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Yes, there are still pitches available in Brittany for the Whitsun 2026 bank holiday weekend (23–25 May) — if you know where to look. Coastal 4- and 5-star sites near Quiberon and Saint-Malo are often fully booked for mobile homes, but 10 areas still have real availability: Saint-Pierre-Quiberon (641 municipal pitches largely unknown to online booking engines), Lac de Guerlédan, the Monts d’Arrée, the Brocéliande forest and the Cap Sizun headland all offer bare pitches from £10/night — that is 30 to 50 % cheaper than July–August. Book within the next 72 hours: forecasts point to a calm, sunny long weekend.

You have been putting it off, and now you are scrolling through campsite listings with a creeping sense of dread — « fully booked » everywhere you look. But today is 12 May 2026 and you are searching for the Whitsun long weekend, not the school summer holidays. The situation is not nearly as bad as it looks: while the big coastal chains sold their mobile homes months ago, Brittany has 712 campsites listed on CampingFrance, and a good half of them have not yet closed their books for the 23–25 May weekend.

This guide pinpoints 10 specific areas where availability is real, with campsite names, phone numbers and verified prices. We have focused on bare pitches (always more available than rental accommodation), lesser-known inland Brittany, and municipal campsites that online booking algorithms routinely under-list. With a settled forecast and ferry crossings from Portsmouth and Plymouth still available, this long weekend can still be everything you were hoping for.

If you are looking for another idea for Whitsun, Nîmes in southern France is hosting its famous feria at the same time:

Another Whitsun idea: the Feria de Nîmes

1. Saint-Pierre-Quiberon — 641 municipal pitches most visitors never find

The wild coastline of Quiberon in southern Brittany, waves crashing over the rocks
Photo by Pascal Bernardon on Unsplash

The Whitsun secret on the Quiberon peninsula

£10–16/night 23–25 May 16–20°C Atlantic coast

Everyone knows Quiberon and its private campsites that have been fully booked since March. What very few visitors realise is that you can cross the isthmus to the neighbouring commune of Saint-Pierre-Quiberon, which runs its own municipal campsites through campings-saintpierrequiberon.fr. The result: genuine availability at council prices, a few minutes’ walk from the same beaches and the same wild Atlantic coastline.

Camping de Penthièvre is the standout: 641 bare pitches across 20 hectares, direct beach access, open 1 April to 30 September 2026. It is one of the largest municipal campsites in Brittany, run without the aggressive commercial logic of private operators. Nearby, Camping du Rohu (109 pitches, open until 2 November) overlooks Drehen beach, far quieter than Quiberon town beach. For an even calmer stay, Camping de Kerhostin (85 pitches) offers coastal views.

Highlights

  • 641 bare pitches at Camping de Penthièvre — your best chance of finding space at short notice
  • Municipal pricing: no private operator surcharge
  • Ferry to Belle-Île (35 min), Houat and Hoëdic from Quiberon — book the crossing ahead
  • GR34 Côte Sauvage coastal path leaves directly from the campsite
Pixidia tip: Call the campsite directly on +33 2 97 30 92 00 (Camping de Penthièvre) rather than going through a comparison site — municipal pitches are routinely under-listed online. Mention your kit (tent, caravan, motorhome) so they can direct you to the right section.

2. Lac de Guerlédan — inland Brittany, 30 % cheaper than the coast

Lac de Guerlédan in inland Brittany, surrounded by forests — lakeside camping
Photo by Hasse Lossius on Unsplash

Brittany’s largest lake, without the coastal crowds

£13–22/night Open year-round 14–18°C Côtes d’Armor

Lac de Guerlédan (304 hectares) is Brittany’s largest artificial lake, formed by the Blavet dam in 1930. Its lack of a sea beach is precisely what keeps it free of the summer hordes. According to lacdeguerledan.com, three campsites on the lakeside still have pitches for the Whitsun 2026 weekend.

