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| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTBoston | BOS | $312 | ~8h | View → |
New York | LGA | $328 | ~9h | View → |
New York | JFK | $328 | ~9h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $329 | ~9h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $336 | ~9h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $343 | ~9h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $345 | ~9h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $358 | ~10h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $371 | ~10h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $372 | ~10h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $375 | ~10h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $382 | ~10h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $391 | ~10h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $391 | ~10h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $395 | ~10h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $398 | ~10h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $402 | ~11h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $404 | ~11h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $405 | ~11h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $438 | ~11h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $441 | ~11h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $446 | ~12h | View → |
Seattle | SEA | $453 | ~12h | View → |
Austin | AUS | $454 | ~12h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $456 | ~12h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $462 | ~12h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $486 | ~13h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $489 | ~13h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $500 | ~13h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $506 | ~13h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $508 | ~13h | View → |
About Marseille
Marseille is France's oldest city and its most misunderstood. While Paris gets the tourist dollars, Marseille gets the soul — a port city that's been absorbing cultures from North Africa, the Middle East, and southern Europe for 2,600 years. The result is a city that feels nothing like the rest of France: rougher, louder, more chaotic, and infinitely more interesting. The food alone justifies the trip. Bouillabaisse here isn't a menu item — it's a religion, served in the fishermen's neighborhood of Vallon des Auffes with fresh rockfish pulled from the Mediterranean that morning.
For Americans accustomed to Paris as their French reference point, Marseille is a genuine shock. The Vieux-Port (Old Port) is ringed with restaurants and bars, and at 6 a.m. on any morning you can watch actual fishermen selling their catch directly off their boats. The Panier neighborhood — the oldest part of the city — has narrow streets, street art, and a buzzy café scene that fills up with locals, not tour groups. The MuCEM (Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations), opened in 2013 in a stunning perforated concrete cube on the waterfront, is one of the best-designed museums in Europe and still surprisingly uncrowded by American visitors.
The city got a major infrastructure upgrade around the Marseille-Provence 2013 European Capital of Culture designation and hasn't stopped developing. The Euroméditerranée urban renewal project transformed the northern waterfront, and the Cours Julien neighborhood has become one of the best places in southern France to eat well without paying Paris prices. Calanques National Park — a series of dramatic limestone fjords with turquoise water — sits right on the city's doorstep, accessible by boat or hiking trail in under an hour from the city center.
Flight-wise, Marseille is almost never a nonstop destination from the US, which is actually a feature: it keeps crowds manageable. You'll connect through Paris (CDG), Amsterdam, London, or Madrid, adding 2-4 hours to your journey but keeping hotel prices and tourist density at levels where you can still feel like a person rather than a number. Budget roughly €120-180/night for a solid mid-range hotel in a good location, and plan to spend more on food than you expect — the fresh seafood is extraordinary and not cheap.
Best Time to Fly to Marseille
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Track Marseille flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Marseille-Provence Airport (MRS) is 18 miles northwest of the city center. Option 1 (best value): Navette Marseille shuttle bus runs every 15-20 minutes to Saint-Charles train station (central) — €10 one-way, 25-30 minutes in normal traffic. Buy the ticket at the machine in the arrivals hall. Option 2 (fastest for groups): Taxi to Vieux-Port area runs €55-70 fixed rate depending on destination zone; confirm the fixed rate before getting in. Option 3 (budget): RTM Bus 61 runs from the airport to Vitrolles-Aéroport TGV station, where you can transfer to the train — but this takes 45-60 minutes and saves only a few euros, so the shuttle is almost always worth it.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The heart of tourist Marseille — the old harbor is ringed with restaurants and has easy access to the ferry to Château d'If. Stay here to be central to everything, but book accommodations at least a block back from the port to avoid street noise. Hotel Hermès (€100-130/night) is a well-located, no-frills option right on the water.
Marseille's oldest neighborhood sits on the hill directly north of the Vieux-Port and has gentrified significantly while keeping its edge. Narrow streets, street art murals, good coffee at La Caravelle, and the Centre de la Vieille Charité museum. Boutique hotels like Hôtel Le Richelieu fit the vibe; expect €80-140/night.
Marseille's bohemian quarter, two metro stops from the Vieux-Port, with the best independent restaurant and bar scene in the city. This is where young locals eat — Chez Etienne for pizza, Shabour for modern cooking, and a dozen solid Lebanese and Moroccan spots. Airbnbs and small hotels run €60-100/night and you're never more than 15 minutes from anywhere by metro.
The residential neighborhoods along the famous Corniche Kennedy coastal road give you sea views and proximity to the Vallon des Auffes fishing port — the most cinematic corner of Marseille. Farther from the tourist center but worth it for a more local experience; Airbnbs here average €90-140/night.
