Seven days does southwest France's wine capital in depth. Days 1–2 cover the UNESCO city and Saint-Émilion; Day 3 the Médoc First Growths; Day 4 the coast (Dune du Pilat and Arcachon oysters); Day 5 Sauternes sweet wine and a slow city day; Day 6 a deeper dive — Chartrons antiques and the Sunday quayside market, a second old-town day, or a Graves/Pessac-Léognan tasting; Day 7 a day trip further afield (Biarritz or San Sebastián by train) or a final slow day before departure. Book the Cité du Vin and château visits ahead, use trains and tours, and never drive after tastings.
A full week is enough to actually understand Bordeaux. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.
7-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$605
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$1,290
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$2,950
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
UNESCO old town + Cité du Vin
Place de la Bourse & Miroir d'Eau - Cathédrale Saint-André & Pey-Berland Tower - Place des Quinconces - Cité du Vin - bistro dinnerActivities
- 09:00 Place de la Bourse & the Miroir d'Eau 1h
Start at Bordeaux's signature view: the 1755 royal square of Place de la Bourse mirrored in the Miroir d'Eau, the world's largest reflecting pool. Morning light and quiet make for the best photos before the water alternates with its mist effect.
Cost: Free TIP: Shoot from across the water mirror for the classic reflection of the 18th-century façade — sunrise or early morning has the fewest people. The pool runs seasonally (roughly spring–autumn). It's free and always accessible; the quays alongside are a lovely flat walk. - 10:30 Old town walk + Cathédrale Saint-André & Pey-Berland Tower 2h
Wander the pale-stone UNESCO old town to the Gothic Cathédrale Saint-André — where Eleanor of Aquitaine married the future Louis VII in 1137 — and climb the separate Pey-Berland Tower (€6) for a rooftop panorama over the city.
Cost: €6 (tower); cathedral free TIP: The cathedral itself is free; the Pey-Berland Tower climb (€6) is the city's best central viewpoint. Pass Place des Quinconces (one of Europe's largest squares, with the Monument aux Girondins) and the pedestrian shopping street Rue Sainte-Catherine on the way. - 13:00 Lunch — L'Entrecôte or a Saint-Pierre bistro 1h30
Lunch on the classic Bordeaux formula at L'Entrecôte (walnut salad, sliced sirloin with secret sauce, unlimited fries, ~€23) near the Grand Théâtre, or a southwest French plat in the Saint-Pierre quarter.
Cost: €20-30 per person TIP: L'Entrecôte takes no reservations — arrive right at noon to beat the queue. There's no menu choice; just say how you like your steak. Pair with a glass of Bordeaux red. The Saint-Pierre lanes nearby are good for a post-lunch wander. - 15:00 Cité du Vin — the wine museum 2h30
Tram (Line B/C area) or walk along the river to the Cité du Vin, the striking 2016 museum whose swirling shape evokes wine in a glass. The €22 ticket includes an immersive world-wine exhibition and a glass at the 8th-floor Belvédère with panoramic views.
Cost: €22 (incl. 8th-floor tasting) TIP: Book online to skip the queue. It's a museum about wine worldwide, not a winery — great even on a non-tasting day or in the rain. Finish at the 8th-floor Belvédère for your included glass and the best city panorama. Allow 2–3 hours. - 19:30 Dinner — Bordelais classics (La Tupina or Brasserie Bordelaise) 2h
Dinner on southwest French tradition: La Tupina for open-fire grilled meats and duck-fat potatoes, or the lively Brasserie Bordelaise for entrecôte à la bordelaise and a deep regional wine list.
Cost: €30-60 per person TIP: Book ahead — both are popular. La Tupina is the canonical traditional table (pricier); Brasserie Bordelaise is central and convivial. Pair entrecôte with a Médoc or Saint-Émilion red. French dinner runs late, from about 7:30pm.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + canelé (Baillardran)
Old town · €3-7
A café and a fresh canelé — Bordeaux's signature breakfast treat.
Lunch
L'Entrecôte
Centre (near Grand Théâtre) · €20-30
The classic set formula: salad, sirloin with secret sauce, unlimited fries.
