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The Ultimate Packing List for Hiking in France: 2026 Edition

France's Grande Randonnée network spans some of the most spectacular terrain in Europe — the Tour du Mont Blanc, GR20 in Corsica, the Pyrenean Haute Route, and thousands of kilometres of marked trails across every region. Our members who've walked them share what the kit list actually looks like on the ground.

Know Your Route — France Is Four Different Environments

France's hiking regions demand genuinely different gear. The GR20 in Corsica — one of Europe's toughest long-distance routes — has nothing in common with a Provence lavender valley walk. A Pyrenees high route in May will feel closer to a NZ alpine traverse than a summer stroll through Burgundy. Start with your region.

Alps (Tour du Mont Blanc, Écrins, Vanoise)

  • Most popular long-distance mountain hiking in Europe
  • Violent afternoon thunderstorms July–August — start early
  • Refuges (mountain huts) excellent — book 2–3 months ahead
  • Snow possible on high passes until late June
  • Multi-country routes (TMB crosses France, Italy, Switzerland)
  • Via ferrata routes available — helmet and harness if attempting

Pyrenees (HRP, GR10, GR11)

  • Less crowded than the Alps — wilder and more remote
  • High Route Pyrénéenne crosses into Spain — passport required
  • Fewer refuges than Alps — more wild camping required
  • Bears present in the central Pyrenees (Ursus arctos)
  • Unpredictable weather year-round — afternoon storms frequent
  • Magnificent in September — post-summer crowds, before snow

Corsica (GR20)

  • One of Europe's most demanding long-distance trails
  • Extreme heat in summer — trail best done June or September
  • Rocky, exposed terrain — hiking poles essential throughout
  • Refuges along the route — book well in advance
  • Water sources can be scarce on southern sections in summer
  • Mouflons, pigs, and occasional snakes — no dangerous predators

Massif Central, Provence & Lowland GR Routes

  • Generally well-marked, less technical than mountain routes
  • Heatwaves are now a serious summer risk across southern France
  • Excellent gîte d'étape (hiker hostel) network — booking advised
  • Tick pressure high in forested and grassland sections
  • Wild camping restricted in national parks — check regulations
  • Waymarking: red and white blazes on all GR routes

The Complete Packing Checklist

Pack & Shelter

Backpack 50–65L with rain coverOsprey, Deuter, or Gregory — adjustable torso essential for multi-week routes
Dry bag liner (inner pack)Alps and Pyrenees: afternoon storms soak everything — covers alone fail
Lightweight 3-season tent (if camping)Pyrenees HRP requires camping on some sections — refuges don't cover the full route
Sleeping bag (0°C–5°C comfort)Refuges provide blankets — a liner is sufficient if you're hut-to-hut only
Sleeping bag liner (silk or merino)French refuges: liners required at most huts — bring your own
Sleeping mat (if camping)Skip for full refuge/gîte routes — add for Pyrenees HRP wild sections

Clothing

Merino base layer (long sleeve)Odour resistance matters at busy Alpine refuges after long days
Moisture-wicking t-shirts (x2)Avoid cotton — wet cotton in Alpine storms causes rapid heat loss
Fleece or synthetic insulated jacketPackable down for dry sections; synthetic for Pyrenees wet weather
Waterproof shell jacket (Gore-Tex)Alps and Pyrenees: afternoon storms are violent and fast-moving — non-negotiable
Waterproof shell trousersHigh passes in July – August: hail and cold rain hit hard at 2,500m+
Quick-dry hiking pantsConvertible zip-off handles France's altitude temperature swings
Merino or synthetic hiking socks (x3–4 pairs)Wet socks cause blisters — change daily on long routes
Warm beanieHigh Alpine bivouacs — temperatures drop below 5°C even in August
Lightweight glovesEarly morning on high passes — hands get cold fast in wind and rain
Wide-brim sun hatCorsica GR20 and southern routes: UV is intense at altitude in summer heat
Buff or neck gaiterDust on southern limestone routes, and cold mornings on high passes
Camp shoes or lightweight sandalsFrench refuges: outdoor shoes are left at the door — camp shoes essential

Footwear

Waterproof hiking boots (stiff sole, broken in)GR20 and Alps: rocky, uneven terrain — ankle support and stiff sole are critical
Trail runners (lowland GR routes)Camino de Stevenson, Provence routes — lighter footwear is comfortable
Microspikes (early season alpine)TMB in June: hard snow on north-facing passes — microspikes save time and nerves
Trekking poles (pair)GR20 and Alpine descents: mandatory comfort, not optional
Blister kit (Compeed, Leukotape, Bodyglide)French hikers swear by Compeed — available in every pharmacy en route

