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France
Provence-Alpes-Côte D'Azur
Var
Toulon

La Seyne-Sur-Mer

Attractions and Places To See around La Seyne-Sur-Mer - Top 20

Attractions and places to see around La Seyne-Sur-Mer offer a blend of maritime heritage, vibrant seafronts, and natural beauty on the Var coast of southern France. This port town provides diverse experiences, from historical fortifications to picturesque beaches and lush natural spaces. Visitors can explore significant landmarks and enjoy the Mediterranean landscape. The area is characterized by its strategic harbor, historical sites, and scenic coastal paths.

Best attractions and places to see around La Seyne-Sur-Mer

  • The most popular attractions is Notre dame du mai, a trail that offers panoramic 360-degree views of the surrounding coastline and islands. This site provides extensive vistas stretching from Six-Fours-les-Plages to the Giens peninsula.
  • Another must-see spot is Musée de la Marine, a museum dedicated to maritime history. Located next to the naval base, it traces over 400 years of naval heritage, featuring models and artifacts.
  • Visitors also love Notre-Dame du Faron Sanctuary, a religious building and historical site. This sanctuary serves as a memorial to soldiers who fell during the 1944 liberation of Provence.
  • La Seyne-Sur-Mer is known for its historical landmarks, natural coastal features, and cultural sites. The region offers a variety of attractions, from fortresses and museums to beaches and scenic trails.
  • The attractions around La Seyne-Sur-Mer are appreciated by the komoot community, with more than 400 upvotes and over 230 photos shared across 14 highlights.

Last updated: May 9, 2026

Notre dame du mai

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A 360 ° C from Notre-Dame du Mai: a breathtaking view of Six-Fours-les-Plages with the archipelago of the islands of Embiez, La Seyne-sur-Mer, Saint Mandrier, the harbor of Toulon and in good weather, view from Marseille to Porquerolles and the Giens peninsula!
Magnificent hike on the small coastal path where the landscapes change constantly: the port of Brusc, the cliffs, the sea, the undergrowth, the scrubland with thyme, heather and rosemary ... and the smell of pins! must do with good shoes, water and a camera!

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Notre-Dame du Faron Sanctuary

Highlight • Religious Site

The sanctuary serves as a memorial to the soldiers who fell in 1944, during the liberation of Provence.

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Toulon Cathedral, also known as Sainte-Marie-Majeure, is a Catholic church in Toulon, in the Var department in northern France. The cathedral is a national monument. Construction of the church began in the 11th century and ended in the 18th century.

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Musée de la Marine

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Ideally located next to the naval base, the Marine Museum traces more than 400 years of maritime history. You will see magnificent, well-preserved models as well as the maneuver board of the famous Clémenceau. The museum is open every day from 10am to 6pm, except Tuesdays. It is labeled "Accueil Vélo".

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Toulon's Small Harbor

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The harbor is one of Toulon's most emblematic sites. It includes the small harbor, which houses the military port, the marina, and the ferry terminal, as well as the large harbor, a coastal strip stretching from the Tour Royale to Cap Brun.

Thanks to its exceptional natural environment (the hills surround the city and overlook the harbor), Toulon has become the only harbor to combine maritime and land defenses. This military heritage of forts, towers, and other fortresses, combined with the historic presence of the Arsenal, now known as the naval base, today provides the opportunity to tell great stories of strategy, battles, and the Revolution.

All year round, the boatmen located at the port offer guided tours of the most beautiful harbor in Europe: the naval base and buildings of the French Navy, the marine cemetery, the port of La Seyne-sur-Mer and the former shipyards, the Tamaris corniche, Lazaret Bay and its mussel beds, the Saint Mandrier peninsula, the fortifications (Eguillette, Balaguier, Tour Royale), and the Mourillon beaches.

Toulon harbor is also an ideal navigational area for sailing, dinghy sailing, and a variety of water sports (sea kayaking, paddleboarding, rowing, etc.). It hosts numerous prestigious regattas and nautical races.