Dinner
La Tupina or Brasserie Bordelaise
Saint-Michel / Saint-Pierre · €30-60
Southwest French classics — open-fire meats or entrecôte à la bordelaise.
Almost entirely on foot in the flat old town. The Cité du Vin is a tram ride (Line C) or a riverside walk north. A single tram/bus ticket is around €1.80; a day pass about €5.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Saint-Émilion wine-village day trip
Train to Saint-Émilion - monolithic church - château tastings - village wine bars - return to BordeauxActivities
- 09:00 Train to Saint-Émilion 1h
From Gare Saint-Jean, the train reaches Saint-Émilion in about 40 minutes (around €20 round trip). From the station it's a short walk or shuttle up to the medieval, honey-stone UNESCO wine village (inscribed 1999).
Cost: ~€20 round trip TIP: Check return times before you go — services aren't frequent. Comfortable shoes help with the steep cobbled lanes. Alternatively, a guided wine tour drives you door to door and adds château visits, avoiding the train timetable. - 10:30 Monolithic church & village walk 2h
Tour Saint-Émilion's extraordinary monolithic church, carved downward into a single limestone rock (guided visit ~€13), then wander the steep medieval lanes, viewpoints, and macaron bakeries that fill the tiny village.
Cost: ~€13 (church tour) TIP: The underground monolithic church is only visited on a guided tour booked at the tourist office — go early as slots fill. The village viewpoints over the surrounding Merlot vineyards are the classic photo. Saint-Émilion macarons are a local sweet specialty. - 13:00 Lunch + village wine bars 1h30
Lunch in the village on regional plates, then taste Saint-Émilion wines at one of the many village wine bars (around €5–12 a glass) — a low-key way to sample the right-bank, Merlot-led style.
Cost: €20-35 per person TIP: Village wine bars let you taste without committing to a full château visit. Saint-Émilion is Merlot-dominant and softer than the Médoc's Cabernet reds. Don't overdo it if you still plan a château tasting afterward. - 15:00 Château tasting in the vineyards 2h
Visit one or two nearby châteaux for a tour and tasting (often €15–40, many by appointment). Walking or cycling out among the vines to a small estate is the heart of the Saint-Émilion experience.
Cost: €15-40 (tasting/tour) TIP: Book château visits ahead — many require appointments. Smaller family estates often give a warmer, cheaper visit than the grand classified names. If you came by train without a car, pick a château within walking/cycling distance of the village. - 18:00 Return to Bordeaux + relaxed dinner 2h30
Take the train back to Bordeaux (about 40 min) and round off the day with a relaxed dinner and a glass of wine in the Saint-Pierre quarter or a riverside terrace.
Cost: Train included + €25-40 dinner TIP: Confirm your return train time before the afternoon tasting. Back in the city, a wine bar like the CIVB Bar à Vin or a Saint-Pierre bistro is an easy, low-key finish. Hydrate after a day of tastings.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + pastry before the train
Bordeaux / Gare Saint-Jean · €3-7
A quick coffee and canelé before heading to Saint-Émilion.
Lunch
Saint-Émilion village restaurant
Saint-Émilion · €20-35
Regional plates and a glass of Merlot-led Saint-Émilion red.
Dinner
Saint-Pierre bistro or wine bar
Bordeaux (Saint-Pierre) · €25-40
A relaxed dinner and Bordeaux wine back in the city.
Train Bordeaux (Gare Saint-Jean) ↔ Saint-Émilion, about 40 min each way (~€20 round trip; check the limited timetable). On foot/bike in the village, or a guided tour for door-to-door château visits.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Médoc First Growth wine tour
Guided Médoc tour - Pauillac/Margaux/Saint-Julien châteaux - 1855 classified estates - return to BordeauxActivities
- 08:30 Guided Médoc wine tour departs 1h30
Join a guided wine tour into the Médoc, the left-bank peninsula north of the city — Cabernet Sauvignon country and the heartland of the 1855 classification, home to First Growths Mouton Rothschild, Lafite, Latour, and Margaux.
