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Lyon + Beaujolais + Annecy 5-Day Rhône-Alpes Core

Lyon's sights and food + a Beaujolais wine day + an Annecy lake-and-Alps day

Five days lets you go deeper into Lyon and reach two contrasting day trips. Days 1-2 cover Lyon's core — Vieux Lyon and the traboules, Fourvière, the Presqu'île, Les Halles Paul Bocuse, Croix-Rousse, and bouchon dinners. Day 3 is the Beaujolais wine country or Pérouges. Day 4 is a full day in Annecy, the canal-laced Alpine lake town about 2 hours away. Day 5 is a slower Lyon day for museums, markets, and anything missed. Reserve bouchons ahead and book the Annecy train in advance for the best fares.

Five days hits the sweet spot for Lyon — three days for the major districts, plus two days for nearby destinations that show a different side of the country. The pace stays relaxed, you get more variety in your photo album, and the day trips break up the urban intensity nicely.

5-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$320

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$675

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,645

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Vieux Lyon + traboules + Fourvière + a bouchon dinner

Vieux Lyon (UNESCO Renaissance) - traboules - Saint-Jean Cathedral - funicular to Fourvière Basilica - bouchon dinner

Activities

  1. 09:30 Vieux Lyon — UNESCO Renaissance old town & traboules 2h30

    Start in Vieux Lyon, the Renaissance old town of pastel facades along the Saône, threaded with traboules — covered passages once used by silk merchants. Wander Saint-Jean and Saint-Georges quarters and slip through a few traboules (around 40 are open to the public, free, in daytime).

    Cost: Free (guided walk €15-20) TIP: Grab a traboules map from the Vieux Lyon tourism office, or take a guided walk to find the hidden entrances. The long traboule from 27 rue Saint-Jean is a classic. Many pass through residential buildings, so keep quiet and discreet. Cobbled streets — wear comfortable shoes.
  2. 12:30 Saint-Jean Cathedral + lunch in Vieux Lyon 1h30

    See the Gothic Saint-Jean Cathedral with its 14th-century astronomical clock, then lunch on a bouchon classic nearby — a salade lyonnaise or quenelle in the old town.

    Cost: €20-30 (bouchon lunch menu) TIP: The cathedral is free to enter. Daniel et Denise Saint-Jean (36 rue Tramassac) is a benchmark bouchon for lunch, but reserve. A fixed lunch menu (€20-30) is the best-value way to eat Lyonnais.
  3. 14:30 Funicular up to Fourvière Basilica 1h30

    Take the funicular from Saint-Jean up the hill to the 19th-century Basilica of Notre-Dame de Fourvière, with its ornate mosaic interior and a terrace panorama over Lyon — on clear days, the Alps. Free entry; the funicular is covered by a metro ticket.

    Cost: ~€2-3 funicular (metro ticket) TIP: Take the funicular up to save the steep climb. The basilica is free; the terrace view is the highlight. Late afternoon gives golden light over the city. You can walk down through the Roman theaters afterward.
  4. 16:30 Roman theaters + Gallo-Roman Museum 1h30

    Walk down the Fourvière slope via the ancient Roman theaters of Fourvière (free to wander) and, if time allows, the Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum — a reminder that Lyon was a major Roman city (Lugdunum).

    Cost: Free (museum ~€7) TIP: The Roman theaters are open and free; the adjacent museum (Lugdunum) is paid and worthwhile for history fans. The walk back down to Vieux Lyon is part of the experience. Skip the museum if you're short on time.
  5. 20:00 Dinner — a classic bouchon 2h

    Settle in for the quintessential Lyon dinner at a traditional bouchon — Café des Fédérations (since 1872) or Chez Paul on rue Major Martin, for charcuterie, quenelle, cervelle de canut, and a pot of Beaujolais.

    Cost: €35-50 per person TIP: Reserve ahead — the famous bouchons fill up, especially weekends. The fixed menu is the full experience. Order a 'pot lyonnais' of regional wine. Many bouchons close Sundays and Mondays, so plan around that.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bakery breakfast

Vieux Lyon · €3-8

A croissant or a Praluline brioche and a café with the morning.

Lunch

Bouchon lunch (Daniel et Denise)

Vieux Lyon · €20-30

A fixed bouchon lunch menu — salade lyonnaise and quenelle.

Dinner

Café des Fédérations or Chez Paul

Presqu'île (rue Major Martin) · €35-50

A classic bouchon dinner — charcuterie, quenelle, and a pot of Beaujolais.