Camping Le Point de Vue de Guerlédan offers 121 pitches, two cabins and two tipis — ideal if you want unusual accommodation at the last minute. Camping du Lac de Guerlédan (60 pitches, open year-round) has direct lake access. For a larger option, Camping Beau Rivage aligns 150 pitches and 40 mobile homes. Budget for a bare pitch: £13–22/night, which is 30 to 40 % less than a comparable coastal campsite.

Highlights

  • 45 km of shoreline for mountain biking and hiking — one of Brittany’s best inland cycling circuits
  • Canoe and kayak on the Nantes–Brest Canal — hire available on site
  • Trout fishing permitted with a permit (day licences available on site)
  • Château des Rohan in Pontivy, 30 min away — perfect half-day excursion
Pixidia tip: The Quénécan forest surrounds the lake — the tipis and cabins at Camping Le Point de Vue (camping-lepointdevue.fr) are the last unusual accommodation available in inland Brittany at this date. Book immediately if this is your preferred option.

3. Brocéliande Forest / Paimpont — Arthurian magic, crowd-free

The legendary Brocéliande forest in Brittany — misty woodland associated with Merlin and Arthurian legend
Photo by Saul Brotheridge on Unsplash

Merlin, the Lady of the Lake and pitches still open

£9–13/night Open all year 14–18°C Ille-et-Vilaine (35)

The Brocéliande forest (Paimpont) is steeped in Arthurian legend: this is said to be where Merlin dwelled, where the Fountain of Barenton made it rain, and where the Lake of Fairies reflected Viviane’s castle. British visitors feel an immediate connection with this landscape. The campsites here remain very lightly booked at Whitsun, far removed from the pressures of the coast.

Camping Municipal de Paimpont offers 78 pitches in the heart of the forest, open year-round at municipal rates (estimated £9–13/night according to camping-paimpont-broceliande.com). For a more unusual experience, Camping d’Aleth has 31 unusual accommodation options (Native American cabin, Far West theme, Breton legends) plus 20 bare pitches. The Fête de la Bretagne Gouel Breizh (18th edition, ~200 events across the region) runs from 14 to 24 May, overlapping perfectly with your stay.

Highlights

  • Merlin’s Tomb and the Fountain of Barenton — mythical walks on foot from the campsite
  • 12th-century Cistercian abbey of Paimpont and its lake — free to visit
  • Château de Comper (Arthurian Imaginary Centre) — great for families with children
  • Fête de la Bretagne Gouel Breizh: live concerts and fest-noz, most events free entry
Pixidia tip: At Brocéliande, avoid limiting yourself to Merlin’s Tomb alone in peak season — the site is small and disappointment is common. Add the Hôtesses circuit (megalithic alley) and the Fountain of Youth for a full day in the forest without let-down.

4. Cap Sizun / Audierne Bay — the tip of Finistère from £10/night

Pointe du Raz and the clifftop headland of Cap Sizun in Finistère — GR34 coastal walk in Brittany
Photo by Slawek K on Unsplash

The least saturated stretch of the Finistère coast

£10–21/night Open since April 14–18°C South Finistère (29)

Cap Sizun is the very tip of Finistère, where the land ends before the open Atlantic. Its remote position — two hours beyond Quimper — naturally protects it from overtourism. According to capsizuntourisme.fr, 13 campsites operate in the area, several of which have only just opened for the 2026 season.

Camping Naéco Baie d’Audierne (Audierne, 42 pitches) has the most accessible prices on the coastal strip: £10–21/day for a pitch with two adults and a car. Camping de la Baie (Cléden-Cap-Sizun, 27 pitches, from £12/day) offers sea views in a small, family-run setting. For more comfort, Camping Huttopia Douarnenez (145 pitches, open from 30 April 2026, heated pool overlooking the bay) offers the best value-for-availability in the area — call them on +33 2 98 74 05 67.