Cost: Tour $80-150 (incl. transport) TIP: A guided tour is the standard way — it handles the driving (essential, as drink-driving is illegal and dangerous) and books the appointment-only château visits. Tours pass the famous estate gates and taste at accessible classified châteaux. Book ahead in high season. - 10:30 First château tour & tasting 2h
Tour your first Médoc château — typically a classified estate in Pauillac, Saint-Julien, or Margaux — learning about the gravel terroir, Cabernet-led blends, and barrel ageing before a guided tasting of the wines.
Cost: Included in tour TIP: It's normal to spit at tastings (use the spittoons) and not finish every pour, especially across several châteaux. Médoc reds are firmer and more tannic than Saint-Émilion's Merlot wines. Ask the guide about the 1855 classification — it's the key to understanding the region. - 13:00 Lunch in the vineyards 1h30
Lunch among the vines — many Médoc tours include a meal at a château or village restaurant, pairing regional cooking with the estate's wines.
Cost: Included or €20-35 TIP: Eat well before more tastings to pace yourself. Some tours include lunch; check when booking. The vineyard setting is part of the appeal — a relaxed, scenic midday break. - 15:00 Second château + estate views 2h30
Visit a second (and sometimes third) château, often a smaller or family-run estate for a more personal tasting, with time to take in the Médoc's flat sea of vineyards and grand estate architecture.
Cost: Included in tour TIP: Smaller estates often give a warmer, more hands-on visit than the grand classified names. Buy a bottle or two on the spot if you love a wine — shipping home is possible but adds cost. Keep hydrating between tastings. - 18:30 Return to Bordeaux + dinner 2h30
Return to the city in the early evening and enjoy a relaxed dinner — a Saint-Pierre brasserie or a wine bar to compare the day's Médoc reds against other Bordeaux styles.
Cost: €30-50 per person TIP: After a day of tannic Médoc reds, a lighter dinner and an Entre-Deux-Mers white or a Sauternes with dessert is a nice change. The CIVB Bar à Vin is good for tasting other regions side by side.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + canelé before the tour
Bordeaux · €3-7
Coffee and a canelé before the Médoc departure.
Lunch
Château or village lunch
Médoc (Pauillac / Margaux) · €20-35
Regional cooking paired with Médoc reds in the vineyards.
Dinner
Saint-Pierre brasserie or wine bar
Bordeaux (Saint-Pierre) · €30-50
A relaxed dinner comparing Bordeaux wine styles.
A guided Médoc wine tour ($80–150) handles all transport and the appointment-only château visits. Driving yourself is possible only with a designated non-drinking driver — drink-driving limits are strict.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Dune du Pilat & Arcachon Bay
Train to Arcachon - Dune du Pilat (Europe's tallest dune) - Cap Ferret oysters - beach - return to BordeauxActivities
- 09:00 Train to Arcachon Bay 1h15
Take the train from Gare Saint-Jean toward Arcachon (about 1 hour, ~€20 round trip), gateway to the Atlantic bay, the oyster villages, and the Dune du Pilat.
Cost: ~€20 round trip TIP: Check return times. In season, a bus links Arcachon to the Dune du Pilat; otherwise a taxi or tour is needed. A scenic, wine-free day that's great for families or non-drinkers — a refreshing break from château visits. - 10:30 Climb the Dune du Pilat 1h30
Climb Europe's tallest sand dune (100m+) — by the seasonal staircase or straight up the sand — for sweeping views over Arcachon Bay, the Banc d'Arguin sandbank, and the vast pine forest behind.
Cost: Free (small parking fee by car) TIP: Bring water, sun protection, and shoes you don't mind filling with sand (or go barefoot). The sand gets very hot in summer. The descent toward the beach side is fast and fun. The panorama from the crest is the highlight. - 13:00 Oysters at Cap Ferret or Arcachon 2h
Lunch on fresh Arcachon Bay oysters at a no-frills bayside shack in Cap Ferret or along the Arcachon waterfront — the local ritual, served with bread, butter, and a glass of crisp white wine.
