Quick Facts: Port | France | No dedicated cruise terminal (river quay docking) | Dock (no tender) | Village center ~5-min walk | UTC+1 (CET) / UTC+2 (CEST in summer)
Saint-Mammes is a small Seine-et-Marne village at the confluence of the Seine and Loing rivers, serving as a stop on European river cruise itineraries through the Île-de-France and Burgundy regions. Most passengers who dock here are en route to Fontainebleau or Paris — and the single most important planning tip is this: don’t underestimate how much is accessible from this quiet quay.
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Port & Terminal Information
There is no formal cruise terminal building at Saint-Mammes — river vessels dock directly along the riverside quay on the banks of the Seine, near the village center. Check with your cruise line for your exact mooring position, as larger vessels may dock at a slightly different stretch of the quay; Google Maps can help you orient.
Facilities are minimal at the quay itself. There are no ATMs, no luggage storage, and no tourist information booth dockside — bring cash from the ship or plan to find an ATM in Fontainebleau (15 km away). The village of Saint-Mammes is a 5-minute walk from most docking positions, but it is very small; most services are in Moret-sur-Loing (3 km) or Fontainebleau (15 km).
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Getting to the City

- On Foot — The village center of Saint-Mammes is walkable in under 5 minutes. The neighboring canal town of Moret-sur-Loing, a medieval gem, is a 35–40-minute walk along flat towpaths (3 km) or a very short drive/taxi ride.
- Bus/Metro — Local bus line Line 22 (Transdev Île-de-France) connects the area toward Fontainebleau roughly every 30–60 minutes; expect a 20–25 minute ride. Fare is approximately €2. Timetables vary seasonally — confirm at Île-de-France Mobilités.
- Taxi — Taxis are not waiting at the quay; ask your ship’s concierge to pre-arrange one. Approx fare to Fontainebleau town center: €20–25; to Moret-sur-Loing: €10–12. Avoid any driver who won’t confirm the metered fare upfront.
- Hop-On Hop-Off — No HOHO buses serve Saint-Mammes directly.
- Rental Car/Scooter — Practical if you want flexibility. The nearest car rental offices are in Fontainebleau (Europcar, Hertz). Your cruise line or a taxi can get you there to pick up a car; it unlocks a wide radius of day trips.
- Ship Shore Excursion — Worth it for Fontainebleau Palace (organized access skips lines) and for Paris day trips (driving/transit logistics are complex independently). For Moret-sur-Loing, go independently — it’s easy and cheaper.
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Top Things to Do in Saint-Mammes, France
You’re positioned at the quiet heart of the Seine-et-Marne, with medieval villages, royal châteaux, Barbizon artist studios, and the forests of Fontainebleau within easy striking distance.
Must-See
1. Château de Fontainebleau (€14, under-18s free) — One of the most lavishly furnished royal châteaux in France, used by every monarch from François I to Napoleon III. The Grands Appartements and Napoleon’s private rooms are unmissable. Book ahead via GetYourGuide to avoid queues. Allow 2.5–3 hours.
2. Moret-sur-Loing (free to wander) — A perfectly preserved medieval fortified town with a 12th-century gate, ancient bridge, and the house where Impressionist Alfred Sisley lived and painted. It is genuinely one of the most beautiful small towns in the Île-de-France and requires no tour — just walk. Allow 1.5–2 hours.
3. Barbizon Village & Forest of Fontainebleau (free) — The village where the Barbizon School of painting was born (Millet, Théodore Rousseau); studios are now small museums (€4–6 each). The surrounding forest has marked hiking and cycling trails through dramatic sandstone formations. Browse guided tours on Viator. Allow 2–3 hours for village + a short trail.
Beaches & Nature
4. Forest of Fontainebleau Trails (free) — 25,000 hectares of royal hunting forest with waymarked walking and mountain-bike circuits. The Gorges d’Apremont circuit (approx 2 hours, moderate) passes boulder fields and panoramic viewpoints — dramatic for a forest this close to Paris. Allow 2–4 hours depending on route.
