Ships anchor offshore; tenders transport passengers to the old town landing.
Quick Facts: Port of Macon | France | No dedicated cruise terminal (river cruise dock along Quai Jean Jaurès) | Dockside | City center is within 10–15 minutes on foot | UTC+1 (CET) / UTC+2 in summer (CEST)
Macon sits on the western bank of the Saône River in southern Burgundy, serving as the gateway to both the Beaujolais wine region and the rolling limestone hills of the Mâconnais. It’s a port of call almost exclusively for river cruise lines — think CroisiEurope, Viking, Avalon, and AmaWaterways — and because ships dock right along the city quayside, you have more usable time ashore than almost anywhere else on a Saône itinerary. The single most important planning tip: Macon is perfectly sized for independent exploration, so save your ship’s organized excursion budget for a wine region day trip instead.
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Port & Terminal Information
There is no formal cruise terminal in Macon. River cruise ships tie up directly along the Quai Jean Jaurès, the long riverside promenade that runs through the heart of the city. This is a dockside arrangement — no tendering, no ferry, no shuttle bus required. You step off the gangway and you’re already on the main walking boulevard of the city.
Terminal facilities are minimal by design. There is no dedicated cruise passenger building, no luggage storage at the dock, and no port ATM. However, you’ll find ATMs within a 5-minute walk along Rue Carnot and near Place de la Barre. The city’s Office de Tourisme de Mâcon is located at 1 Place Saint-Pierre and is an excellent first stop for maps, wine region information, and event listings — the staff speak English and are accustomed to river cruise passengers.
Wi-Fi is available in most cafés along the quayside. Check your ship’s daily schedule carefully: most river cruise lines operating here allow 8–10 hours in port, which is genuinely generous. You can orient yourself using [Google Maps](https://www.google.com/maps/search/Macon+cruise+terminal) before you disembark.
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Getting to the City

Because ships dock directly on the quayside in the city center, “getting to the city” is largely a non-issue — but here’s how movement works once you’re ashore.
- On Foot — The dock on Quai Jean Jaurès places you within a 5-minute walk of the old town, the covered market, the cathedral, and the main shopping streets. Almost everything in Macon is walkable. The city is flat along the riverbank and gentle on the old-town side. Comfortable shoes are all you need.
- Bus/Metro — Macon has a local bus network operated by Tudibus. Line 1 and Line 2 serve the city center and connect to the train station. Fares are around €1.50 per journey. That said, buses are entirely unnecessary for reaching the main sights from the dock. They’re more useful if you want to reach the outskirts or the TGV station at Mâcon-Loché.
- Taxi — Taxis are available near Place de la Barre and can be called via Taxi Mâconnais (+33 3 85 38 88 88). Expect €8–12 for any ride within central Macon. For day trips into the Beaujolais or Mâconnais wine villages, negotiate a fixed rate in advance — a 2–3 hour winery tour by taxi typically runs €80–120 depending on distance. Avoid accepting unsolicited rides from anyone approaching the dock.
- Hop-On Hop-Off — There is no HOHO bus service in Macon. The city is too compact to warrant one.
- Rental Car/Scooter — Europcar has a branch in Macon at 29 Rue de Strasbourg (about 15 minutes on foot from the dock), and Hertz operates near the train station. A day rental starts around €45–65 including insurance. Renting a car is genuinely worth considering here if you want to self-drive into the Beaujolais wine villages — the roads are scenic, well-marked, and lightly trafficked on weekdays.
- Train — Mâcon-Ville station is about 15 minutes on foot from the dock, and trains to Beaune take around 45 minutes (€12–16 one way). The high-speed TGV station, Mâcon-Loché TGV, is outside the city and requires a taxi or local bus to reach — not practical for a shore day.
- Ship Shore Excursion — Worth booking through your ship if it includes Hameau Duboeuf (the wine theme park in Romanèche-Thorins), the Lamartine villages, or a private château visit. These destinations are harder to reach by public transport and the ship’s timing is coordinated to get you back. For anything in Macon itself, go independently.