Highlights

  • Pointe du Raz — one of Brittany’s finest natural headlands, Customs Officers’ path GR34
  • Île de Sein by ferry from Audierne (35 min) — car-free island, wonderfully timeless
  • Baie des Trépassés — surfing and bodyboarding on Atlantic swells
  • Medieval village of Pont-Croix and its Whitsun market
Pixidia tip: The ferry crossing to Île de Sein (Compagnie Penn Ar Bed) fills quickly at Whitsun — book your ticket at the same time as your pitch. A day on the island is well worth it: no cars, low stone houses, a unique Atlantic light.

5. Crozon Peninsula — still available despite its reputation

Cliffs and beaches of the Crozon Peninsula in Finistère, Brittany — seaside camping
Photo by Auriane Clément on Unsplash

17 campsites, with pitches still on offer

£17–31/night Open since May 15–19°C Finistère (29)

The Crozon Peninsula has a well-earned reputation — Cap de la Chèvre, Plage de la Palue, the Iroise Marine Nature Park. That is precisely why the 5-star campsites here are fully booked in summer. But with 17 campsites on the peninsula according to the Crozon tourist office, alternatives do exist for Whitsun, especially for bare pitches.

Camping Les Bruyères (Morgat) opened on 1 May 2026: 3-star, heated pool, aquatic park, seafront location. It is one of the rare campsites with a heated pool still available at Whitsun on the peninsula. Camping de la Presqu’île (Crozon, 60 pitches + 12 mobile homes) is in the village centre, walking distance from the beaches — ideal if you only have one car. The same campsite also offers glamping options with availability.

Highlights

  • Cap de la Chèvre — panoramic views over the Iroise Sea and the Molène archipelago
  • Plage de la Palue — surfing, bodyboarding, a long wild beach little-visited in May
  • GR34 Crozon version — spectacular clifftop walking between headlands and coves
  • Brest Castle, 30 min away — free National Maritime Museum entry under 18s
Pixidia tip: From Crozon, the ferry to Brest (Le Fret → Brest) takes 25 minutes and saves you two hours of driving. A single ticket costs around €4 per person — a perfect mini sea crossing for an afternoon in the city from your campsite.

6. Monts d’Arrée / Huelgoat — free shuttle from the train station

Moorland and peat bogs of the Monts d'Arrée in Finistère — Armorique Regional Nature Park
Photo by Harry Le on Unsplash

The other Brittany — wild, mystical and car-free friendly

£17–26/night Open spring 12–17°C Inland Finistère

The Monts d’Arrée peak at only 385 metres (Ménez Michel), but the atmosphere is incomparable: close-cropped moorland, peat bogs, tumbled boulders at Huelgoat and a light that Breton painters have always known how to capture. This is a niche destination, completely unknown to the average tourist, which is precisely what keeps it available at Whitsun 2026.

Camping La Rivière d’Argent (Huelgoat, 3-star) is the flagship address: 32 accommodations (domes, lodges, cabins with Nordic hot tub) and 58 pitches across 6 ha in the Armorique Regional Nature Park. Covered and heated pool, restaurant serving local produce. According to larivieredargent.com, a free shuttle serves the railway stations at Morlaix and Carhaix — perfect if you take the Eurostar to Paris and then the TGV to Morlaix (about 5 hours total from London). Call them on +33 2 98 99 72 50.

Highlights

  • Free shuttle from Morlaix and Carhaix stations — car-free stay possible, unique in Brittany
  • Huelgoat forest: boulder chaos, the Rocking Stone, Camp d’Artus — easy walking
  • Monts d’Arrée Ecomuseum at Saint-Rivoal — rural Breton life of the 20th century
  • Réservoir de Saint-Michel — 360° panorama over the moorland, exceptional sunrise
Pixidia tip: The dome cabins with Nordic hot tub at La Rivière d’Argent are the most sought-after unusual accommodation in inland Brittany. If the domes are full, bare pitches are usually still available — and at £17–22/night, they represent the best value in this article. The free shuttle makes this campsite the ideal base for those travelling by train from the UK.

