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Cinéma de la Plage at Cannes 2026 is completely free: no badge, no registration, no ticket required. 11 screenings run from 13 to 23 May at 9:30 pm on Plage Macé (renamed Plage Brigitte Bardot on 18 May), with a giant 24 × 6 m screen and around 800 sun loungers. Arrive 1–2 hours early on evenings with guests, 45 minutes is enough on other nights. Exceptional 2026 line-up: a world premiere, two restored 1966 Palmes d’Or, and Ken Loach and Claude Lelouch appearing in person.

You don’t need a press badge to experience the Cannes Film Festival. From 12 to 23 May 2026, the 79th edition offers several entry points open to the general public — some of them completely free. Between the Cinéma de la Plage on the Croisette, the Cinéum in La Bocca, and parallel sections like the Directors’ Fortnight and Critics’ Week, there are more options than you might think. This guide cuts through what’s genuinely accessible, what’s sold out for 2026, and how to plan your trip from the UK.

1. Cinéma de la Plage: 11 free screenings under the stars

Open-air cinema screening on Cannes beach, sun loungers facing a giant screen at night
Photo by Stephen McFadden on Unsplash

Plage Macé / Plage Brigitte Bardot — La Croisette

Free 13–23 May 2026 ~15°C in the evening 9:30 pm every evening

Launched in 2001, the Cinéma de la Plage is the only section of the Festival’s Official Selection open to the general public without accreditation. Screenings take place on Plage Macé, opposite the Majestic Hotel, on a 24 × 6 metre screen delivering the same technical quality as the Grand Théâtre Lumière. According to the Festival’s official press release, 11 screenings are scheduled from 13 to 23 May 2026, all starting at 9:30 pm.

On 18 May, a particularly special moment awaits: Mayor David Lisnard will officially rename Plage Macé the Plage Brigitte Bardot, with the unveiling of a commemorative plaque during the screening of Louis Malle’s Viva Maria!. Bardot, now 91, has welcomed the initiative from Saint-Tropez. The beach will also become dog-friendly from autumn 2026.

Full 2026 programme

DateFilmDirectorHighlight
Wed 13 MayTop GunTony Scott, 198640th anniversary
Thu 14 MayShinkansen DaibakuhaJunya Sato, 19754K restoration
Fri 15 MayLes Caprices de l’enfant roiMichel Leclerc, 2026World premiere
Sat 16 MayA Man and a WomanClaude Lelouch, 1965Palme d’Or 1966, 4K — Lelouch in person
Sun 17 MayAll the President’s MenAlan J. Pakula, 19768K digitisation
Mon 18 MayViva Maria!Louis Malle, 1965Brigitte Bardot beach renaming ceremony
Tue 19 MayLand and FreedomKen Loach, 19954K restoration — Ken Loach in person
Wed 20 MayCría CuervosCarlos Saura, 19764K restoration — Jeannette live performance
Thu 21 MaySignore & SignoriPietro Germi, 1966Palme d’Or 1966
Fri 22 MayJe Hais les ActeursGérard Krawczyk, 19862K restoration
Sat 23 MayMon OncleJacques Tati, 19584K restoration — team in attendance

Worth noting: on 21 May, the programme pays tribute to the joint Palme d’Or 1966 with Signore & Signori by Pietro Germi — a thematic evening continuing the celebration of A Man and a Woman on 16 May. Both films share the same 1966 Palme d’Or. Before each screening, the duo TwinSelecter (rock, soul, funk, jazz, disco) warm up the crowd.

Key highlights

  • Completely free access — no ticket, no registration, just turn up on the beach
  • Giant 24 × 6 m screen, same technical quality as the Grand Théâtre Lumière
  • World premiere on 15 May (Les Caprices de l’enfant roi, cast expected)
  • Ken Loach and Claude Lelouch appearing in person on 19 and 16 May
  • Blue blankets lent to audience — handy as May evenings on the Riviera can drop to ~15°C
Pixidia tip: Evenings with celebrity guests — especially 15, 16 and 19 May — attract large crowds. Arrive 1.5 to 2 hours before 9:30 pm to secure a sun lounger. On quieter evenings, 45 minutes to an hour is usually enough. If all loungers are taken, the screening is still visible from the Croisette standing behind the barriers — not perfect, but the atmosphere is magical nonetheless.