Cost: €15-30 per person TIP: Bayside oyster shacks are the authentic experience — simple, fresh, and cheap. Pair with an Entre-Deux-Mers white. Cap Ferret is more rustic and charming; Arcachon town is easier to reach by train. Cash is handy at small shacks. - 15:30 Beach time + Arcachon town 2h
Relax on the Atlantic beaches, stroll Arcachon's elegant Belle Époque seafront and Ville d'Hiver (winter town) villas, or take a short boat trip on the bay before heading back.
Cost: Free (boat trip extra) TIP: Arcachon's Ville d'Hiver has charming 19th-century villas worth a wander. A bay boat trip (toward the Île aux Oiseaux bird island) is a relaxing option. Keep an eye on the return train time. - 18:30 Return to Bordeaux + dinner 2h
Train back to Bordeaux for a final-stretch dinner — southwest French classics or a wine bar in the old town.
Cost: €25-45 per person TIP: After a beach day, a hearty Bordelais dinner (entrecôte, duck) hits the spot. Book popular spots ahead. A relaxed end to a non-wine day before tomorrow's finale.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + pastry before the train
Bordeaux · €3-7
Coffee and a canelé before heading to the coast.
Lunch
Bayside oyster shack
Cap Ferret / Arcachon · €15-30
Fresh Arcachon oysters with bread, butter, and white wine.
Dinner
Bordelais bistro or wine bar
Bordeaux (old town) · €25-45
Southwest French classics back in the city.
Train Bordeaux ↔ Arcachon, about 1 hour each way (~€20 round trip). A seasonal bus or taxi links Arcachon to the Dune du Pilat. On foot at the dune, bay, and town.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Sauternes sweet wine or a slow city day + departure
Sauternes dessert-wine trip OR markets & old town - last canelés - departureActivities
- 09:30 Sauternes wine trip or a slow morning 2h
Choose a finale: a half-day trip to Sauternes (south of the city) for the world's famous botrytized sweet wines, or a slow city morning at the Marché des Capucins and the old town, with a final wine-bar tasting.
Cost: Sauternes tour from $70 / market free TIP: Sauternes is best by car or tour (limited public transport) — its luscious dessert wines (and the famous Château d'Yquem region) are a different world from the dry reds. For a relaxed last day, the Marché des Capucins on a weekend morning is the local choice. - 12:00 Marché des Capucins — final market lunch 1h30
Graze the Marché des Capucins, 'the belly of Bordeaux' — oysters and white wine at Chez Jean-Mi, charcuterie, cheese, and produce — for a last, atmospheric local meal.
Cost: €12-25 per person TIP: Weekend mornings are liveliest. Slurp Arcachon oysters with a glass of white at the market bars. It's a morning-to-early-afternoon market, closed Mondays. Bring some cash. A fitting last taste of Bordeaux. - 14:00 Last canelés + souvenir wine shopping 1h30
Pick up a box of canelés from Baillardran or La Toque Cuivrée and buy a bottle or two of Bordeaux wine from a city caviste (wine shop) as a souvenir before heading out.
Cost: Shopping extra TIP: Canelés keep a day or two and make an easy, characterful gift. A caviste can advise on a good-value bottle and on travelling with or shipping wine. Vacuum-packed regional foods travel well in checked luggage. - 16:30 Departure (BOD or TGV) 1h30
Head to Bordeaux Airport (BOD) by the 30'Direct shuttle (~€8–9, ~30 min) or a taxi (~€30–45), or to Gare Saint-Jean for the TGV (about 2h05 to Paris).
Cost: Shuttle ~€8-9 / TGV ~€30-90 TIP: Allow 2 hours before a Schengen flight, more for connections (many international routes connect via Paris). For onward travel, the TGV from Gare Saint-Jean reaches Paris in about 2 hours — often easier than flying.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + canelé
Bordeaux · €3-7
A final coffee and canelé.
Lunch
Marché des Capucins
Capucins · €12-25
Market oysters, charcuterie, and white wine.