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Top Things to Do in Macon, France
Macon rewards slow, curious exploration — Roman history, Romanesque architecture, world-class wine, and a buzzing Saturday market all compete for your attention. Here are the best ways to spend your hours ashore.
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Must-See
1. The Vieux Saint-Vincent Cathedral Ruins (Free) — The partially destroyed 11th-century cathedral in the heart of old Macon is one of the most atmospheric stops in the city. Two Romanesque towers still stand dramatically over Place Saint-Vincent, and the carved tympanum above the doorway is considered one of the finest examples of Burgundian Romanesque sculpture still visible in the region. Allow 20–30 minutes to explore the exterior and square.
2. Musée des Ursulines (€5 adults / €3 reduced) — Housed in a 17th-century Ursuline convent on Rue des Ursulines, this municipal museum covers Gallo-Roman archaeology, medieval art, and Burgundian painting from the 15th to 19th centuries. The Roman finds from local excavations are particularly strong, and the building itself is beautiful. Allow 60–90 minutes; closed Mondays.
3. Maison de Bois (The Timbered House) (Free to view exterior) — Located at the corner of Place aux Herbes, this extraordinary 15th-century half-timbered building is one of the oldest secular structures in Burgundy. Its carved wooden pillars are decorated with fantastical human and animal figures — look for the acrobats, musicians, and grotesque faces. A 5-minute detour that feels genuinely medieval. Allow 10–15 minutes.
4. The Quai Lamartine Promenade (Free) — The riverfront promenade is named for Alphonse de Lamartine, the Romantic poet who was born in Macon in 1790. Walking the full length of the quay gives you sweeping views of the Saône, the old stone bridge, and the hills of the Mâconnais in the distance. Early morning or late afternoon light here is exceptional. Allow 20–30 minutes for a leisurely stroll.
5. Marché Couvert de Mâcon — The Covered Market (Free entry) — Open Tuesday through Sunday mornings until around 12:30, the Halles de Mâcon on Rue Philibert-Lacroix is where locals do their serious food shopping. You’ll find Bresse chicken, époisses cheese, Mâconnais goat cheese (AOP), charcuterie, and seasonal produce. Saturday morning is the biggest and most lively market day. This is essential if your ship is in port on a weekend. Allow 30–60 minutes.
6. Musée Lamartine (€5 adults) — Dedicated to the poet and politician Alphonse de Lamartine, this small but rich museum on Rue Sigorgne holds portraits, manuscripts, personal objects, and the famous painting of the young Lamartine. It’s compact and manageable even if you’re not a French literature scholar — the history of 19th-century Burgundian society woven through the displays is genuinely interesting. Allow 45–60 minutes.
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Beaches & Nature
7. Parc Naturel Régional du Mâconnais (Free) — The hills directly west of Macon are part of this regional natural park, a mosaic of limestone escarpments, vineyards, and medieval villages. The village of Solutré-Pouilly is only 8 km from the city center and sits beneath the dramatic Roche de Solutré, a prehistoric limestone crag that rises 490 meters above sea level. President François Mitterrand famously climbed it every Pentecost Monday. A gentle 90-minute circular hike takes you to the summit with panoramic vineyard views. Combine it with a visit to the Musée de Préhistoire de Solutré (€5), which displays mammoth bones and flint tools excavated at the base of the rock. Allow 2–3 hours total including transport.
8. Saône River Boat Cruise (€10–15 typically) — Small excursion boats occasionally operate from the Macon quayside during the summer season, offering 45–75 minute trips along the Saône. Check with the tourist office on arrival for current operators and schedules, as this is seasonal. It’s a genuinely lovely way to see Macon from the water if you’ve just arrived by river cruise and want a different angle. Allow 60–90 minutes.
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Day Trips
9. Hameau Duboeuf Wine Theme Park, Romanèche-Thorins (€24.85 / adults) — Located 15 km south of Macon in the heart of the Beaujolais, this is Europe’s first wine-themed attraction park, created by legendary Beaujolais négociant Georges Duboeuf. It’s genuinely impressive — not a gimmick. You walk through sensory installations about viticulture, cooperage, and winemaking, visit a working winery, ride a miniature train through the vineyards, and finish with tastings. The grounds include botanical gardens and a museum of antique wine-trade objects. It’s accessible by train from Mâcon-Ville station (Romanèche-Thorins stop, about 20 minutes, €5–7). [Book your Hameau Duboeuf tickets in advance on Viator](https://www.viator.com/search/Macon) 🎟 Book: Hameau Duboeuf, 1st theme park on Vine and Wine in Europe. Allow 3–4 hours.
