Auvers-sur-Oise is where Vincent van Gogh spent the final 70 days of his life — and where he painted over 80 masterpieces. This small village north of Paris feels suspended in time, its wheat fields and stone churches almost unchanged since the 1890s. If your cruise calls here, don’t waste a single minute.
Arriving by Ship
River cruise ships on the Seine and Oise typically dock directly at quaysides near Pontoise or at purpose-built moorings along the Oise riverbank, with Auvers-sur-Oise just a short transfer away. No tender boats are required — you’ll step ashore and be in the village within 10 to 20 minutes by shuttle or taxi.
The port area itself is modest and functional rather than scenic, so move through it quickly. The real reward begins the moment you reach the village streets.
Things to Do

Auvers-sur-Oise punches well above its size. Between the Van Gogh trail, a medieval château, and genuinely moving cemetery, a single day here can feel almost overwhelmingly rich.
Art & History
- Maison de Van Gogh (Auberge Ravoux) — visit the tiny attic room where Van Gogh lived and died; entry costs around €6 and the room is shockingly, beautifully bare.
- Van Gogh self-guided walking tour app — follow a GPS-mapped route matching 80 of his paintings to exact real-world locations for just USD 14.99. 🎟 Book: Auvers-sur-Oise: Van Gogh Self guided walking tour with an APP
- Église Notre-Dame d’Auvers — step inside the very church Van Gogh immortalised in The Church at Auvers; admission is free and the Gothic stonework is stunning up close.
- Château d’Auvers — an immersive multimedia journey through Impressionist France inside a 17th-century estate; tickets run approximately €14 and the light shows are genuinely spectacular.
- Van Gogh & Van Gogh’s Grave — the simple ivy-covered graves of Vincent and his brother Theo sit side by side in the village cemetery; free to visit and quietly affecting.
- Immersive Van Gogh tour — a guided 90-minute experience that places his paintings directly in the landscapes that inspired them, priced from USD 82.04. 🎟 Book: Unique Van Gogh immersive tour in Auvers sur Oise – 1.5 hours
Active Exploration
- Hiking in Van Gogh’s footsteps — a 6-mile guided walk through the exact fields and riverbanks he painted, available from USD 93.89 for around five hours. 🎟 Book: Hiking Adventure in Van Gogh's Footsteps with 6 miles walk
- Daubigny’s Studio (Atelier Daubigny) — explore the preserved workshop of the Impressionist painter who first drew Van Gogh to Auvers; open afternoons in summer for around €5.
- Parc Van Gogh — a free riverside park with a large mosaic mural; perfect for a short stroll before or after the main sights.
What to Eat
Auvers-sur-Oise is a village, not a foodie destination, but a handful of spots do the classics very well. Go for simple, traditional French cooking rather than anything adventurous.
- Auberge Ravoux restaurant — a fixed-price lunch menu (around €38) in the actual inn where Van Gogh ate daily; book ahead as it fills up fast.
- Crêpes from village vendors — street-style buckwheat galettes appear near the main square on weekends; expect to pay €3–5 for a savoury filling.
- Boulangerie baguettes and pastries — pick up a warm baguette and a pain au chocolat from the local bakery for under €2; ideal picnic fuel for the wheat fields.
- Moules marinières — the Oise valley region does mussels well; several cafés near the river serve a pot with fries for around €14–16.
- Local Normandy cheeses — nearby markets often sell Camembert and Livarot; grab a wedge for €4–6 and eat it on a bench overlooking the fields.
- House wine at village bistros — a carafe of regional table wine runs €8–10; perfectly decent and very much in the spirit of the Impressionist lunching tradition.
Shopping

Shopping is intentionally low-key here — and that’s part of the charm. The village has a handful of small galleries selling original prints and Impressionist-inspired artwork, along with gift shops near the Maison de Van Gogh stocking quality reproductions, books, and postcards.
Avoid mass-produced “Van Gogh” merchandise that could have come from any Paris tourist trap. Instead, look for locally produced lavender products, handmade ceramics from the artists’ studios dotted around the village, or a beautifully printed art book from the château shop.
Practical Tips
- Currency — France uses the euro; carry some cash as smaller vendors and market stalls rarely accept cards.
- Tipping — rounding up a restaurant bill is appreciated but not obligatory; 5–10% is generous.
- Transport — taxis from the dock are the easiest option; agree on a price before you get in.
- Best time ashore — aim to arrive early, by 9am if possible, before day-trippers from Paris arrive mid-morning.
- How long you need — four to five hours covers the key Van Gogh sites comfortably; a full day lets you breathe and linger.
- Dress code — comfortable walking shoes are essential; the wheat field paths can be uneven.
- Safety — Auvers-sur-Oise is extremely safe; standard city-centre awareness is more than enough.
- Combine with Giverny — if your schedule allows, a combined Giverny and Auvers day trip pairs Monet and Van Gogh in one unforgettable sweep, from USD 258.20. 🎟 Book: Giverny Monet's Garden & Auvers-sur-Oise with Van Gogh House Full Day From Paris
Pack your curiosity, leave your itinerary a little loose, and let one of the world’s most quietly extraordinary villages do the rest.
🎟️ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast — book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
This page contains affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
📍 Getting to Auvers-sur-Oise, France
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

Leave a Reply