Dinner
In-flight or en route
BOD / TGV · €8-20
A light bite before departure or on the train.
Sauternes by car or tour (limited transit). In the city, on foot. Departure via the 30'Direct airport shuttle (~€8–9), a taxi (~€30–45), or the TGV from Gare Saint-Jean.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Chartrons, markets & a deeper city dive
Chartrons antiques quarter - Sunday quayside market - Graves/Pessac-Léognan tasting - riverside BordeauxActivities
- 09:30 Chartrons — the old wine-merchant quarter 2h
Explore Chartrons, the historic wine-trade district north of the center along the river, now a trendy quarter of antique shops, galleries, and cafés, with the cobbled Rue Notre-Dame at its heart.
Cost: Free (shopping extra) TIP: Chartrons is calmer and more local than the tourist core — good for browsing antiques and independent shops. On Sunday morning, the Marché des Quais (quayside market) runs along the river here, great for produce, oysters, and street food. - 12:00 Quayside market lunch (or riverside stroll) 1h30
Lunch at the Sunday Marché des Quais on the Chartrons riverfront — oysters, charcuterie, and local plates by the water — or stroll the long flat quays back toward the center past the Cité du Vin.
Cost: €12-25 per person TIP: The Sunday quayside market is a local favorite for oysters and white wine by the river. On other days, the quays are a lovely walk or bike ride. The riverside is one of the best parts of the UNESCO frontage. - 14:30 Graves / Pessac-Léognan tasting (optional) 2h
Optionally taste Graves and Pessac-Léognan wines — the region just south of the city producing both fine dry reds and whites (and the only commune-level estate within the city's edge, Château Haut-Brion's neighborhood) — at a city wine bar or on a short tour.
Cost: €10-40 (wine bar / tour) TIP: Graves and Pessac-Léognan are often overlooked between the Médoc and Saint-Émilion but make excellent reds and whites. A city wine bar (CIVB Bar à Vin) is an easy way to taste them without a trip. Or take a short organized tasting tour. - 17:00 Place des Quinconces & the Grand Théâtre 1h30
Wind through the grand civic heart — Place des Quinconces with the Monument aux Girondins and the neoclassical Grand Théâtre (1780) on Place de la Comédie — before an evening drink in the Triangle d'Or.
Cost: Free (theatre tours extra) TIP: The Grand Théâtre's columned façade is a Bordeaux landmark; guided interior tours run on some days. Place des Quinconces is one of Europe's largest squares. The Triangle d'Or around here has the city's best bars and shops for an aperitif. - 19:30 Dinner — gastronomic or wine-bar finale 2h
Dinner to suit the mood — a gastronomic table (Le Gabriel's bistro on Place de la Bourse) or a relaxed self-serve wine bar (Aux Quatre Coins du Vin) to compare the day's Graves wines.
Cost: €30-80 per person TIP: Le Gabriel's terrace over Place de la Bourse is a memorable setting; book ahead. For a casual night, the self-serve dispensers at Aux Quatre Coins du Vin let you taste many wines side by side. Either makes a fine penultimate evening.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Chartrons café + pastry
Chartrons · €3-7
Coffee and a pastry in the trendy Chartrons quarter.
Lunch
Quayside market or riverside bistro
Chartrons / quays · €12-25
Sunday quayside oysters, or a riverside lunch.
Dinner
Le Gabriel or a wine bar
Place de la Bourse / Saint-Pierre · €30-80
A gastronomic or wine-focused dinner in the center.
On foot and by tram (Line C reaches Chartrons and the Cité du Vin). The riverside quays are a flat walk or bike ride. Graves/Pessac-Léognan via a short tour or a city wine bar.
DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Biarritz/San Sebastián day trip or a slow finale + departure
Train to Biarritz or San Sebastián OR final slow Bordeaux day - last wine & canelés - departureActivities
- 08:00 Train south, or a slow last morning 2h30
Choose a finale: a train to Biarritz (Basque coast, ~2h) or onward to San Sebastián in Spain for a day by the sea, or a relaxed last Bordeaux morning over the old town and a final wine-bar tasting.
