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Days 3–4
Vézère valley caves
The prehistoric heart of the region. Lascaux IV (the full replica) is about 25 minutes from Sarlat at Montignac; the original painted Font-de-Gaume cave at Les Eyzies (about 35 minutes) is the one to book first as it's strictly capped. Add the cliff fort of La Roque Saint-Christophe between them.
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Day 5
Dordogne river villages by canoe
The classic day: paddle a stretch of the river past La Roque-Gageac and Beynac, with the put-ins around Vitrac and Cénac about 15 minutes from Sarlat. Operators run you back to your car; allow two to three hours on the water plus the two castles of Beynac and Castelnaud above you.
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Days 6–7
Bastide towns & gardens
Swap caves for the grid-planned medieval bastides — Domme on its clifftop (about 20 minutes) and Monpazier (about an hour south) are the best preserved. Pair with the clipped terraces of the Jardins de Marqueyssac, 12 minutes from Sarlat, for the region's best river view.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Sarlat-la-Canéda
££ mid-rangeThe natural first base: a walkable medieval town with the most restaurants, the famous market and everything in the eastern Dordogne within 40 minutes. It's busy and parking is paid in the centre in season, so a gîte just outside town gives you a quieter night and an easy drive in.
Best for: First-timers, families, walkable evenings and the Saturday market
Vézère valley (Les Eyzies / Montignac)
££ mid-rangeStay here to be on the doorstep of Lascaux IV and Font-de-Gaume and skip the daily drive to the caves. Quieter and more rural than Sarlat with fewer restaurants, so it suits self-caterers who want the prehistoric sights first and the buzz second.
Best for: Cave-focused trips and quieter self-catering
Bergerac & the vineyards
£ valueThe western Dordogne around the airport: flatter, warmer, wine country (Monbazillac, Pécharmant) and noticeably cheaper than the Sarlat honeypot. Better for a wine-and-river break than the headline caves, which are a 50–60 minute drive east, so weigh the saving against the daily mileage.
Best for: Wine trips, lower prices and short airport transfers
Getting around Dordogne
You drive here, full stop — this is the one part of France where public transport genuinely doesn't work for a holiday. The main rail line runs Bordeaux–Bergerac–Sarlat and Brive–Périgueux, but the caves, the river villages and the bastides sit on rural D-roads with no useful bus, so a hire car is essential rather than optional. Pick it up at Bergerac or Brive airport on arrival; both are tiny and you'll be on the road within fifteen minutes. The D-roads are scenic and slow, with single-lane stretches, village speed limits and harvest tractors in autumn, so budget more time than the distances suggest. Sarlat's centre is pedestrianised, so use the paid car parks on the ring (around €2 an hour, free in winter) and walk in.
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