Water & Food

Water bottles or reservoir (2L minimum)Corsica GR20 southern section: carry 3L — sources dry up in summer
Water filter or purification tabletsTreat stream water on all routes — Sawyer Squeeze is compact and reliable
Lightweight stove + gas canisterCamping sections of Pyrenees HRP — Primus or MSR canisters sold in outdoor shops
Pot and sporkSkip for full refuge routes — refuges serve hearty evening meals
Dehydrated meals (2–3 days backup)For gaps between refuges and remote sections of Pyrenees
High-calorie trail snacksFrench boulangeries and épiceries in trail towns are excellent resupply points
Electrolyte sachetsCorsica and Provence summer heat: salt loss is rapid — don't rely on water alone

Navigation & Safety

IGN topographic maps (1:25,000)France's Institut Géographique National maps are the gold standard — buy route-specific sheets
Komoot or Wikiloc app (offline)Both apps have excellent French GR route coverage — download before departure
Compass (baseplate)GR blazes can be infrequent in fog on high passes — navigation skills needed
Headlamp + spare batteriesEarly starts to clear passes before afternoon storms — common strategy
Power bank (10,000mAh+)Refuges often charge for charging — bring your own capacity
Satellite communicator (Garmin inReach)Pyrenees HRP remote sections — useful for two-way messaging and SOS
Emergency whistle and space blanketLightweight — attach whistle to pack, blanket in top lid
Comprehensive first aid kitInclude altitude headache medication — ibuprofen effective and widely available

Sun, Skin & Insects

Sunscreen SPF50+ (water resistant)Alpine UV at 2,500m is significantly stronger than at sea level
Sunglasses (UV400, wraparound)Snow glare on early-season passes — wraparound style prevents side exposure
Lip balm (SPF30+)Wind and altitude dehydrate lips rapidly on exposed ridges
DEET insect repellentForested sections and lower altitude GR routes: ticks and mosquitoes are present
Tick removal toolTick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is present in parts of eastern France and Alsace

Documents & Admin

Passport (EU nationals: national ID card)TMB crosses into Italy and Switzerland — full passport required for non-EU hikers
Refuge booking confirmationsTMB refuges fill in February for July–August — book as early as possible
EHIC / GHIC health card (EU/UK nationals)Covers emergency medical costs in France — carry alongside travel insurance
Travel insurance with mountain rescuePGHM (French mountain rescue) is free — but helicopter costs can be significant
Cash (euros)Many refuges and rural gîtes are cash only — ATMs are scarce on remote routes
Emergency contact list (written)Leave full itinerary with someone — include refuge names and dates

France-Specific Hazards Our Members Flag

  • Alpine afternoon thunderstorms: This is the defining hazard of Alps and Pyrenees summer hiking. Storms typically build by noon and hit by 2–3pm. The strategy is simple — start at dawn, clear high passes by 11am, be in the refuge or below the treeline before storms arrive. Never be on an exposed ridge or near a summit after midday in summer.
  • Heatwaves in southern France: Since 2019, extreme heatwaves have become an annual event in France. Hiking in Provence, Languedoc, or lowland Corsica in July–August with temperatures above 38°C is genuinely dangerous. Start before 7am, stop by midday, rest in shade, and consume electrolytes — not just water.
  • GR20 difficulty: The GR20 is consistently ranked as one of the toughest long-distance trails in Europe. It's not technical mountaineering, but the relentless rocky terrain, elevation changes, and Corsican summer heat combine into something that genuinely breaks underprepared hikers. Train specifically before attempting it.
  • Wild camping restrictions: Wild camping in French national parks is largely prohibited except in designated zones. In the Pyrenees National Park, bivouacking (arriving after 7pm, departing before 9am) is permitted. In the Vanoise and Écrins, it's more restricted. Research your specific route before assuming you can camp freely.
  • Bears in the Pyrenees: Brown bears have been reintroduced to the central Pyrenees and the population is growing. Encounters are rare but real. Make noise on blind corners, store food properly at night, and follow FIEP (Pyrenean bear foundation) guidelines if you encounter one.

What Our Members Have Learned Hiking France

  • Refuges are a genuine pleasure: French Alpine refuges serve hot meals, cold beer, and hearty breakfasts. The cost (typically €50–70 demi-pension) includes dinner and breakfast and is well worth it — pack lighter as a result and enjoy them.
  • Book TMB refuges in February: The Tour du Mont Blanc is Europe's most walked long-distance mountain route. Refuges book out months in advance for July and August. If you miss the booking window, consider September — smaller crowds, excellent weather, autumn colour.
  • Boulangeries change your trip: Trail towns in France have bakeries with fresh bread, pain au chocolat, and sandwiches every morning. Build your resupply strategy around them — buy the next day's lunch before leaving town.
  • Learn 10 words of French: Rural France is not tourist France. Outside major hiking hubs, English is limited. Basic French — "bonjour", "merci", "une bière s'il vous plaît", "où est le refuge?" — opens doors and earns goodwill at refuges and gîtes.
  • September is the best month: Across all French hiking regions, September offers the most consistent conditions — post-summer crowds, cooler temperatures, reliable weather windows, and full refuge availability. If your schedule allows, skip August entirely.
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