10. Beaujolais Wine Village Circuit (Self-guided or guided) — The iconic Beaujolais villages — Fleurie, Moulin-à-Vent, Chénas, Juliénas, Chiroubles — are all within 20–35 km of Macon and are best explored by rental car or taxi. Each village is tiny, photogenic, and has at least one cave coopérative (cooperative winery) where you can taste and buy directly. A self-drive loop through 3–4 villages takes about 4–5 hours including tastings. Alternatively, look for a [guided Beaujolais tasting experience on GetYourGuide](https://www.getyourguide.com/s/?q=Macon¤cy=USD&partner_id=MHU0UHU) to handle the logistics for you. Allow a full half-day or full day.
11. Crémant de Bourgogne Tasting Experience near Beaune (From USD 15.38) — If your schedule allows a 45-minute train ride north to the Beaune wine region, there are superb structured tasting sessions covering Crémant de Bourgogne — Burgundy’s answer to Champagne — at cellars just outside Beaune. These 30-minute guided tastings are exceptional value and give you a completely different wine experience from the Beaujolais. [Book your Crémant de Bourgogne tasting on Viator](https://www.viator.com/search/Macon) 🎟 Book: Tasting Crémants DE Burgundy 30 minutes to 20 min DE Beaune. Allow 2–3 hours for the round-trip including the tasting.
12. The Rock of Vergisson (Free) — Just 1 km from the Roche de Solutré, the Roche de Vergisson is slightly less famous and therefore significantly less crowded. It’s another dramatic limestone promontory above the Pouilly-Fuissé vineyard zone, and the views from the summit are arguably more interesting because you can see across to Solutré. The village of Vergisson at its base has a handful of domaines offering tastings of Pouilly-Fuissé white wine — one of Burgundy’s most celebrated appellations. Allow 2–3 hours for the hike and a tasting stop.
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Family Picks
13. Hameau Duboeuf for Families — Already listed above, but worth noting specifically: the miniature train ride through the vineyards and the interactive sensory installations are genuinely enjoyable for children aged 8 and up. There’s also a botanical garden walk that keeps younger kids engaged. 🎟 Book: Hameau Duboeuf, 1st theme park on Vine and Wine in Europe
14. The Macon Saturday Market Experience — Not an attraction in the traditional sense, but families with children genuinely enjoy the spectacle of the Saturday morning market, especially the Bresse chicken vendors, the cheese mountains, and the pastry stalls. Buy a pain au chocolat and a box of macarons from one of the local boulangeries and walk the quayside — it’s simple, free, and deeply French.
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Off the Beaten Track
15. Cluny Abbey, 25 km Northwest of Macon (€9.50 adults / €7.50 reduced) — One of the most important medieval religious sites in all of Europe, the ruins of the Abbaye de Cluny once housed the largest church in Christendom before St. Peter’s Basilica was built. What remains is still extraordinary — the south transept tower, the narthex wall, the chapter house, and an excellent museum. The surrounding village of Cluny is beautiful and has good lunch options. Reach it by car (30 minutes) or by a connecting bus from Macon (about 45 minutes, infrequent). Allow 3–4 hours. Look for a [guided Cluny day tour on GetYourGuide](https://www.getyourguide.com/s/?q=Macon¤cy=USD&partner_id=MHU0UHU) that includes transport from Macon.
16. Chapelle de Berzé-la-Ville (€5) — Hidden in a small village 12 km west of Macon, this Romanesque chapel contains some of the most brilliantly preserved 12th-century Cluniac frescoes anywhere in France. The apse painting of Christ in Majesty is considered a masterpiece of medieval art. Few tourists find it; almost no cruise passengers visit. Combine it with a stop at the nearby Château de Berzé for a glass of Mâconnais wine. Requires a car or taxi. Allow 45–60 minutes.