Transit:

Mostly on foot in Vieux Lyon, plus the funicular up to Fourvière (covered by a €1.90 metro ticket). The old town is compact; the hill is the only climb, and the funicular handles it.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $120 Luxury $300
DAY 2

Presqu'île + Les Halles Paul Bocuse + Croix-Rousse

Place Bellecour - Presqu'île shopping - Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse - Croix-Rousse silk hill - traboules - praline sweets

Activities

  1. 09:30 Place Bellecour + Presqu'île stroll 1h30

    Begin on the Presqu'île, the peninsula between the rivers. Place Bellecour — one of Europe's largest pedestrian squares, with its Louis XIV equestrian statue — anchors the walk down rue de la République toward Place des Terreaux and the grand Hôtel de Ville.

    Cost: Free TIP: Place des Terreaux fronts the Musée des Beaux-Arts (around €8-12) if you want art. The Presqu'île is flat and walkable. Window-shop the rue de la République, the main pedestrian street.
  2. 11:30 Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse — market lunch 2h

    Head to Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse, the covered food market named after the late chef, with 50+ vendors. Graze stall to stall — oysters and white wine, quenelles, Saint-Marcellin cheese, charcuterie, and a slice of pink praline tart from Maison Sève.

    Cost: €15-30 per person TIP: Come hungry and graze rather than sit at one place. The seafood counters do oysters with a glass of white; La Mère Richard's cheese counter is famous for Saint-Marcellin. Closed Monday — plan around it. Liveliest at lunch.
  3. 14:30 Up to Croix-Rousse — the silk-weavers' hill 2h

    Take the metro or funicular up to Croix-Rousse, 'the hill that works', the historic silk-weaving district. Walk its traboules — the monumental Cour des Voraces staircase is the showpiece — and browse the village-like streets and viewpoints over the city.

    Cost: Free TIP: The Cour des Voraces is the must-see traboule here. Visit La Maison des Canuts for a silk-weaving demonstration (small fee) to understand the heritage. The descent through the passages back toward the center is part of the fun.
  4. 17:00 Praline sweets + an aperitif 1h30

    Pick up Lyonnais sweets — a Praluline brioche at Pralus or coussins de Lyon at Voisin — then settle in for an aperitif (a kir, or a local beer) at a Presqu'île café as the city slows down.

    Cost: €8-15 TIP: Coussins de Lyon (marzipan-and-chocolate cushions) and the Praluline brioche are the city's signature sweets and travel well as gifts. The aperitif hour is a relaxed local ritual before late dinner.
  5. 20:00 Dinner — a brasserie or modern bistro 2h

    For a change from bouchons, dine at the grand 1836 Brasserie Georges (house-brewed beer, the pistachio Lyon sausage, choucroute) near Perrache, or a contemporary Presqu'île bistro.

    Cost: €25-45 per person TIP: Brasserie Georges is worth it for the vast Art Deco hall as much as the food, and handles walk-ins and groups better than tiny bouchons. Lyon's modern bistro scene is strong if you want lighter, creative cooking. Reserve at peak times.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast

Presqu'île · €3-8

A coffee and viennoiserie on the Presqu'île.

Lunch

Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse

Part-Dieu (cours Lafayette) · €15-30

Graze the market — oysters, cheese, quenelle, praline tart.

Dinner

Brasserie Georges or a modern bistro

Perrache / Presqu'île · €25-45

A grand 1836 brasserie or a creative contemporary bistro.

Transit:

On foot on the flat Presqu'île, with the metro or funicular up to Croix-Rousse. A single TCL ticket (€1.90) or a day pass (€6.50) covers metro, tram, bus, and funicular.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $125 Luxury $310
DAY 3

Day trip — Beaujolais vineyards or Pérouges

Beaujolais wine country (Gamay, golden-stone villages) OR medieval Pérouges - tastings or galette - return to Lyon

Activities

  1. 09:00 Set out — Beaujolais or Pérouges 1h

    Choose your day trip. The Beaujolais wine region begins about 40 minutes north — golden-stone villages and Gamay vineyards, best by guided tour or car. Pérouges, a perfectly preserved medieval hilltop village, is under 40 minutes by train (to Meximieux-Pérouges) plus a short uphill walk.

    Cost: Tour €100-130 / train €10-20 round trip TIP: For Beaujolais, a guided tour (€100-130 with tastings) means you can drink freely and skip the driving. For Pérouges, the train to Meximieux-Pérouges plus a 15-20 min walk is cheap and easy. Some tours combine Beaujolais and Pérouges in one day.
  2. 10:30 Beaujolais tastings OR explore Pérouges 2h30

    In Beaujolais: visit a vineyard or two for tastings of fruity Gamay reds, through the 'pierres dorées' (golden-stone) villages. In Pérouges: wander the cobbled medieval lanes, the fortified gate, and the central square inside the ramparts.

