An Etretat day trip (Étretat, if you want the accents right) takes you to the single most photographed stretch of coastline in Normandy — towering white chalk cliffs, three natural arches carved by the sea, and a slender rock needle rising straight out of the water. Etretat is around 114km from Caen and roughly 124km from the Portsmouth to Caen ferry terminal at Ouistreham, an easy hour-and-a-quarter drive that makes this one of the most rewarding coastal day trips covered on this site.
The cliffs of Etretat France have been famous for well over a century. Claude Monet painted them more than 50 times; Guy de Maupassant, who grew up here, wrote them into his novels; and Maurice Leblanc’s Arsène Lupin — reimagined for a new generation in the Netflix series partly filmed here — hid his greatest secret inside the hollow needle rising from the sea. Today the Normandy cliffs at Etretat draw around two million visitors a year, and it’s easy to see why the moment you arrive.
This complete guide to an Etretat day trip covers everything: the cliffs themselves and how to visit them safely, the beach and whether you can actually swim there, the town’s surprising literary and aviation history, and exactly how to get there from Caen — including why Le Havre, long the obvious route in from the UK, is no longer the ferry option it used to be.
Last updated: July 2026 | Facts verified from Le Havre Étretat Tourisme and primary historical sources.