The leafy, upscale residential district south of the center, near the beach at Plage du Prado and the Borély Park. The InterContinental Marseille Hôtel Dieu (€220-380/night) sits in a converted 18th-century hospital with insane city views — worth it for one or two nights if budget allows.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
€18 hostel dorm at Vertigo Vieux-Port, €25 food (€3 pastry breakfast, €12 lunch at a market stand or Lebanese spot on Cours Julien, €10 street food dinner), €5 metro/bus all day, €10 free or low-cost sights (MuCEM exterior, Panier walk, beach), €5 coffee/drinks
€120 hotel (Hôtel Hermès or similar), €55 food (€10 café breakfast, €20 lunch with wine, €25 dinner at a neighborhood bistro), €10 transport, €15 one paid museum or Calanques boat tour contribution
€280 Hôtel Dieu InterContinental or similar, €120 food (bouillabaisse dinner at Chez Fonfon runs €65-80pp alone, add a good lunch and breakfast), €25 private transfer or car rental, €55 Calanques private boat tour or cooking class
What to Eat in Marseille
Bouillabaisse at Chez Fonfon (Vallon des Auffes): The real deal — €70-85pp for the full service with rouille, gruyère, and bread, built around rockfish that were swimming in the Mediterranean yesterday. Call ahead, they're often booked a week out in summer.
Panisse at any Cours Julien bakery: Chickpea flour fritters that are Marseille's answer to fast food — crispy outside, creamy inside, €2-3 for a bag from a street vendor. More addictive than they have any right to be.
Sea urchin (oursins) at the Vieux-Port morning market: Fishermen crack them open on the quay at 7-8 a.m. and serve them with lemon and bread for €3-5 a plate. This only exists from November to April (the harvest season) and it's one of the great raw food experiences in Europe.
Pieds et paquets at Le Souk or a traditional Marseillais brasserie: The dish locals consider the real Marseille specialty over bouillabaisse — lamb tripe and feet slow-cooked in white wine and tomato. Sounds confronting, tastes like the best braised lamb you've ever had. Around €18-22 as a main.
Navettes from Four des Navettes (Rue Sainte, open since 1781): Orange-blossom and anise-flavored boat-shaped cookies that are the oldest recipe still being made in Marseille. €10-12 for a bag of a dozen. The shop itself is a historic site.
Flying from the US to Marseille
Airlines & Routes
- →Air France via Paris CDG (most frequent, good connections from JFK, LAX, SFO, ORD, BOS, MIA)
- →Delta via Paris CDG or Amsterdam AMS (code-share with Air France and KLM)
- →United via Paris CDG or Frankfurt FRA
- →American Airlines via London LHR or Madrid MAD (connecting to Iberia or British Airways)
- →Iberia via Madrid MAD (often cheapest option from East Coast — Madrid connection is fast)
- →easyJet operates Manchester-Marseille, Gatwick-Marseille — useful if positioning through London
- →Vueling via Barcelona BCN (cheapest option if you can position to Spain first)
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Marseille has a reputation that's worse than reality for tourists, but some precautions are genuinely warranted. Pickpocketing is real around the Vieux-Port and on the Metro — keep your phone in a front pocket and don't flash expensive cameras in crowds. The northern arrondissements (14th-16th) have serious gang-related issues that make them no-go zones for tourists at night; there's no tourist reason to be there anyway. The Belsunce neighborhood (just north of the train station) is gritty and has drug activity but is mostly a nuisance rather than a danger in daylight. Vieux-Port and Panier are safe for nighttime walking. Don't swim in the Calanques alone — the terrain is rugged, phone signal disappears, and the coastal rescue service handles multiple incidents per year from people who underestimate the hike. The Calanques are closed to hiking from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in July-August due to wildfire risk; this is enforced with fines.
Book the Calanques boat tour from the Vieux-Port departure points rather than a hiking permit for your first visit — the half-day sea tour (€35-45pp, departs 9am and 2pm from Quai des Belges) shows you all five major calanques including Morgiou and En-Vau, which require a 3+ hour hike to reach on foot. You'll still want to hike one calanque independently (Calanque de Sormiou via bus 21 from Castellane metro is the easiest), but the boat unlocks the whole park in a morning and leaves your afternoon free for the city.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Marseille?
The cheapest route to Marseille from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $312. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Marseille?
The best time to visit Marseille is May, June, September, October. Late spring and early fall have warm weather without the brutal summer heat. Perfect for hiking the calanques and exploring the city. Avoid July-August; it's too hot.
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Marseille?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days within any 180-day period (Schengen Area).
How long is the flight from the US to Marseille?
Flight time from the US to Marseille (MRS) is approximately 8 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.
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