2. The Cinéum: the festival multiplex for accredited cinephiles

Full cinema auditorium during a Directors' Fortnight screening at the Cannes Film Festival
Photo by Samuel Regan-Asante on Unsplash

Cinéum — 230 avenue Francis Tonner, La Bocca

Accreditation required 12–23 May 2026 Air-conditioned 12 screens, 2,450 seats

The Cinéum (230 avenue Francis Tonner, 06150 Cannes — La Bocca district) is the largest multiplex on the French Riviera, opened in July 2021. Designed by architect Rudy Ricciotti (MuCEM, Marseille) across 9,400 m², it houses the first IMAX screen in Cannes. According to cineum.fr, the complex features 12 screens including an IMAX (513 seats), a ScreenX (270°) and a Salle Aurore (Premium Large Format). During the Festival, 4 screens are dedicated to official screenings — primarily for non-professional accredited visitors.

How to get access during the Festival

  • Cannes Cinéphiles accreditation (€24 — registrations closed for 2026, reopening February 2027)
  • « 3 Days in Cannes » (18–28 year-olds): Official Selection access — registrations closed for 2026
  • Free transport via QR Code on PALM BUS line A (stop « Saint Cassien ») every 6 minutes
  • From the train station: depart from platform « i », ~25 minutes
Cannes Cinéphiles 2026 — registrations closed: the cinephile accreditation (€24 incl. VAT) was open from 2 February to 15 April 2026. It is too late for 2026. Late registrations (€224 incl. VAT) are also closed. Registration for 2027 will open in February 2027. In the meantime, the other options in this guide remain fully accessible.

3. Watching films at the Festival without accreditation

Queue of filmgoers outside a cinema at a film festival
Photo by Felipe Bustillo on Unsplash

Three free or affordable alternatives

€0 to €8 13–22 May 2026 Indoor screenings No accreditation needed

The Cannes Film Festival isn’t just about professional badges. Three parallel sections offer direct public access, with films that are often every bit as ambitious as those in the Official Competition.

Critics’ Week — free (public account)

The 65th Critics’ Week (13–21 May 2026, Espace Miramar) is the only section where you can watch films without any accreditation whatsoever. Create a « GRAND PUBLIC » account on ticketonline.festival-cannes.com, reserve up to 2 free tickets per account (4 days in advance), and arrive 40 minutes before the screening. The 2026 jury is presided over by Payal Kapadia (Grand Prix Cannes 2024), and the opening film In Waves by Phuong Mai Nguyen is the first animated film to open the section in its history. According to semainedelacritique.com, tickets go fast — book as soon as reservations open.

Directors’ Fortnight — €8/film at the box office

The Fortnight (Théâtre Croisette, rue Amouretti at the JW Marriott) offers a standard box office with no accreditation required: €8 per ticket, €5 concession, or a book of 6 tickets for €40. The box office is open 9 am–6 pm from 11 to 22 May. The 2026 selection includes 19 feature films, including 94-year-old Alain Cavalier with the final chapter of his filmed diary, and Quentin Dupieux’s Le Vertige as closing film. Source: quinzaine-cineastes.fr.

ACID — free with filmmaker Q&As

The ACID (Association for Independent Cinema, 34th edition) runs from 13 to 22 May 2026 at 8 rue du Bétaguier. The 9 selected films — including 6 debut features — screen for free, with each showing followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers. A particularly rich format for discovering independent cinema outside the usual circuits. Source: lacid.org.

Key highlights

  • Critics’ Week: free online account, €0 entry, Espace Miramar
  • Directors’ Fortnight: standard box office at €8, no prior registration needed
  • ACID: free entry + direct Q&As with directors — a genuinely unique format
Pixidia tip: If you’re in Cannes for a few days, combine all three. Cinéma de la Plage in the evening, Directors’ Fortnight in the afternoon, ACID in the morning — you can watch 3 to 4 films a day for no more than €8–16. For more on making the most of the Festival without a professional badge, read our complete guide to the Festival without a badge.
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4. Getting to Cannes: transport from the UK and getting around

Cannes seafront with palm trees lining the road along the beach, French Riviera, France
Photo by Jon Amdall on Unsplash

Getting to Cannes from London and getting around during the Festival

~€55–70/day on site 12–23 May 2026 17–21°C during the day ~14 hours of sunshine/day

By plane from London: the quickest option. Flights from London Heathrow or Gatwick to Nice Côte d’Azur (NCE) take around 2 hours. British Airways operates 39 non-stop flights per week from Heathrow; easyJet runs frequent services from Gatwick and Luton. Prices start from around £83 return from Gatwick during the festival period. From Nice Airport, a train or bus to Cannes takes 30–40 minutes. Source: Expedia UK.

By train via Eurostar: a scenic but longer alternative. Take the Eurostar from London St Pancras to Paris (approx. 2h15), then transfer across Paris to Gare de Lyon and board a TGV to Cannes (approx. 5h30). Budget around £130–200 return on the Eurostar + TGV combination. The overnight option — Eurostar to Paris, then a couchette train to the Riviera — is worth considering for a comfortable arrival. Source: The Man in Seat 61.