    Cost: Included (tour) / free (Pérouges) TIP: Beaujolais Nouveau (the young-wine release) is celebrated the third Thursday of November. In Pérouges, the village is small but atmospheric — allow time to walk the full circuit of walls and lanes.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — village restaurant 1h30

    Lunch on regional cooking — a vineyard-village restaurant in Beaujolais, or in Pérouges the famous 'galette de Pérouges', a thin sugared flatbread, with a local meal.

    Cost: €20-35 per person TIP: In Pérouges, the galette de Pérouges (sugar-and-butter flatbread) is the local specialty to try. Beaujolais village restaurants pair regional dishes with the local Gamay. Confirm return-transport times before lunch.
  4. 15:30 More tastings / village time 1h30

    Continue with a second Beaujolais estate or a slow wander, or in Pérouges visit the small museum and ramparts and enjoy the quiet medieval atmosphere before heading back.

    Cost: Included / small fees TIP: Don't overpack the day — two vineyards is plenty in Beaujolais. Pérouges is compact and unhurried. Both pair a slice of history or wine with the countryside that supplies Lyon's tables.
  5. 18:30 Return to Lyon + farewell bouchon 2h30

    Head back to Lyon (around 40 min to 1 hour) and round off the trip with a final bouchon dinner — Le Garet or Le Musée — and a last pot of regional wine.

    Cost: Return + €30-45 dinner TIP: Reserve the farewell bouchon ahead. Le Garet and Le Musée are beloved locals' spots for the classics. A relaxed last evening over quenelle and a pot of Beaujolais is a fitting end.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café breakfast

Lyon (before departure) · €3-6

Coffee and a viennoiserie before the day trip.

Lunch

Village restaurant

Beaujolais / Pérouges · €20-35

Regional cooking with Gamay, or the galette de Pérouges.

Dinner

Farewell bouchon (Le Garet)

Presqu'île · €30-45

A final bouchon dinner — quenelle and a pot of Beaujolais.

Transit:

Beaujolais: guided tour (€100-130) or rental car, about 40 min north. Pérouges: direct train to Meximieux-Pérouges (under 40 min) plus a 15-20 min walk uphill, €10-20 round trip.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $150 Luxury $360
DAY 4

Annecy — Alpine lake & old town

Train to Annecy - Vieille Ville canals - Palais de l'Île - lakefront + Pont des Amours - return to Lyon

Activities

  1. 08:00 Train to Annecy 2h

    Take a morning train to Annecy (about 2 hours), the 'Venice of the Alps' on a turquoise lake ringed by mountains. Walk from the station into the canal-laced old town.

    Cost: €20-40 round trip TIP: Book the train ahead on SNCF Connect for the cheapest fares. An early start makes the most of a full day. Annecy is too far for a half-day, so commit the whole day to it.
  2. 10:30 Vieille Ville — canals & Palais de l'Île 2h

    Wander Annecy's Vieille Ville (old town) — pastel houses along flower-lined canals and the iconic Palais de l'Île, a 12th-century stone building marooned mid-canal that's the town's postcard image.

    Cost: Free (Palais de l'Île small fee) TIP: The Palais de l'Île is the classic photo from the canal bridges. The old town is compact and made for strolling. Browse the markets and Savoyard food shops along the way.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — Savoyard specialties 1h30

    Lunch on Alpine Savoyard cooking — tartiflette, raclette, or fondue (richer mountain fare than Lyon's), or a lighter lakeside meal in the warmer months.

    Cost: €18-35 per person TIP: Savoyard cheese dishes (tartiflette, fondue) are heartier and best in cooler weather; in summer, a lakeside terrace and lighter plates are more comfortable. The old town has plenty of options.
  4. 15:00 Lakefront + Jardins de l'Europe + Pont des Amours 2h

    Stroll the lakefront gardens (Jardins de l'Europe) and the Pont des Amours over the canal, with mountain views across the clear water. In summer, the lake beaches and boat trips are options.

    Cost: Free (boat trip extra) TIP: A lake boat cruise (around €15-20) is a fine way to see the mountains in summer. The Pont des Amours is the romantic photo spot. Rent a bike or pedalo along the shore if the weather's warm.
  5. 18:00 Return to Lyon + relaxed dinner 2h30

    Take the train back to Lyon (about 2 hours) and keep dinner simple — a Presqu'île bistro or a light market-style meal after a full day out.

    Cost: Return + €20-35 dinner TIP: Confirm your return train before settling into the afternoon. Back in Lyon, a relaxed bistro or wine bar suits a tired evening better than a heavy bouchon feast.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café breakfast

Lyon (before the train) · €3-6

Coffee and a viennoiserie before the early train.