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November 8, 2025, Musée de la Marine

A true gateway to the historic Arsenal

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The harbor is one of Toulon's most emblematic sites. It includes the small harbor, which houses the military port, the marina, and the ferry terminal, as well as the large harbor, a coastal strip stretching from the Tour Royale to Cap Brun. Thanks to its exceptional natural environment (the hills surround the city and overlook the harbor), Toulon has become the only harbor to combine maritime and land defenses. This military heritage of forts, towers, and other fortresses, combined with the historic presence of the Arsenal, now known as the naval base, today provides the opportunity to tell great stories of strategy, battles, and the Revolution. All year round, the boatmen located at the port offer guided tours of the most beautiful harbor in Europe: the naval base and buildings of the French Navy, the marine cemetery, the port of La Seyne-sur-Mer and the former shipyards, the Tamaris corniche, Lazaret Bay and its mussel beds, the Saint Mandrier peninsula, the fortifications (Eguillette, Balaguier, Tour Royale), and the Mourillon beaches. Toulon harbor is also an ideal navigational area for sailing, dinghy sailing, and a variety of water sports (sea kayaking, paddleboarding, rowing, etc.). It hosts numerous prestigious regattas and nautical races.

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Subsequently, the growing importance of the naval arsenal contributed to a demographic boom that required increasing the capacity of the Cathedral, the only church in the city until the beginning of the 19th century. A new extension, including the Chapel of the Relics, was undertaken between 1654 and 1659 under the episcopates of Bishop Jacques Danès de Marly and Bishop Pierre Pingré. The latter consecrated the new Cathedral in 1661. It is now oriented from north to south and its surface area has doubled. This extension made it possible to include a large part of the pre-existing structural work. Thus, the building has three naves of five bays of unequal dimensions: the first, upon entering, is very short and corresponds to the Romanesque side aisle; the second, with a square plan, is the old great Romanesque nave; the third and fourth are narrower, and the volume of the great Romanesque nave is only found in the fifth bay which precedes the choir. The bay of the relic chapel, which supports the dome, already had its dimensions and square plan. The main drawback of this building is its darkness; the elevation of the central nave does not differ enough from that of the side naves to allow windows to be opened (those visible overlook the attic). Ceremonies were therefore, here more than elsewhere, lit by candlelight. These successive expansions and rearrangements give it a unique character, with naves of varying sizes, massive walls, and arcades of different styles. From 1696 to 1701, a monumental façade (24 meters long and 19 meters high) was inlaid onto the Romanesque wall where a door had been installed since 1666. The gable is adorned with a simple pointed pediment placed on a cornice surmounting a Corinthian order, as the central nave was not high enough in relation to the side naves to allow for the construction of a second order. Part of the sculpted decoration was damaged or destroyed during the Revolution in 1794 (the statues of Faith and Charity, as well as the bas-reliefs above the side doors, were removed, and the angels on the transom of the main door were disfigured). In 1730, the bell tower was demolished because it was in such poor condition. The city organized funding for a new bell tower, the construction of which began in 1737 and was completed in 1740. Like the old one, the new bell tower was falsely symmetrical with the Fos tower, until the latter was upgraded in 1822. The wrought iron bell cage that then topped it was transferred to the bell tower. The four bells, Holy Trinity, Savior, Mary, and Cyprien, have punctuated Toulon's life since 1524. During the French Revolution, the churches suffered greatly; the Cathedral was transformed into a Temple of Morality, a military equipment store, and a salt warehouse. The Concordat of 1801 abolished the dioceses of Fréjus and Toulon, which were incorporated into the diocese of Aix-en-Provence. In 1802, the Cathedral was returned to worship in a deplorable state and took the name of Sainte-Marie-Majeur Church until 1958, when the see was transferred to Toulon. In 1822, during the Restoration, the Diocese of Fréjus was reestablished and incorporated the Diocese of Toulon, thus corresponding to the Var department as Napoleon Bonaparte had intended. Illustrious visitors have come to pay their respects in our Cathedral: numerous Counts of Provence, Catherine de Medici, Anne of Austria, several Kings of France (Charles IX, Louis XIV, Charles X), Cardinal Mazarin, the Duke and Duchess of Angoulême, Saint Catherine of Siena, Saint John Bosco, Father Lacordaire, and more. Please come and discover this unique Cathedral, where guided tours are offered every Thursday during the summer: meet at 3 p.m. in front of the reception desk.