Cost: Train varies / slow day free TIP: Biarritz and San Sebastián make a great long day by train if you have an early start and a late departure — but only if your flight/onward travel allows. Otherwise, keep the last day slow in Bordeaux to avoid rushing before departure. - 11:00 Biarritz/San Sebastián (option) or city sights 3h
On the coast option, enjoy Biarritz's surf beaches and Belle Époque seafront, or San Sebastián's pintxos bars and bay. On the slow option, revisit a favorite Bordeaux spot or catch a missed sight like the Musée d'Aquitaine.
Cost: Meals/entries extra TIP: San Sebastián's pintxos crawl is a Basque highlight if you cross into Spain (check border/transport timing). In Bordeaux, the Musée d'Aquitaine (city history) or a final stroll along Rue Sainte-Catherine fills a relaxed morning. - 14:30 Final Bordeaux wine & canelés 1h30
Back in (or staying in) the city, a last glass of Bordeaux at a wine bar and a box of canelés to take home — a fitting send-off for a wine-and-food week.
Cost: €10-25 + shopping TIP: The CIVB Bar à Vin is a good final tasting stop. Grab canelés from Baillardran or La Toque Cuivrée for the journey. A caviste can sort a souvenir bottle and advise on travelling with wine. - 16:30 Departure (BOD or TGV) 1h30
Head to Bordeaux Airport (BOD) by the 30'Direct shuttle (~€8–9, ~30 min) or taxi (~€30–45), or to Gare Saint-Jean for the TGV (about 2h05 to Paris) for onward travel.
Cost: Shuttle ~€8-9 / TGV ~€30-90 TIP: Allow 2 hours before a Schengen flight, more for connections (many long-haul routes connect via Paris). The central TGV to Paris (~2h) is often easier than flying. Confirm coastal-day return times well before any flight.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café + canelé
Bordeaux · €3-7
A final coffee and canelé before the day.
Lunch
Coastal pintxos/seafood or city bistro
Biarritz / San Sebastián / Bordeaux · €15-35
Basque pintxos or seafood, or a final Bordeaux lunch.
Dinner
In-flight or en route
BOD / TGV · €8-20
A light bite before departure or on the train.
Biarritz ~2h by train; San Sebastián a bit further (check border/transport). Or a car-free slow city day. Departure via the 30'Direct shuttle, a taxi, or the TGV from Gare Saint-Jean.
DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Book Bordeaux Tours & Tickets
Packing Checklist
- ✓ Passport + check Schengen rules (visa-free 90 days for many passports) and ETIAS from 2026
- ✓ Comfortable walking shoes — the flat old town is cobbled, and Saint-Émilion's lanes are steep
- ✓ Spring/autumn (best seasons): light layers and a light rain jacket — Bordeaux is mild but wet
- ✓ Summer (Jul-Aug): light breathable clothing, sun hat, sunglasses, SPF, and a refillable water bottle
- ✓ Winter (Dec-Feb): a warm layer and a waterproof jacket for the damp, mild winters
- ✓ Some cash (€30-50) for the Marché des Capucins, small châteaux, and tips
- ✓ Type C/E plug adapter for France's 230V outlets
- ✓ Book the Cité du Vin online and any Médoc/Saint-Émilion château visits ahead; never drive after tastings
- ✓ Coast day: shoes you don't mind filling with sand, swimwear in summer, and sun protection for the exposed Dune du Pilat
- ✓ Médoc day: book a guided tour ahead; bring a layer as vineyards can be breezy
- ✓ Leave room for souvenirs — canelés and Bordeaux wine travel well (wine best in checked luggage or shipped)
- ✓ Sauternes finale: a car or tour is needed; or keep the last day slow in the city
- ✓ Coastal day trip (Biarritz/San Sebastián): allow plenty of time and confirm return trains before any flight
- ✓ Sunday in the city: time Chartrons around the quayside market for the best atmosphere
- ✓ Keep a final cash buffer for markets, the airport shuttle, and tips
- ✓ Departure day: confirm whether your BOD flight connects via Paris and allow extra time
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Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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