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Normandy, France
Normandy

Normandy

Normandy

A Normandy road trip for UK travellers: which ferry port to pick, the D-Day beaches loop from Bayeux, Mont-Saint-Michel without the queues, and real drive times in pounds.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

In short

Normandy at a glance

Normandy is the one big French region you can reach with your own car and no flying: load up at Portsmouth or Newhaven, sail overnight, and drive off in Normandy by breakfast. The headline trio is the D-Day landing beaches (best done from Bayeux), Mont-Saint-Michel out on the western edge, and Monet's garden at Giverny in the east. Allow 5โ€“6 days to link all three without rushing; a long weekend covers Bayeux and the beaches comfortably on their own.

Normandy is the rare big French region you can do entirely with your own car and no airport. You load up at Portsmouth or Newhaven, sail across the Channel โ€” overnight on the longer crossings โ€” and drive off in France in time for a croissant. That changes how you plan it: the appeal isnโ€™t a single city, itโ€™s the freedom to string together the D-Day landing beaches, Mont-Saint-Michel and Monetโ€™s garden at Giverny on roads that are short, quiet and almost toll-free west of Caen.

The first decision is the ferry, because it sets where your trip begins. Portsmouth to Caen (Ouistreham) drops you straight into the heart of it, with all five landing beaches within about 30 minutes of the port and an easy run to Bayeux โ€” thatโ€™s the crossing to book if D-Day and Mont-Saint-Michel are the point. If youโ€™re aiming further east โ€” Rouen, the ร‰tretat cliffs or Giverny โ€” the shorter, cheaper Newhavenโ€“Dieppe crossing lands you closer and costs less. Either way, book the car-and-cabin combination weeks ahead for summer; the popular sailings sell out.

For the beaches themselves, base in Bayeux rather than Caen. Bayeux came through the war undamaged, so you get an intact medieval centre and the famous Tapestry on your doorstep, and youโ€™re 20 minutes from Omaha Beach and 15 from the American Cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer. The five beaches spread along roughly 80km of coast, which splits neatly into a western half-day (Pointe du Hoc, Utah, the cemetery) and an eastern one (Omaha, Arromanches and the Mulberry harbour remains, Juno) โ€” genuinely awkward without a car, which is why bringing your own pays off here more than almost anywhere in France.

Two timing rules save the trip. Mont-Saint-Michel sits 90 minutes out on the western edge: park on the mainland, take the free Passeur shuttle, and go early or stay overnight to climb to the abbey before the coaches arrive late morning. And Givernyโ€™s garden only opens 1 April to 1 November, so if Monet is on your list, plan the eastern loop for those months and steer clear of the days either side of 6 June, when the D-Day anniversary fills the beach roads with ceremonies and closures.

The route

A relaxed loop that links the three Normandy headliners without backtracking, assuming you bring the car over on the ferry. Drive times are motorway-and-A-road estimates. Sail into Caen (Ouistreham) for a beaches-first run, or Newhavenโ€“Dieppe if you want to start in the east near Giverny.

  1. Day 1

    Arrive Caen (Ouistreham) โ†’ Bayeux

    The overnight Portsmouthโ€“Caen ferry docks at Ouistreham around breakfast. Drive 30โ€“40 minutes west to Bayeux and base there. Spend the afternoon on the Bayeux Tapestry and the cathedral while you find your feet โ€” both are a short walk from any town-centre hotel.

  2. Days 2โ€“3

    D-Day beaches from Bayeux

    The beaches run along roughly 80km of coast and split into two easy half-days from Bayeux. West: Pointe du Hoc, Utah Beach and the American Cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer (15 minutes out). East: Omaha Beach (20 minutes), Arromanches and the Mulberry harbour remains, then Juno. The Caen Memorial museum is worth half a day if you want the full picture.

  3. Day 4

    Bayeux โ†’ Mont-Saint-Michel

    About 90 minutes southwest. Park in the mainland car park (around ยฃ15โ€“22 a day in season) and take the free Passeur shuttle or walk the 45-minute causeway. Go early or stay over to beat the day-trip coaches that arrive late morning. The abbey at the top is the reason to climb.