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Toulon has been an episcopal see since the 5th century. Honorius (or Augustal) is the first known bishop in 441. Saint Cyprian, the most illustrious, served from 517 to 546. According to several sources, the original cathedral was located on the site of the current chapter house. Unfortunately, the first reliable information dates back only to the 11th and 12th centuries. The archives are all the more sparse because raids by Majorcan pirates in 1178 and 1196, as well as successive pillages and massacres by the Saracens, destroyed many documents and buildings during the Middle Ages. The Romanesque (or pre-Romanesque) building may therefore have been partially or completely demolished. In any case, the church had become too small by the end of the 11th century due to the growth of the city. According to tradition, Count Gilbert of Provence, while passing through Toulon, vowed to build a church dedicated to the Virgin Mary if he returned safely from the Crusade to the Holy Land. Upon his return in 1096, he ordered the construction of a larger church dedicated to the Virgin Mary under the name of Notre-Dame-de-la-Seds (from the Latin sedis, meaning seat, in reference to the cathedra, the bishop's seat). This medieval cathedral was located to the west of the ancient building; it faced east and was accessed through a porch in the chapter house courtyard, the entrance being through the current Chapel of the Holy Cross. This Romanesque edifice comprised the first three bays of the current building. A few visible traces remain: vaults, Sibille's epitaph on the funerary plaque in the former Saint Michael cemetery (present-day Cathedral Square), and the Fos tower, whose foundations are located in the current Sainte-Croix chapel (it was in danger of collapse, and the top was destroyed in 1822). This tower housed a clock between the 15th and 19th centuries; it may have been part of an early city wall or an early canonical district, or it may have been identified with the "provostship tower," located west of the Cathedral according to some sources. Regardless of its construction date, the question arises as to the church's integration into the poorly understood and changing topography of the city, due to the rapid expansion of the medieval town, which spread southward and westward during the 13th and 14th centuries. In 1442, the Chapel of the Holy Relics was built, which the following year became "Our Lady of the Holy Relics", and finally the Chapel of the Virgin. It was separated from the Cathedral by a street and contained the relics of Saint Cyprian; the altar of the Virgin, dated 1688 (inscription engraved on the key of the arcade), probably after a rearrangement towards the north or a modification of its interior decoration.

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In the 5th century, Toulon was the seat of a bishopric and certainly had a cathedral. In 1096, traces of the Romanesque building constructed by Count Gilbert can be found. This church occupied the first three bays of the current cathedral, as one enters it. The choir is that of the Saint-Joseph chapel. To enlarge the building, which had become too cramped, the other bays were built towards the north, incorporating the chapel of relics, which had been built in the 15th century. The current cathedral was built beginning in 1654: the three naves of the previous building were therefore used to create the first three bays of the new structure. On April 27, 1661, the second Sunday after Easter, Bishop Pierre de Pingré of Toulon, consecrated the new cathedral, retaining his former title of Notre-Dame de la Seds or of the See. In 1688, Bishop de Chalucet extended the Chapel of the Virgin, which brought the building to its current form. This means that in 2011, Sainte-Marie Cathedral celebrates the 350th anniversary of its dedication.

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A must-see for an insight into the history of boat building and the interconnected trades involved. Located near the Maritime Prefecture and the Clock Tower at the entrance to the arsenal, the Toulon National Maritime Museum was created at the end of the First Empire. A true reminder of the Toulon arsenal, it has preserved the majestic gate designed by Lange in 1738. The site houses a collection of ships and galleys emblematic of the maritime tradition in the Mediterranean. Since the inauguration of a new exhibition in March 2011, the museum has also highlighted the establishment of the navy in Toulon and its impact on the city's development. On the ground floor, a space is dedicated to Vauban, creator of the first arsenal under Louis XIV. A model of the rope-making factory presents the architecture of a building like few others in France. The central part of the museum houses large-scale models of a ship and a frigate used for training officer cadets. Visitors will also discover a reconstruction of a galley, replaced after 1748 by the Toulon port prison. The reconstruction of the prison hospital is among the museum's new features. The first floor resituates Toulon as a seat of power and displays gifts representative of the Franco-Russian alliance established from 1891 to 1914, such as a punch set and a silver and enamel bratina. In addition to a torpedo dating from the 1960s, and a space reserved for submarines and aircraft carriers, enthusiasts will also appreciate the life-size reconstruction of the Charles de Gaulle maneuvering board, as well as a space dedicated to life aboard a ship, ensuring that the crew remains connected to their work tools.

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Ideally located next to the naval base, the Marine Museum traces more than 400 years of maritime history. You will see magnificent, well-preserved models as well as the maneuver board of the famous Clémenceau. The museum is open every day from 10am to 6pm, except Tuesdays. It is labeled "Accueil Vélo".

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The sanctuary serves as a memorial to the soldiers who fell in 1944, during the liberation of Provence.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What natural attractions can I explore around La Seyne-sur-Mer?

