A Seine river cruise is not a multi-country tour. Most sailings begin and end in Paris, so the city is part of the trip rather than a layover before it, and from there the river carries you into Normandy and to the D-Day beaches. New-to-Tauck clients booking this sailing through us receive a complimentary pre- or post-cruise hotel night in Paris, available only through a Certified Tauck Advisor. We book Tauck, Belmond, and AmaWaterways on this river, with pricing from about $600 per person per day up to $1,400 and beyond. A 30-minute call is where we work out which one fits the trip you actually have in mind.
New-to-Tauck clients receive a complimentary pre- or post-cruise hotel night in Paris, and this is a Certified Tauck Advisor Austin TX benefit. Tauck does not offer it to clients who book directly, and a Paris hotel night at a quality property is worth $200 to $500 or more on its own.
On Belmond and AmaWaterways sailings that qualify for Virtuoso amenities, we add an onboard credit of $100 to $300 per cabin, a hosted cocktail reception, and priority service from the crew. These exist because of Virtuoso membership, which only certain travel advisors have.
We also monitor your booking between confirmation and departure, including when shore excursion windows open for Giverny and the Normandy beaches tour, both of which fill earlier on popular sailings than most travelers expect. For the fuller picture of what working with a luxury river cruise travel advisor Austin TX looks like day to day, that’s covered on our river cruise page.
A Seine sailing is France, and usually only France. There is no second or third country, no shifting currency or language halfway through the week. What you get instead is depth: real time in Paris, then Normandy, on ships that run smaller and more intimate than the mainstream Danube and Rhine vessels.
This makes the Seine the wrong choice if you want to cover several countries in one trip or are drawn to river cruising mainly for the variety. It is the right choice if Paris is the actual destination and you want a structured way to add Normandy and the countryside around it without managing the logistics yourself.
Unlike the Douro, which we usually recommend as a second or third river cruise, the Seine works well as a first one too, provided Paris and France are the draw rather than a broad introduction to European river cruising as a format.
We book three lines on the Seine, and the right one depends on how much you want handled for you.
Tauck’s Seine itineraries are some of their most reflective. Tauck Exclusive events in Paris and Normandy have included private access to cultural institutions other lines don’t get, and a Tauck Director provides context throughout, including during the Normandy beaches visit. As a Certified Tauck Advisor, we add the complimentary Paris hotel night for new Tauck clients on top of this.
Pricing runs $900 to $1,400 per person per day. This is the line for travelers who want everything decided, gratuities and an open bar included, with nothing left to arrange once onboard.
Belmond’s Seine product is a strong step up from mainstream lines for a first Seine cruise, with solid included programming in both Paris and Normandy and a smaller, more atmospheric ship than the bigger names on this river.
Pricing is $1,400 per person per day and up, and on qualifying sailings the Virtuoso onboard credit applies.
AmaWaterways brings its Chef’s Table casual dining venue to the Seine, and it works particularly well here given how central regional French food is to the experience. Active programming exists but is lighter than what AmaWaterways offers on the Danube or Douro.
At $600 to $900 per person per day, this is the value-conscious way into a Seine sailing, and a reasonable first choice if budget matters more than having every detail handled.
Line | Per Person Per Day | Best For |
AmaWaterways | $600–$900 | Value-conscious travelers, lighter active programming |
Tauck | $900–$1,400 | Everything handled, Tauck Exclusive events |
Belmond | $1,400+ | A strong step up from mainstream lines on a first Seine cruise |
On top of the cruise fare, plan for flights, travel insurance, and a pre- or post-cruise hotel stay in Paris. The Tauck hotel night and Virtuoso hotel amenities offset some of this, but they don’t replace the need to budget for it. For the full picture of what is and isn’t included in a river cruise fare, see what is included on a river cruise fare.
May through September is the window we book. Giverny’s gardens are fullest from late spring through summer, and the Normandy beaches are well-run and accessible for visits throughout this period.
We don’t book Seine sailings outside this range. Outside the main season, the gardens at Giverny are closed or past their best, and that’s reason enough on its own.
Most of the extension question on a Seine cruise is how many additional nights in Paris to add, since Paris is already built into the itinerary rather than a separate destination to bolt on. Clients who can spare it often add a few nights after the cruise rather than before, when there’s no embarkation to plan around.
We build these stays with Virtuoso amenities at the hotels we book wherever possible: complimentary breakfast, room upgrades when available, and early check-in or late checkout. These come on top of whatever rate you’re paying for the room, and they aren’t available booking the hotel directly or through a third-party site.
Paris:
Most Seine sailings begin with two to three nights in Paris, giving time for the Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, Père Lachaise, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, and whatever else is on the list. Some itineraries include a day excursion to Versailles. Paris deserves its time and most lines treat it accordingly.
Giverny:
Claude Monet’s house and gardens – the inspiration for the Water Lilies series – are accessible by tender from the ship on the River Epte. The gardens, restored to their 1908 appearance, are extraordinary in May through September when in full bloom. This excursion is one of the most memorable in all of river cruising for art history enthusiasts.
Rouen:
The capital of Normandy and one of France’s most beautiful medieval cities. Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in the old market square in 1431. The Gothic cathedral – painted obsessively by Monet in different lights – dominates the skyline. Rouen is the gateway into deeper Normandy.
Normandy Landing Beaches:
The D-Day beaches – Omaha, Utah, Gold, Juno, Sword – and the American cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer are included in most Seine itineraries. These are among the most emotionally powerful sites in the world. Allow a full day. Guided interpretation from a historian (included on most lines) is essential context.
Not at all – though history enthusiasts do particularly well on the Seine. The combination of Paris, Giverny, and Impressionist France makes it equally rewarding for art lovers. And the Normandy beaches section appeals to anyone who cares about 20th century history, regardless of specialist background. The one profile that may find the Seine less satisfying: travelers who want maximum variety across multiple countries and culture zones. The Seine is deliberately France-specific and slower-paced.
Often, yes, more so than other rivers we book. The Danube is still our default first-timer recommendation if the goal is a broad introduction to river cruising as a format. But if Paris and France are the actual reason you’re going to Europe, the Seine is a strong first cruise on its own terms, and you don’t need prior river cruise experience to get the most out of it.
Nine to twelve months is the general guideline for European river cruising. Tauck’s Seine departures and Belmond’s smaller ships both run fewer sailings than mainstream Danube or Rhine departures, so the gap between booking early and booking late shows up sooner, particularly for suite categories.
No. The cruise line prices the sailing the same way regardless of how you book. We charge a planning fee, disclosed upfront, for the advisory work and the support that comes with it. On Tauck and qualifying Virtuoso sailings, the hotel night and onboard credit you receive through us typically offset some or all of that fee.
A 30-minute call is where this starts. Tell us how much of the trip is about Paris, how much is about Normandy, and what’s pulling you toward France specifically, and we’ll come back within a week with specific sailings, cabin categories, and what each one actually costs once the perks are factored in.