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What to Eat & Drink

Macon sits at the crossroads of two of France’s most celebrated food and wine regions — Burgundy to the north and Beaujolais to the south — so eating and drinking well here requires almost no effort. The local wine appellation to order is Mâcon-Villages (white, made from Chardonnay) or Pouilly-Fuissé if you’re splurging, and the food culture is proudly local: Bresse chicken, freshwater fish from the Saône, escargots, and extraordinary cheese.
The Rue Carnot and Place aux Herbes area is where most of the best eating happens, and the covered market on weekday and Saturday mornings is the quickest way to assemble a world-class picnic for the quayside.
- Jambon persillé — Burgundian specialty of cold jellied ham with parsley; found in every brasserie; €6–9 as a starter
- Poulet de Bresse — AOP-certified free-range chicken, often served in a cream sauce with morels; look for it at Brasserie du Pont near the old bridge; main course €18–26
- Mâconnais goat cheese (Cabécou or Chevroton de Mâcon) — Small, tangy rounds of chèvre; buy them at the market for €2–3 each; perfect with a glass of local Mâcon-Villages white
- Gougères — Burgundy’s addictive warm cheese puffs, served in most wine bars as a nibble; free with wine tastings or €3–5 a portion
- Quenelles de brochet — Pike dumplings in a rich Nantua crayfish cream sauce; a classic Saône River dish; €14–18 at traditional
🎟️ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast — book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
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Getting Around from the Port
Tender dock is steps from the old medieval town; easy 10-minute walk to main attractions
Available at tender dock for longer distances or hotel transfers
Shore excursion buses depart from tender dock for wine tours and regional sites
Rent bikes near the tender dock to explore along the Sau00f4ne River
Top Things To Do
Saint-Pierre Cathedral
Stunning Gothic cathedral with rose windows and intricate stonework dating to the 15th century. Located in the heart of the old town, it's a masterpiece of Flamboyant Gothic architecture.
Find shore excursions on ViatorMu00e2con Old Town (Vieux Mu00e2con)
Charming medieval quarter with narrow cobbled streets, Renaissance mansions, and historic buildings reflecting centuries of Burgundian heritage. Perfect for wandering and discovering local shops and cafu00e9s.
Find shore excursions on ViatorBurgundy Wine Tasting Tour
Explore nearby Burgundy vineyards and wine cellars famous for world-class Pinot Noir and Chardonnay wines. Most tours include tastings at local wineries with expert sommeliers.
Find shore excursions on ViatorSau00f4ne River Promenade
Scenic riverside walk with views of historic bridges and quays lined with cafu00e9s and restaurants. The riverfront offers perfect photo opportunities and a relaxing stroll through local life.
Find shore excursions on ViatorMu00e2con Museum (Musu00e9e des Ursulines)
Regional museum housed in a 17th-century convent featuring archaeology, art, and local history exhibits. The collection includes Roman artifacts and paintings from notable French artists.
Find shore excursions on ViatorPractical Tips for Cruise Passengers
- Tender operations depend on weather and sea conditions; be prepared for potential delays or cancellations
- The old town is compact and walkable; wear comfortable shoes for cobblestone streets
- Many attractions close on Mondays or have reduced hours; check ahead if your ship arrives mid-week
- French is the primary language; consider downloading a translation app or joining a guided tour
- Restaurants and shops typically close between 12-2 PM; plan meals accordingly or eat earlier/later
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, the tender dock is only 0.5 km from the old town center with a pleasant 10-15 minute walk through historic streets. The area is safe and walkable for most passengers.
Typically 8-10 hours, giving you sufficient time for a guided wine tour (4-6 hours) or a relaxed exploration of the old town with lunch.
A Burgundy wine tasting tour is the most popular choice due to proximity to world-famous vineyards. Alternatively, explore the medieval old town and Saint-Pierre Cathedral for history and culture, or relax at a riverside cafu00e9.
Book your Mâcon shore excursions in advance to secure spots on popular Burgundy wine tours and guided city walks.
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