Lunch

Savoyard restaurant

Annecy old town · €18-35

Alpine fare — tartiflette, raclette, or a lakeside meal.

Dinner

Lyon bistro or wine bar

Presqu'île · €20-35

A relaxed dinner back in Lyon after a long day.

Transit:

Lyon ↔ Annecy about 2 hours each way by direct train (€20-40 round trip, book ahead). On foot within Annecy's compact old town and lakefront.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $75 Mid $155 Luxury $370
DAY 5

Slow Lyon — museums, markets & last bites

Musée des Confluences or Beaux-Arts - riverside walk - a missed traboule or quarter - final bouchon

Activities

  1. 09:30 A Lyon museum — Confluences or Beaux-Arts 2h30

    Spend the morning at a museum: the striking, deconstructivist Musée des Confluences (science and societies, ~€9) at the rivers' meeting point, or the Musée des Beaux-Arts (one of France's great fine-art collections, ~€8-12) on Place des Terreaux.

    Cost: €8-12 TIP: The Musée des Confluences building alone is worth the trip — reach it by tram down the peninsula. Choose the Beaux-Arts if you prefer classic art in a former abbey. Either makes a strong, unhurried morning.
  2. 12:30 Lunch + riverside walk 2h

    Lunch at a riverside spot or a Presqu'île bistro, then walk the banks of the Rhône or Saône — the redeveloped Rhône riverbanks (Berges du Rhône) are a relaxed promenade with floating bars in season.

    Cost: €15-30 per person TIP: The Berges du Rhône are great for a flat, easy walk, with péniche (barge) bars in warmer months. A lighter lunch sets up an afternoon of strolling.
  3. 15:00 A missed traboule or quarter + shopping 2h

    Catch anything you missed — more traboules in Vieux Lyon or Croix-Rousse, the silk-weaving Maison des Canuts, or shopping for sweets and gifts (praline tart, coussins de Lyon, Beaujolais wine, silk scarves).

    Cost: Free + shopping TIP: Silk is part of Lyon's identity — a scarf makes a fitting souvenir. Vacuum-sealed cheese, a Praluline brioche, and bottles of Beaujolais all travel well. Keep the afternoon flexible.
  4. 20:00 Final bouchon dinner 2h

    End with one last bouchon feast — Le Musée or Daniel et Denise — for a final quenelle, andouillette for the brave, and a tarte aux pralines, with a pot of regional wine.

    Cost: €35-50 per person TIP: Reserve ahead. If you've saved an adventurous dish (andouillette, tablier de sapeur), this is the night. Finish with the pink praline tart. A relaxed, social last evening in the food capital.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast

Presqu'île · €3-8

Coffee and a Praluline brioche.

Lunch

Riverside bistro

Berges du Rhône / Presqu'île · €15-30

A lighter lunch before a riverside walk.

Dinner

Final bouchon (Le Musée or Daniel et Denise)

Presqu'île / Vieux Lyon · €35-50

A last bouchon feast and a tarte aux pralines.

Transit:

On foot plus tram/metro (€1.90 single, €6.50 day pass). The tram reaches the Musée des Confluences down the peninsula; the riverbanks are a flat walk.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $125 Luxury $305

Book Lyon Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Lyon 5-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is Annecy worth a day trip from Lyon?
Yes — Annecy is about 2 hours each way, but its turquoise Alpine lake, canal-laced old town, and the iconic Palais de l'Île make it one of the most beautiful towns in France. It's a full day rather than a half-day given the travel time. Book the direct train ahead for cheap fares, and go in good weather to enjoy the lakefront.
Should I do both Beaujolais and Annecy?
In five days, yes — they're very different. Beaujolais is rolling vineyard country (best as a wine tour so you can taste freely), while Annecy is an Alpine lake town. Doing one on Day 3 and the other on Day 4 gives you wine country and mountains alongside the city. If you only have time for one, choose by whether you prefer wine or lakes and mountains.
How do I get the cheapest train tickets?
Book on SNCF Connect or Trainline 1-2 months ahead — French rail fares rise as seats sell, so early booking can halve the price. This matters most for the Annecy trip and any onward TGV (to Paris, Marseille, Geneva). Pérouges and local Beaujolais trains are cheap regional fares with less price variation.
Is five days too long for Lyon?
Not if you use the day trips — two days cover the city's core, and the Beaujolais, Pérouges, and Annecy excursions easily fill the rest with wine country, a medieval village, and an Alpine lake. Lyon also makes a strong base for the wider Rhône-Alpes region and onward TGV travel, so five days rarely feels excessive here.

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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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