Looking for a side trip from Paris that goes beyond the usual? Burgundy pairs a thousand years of history with some of France’s most prestigious vineyards, Michelin-starred tables, and medieval villages that feel entirely untouched. Paris-Toujours arranges private winery tours, expert-led tastings, and fully tailor-made stays across the region — at your pace, with a private guide who knows every cellar worth visiting.
Ideal for wine lovers, history enthusiasts,
and anyone who travels to eat and drink well.
Burgundy Wine Region
With rolling green hills dotted with mustard fields, vast forests, and acres of vineyards, Burgundy is home to some of France’s finest countryside. It’s also a place with a rich history going all the way back to Gallo-Roman antiquity, and in its heyday was a formidable Duchy, more powerful than France.
Whether you enjoy a side trip from Paris on winery tours in Burgundy, visit the region for days spent exploring medieval villages, outdoor activities and water sports, or simply gorging yourself on fine cuisine in one of the region’s Michelin-starred restaurants, the Burgundy region has something to offer every type of holidaymaker.
What to see and do in Burgundy
The city of Dijon, Burgundy’s main city, is officially recognized as a Ville d’Art et d’Histoire (Town of Art and History), and its elegant medieval and Renaissance architecture harks back to a time when Dijon was the capital of the Duchy of Burgundy. Much of the center of town is an official conservation area, listed on the UNESCO World Heritage list. A walk around the vehicle-free, compact town center, with its half-timbered houses, Gothic and Romanesque churches, and 17th and 18th-century private mansions, feels like a step back in time.
To explore the history of the city, we recommend either taking a private guided tour, or following the self-guided owl tour route, in which small brass owl signs set into the ground lead you to 22 sites in the historical center of town. The route is named for a small stone owl carved into the side of the beautiful Église Notre-Dame, which is worth a visit for its unusual architecture, with leering gargoyles perched atop narrow columns. Legend has it that the owl brings you luck if you stroke her wing with your left hand.
The most iconic monument in the heart of Dijon is the Palace of the Dukes and Estates of Burgundy. The eastern wing has housed the Musée des Beaux-Arts since 1799, with some 1,500 works of art — one of the finest such collections in France.
Food and gastronomy in Dijon
For those more interested in fine food than fine art, Dijon boasts several Michelin-starred restaurants, a lively indoor market, and even an international food festival that has taken place every November for almost a century. Local specialties include — unsurprisingly — mustard, which you can learn more about by visiting the family-run Moutarderie Edmond Fallot in nearby Beaune, making mustard since 1840. Today, visitors experience exhibitions devoted entirely to this local tradition.
Another delicacy not to be missed is found at Mulot & Petitjean in Dijon, worth visiting as much for the beautiful shop itself on Place Bossuet as for its specialty: gingerbread.
From 2021, foodies are able to experience food in Dijon in a different way: by visiting the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie et du Vin. An exhibition space of 17,000 m², this museum devoted to French gastronomy and the wines of the world opened in December 2021.
Fontenay Abbey
Just over an hour’s drive from Dijon is Fontenay Abbey, the world’s oldest preserved Cistercian site. Overlooking bucolic countryside, the abbey was founded in 1118 and is now a UNESCO World Heritage site. Fully restored, it offers visitors the chance to experience the austere setting where Cistercian monks lived their simple lifestyle, and includes Europe’s oldest metallurgical forge, with a working reconstruction of a 13th-century hydraulic hammer.
Winery tours in Burgundy
The Burgundy region is most famous throughout the world for its fine wines, and winery tours in Burgundy are one of the most popular things to do in the region. Highlights include the Côte de Nuits, a small sub-region of only 30 km. Within this area, you’ll find plenty of wineries in Gevrey-Chambertin, a village 15 km south of Dijon. At Clos Vougeot, a 16th-century wine-making château, you can tour historical wine-making equipment. And don’t miss the biggest town in the Côte de Nuits, Nuits-Saint-Georges, for museums about the craft of making both wine and Crème de Cassis, another local specialty.
Another prestigious wine-growing area is the Côte de Beaune, with delightful villages such as Aloxe-Corton, Meursault, and Pommard. The area includes some of Burgundy’s most famous vineyards and is the place to go for prestigious wine châteaux.
The town of Beaune itself is a thriving little place where life revolves — unsurprisingly — around wine. Known as one of the best places in France for wine tasting, you could also spend your days wandering the streets leading off the main square, Place Carnot, towards the medieval ramparts, moats, and adjacent fortresses and watchtowers which enclose the town. The highlight is the 600-year-old Hôtel-Dieu, France’s finest medieval charity hospital, whose roof is bedecked with multicolored tiles from Flanders.
Outdoor activities
Covering the four départements of the Burgundy region, the Morvan Regional National Park is a vast, forested area crisscrossed with signposted walking trails, and dotted with lakes and rivers — perfect for hiking, fishing, and watersports.
The best time to go to Burgundy
Unlike other areas of France which come into their own during the festive period, Burgundy is best avoided in the winter, when the days are short and the temperatures bitterly cold (often reaching -10 °C / 14 °F).
Most people visit in the summer, though be aware that dry weather isn’t guaranteed, even in July. For a quieter time, the shoulder season is an option, though locals say it gets noticeably cooler at the end of August, and you can feel Autumn in the air from September.
However, in spite of this coolness, there’s a good reason to visit Burgundy in September–October: it’s when the vines turn gold, giving the region its nickname, the Côte d’Or (Gold Coast). Our advice? Plan your trip for the fall, pack an extra sweater or two, and experience the region in all its golden glory.
Travel to Burgundy with Paris-Toujours
Planning a trip to Burgundy? Make the most of this wonderful region by enlisting a little help.
We can help you plan private winery tours in Burgundy with tastings, and private visits to some of the most interesting sights, such as the UNESCO World Heritage Site, Fontenay Abbey.
For something a little different, we’ve also organized truffle hunting expeditions, where you’ll join local experts (and their clever truffle-hunting dogs!) to search for this world-renowned delicacy.
A private trip to the medieval city of Semur-en-Auxois, a remarkable heritage site with a church, dungeon, and medieval fortifications, and Flavigny-sur-Ozerain, another medieval gem built around an 8th-century abbey. Here, you’ll also get to sample a local delicacy: aniseed sweets still made at the Abbey!