On the ground in Nice → Cannes: French rail (TGV/TER) runs Nice to Cannes in approximately 30 minutes for around €8, with trains every 30 minutes from Nice Airport station. Antibes and Juan-les-Pins, just 15 minutes from Cannes by train, are good bets for accommodation — typically 2–3× cheaper during festival week.

Local transport in Cannes: the PALM BUS network runs enhanced services from 12 to 23 May. A single ticket costs €1.80; a day pass is €4.60; a 3-day pass is €9.20. The Croisette is closed to private cars from 2 pm. Avoid driving: parking costs €50–80/day and car parks fill by 9 am. Source: palmdeplacements.fr.

Weather in mid-May: temperatures between 17 and 21°C during the day, around 15°C in the evening. Bring a light layer (thin jumper or jacket) for the Cinéma de la Plage. Blue blankets are lent on site. Note that £1 currently buys approximately €1.16–1.18, so festival prices in euros are relatively kind on a British budget.

Key highlights

  • Fly from Gatwick/Heathrow to Nice (~£83 return, ~2h) or take Eurostar + TGV from St Pancras (from £51 one-way)
  • PALM BUS 3-day pass for €9.20 — ideal if attending multiple screenings and the Cinéum
  • Stay in Antibes, Nice or Mandelieu — up to 3× cheaper than Cannes during the festival
Pixidia tip: Typical budget for a day at the festival without a badge: return train Nice ↔ Cannes (~€16) + PALM BUS (~€4.60) + lunch on rue d’Antibes (~€15) + Directors’ Fortnight (~€8) + Cinéma de la Plage (€0) = roughly €45–55 (approximately £38–47). For accommodation, see our complete guide to where to stay during the Cannes Film Festival 2026.

Plan your Cannes Film Festival 2026 trip

These articles from the Cannes 2026 cluster complement this guide for a complete experience:

Enjoying the Festival without a badge Where to stay during the Festival 2026 Official Selection films and travel inspiration

Practical information for your Cannes trip

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Frequently asked questions

Is Cinéma de la Plage at Cannes 2026 really free?

Yes, completely free: no ticket, no registration, no accreditation required. Simply arrive at Plage Macé (Plage Brigitte Bardot from 18 May onwards) before 9:30 pm. Access is limited to around 800 sun loungers; if those are taken, the screening remains visible from the Croisette standing behind the barriers. Source: festival-cannes.com.

What time should I arrive for Cinéma de la Plage?

For evenings with expected guests — notably 15 May (world premiere), 16 May (Claude Lelouch) and 19 May (Ken Loach) — arrive 1.5 to 2 hours before the 9:30 pm start. For other screenings, 45 minutes to an hour is generally sufficient. Reviews from previous years on Tripadvisor and France Bleu confirm that most « ordinary » evenings allow you to find a sun lounger without too long a wait.

Can I still register for Cannes Cinéphiles 2026?

No, Cannes Cinéphiles 2026 registrations closed on 15 April 2026. The standard accreditation (€24 incl. VAT) is no longer available, and the late registration option (€224 incl. VAT) has also closed. The next registration window will open in February 2027. In the meantime, the free options in this guide — Cinéma de la Plage, Critics’ Week, ACID — remain fully accessible without accreditation. Source: cannes-cinema.com.

How do I get to the Cinéum from Cannes town centre?

From the train station, take PALM BUS Palm Express line A (platform « i ») to the stop « Saint Cassien » — approximately 25 minutes, with a bus every 6 minutes during the festival. Line 1 also serves stops « Coubertin » and « Palais des Victoires ». For accredited Cinéphiles, a downloadable QR Code via « Mon Cannes » gives free access to the entire PALM BUS network from 12 to 23 May. Source: palmdeplacements.fr.

What is the weather like in Cannes in May during the Festival?

In mid-May, Cannes enjoys a pleasant Mediterranean climate: 17 to 21°C during the day, around 15°C in the evening. Expect around 14 hours of sunshine per day and an average of only 3 rainy days in May. For outdoor screenings at Cinéma de la Plage, pack a light jumper or thin jacket — blue blankets are lent on site, but they don’t always cut it on the chillier evenings.

Is the Directors’ Fortnight open to the public without accreditation?

Yes, the Directors’ Fortnight 2026 is one of the most accessible sections without accreditation: standard box office at €8 per entry (€5 concession, book of 6 tickets for €40). The box office is in front of the Théâtre Croisette (JW Marriott, rue Amouretti), open 9 am–6 pm from 11 to 22 May. Online reservations open 4 days before each screening at 10 am (before 13 May) or 8 am (from 13 May onwards). Source: quinzaine-cineastes.fr.

Sources

Research conducted on 9 May 2026. Prices and programmes may change — consult official sources before travelling.

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