7. Gulf of Morbihan / Arradon — booking fees waived for Whitsun

The Gulf of Morbihan in Brittany with its islands and calm waters — kayaking and sailing in spring
Photo by Jason Polychronopulos on Unsplash

Inland sea, islands and special Whitsun offers

£13–22/night Open since mid-April 16–20°C Morbihan (56)

Carnac and Quiberon attract most of the demand in Morbihan. But the Gulf of Morbihan extends much further: the communes of Arradon, Séné and Larmor-Baden have campsites with views over the inland sea, 10–15 km from Vannes. And for Whitsun 2026, two campsites in the area have direct deals available.

Camping de Penboch (Arradon, 4-star, open since 11 April) has both a covered and an outdoor pool — rare for a campsite so close to the islands. Call +33 2 97 44 71 29 or visit camping-penboch.fr. Camping Les Mouettes (Sarzeau) has confirmed booking fees waived for the Whitsun weekend according to their website — a direct saving at booking (call +33 2 97 41 90 50 or visit lesmouettes-camping.com).

Highlights

  • Crossing to Île-aux-Moines (5 min from Port-Blanc at Baden) — the car-free gem of the Gulf
  • Séné Natural Reserve — 220 bird species, ideal in spring for migratory visitors
  • Kayak hire on the Gulf — half-day from Vannes or Arradon
  • Vannes old town and its covered market hall — busy Wednesday and Saturday market
Pixidia tip: The Séné Natural Reserve is one of the top birdwatching destinations in western France. In May, spoonbills and avocets are on migration — arrive early in the morning to spot them from the hides (free entry).

8. Côte du Goëlo / Binic — free Art Rock festival thrown in

Breton coastline at Cap d'Erquy, Brittany, GR34 coastal path
Photo by Slim MARS on Unsplash

Cap Fréhel, a medieval fort and 85,000 festival-goers next door

£13–26/night Open spring 15–19°C Côtes d’Armor (22)

The Côte du Goëlo — between Saint-Brieuc and Paimpol — is one of the least talked-about stretches of Brittany’s tourist coast. Yet its appeal is real: Cap Fréhel with its red-brown lighthouse visible for 100 km, Fort-la-Latte perched on a rocky headland, and Île Bréhat reachable in 15 minutes by ferry from Paimpol. At Whitsun 2026, Saint-Brieuc also hosts the 43rd edition of the Art Rock Festival (22–24 May) — 85,000 visitors, De La Soul in concert, and a large portion of the events free in the city centre.

Camping Les Fauvettes (Binic) is a municipal campsite with an exceptional view over the bay — the GR34 path leading to Avant-Port beach starts directly from the site. Camping Les Madières (Pordic) offers a heated pool and direct GR34 access. Both remain far less saturated than the Pink Granite Coast less than 40 km away.

Highlights

  • Art Rock Festival Saint-Brieuc (22–24 May) — free open-air concerts in the city, De La Soul
  • Cap Fréhel — wild heathland, cliffs and landmark lighthouse, quieter than in summer
  • Fort-la-Latte (14th century) — medieval castle on a headland, visit and panoramic view
  • Île Bréhat from Paimpol (15 min ferry) — the mimosa island, no cars allowed
Pixidia tip: If you are attending Art Rock, do not try to move your car on concert evenings (22–24 May) — parking in Saint-Brieuc is very tight across the three days. Take a regional train from your campsite and enjoy the festival on foot. The BreizhGo TER pass (€55/2 days) is good value for this weekend.

9. Pink Granite Coast / Trégor — available before the summer rush

The rose-pink rock formations of the Pink Granite Coast at Perros-Guirec, Brittany
Photo by Jonathan Vinial on Unsplash

The pink rocks, the GR34 and Breton music

£17–35/night Open since mid-April 15–19°C Côtes d’Armor (22)

The Pink Granite Coast between Perros-Guirec and Trébeurden is one of the most photographed stretches of Brittany — its weathered boulder formations, golden light and GR34 Customs Officers’ path make it unmissable. In July and August, saturation is total. But at Whitsun, campsites in the secondary area (Trébeurden, Trévou-Tréguignec, Lannion) still have pitches available.