  4. Days 5โ€“6

    Honfleur, ร‰tretat & Giverny

    Loop back east along the coast: pretty harbour Honfleur (about 50 minutes from Caen), the white cliffs at ร‰tretat that Monet painted, then Monet's own garden at Giverny near Vernon. Time it for 1 Aprilโ€“1 November when the garden is open, and finish near the Newhavenโ€“Dieppe or Le Havre ferry for the sail home.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Bayeux

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The best base for the D-Day beaches by a distance: it escaped wartime bombing, so the medieval centre and cathedral are intact, and it's 20 minutes from Omaha and 15 from the American Cemetery. Walkable, well-stocked with hotels, and far nicer to stay in than Caen.

Best for: D-Day beaches, walkability, first nights

Browse hotels Loop start

Mont-Saint-Michel (mainland hotels)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Staying at the foot of the bay lets you walk over for the early-morning or floodlit-evening hours when the day-trippers have gone. The hotels on the island itself are pricey and cramped; the mainland cluster by the car park is better value and a short shuttle from the rock.

Best for: Beating the crowds, sunrise on the abbey

Browse hotels Western edge

Honfleur

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A postcard harbour town that makes a softer base for the eastern half โ€” slate-fronted houses round the Vieux Bassin, good seafood and an easy hop to ร‰tretat and the cliffs. More charming than Le Havre across the estuary, and well placed for the run to Giverny.

Best for: Eastern Normandy, the coast, Giverny

Getting around Normandy

Normandy is a drive-your-own-car region: the whole appeal of bringing the car on the ferry is the freedom to reach beaches, abbeys and gardens that public transport barely touches. Trains link Caen, Bayeux and Rouen, and you can reach Bayeux and even Mont-Saint-Michel without a car, but the D-Day beaches are genuinely awkward without one โ€” they're spread along 80km of coast with thin bus links. Distances are short: Caen to Bayeux is 30 minutes, Bayeux to Mont-Saint-Michel about 90. Autoroute tolls are modest and the country roads are quiet. Remember to bring a UK sticker and headlamp beam deflectors, and never drive onto Mont-Saint-Michel itself โ€” park on the mainland and shuttle in.

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Normandy FAQs

Which ferry should I take to Normandy?
For the D-Day beaches and Mont-Saint-Michel, Portsmouth to Caen (Ouistreham) is the natural choice โ€” it lands you right in the region, all five beaches within about 30 minutes of the port. The daytime Brittany Ferries crossing runs around six hours; the overnight sailing is closer to eight, so you arrive rested for breakfast. For eastern Normandy, Rouen or Giverny, the Newhaven to Dieppe crossing (about four hours with DFDS) is cheaper and drops you closer. Portsmouth to Le Havre also works for the east. Book the car-and-cabin combination weeks ahead in summer.
How many days do you need in Normandy?
Five to six days links the D-Day beaches, Mont-Saint-Michel and Giverny at a relaxed pace with the car. A long weekend is plenty for Bayeux and the landing beaches on their own โ€” two half-days covers the western and eastern beach groups with the Caen Memorial in between.
Do you need a car for the D-Day beaches?
Effectively yes. The five beaches are strung along about 80km of coast with sparse bus links, so a car (or a guided tour from Bayeux) is the realistic way to see Pointe du Hoc, Omaha, the American Cemetery and Arromanches in a day. Bayeux itself, the Tapestry and the cathedral are all walkable without one.
When is the best time to visit Normandy?
May, September and early October give mild weather, long days and thinner crowds. June to August is warmest but busiest, and you should specifically avoid the days either side of 6 June, when the D-Day anniversary brings ceremonies, big crowds and road closures around the beaches.
How do you visit Mont-Saint-Michel by car?
You can't drive onto the rock. Park in the mainland car park (roughly ยฃ15โ€“22 a day in high season), then take the free Passeur shuttle โ€” it runs every few minutes and the fare is built into the parking ticket โ€” or walk the 45-minute causeway. Arrive early or stay overnight nearby to see the abbey before the coaches roll in.

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