Top Seasons to Explore Marseille: Summer Festivities & Winter Attractions | Go Travel Daily

Top Seasons to Explore Marseille: Summer Festivities & Winter Attractions

High season: June to August ushers beach life and parties on the sand

High season means uncomfortably hot city temperatures – 35°C is fairly common at noon – and urban beaches packed with holidaymakers. The summer festival season is in full swing, with bags of open-air film screenings, rooftop concerts, and dance parties to entertain. Hotels and hostels are fully booked, with rates at a premium.

Shoulder season: April, May, September and October are mellow months to visit “sans le crowd”

Shoulder-season temperatures are pleasantly balmy, the school-holiday crowd is yet to descend on the coast, and street markets are heaped with fresh produce from all over Provence. It’s warm enough to swim in the Med and hike along the coast without melting. Spring blooms and autumn foliage cast city parks and gardens in an exquisite light.

Low season: November to March is best for sightseeing on the cheap

The bitterly cold mistral wind whips through the city. Locals button down the hatches and hibernate. The few tourists around revel in exploring near-deserted museums and monuments. Hotel rates are at their lowest, and attractions open shorter hours. Beach restaurants and bars, rooftops, and seaside addresses close for winter.

Enjoy solitary January strolls

The very occasional snow flurry might fall on the city, but days are cold and crisp with China-blue skies. Lunch in the sun alfresco is possible, even in January. If you missed the city’s emblematic santon fair (tiny, hand-crafted crib figurines) before Christmas, catch it now.

Key Events: Foire aux Santons

February is for foodies

February can be a cold month, but the oursin (sea urchin) season is on hand to comfort and thrill. The pale-orange roe is the star of every seafood restaurant menu, and weekend festivals celebrating the spiny-balled delicacy fill nearby Carry-le-Rouet with gourmet gaiety. Pilgrims weave their way up to Abbaye St-Victor at dawn bearing baskets of traditional Marseillais navettes (orange blossom biscuits) to be blessed at La Chandeleur.

Key Events: Les Oursinades, La Chandeleur (2 February)

March means street parties

With clocks springing forward at the tail end of the month, the days feel longer and spring is in the air. Decorated floats and costumed revelers parade along streets around the Plages du Prado and Parc Borély during carnival’s exuberant street processions.

Key Events: Carnaval de Marseille

April is for setting sail

The sailing season opens, adding picture-postcard white sailboats to Marseille’s panoramic bay views. Days are comfortably warm, café and restaurant terraces pop up like mushrooms after the rain, and cultural happenings return to the stage.

Key Events: Massilia Cup, Semaine Nautique Internationale de Méditerranée (SNIM), Festival de Musique Sacrée, Festival International Music et Cinéma, Festival Flamenco Azul

May brings in bountiful markets

Beautiful sunny days are a given. Open-air food markets are piled high with early summer produce from all over Provence, including ruby-red cherries, melons, and syrupy figs from the nearby Vaucluse. Muguets (“lily of the valley” blooms) are sold on street corners to mark 1 May.

Key Events: Fête de la Nature, Salon des Vignerons et de la Gastronomie, Rencontres du Cinéma Sud Américain

June kicks off festival season

Freshly harvested garlic is piled high in woven garlands on street stalls at the Vieux Port’s ancient garlic fair – a handful of saffron farmers sell their wares too. World music spills across the streets of ethnically diverse Noailles, and live jazz makes toes tap at a quartet of atmospheric outdoor venues, including Centre de la Vieille Charité, MuCEM, and Abbaye St-Victor.

Key Events: Foire à l’Ail (Garlic Fair), Festival du Soleil, Festival de Marseille (mid-June–mid-July), Marseille Jazz des Cinq Continents (June–early August), Watts Summer Festival, Marsatac

July embraces the holiday spirit

School’s out for summer, temperatures soar, and cultural life shifts outside. Beaches are packed; movies are screened in parks, squares, and courtyards; and rooftop venues and beach clubs buzz until the wee hours. Watch for top-drawer concerts at the beautiful, open-air Théâtre Silvain amphitheater and world champion pétanque players spinning balls in Parc Borély.

Key Events: Ciné en Plein Air (July-late September), Au Large! Festival, Mondial La Marseillaise à Pétanque, Bastille Day (14 July), Pride Marseille

August sizzles in the summer sun

The French take vacation and many locals head out of the city. However, this is one of the busiest times to be in Marseille, with events galore, an infectious party atmosphere, and the start of the new football season (through to May). In nearby Cassis, the first grapes are harvested at the end of the month.

Key Events: La Fête de la Vierge (15 August), Les Joutes de l’Estaque

September’s quiet autumn streets

Temperatures cool, and walking trails in the Parc National des Calanques begin to reopen as the risk of wildfire subsides. Contemporary sounds by globetrotting artists rock the uber-cool rooftop of Friche La Belle de Mai. The Cassis wine harvest is in full swing.

Key Events: Festival MIMI, Foire Internationale de Marseille

October marks the close of the season

The days may be shortening, but the glow of the autumn sun is a delight. It is still warm enough to swim, and beaches are blissfully empty. By the end of the month, seasonal hotels, restaurants, and bars shut for winter.

Key Events: Fiesta des Suds

November welcomes Marseille’s oldest craft fair

The city’s oldest craft fair, with stalls selling Marseillais santons (thumbnail-sized, terracotta figurines for Christmas cribs), opens with a flourish at the Vieux Port – as it has done since 1803. This is the traditional time of year to eat pieds et paquets (sheep’s trotters and stuffed tripe).

Key Events: Foire aux Santons

December is a festive time

Families celebrate Christmas with midnight Mass, Provençal chants, 13 desserts, and nativity scenes. Santonniers (santon makers) are celebrated with their own Mass, either at the tail end of December or early January.

Key Events: Foire aux Santons continues

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