Camping Le Mat (Trévou-Tréguignec), open since 18 April 2026, is directly on Trestel beach: 45 mobile homes + 30 pitches according to campinglemat.com — bare pitches have real availability here. Camping Armor Loisirs (Trébeurden, 101 pitches, 500 m from Pors Mabo beach) has new rentals for 2026. In Lannion, the Printemps des Sonneurs (23–24 May) brings together biniou and bombarde players in Breton traditional music.

Highlights

  • GR34 path from Perros-Guirec to Ploumanac’h — the finest coastal section in Brittany in May
  • Printemps des Sonneurs in Lannion (23–24 May) — free fest-noz and traditional music competition
  • Hidden beaches: Goas Lagorn (Lannion) and Toul Drez (Trégastel) — quieter than Perros
  • Île de Bréhat from Paimpol (15 min crossing)
Pixidia tip: Camping Le Ranolien (Perros-Guirec, 5-star, 550 m² spa) is fully booked for mobile homes at Whitsun. If you want the pink rocks and a quality campsite, head to Le Mat at Trévou — same sea access, lower prices and real availability.

10. Cancale / Côte d’Émeraude — oysters and world literature on your doorstep

A Breton beach in France at low tide — rock-pooling and family seaside
Photo by Pascal Bernardon on Unsplash

The Étonnants Voyageurs festival 20 minutes from your pitch

£17–31/night Open since April 15–19°C Ille-et-Vilaine (35)

Cancale and the Côte d’Émeraude are less crowded than Saint-Malo intra-muros at Whitsun, while being 20 minutes’ drive from the heart of the walled city. Saint-Malo hosts the 36th edition of the Étonnants Voyageurs festival on 23, 24 and 25 May 2026 — 50,000 visitors, 150 authors from around the world, Lebanon as guest country, and a portion of the talks free to attend. The combination is perfect: quiet camping at Cancale, cultural trips into Saint-Malo.

Camping de l’Île Verte (Cancale, 4-star, open since 4 April 2026) is positioned between Cancale and Saint-Malo in a green setting. Camping La Touesse (Saint-Lunaire, 4-star, 300 m from Fourberie beach) is a charming family alternative. For those who want to be within walking distance of Saint-Malo’s ramparts, Camping de la Cité d’Aleth (open until 28 September 2026) is intra-muros — but book quickly. Budget: £17–31/night for a pitch, mobile home for 3 nights from £265.

Highlights

  • Cancale oysters at the harbour market — best eaten in May when the water is still cold
  • Étonnants Voyageurs Saint-Malo (23–25 May) — 150 authors, free entry for some events
  • GR34 from Pointe du Grouin to Mont-Saint-Michel Bay — panoramic coastal walk
  • Île du Grand-Bé at low tide — Chateaubriand’s tomb, accessible on foot from the ramparts
Pixidia tip: From Cancale, Mont-Saint-Michel is only 50 km away. In May, queues at the footbridge are far shorter than in summer. If you hire a car, add a half-day for the Wonder of the Western World — at €6/adult for abbey entry, it is one of France’s best-value heritage sites.

Getting to and around Brittany for Whitsun

Flights & trains London → Brittany

Eurostar London St Pancras to Paris (2 h 16 min) then TGV to Rennes (1 h 30 min) — total around 4 h 45 min. Alternatively, fly London to Rennes or Brest. Compare all options now before Whitsun prices spike.

From £35 one-way
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Campsite booked 10 days out on a bank holiday weekend: cancellation cover is well worth it. SafetyWing’s Nomad Insurance covers cancellation, medical and repatriation — from $56 for 4 weeks. 10 % off via our Ambassador link.

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Frequently asked questions — Brittany camping Whitsun 2026

Are campsites in Brittany really full for Whitsun 2026?

