★ Pillar guide

Planning your D-Day pilgrimage: a complete guide for US, UK, Canadian and international visitors.

Flights, ferries, drive times, what to book first, where to stay. Everything we wish our American and British guests had known before they came.

Arromanches beach and Mulberry B harbour, the heart of the D-Day landings
Who this guide is for. US, UK, Canadian, Australian and other international visitors planning a trip to Normandy's D-Day beaches. Whether you are a WWII veteran's descendant, a history enthusiast, or simply a traveller who wants to understand June 6, 1944 — this is the practical playbook.

1. When to come: the 82nd anniversary and other windows

The most meaningful time to visit is around June 6, the anniversary of D-Day. In 2026, this marks the 82nd anniversary and the D-Day Festival runs from May 30 to June 14. Commemorations, military re-enactments, fly-overs, and an evening concert and fireworks at Arromanches on June 6 itself.

But the beaches and museums are open year-round, and many veterans' families prefer a quieter visit:

Avoid the second week of August (French national holiday) if you want quiet — France is on the road then.

2. Getting to Normandy from abroad

From the United States and Canada

The fastest path is to fly to Paris Charles de Gaulle (CDG), then drive 3 hours west to Arromanches. There is no direct US flight to a Normandy airport.

From CDG to Arromanches: rent a car (best option, ~3h drive via A13 + A84). Or train from CDG to Paris Saint-Lazare → Bayeux (about 3h total with transfer), then taxi to Arromanches (15 min, ~€25).

From the United Kingdom

Three options, ranked by what most of our British guests choose:

From Australia, New Zealand, Asia-Pacific

Long-haul to London Heathrow, Frankfurt, or Paris CDG, then onward as above. Most Australian visitors we host combine the D-Day trip with London or Paris on the same itinerary — count at least 8–10 days door to door for the full circuit.

3. Where to stay: why we recommend Arromanches

Most international D-Day visitors stay in Bayeux (10 km from Arromanches, hotels and B&Bs), but those who want the experience to be more immersive choose to stay on the beach itself. Arromanches is the only village right at the heart of the British Gold Beach landing zone, with the Mulberry artificial harbour at its doorstep.

What this means in practice:

For a group of 4 to 10, renting an entire house makes more sense than booking multiple hotel rooms. Villa Bellevue accommodates up to 10 guests across five bedrooms in the very centre of Arromanches — see also our guide on renting for ten in Normandy.

4. What to book before you arrive

Booking priority

Reserve these months ahead

1. Your villa or hotel (Arromanches and Bayeux fill up first, particularly for June 5–7).
2. D-Day Museum and Caen Memorial tickets (timed entries online).
3. A private guided tour or driver if you don't rent a car.
4. Ferry Portsmouth–Caen if coming from UK (book at least 3 months ahead for June).

5. Driving in Normandy: what to know

6. A suggested 5-day D-Day itinerary

Day 1 — Arrival and acclimatisation

Land at CDG morning, drive to Arromanches (3h), check in late afternoon. Walk the seawall at golden hour, dinner at Le Mouton Rathouin or La Petite Plage.

Day 2 — The British and Canadian sector

Morning: D-Day Museum and Mulberry remains on foot (100 m from the villa). Afternoon: Juno Beach Centre at Courseulles (15 min drive) and Pegasus Bridge (45 min). Sunset back at Arromanches 360 cinema platform.

Day 3 — The American sector

Full day. Drive 20 min to Colleville-sur-Mer for the Normandy American Cemetery, then Omaha Beach, then Pointe du Hoc. Lunch in Vierville or Port-en-Bessin. Return for dinner at the villa.

Day 4 — Caen Memorial and Bayeux

Morning at the Caen Memorial (35 min drive, plan 3h+ inside). Afternoon in Bayeux for the Bayeux Tapestry and the British Cemetery (4,144 Commonwealth graves). Read also our guide to visiting Bayeux.

Day 5 — Slow morning, departure

Coffee at the bow window, walk on the beach at low tide, drive back to CDG (3h). Allow a buffer if your flight is in the afternoon.

If you have more time, extend with Mont-Saint-Michel (1h45 west) or Honfleur (1h east).

7. Useful local etiquette

Tip #1

The American Cemetery and respectful behaviour

The cemetery is on land granted to the United States in perpetuity. Dress respectfully (no swimwear, no shorts above the knee). The 4pm flag-lowering ceremony is moving and free to attend.

Tip #2

French time and meal hours

Lunch is 12:00–14:00 sharp. Dinner is 19:30 onwards. Many restaurants close in the afternoon. Plan accordingly or you'll be eating supermarket sandwiches.

Tip #3

French greetings

Start every shop or restaurant interaction with "Bonjour" — even a hesitant one. It opens every door. Locals appreciate the effort.

8. With a veteran or with descendants

We have hosted several families travelling with WWII veterans (in their late 90s and 100s, often on what they know will be a final visit). A few specific tips:

9. Money, language, paperwork

10. Photography and souvenirs

Photography is welcome at all D-Day sites including the American Cemetery (no flash inside the chapel). For souvenirs, avoid the tourist shops near the bus park — better quality and prices at the museum gift shops. The most touching souvenirs are usually the things you find at home: sand from Omaha or Gold Beach, a Bessin cheese to share back home, a Bayeux Tapestry print.

11. A final word

Whatever brings you here — family history, scholarship, curiosity, or pilgrimage — you are joining a quiet stream of people who have made this trip since 1945. The locals see you as part of the village's purpose. Many of our older neighbours remember the days, others have inherited the stories. Take the time to talk, to listen, and to walk slowly. The beaches did not give up their dead easily; they don't give up their meaning quickly either.

If you want a place where you can spread out, host your family for a few days, and step out the door right onto the Mulberry harbour — we'd be honoured to host you.

Related reading

The villa awaits you

1857 seaside house, 10 guests, 100 m from the D-Day Museum.

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