La Seyne-sur-Mer is rich in natural beauty. You can visit Notre dame du mai, which offers panoramic 360-degree views of the coastline and islands. The Cap Sicié massif is a heavily forested cape with stunning Mediterranean views, cliffs, and inland Provence. Don't miss the Forêt de Janas, a vast woodland perfect for family outings, or the wide, sandy Plage des Sablettes, known for its shallow, turquoise waters.

Are there historical sites or landmarks to visit in La Seyne-sur-Mer?

Absolutely. Explore the 17th-century Fort Balaguier, which offers panoramic views and houses a maritime museum. The Pont Levant, an old lift bridge, is a symbol of the town's industrial heritage. You can also visit the beautiful 17th-century Église Notre-Dame-du-Bon-Voyage in the historic town center.

What kind of outdoor activities can I do near La Seyne-sur-Mer?

The region offers a variety of outdoor activities. You can find numerous hiking trails, including routes around Cap Sicié and the Forêt de Janas. For runners, there are running trails like the Plage de Sainte-Asile loop. Cyclists can enjoy cycling routes that offer views of the Rade de Toulon or explore the Sicié Massif.

Are there any family-friendly attractions or activities?

Yes, La Seyne-sur-Mer is great for families. The Plage des Sablettes is a wide, sandy beach with shallow waters, ideal for children. The Forêt de Janas provides extensive woodlands for family outings and walks. Additionally, the Notre dame du mai trail is considered suitable for families with children, offering magnificent views without excessive difficulty.

Where can I find the best viewpoints in the area?

For breathtaking views, head to Notre dame du mai, which provides 360-degree panoramas stretching from Six-Fours-les-Plages to the Giens peninsula. The Cap Sicié massif, accessible via the Corniche Merveilleuse, also offers superb vistas of the coastline and offshore islands. The Pont Levant has a belvedere with excellent harbor views.

What cultural sites are available in La Seyne-sur-Mer?

Beyond historical landmarks, La Seyne-sur-Mer offers cultural experiences. The Musée de la Marine, located near the naval base, traces over 400 years of maritime history. The Historic Town Centre features narrow streets, colorful facades, and squares like Place Laïk and Place Bourradet with cafés and artisan shops. The town also embraces street art and hosts the MINIFEST urban art festival.

Is there a good place to learn about the region's maritime history?

Yes, the Musée de la Marine is an excellent choice. It's ideally located next to the naval base and showcases over 400 years of naval heritage with magnificent models and artifacts. Additionally, the Fort Balaguier houses a museum specifically focusing on local maritime history.

What is the best time of year to visit La Seyne-sur-Mer for outdoor activities?

The Var coast generally enjoys a Mediterranean climate, making spring (April-June) and early autumn (September-October) ideal for outdoor activities. During these periods, the weather is pleasant for hiking, cycling, and exploring natural sites like Cap Sicié and the Forêt de Janas, avoiding the peak summer heat and crowds.

Are there any parks or green spaces for relaxation?

Yes, La Seyne-sur-Mer offers several pleasant green spaces. The Parc de la Navale is a landscaped waterfront park with views of Toulon's harbor, perfect for strolls and picnics. You can also visit the vibrant Parc Urbain Bonnabel in the heart of the town or the beautifully landscaped Les Jardins de la Plage near the beaches.

What is the significance of Tamaris?

Tamaris is a luxurious seasonal resort known for its superb corniche and marvelous villas, many in a Moorish style with minarets. Created by Michel Pacha, it once attracted famous artists like Renoir and Georges Sand. It offers a glimpse into the opulent past and unique architecture of the region.

Can I explore the Toulon Harbour from La Seyne-sur-Mer?

Yes, Toulon Harbour, the French Navy's main base on the Mediterranean, is easily accessible. You can stroll along the quays in La Seyne-sur-Mer to observe maritime traffic. Boat tours are also available from Toulon's small harbor, offering guided tours that pass by the naval base, the port of La Seyne-sur-Mer, and the Tamaris corniche.

Are there any religious or memorial sites in the area?

Yes, the Notre-Dame du Faron Sanctuary is a significant religious building and historical site. It serves as a memorial to the soldiers who fell during the 1944 liberation of Provence. Additionally, the Toulon Cathedral (Cathedral of Saint Mary Major), though in Toulon, is a notable historical and religious monument with origins dating back to the 5th century.

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