There are numerous options depending on where you are starting from, where you are going, time, costs, sailing vs driving etc:
Brittany Ferries
Personally I prefer Brittany Ferries on the western Channel. These are longer and less frequent crossings than those from Dover, and can look more expensive. But if you are travelling from the West, North or Midlands they can offer advantages, especially if heading to Normandy, Brittany, the Loire Valley and the south and southwest of France – you can avoid the M25, long journeys across northern France and possibly an overnight hotel room en route.
However there are other options –
Dover – Calais/Dunkerque (Dunkirk)
the shortest sea crossing at 90 minutes or less – (slightly longer to Dunkerque) – frequent daily crossings – motorway access on both sides of the Channel:
P & O Ferries
- DFDS
Newhaven/Dieppe
a slightly longer crossing (4 hours). Dieppe is an ideal gateway into Normandy and central France. Dieppe is the closest French port to Paris and the Alabaster Coast is famous for its beauty (see our article on Dieppe)
Western Channel – Portsmouth/Plymouth
longer (6-7 hours) (and more expensive) crossings but more facilities onboard and good for western France and Brittany and avoid the need to drive around London. It also feels more like your holiday has begun already and the ports of arrival feel more “French”
Brittany Ferries
(Portsmouth/Poole/Plymouth to Le Havre/Caen/Cherbourg/St Malo/Roscoff
Western Channel – via Spain (for southwest France)
crossing takes 24 hours or more – with easy access to the Basque country and across the Pyrenees into S W France, Aquitaine, Biarritz etc, saving the long drive down through France and the need for overnight accommodation en route! (e.g. Calais to Biarritz is over 1000km!)
Brittany Ferries
for UK to France Portsmouth/Plymouth to Santander/Bilbao in NW Spain
For eastern or central France
especially from the North and East of the UK:
- Hull – Zeebrugge with
P&O Ferries– although Zeebrugge is in Belgium,with fast motorway links it is still only about 3.5 hours to Paris (306km), whereas Calais – Paris is 288km! and you avoid the M25 around London!
Channel Tunnel
Frequent departures and no weather problems or delays – just 25 minutes in your own vehicle with no luggage restrictions, but can be more expensive than the ferry.
- Eurotunnel (this is the tunnel train for vehicles) -Folkestone – Calais
- for passenger trains from London and Ashford to Paris/Brussels and beyond use Eurostar
other articles about cross-channel ferries:
- Covid update April 2022
- Ouistreham Seafood Festival November 2015
- Top attractions in France March 2015
- Cherbourg January 2015
- Dunkirk Celebrations and Operation Dynamo January 2015
- Dunkerque and Gravelines May 2014
- Brittany Ferries – “Economie” crossings February 2014
- Use your mobile phone in the Channel Tunnel January 2014
- Le Havre, Normandy February 2013
- Dunkerque Carnival January 2012
- Dunkerque Christmas Market November 2011
- Brittany Ferries to Bilbao November 2010
- Lille and its art September 2010
- France by Bus, Train, Road – but not by plane! April 2010
- Ferry to Corsica March 2010
- Roscoff Onion Festival August 2009
- Calais attractions August 2009
- Normandy Scallops and Herrings July 2009
- Rock Festival in Brittany 2022 June 2009
- New Brittany ferry and route May 2009
- A taste of Corsica April 2009
- Le Havre – Christmas Shopping December 2008
- Lille’s Christmas celebrations November 2008
- Roscoff and Concarneau – a tale of two Brittany ports September 2008
- Caen Port Festival August 2008
- Brest Maritime Festival July 2008
- Calais- Shop local March 2008
- Marseille connections March 2008
- Getting around Paris December 2007
- The Normandy Beaches and Coasts May 2007
- La Basse Cour, B&B in Normandy July 2006
- Bailleul – Carnaval and Potjevleesch! February 2006
- Normandy Gardens project February 2006