Aix-en-Provence
CITY GUIDE

Aix-en-Provence

Provence's elegant capital of art and fountains

Paul Cézanne painted his masterpieces here. Roman fountains still bubble on every corner. And the morning light hits the honey-colored buildings of Cours Mirabeau in a way that makes you understand why artists have flocked to Aix-en-Provence for centuries. This isn't just another pretty French town — it's the cultural heart of Provence, where university students debate philosophy at sidewalk cafés and Saturday markets overflow with lavender, olives, and that perfect tomato you'll remember for years.

Best Months

APR · MAY · JUN · SEP · OCT

~23°C · high crowds

Culture & Context

CÉZANNE'S FOUNTAIN CITY

Aix calls itself the City of a Thousand Fountains, and once you're there, you'll stop counting and just start drinking from them (the non-potable ones aside). The city was built on Roman thermal waters — literally named Aquae Sextiae — and that spa-town DNA is still everywhere. Paul Cézanne was born here and his obsession with Montagne Sainte-Victoire defined not just his career but the visual identity of the whole place. His studio, the Atelier Cézanne, sits on the northern edge of town and has been preserved almost exactly as he left it.

Here's the thing most guidebooks skip: Aix is a serious university city. Tens of thousands of students keep it from going full bougie-museum-piece. Some locals nickname it the "21st arrondissement of Paris" because of how many Parisians have migrated south for sun and a more relaxed lifestyle — but with Paris-level taste in food and fashion. That combination gives Aix a strange dual energy. Elegant 17th-century mansions on one street, cheap student pizza joints on the next.

And the pronunciation: it's "Ex." Not "Ax." Say it wrong once and you'll know immediately from the look on the waiter's face.

Local Customs

BONJOUR FIRST, ALWAYS

Say 'Bonjour' the moment you walk into any shop, café, or bakery — before you say anything else. Not doing so is considered rude, full stop.. Shops (especially small independent ones) close for a long lunch, typically 12:30 PM to 2:00 PM or even 3:00 PM.

Plan around it or you will stand outside a shuttered door looking confused.. Bars in the historic centre cannot legally sell alcohol after 9 PM. If you want a late drink, head to a restaurant or find a bar that has a special license..

Dining is slow by design. Nobody is rushing you. Asking for the bill before you're ready is considered odd; expecting it immediately after your main course is considered rude..

Service is usually included in the bill (service compris). Rounding up or leaving a few euros extra for good service is appreciated but not obligatory.. Pétanque is played seriously in the squares.

Don't wander through an active game.. The morning market at Place Richelme runs daily, 8am–1am. Locals shop here.

The larger Tuesdays/Thursdays/Saturdays market on Cours Mirabeau is where you go for clothes and crafts too.. Greet shopkeepers and waiters when leaving as well — 'Au revoir' and a nod goes a long way.

Safety

WATCH YOUR POCKETS

Aix is genuinely safe, scoring around 76/100 on global safety indexes. 92 out of 100 residents and visitors say they feel safe during the day. Evenings are also calm, particularly in the center. That said, petty theft is the main thing to watch for. Pickpockets operate at crowded markets, around the Fontaine de la Rotonde, and at bus stations. Keep your wallet in a front pocket and don't leave bags unattended at café terraces — it's common enough that locals barely blink when it happens to tourists.

At night, stick to lit, populated streets. Don't wander into narrow side alleys after midnight if you're alone. The advice isn't paranoia, just sense. For solo female travelers, the center is comfortable; occasional unwanted attention in busier areas is possible but not the norm.

Emergency numbers: 112 (general European emergency, works everywhere) or 17 (police only). If something is stolen, you can file a report online in French at pre-plainte.interieur.gouv.fr before going to the station in person. Keep copies of your passport stored separately from the original.

Useful Phrases

Bonjourbohn-ZHOOR
Good day
use this as your default greeting every time you enter anywhere, any time before about 6pm.
Bonsoirbohn-SWAR
Good evening
switches in around 6pm. Get this right and people warm up fast.
S'il vous plaîtseel voo PLAY
Please
essential for ordering in cafés and getting a waiter's attention without snapping your fingers (don't snap your fingers).
Mercimehr-SEE
Thank you. Add 'beaucoup' (boh-KOO) after it when someone does something genuinely helpful.
Excusez-moiex-KYOO-zay mwah
Excuse me
leads every interaction with a stranger, especially if you need directions or help.
L'addition, s'il vous plaîtlad-ee-SYON seel voo play
The bill, please
the most useful phrase you'll use at dinner. Waiters won't bring it until you ask.
Un café, s'il vous plaîtuhn kah-FAY seel voo play
A coffee, please
note that 'un café' in France means an espresso. If you want something bigger, ask for 'un grand café' or 'un café allongé.'
Où est...?oo ay
Where is...?
pair it with any landmark: 'Où est le Cours Mirabeau?' People will point you in the right direction.

Itineraries coming soon

We're working on adding amazing itineraries for Aix-en-Provence. In the meantime, try the app to create your own!

Vieil Aix puts you in the medieval heart where fountains gurgle and shutters creak open to morning light. Book a room near Place des Cardeurs or Rue Espariat — you'll walk to everything but pay €150+ per night in summer. The Quartier Mazarin feels more residential, with wider streets and 17th-century mansions turned into boutique hotels. It's quieter here, perfect if you want to feel like a local. Look, if budget matters, stay near the train station on Avenue Victor Hugo. The walk to old town takes 15 minutes but hotels drop to €80 per night. Just avoid the industrial zone past the périphérique — it's all car dealerships and concrete.

Money-Saving Tips

  • 1.Buy groceries at Monoprix on Cours Mirabeau instead of tourist shops — prices drop 30% and selection improves dramatically
  • 2.Free museum entry first Sunday of each month at Musée Granet and Fondation Vasarely
  • 3.Skip expensive hotel breakfasts and grab pastries from local boulangeries for €3 instead of €25
  • 4.Lunch menus at good restaurants cost €18-25 vs €45+ for dinner — same quality, better value
  • 5.Park at Parking des Cardeurs for €1.20/hour vs street parking at €2/hour with better availability
  • 6.Buy Provence rosé at Monoprix for €8-12 per bottle instead of €25+ at restaurants
  • 7.Take the Aix City Pass for €15 — includes bus transport and museum entries if you're hitting 3+ attractions

Travel Tips

  • Download the Fontaines d'Aix app to find all 100+ fountains — each tells a story about the city's history
  • Book restaurant reservations by 10am for same-day dinner — popular spots fill up fast, especially in summer
  • Carry a reusable water bottle — public fountains throughout old town provide free, fresh mountain water
  • Learn basic French greetings — locals appreciate the effort and service improves noticeably
  • Avoid driving in old town during market days (Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday) — streets close and traffic becomes impossible
  • Wear comfortable walking shoes with good grip — cobblestones get slippery when wet
  • Shop at markets early (8-9am) for best selection and before crowds arrive
  • Keep cash handy — many small shops and cafés don't accept cards under €10

Frequently Asked Questions

Three days covers the essentials comfortably. Day one for old town and Cours Mirabeau, day two for museums and Cézanne sites, day three for markets and a day trip to nearby villages or calanques. You could see the highlights in two days, but you'd miss the leisurely café culture that makes Aix special.

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