Local guide

What to do in Arromanches: a complete guide by a local.

Twenty years of walking this thousand-soul village taught us a few secrets. Here is our Arromanches.

Panoramic view of Arromanches-les-Bains with artificial harbour

Arromanches-les-Bains is a village of a thousand inhabitants set between two cliffs, halfway between Bayeux and Courseulles. People come for its history — the Mulberry B artificial harbour built here in June 1944 — and stay for something else: the light, the sea that changes colour every hour, the seawall you walk between two tides.

This guide gathers what we actually tell travellers passing by the villa. No filter.

1. The D-Day Museum

At 100 metres from the villa, on the esplanade. Plan 1h30 for the visit, more if you take the time to understand the engineering feat of the Mulberry B. The museum was completely redesigned in 2023 and is today one of the most educational on the coast. Book online, especially in June and July: queue can be 30 minutes.

The tip

Go early or late in the day. Tour buses arrive around 10:30am and leave around 4:30pm. Before and after, you have the museum almost to yourself.

2. Arromanches 360 circular cinema

At 500 metres, perched on the eastern cliff. The 360-degree immersive film is short (19 minutes) but striking. Most importantly, it offers the best panoramic viewpoint over the artificial harbour.

Our tip

Pair it with a sunset

Take the last screening, exit, and settle on the lawn facing the sea. The golden light on the Mulberry caissons is the image you'll remember.

3. Walking the seawall at low tide

The simplest and most beautiful experience. At low tide, you can walk at the foot of the caissons that formed the artificial harbour. You physically understand how mad it was to build this in a few weeks, in June 1944, under fire.

Download the Tides app and check the coefficients. Above 90, it's spectacular. Go at least an hour before low tide for the time.

4. The customs officers' path (GR 223)

The GR 223 runs along the Norman coast over hundreds of kilometres. From Arromanches, you can head west (towards Tracy-sur-Mer, Longues-sur-Mer, Port-en-Bessin) or east (towards Asnelles, Ver-sur-Mer). Count 2 to 3 hours for the Arromanches – Longues-sur-Mer battery – return loop, our favourite walk.

5. The Wednesday morning market

Place du 6 juin, 8am to 1pm. Small but authentic. The fishmonger comes from Port-en-Bessin, the cheesemaker is from Bessin, and there are two local market gardeners. Perfect to prepare lunch at the villa.

6. Eat

The good addresses, in the order we recommend them:

For more details, also read our Arromanches restaurants guide.

7. The D-Day beaches

Arromanches is on Gold Beach. On foot or by car, you can link the others in minutes:

To plan your full D-Day day, see our D-Day beaches itinerary.

8. Bayeux, ten minutes away

10 km away, the town of Bayeux deserves a day on its own. The Tapestry (70 metres of embroidery telling the conquest of England in 1066), the Notre-Dame cathedral, the medieval streets, the Saturday morning market. Everything is walkable once there.

Note: the Tapestry leaves for the British Museum in autumn 2026 for an exceptional exhibition. If that's in your plans, do it before. Details in our guide to visiting Bayeux.

9. Off-season: the version we love

From November to March, Arromanches finds its rhythm. You have the seawall to yourself, restaurants are welcoming, and winter light on the Channel is unparalleled. Equinox storms are spectacular from the salon bow window.

It's also the season the villa welcomes the most family tribes — Christmas, New Year's Eve, February holidays. The recovered calm, the fireplace, the sea making its noise.

Stay 100 metres from the museum

Villa Bellevue accommodates 10 guests in the heart of Arromanches.

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