The 4- and 5-star coastal campsites in Quiberon, Carnac and Saint-Malo have often had their mobile homes reserved since March 2026. But bare pitches remain accessible in most campsites, and inland Brittany (Monts d’Arrée, Brocéliande, Lac de Guerlédan) has plenty of space. The municipal campsites of Saint-Pierre-Quiberon — including Camping de Penthièvre with its 641 pitches — are routinely overlooked by comparison sites and retain real availability. According to Ulysse.com, the Whitsun / Pentecôte weekend is « noticeably less saturated » than the May Day long weekend.

What weather should I expect in Brittany over Whitsun 2026?

According to weather forecasts published on 6 May 2026, the Whitsun weekend (23–25 May) looks calm and bright with high pressure dominant, following a cloudy Ascension Thursday. Temperatures should sit between 15 and 20°C (59–68°F), with no significant rain forecast. The days are long — sunrise around 6:30 am, sunset around 10 pm — which is a considerable advantage over the summer months. Source: tameteo.com, 6 May 2026 (18-day outlook).

How much does a campsite in Brittany cost over Whitsun 2026?

A bare pitch costs between £10 and £26/night in Brittany at Whitsun — around 30 to 50 % less than in July–August. Municipal campsites on Cap Sizun have pitches from £10/night. A 4-person mobile home for 3 nights runs between £220 and £440, versus £870–1,050/week in August. Total budget for a family of four (3 nights, bare pitch) can be as low as £240 (ferry + campsite + food) or up to around £570 (hire car + 3-star mobile home + day trips). Source: Ulysse.com.

How do I get from the UK to Brittany for the Whitsun weekend?

There are three main options from the UK. By ferry: Plymouth to Roscoff (about 6 hours, from £117 for a car and two passengers) or Portsmouth to St Malo (about 9 hours overnight) with Brittany Ferries — book well ahead as Whitsun sailings fill up. By train: Eurostar from London St Pancras to Paris (2 h 16 min) then TGV Paris Montparnasse to Rennes (1 h 30 min) gives a total journey of around 4 h 45 min from city centre to city centre; fastest services can be under 5 hours. By air: Ryanair and other low-cost airlines fly London to Rennes or Brest. The train or ferry are recommended to avoid arriving with a hire car on a busy bank holiday. Sources: brittany-ferries.co.uk, Trainline.

Can I visit Brittany at Whitsun without a car?

Yes, especially if you head inland. Camping La Rivière d’Argent (Huelgoat, Monts d’Arrée) offers a free shuttle from the railway stations at Morlaix and Carhaix — unique in Brittany. From London, that is Eurostar to Paris then TGV to Morlaix, with the campsite shuttle meeting the train: roughly 5 hours door-to-door. The regional TER BreizhGo network covers most of Brittany, and the BreizhGo pass (€55 for 2 days) gives unlimited travel across the region. Several coastal campsites are cyclable from railway stations: Binic from Saint-Brieuc, Arradon from Vannes.

What events take place in Brittany during Whitsun 2026?

Four major events coincide with the Whitsun 2026 long weekend in Brittany: the Art Rock Festival in Saint-Brieuc (22–24 May, 43rd edition, 85,000 visitors, free outdoor concerts in the city), the Étonnants Voyageurs festival in Saint-Malo (23–25 May, 36th edition, 150 authors, Lebanon as guest country), the Printemps des Sonneurs in Lannion (23–24 May, traditional Breton music, free fest-noz), and the Fête de la Bretagne Gouel Breizh (14–24 May, ~200 events across the region). Sources: artrock.org, etonnants-voyageurs.com.

Sources

Research conducted on 12 May 2026. Availability and prices may change — check directly with campsites before booking.

Ready to head to Brittany for Whitsun?

Ten days out is still plenty of time to secure a pitch and put together an unforgettable long weekend on the coast or in the Breton countryside. Browse our Brittany itineraries for inspiration before you book.

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