5. Canal du Loing Towpath Walk (free) — Starting right from the quay at Saint-Mammes, the flat towpath along the canal to Moret-sur-Loing is one of the most peaceful 3-km walks you’ll find anywhere in France. Barge traffic, kingfishers, and weeping willows. Allow 1.5 hours round trip.
Day Trips
6. Paris (~75 km, ~40 min by train from Fontainebleau-Avon) — The RER D from Fontainebleau-Avon runs directly to central Paris (Gare de Lyon/Châtelet) for €9–11 each way. A full day trip is feasible if your ship allows it. For a curated Paris experience, consider a Paris Antiques Market Insider’s Tour — a 1h 45m small-group tour priced from USD 58.73 that’s perfect for fitting into a port day. 🎟 Book: Paris Antiques Market Insider's Tour in Extra-Small Group
7. Vaux-le-Vicomte (€19.50) — The château that inspired Versailles, located 20 km from Saint-Mammes. Visiting by taxi or rental car is easy; the gardens, painted ceilings, and moat are spectacular. Candlelit evenings run on select Saturdays (worth checking dates). Allow 2.5–3 hours.
8. Provins UNESCO Medieval City (free entry to town, tower €6) — A remarkably intact medieval trading city 40 km east. Its circuit of ramparts, underground passages, and 12th-century keep are UNESCO-listed. Allow 3–4 hours.
Family Picks
9. Fontainebleau Town & Market (free) — The town surrounding the château is genuinely pleasant — great crêperies, a lively Saturday market, and the ornate Cour Ovale courtyard you can walk into for free. Kids enjoy the fountains and the sheer scale of the palace exterior. Allow 1–1.5 hours.
10. Bouldering at Fontainebleau Forest (free) — The forest is world-famous among climbers for its low sandstone boulders, and it’s entirely free to scramble on them with supervision. Families with older kids find it a surprisingly fun detour alongside a nature walk. Allow 1–2 hours.
Off the Beaten Track
11. The Bargemen’s Village of Saint-Mammes Itself (free) — Few passengers bother to actually look at Saint-Mammes, but its quayside houses, old lock-keeper’s building, and the junction of the Seine and Loing are genuinely photogenic. The small waterfront café scene here is authentic in a way Fontainebleau town is not. Allow 30–45 minutes.
12. Écomusée de la Brie (€5, Nangis, ~35 km) — A living farm museum preserving the agricultural heritage of the Brie region — yes, the same Brie the cheese is named for. Quiet, local, and absolutely not on anyone’s tourist map. Check GetYourGuide for regional tours. Allow 1.5–2 hours.
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What to Eat & Drink

You’re in Seine-et-Marne, the outer ring of classic French culinary tradition: brie de Meaux, artisan bread, game terrines, and proper bistro cooking at non-Paris prices. Moret-sur-Loing is also famous for sucre d’orge (barley sugar), hand-made by Benedictine nuns for 600+ years — buy it at the small shop in town.
- Brie de Meaux — the real thing, raw-milk and runny; any fromagerie or market stall; €3–5 per portion
- Sucre d’orge de Moret — hard barley-sugar sticks in flavours from honey to violet; the nuns’ shop on Rue des Fossés; ~€5 for a box
- Crêperies in Fontainebleau town — galettes (buckwheat savoury) and sweet crêpes; €8–12 for a full lunch
- Le Caveau des Ducs, Fontainebleau — stone-vaulted bistro near the château; duck confit, Burgundy wines; €18–28 for a main
- Riverside café, Saint-Mammes quay — simple sandwiches, coffee, cold beer; perfect for a quick bite before re-boarding; €4–8
- Sunday market, Fontainebleau — local cheeses, ch
🎟️ 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 to Saint-Mammes, France
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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