Bordeaux is six hours from Paris by private vehicle — a journey south through the Loire Valley, past Poitiers and Angoulême, arriving in the Gironde with time enough for an evening at a premier cru table before the vineyard visits begin the following morning. The wine circuit that follows — the Médoc châteaux, Saint-Émilion, Pomerol, and the négociant houses of the Chartrons — is one of the great private travel programmes available to a collector, and one that rewards a chauffeur who understands the rhythms of the Bordelais rather than simply following the GPS.
Paris to Bordeaux — the drive south
The Paris–Bordeaux route follows the A10 Autoroute de l'Aquitaine for 580 kilometres, passing Orléans, Tours, Poitiers, and Angoulême before arriving at the Bordeaux périphérique. Standard transit time is five hours thirty minutes to six hours depending on traffic at the Poitiers bypass and the approach to Bordeaux.
For clients who prefer the TGV for the Paris–Bordeaux segment, the journey takes two hours fifteen minutes from Paris Montparnasse to Bordeaux Saint-Jean, and FFGR provides a vehicle and driver at Bordeaux Saint-Jean for the duration of the Bordeaux programme — typically three to four days. This is the preferred arrangement for the en primeur week in April, when the Paris–Bordeaux train carries a significant portion of the world's wine press and the rail option is both faster and less stressful than the A10 during that specific week.
The Médoc circuit — Left Bank châteaux access
The Route des Châteaux du Médoc runs north from Bordeaux through Margaux, Saint-Julien, Pauillac, and Saint-Estèphe — the four principal appellations of the Left Bank. The premiers crus classés — Lafite-Rothschild, Mouton-Rothschild, Latour, Margaux, Haut-Brion — do not receive casual visitors. Access to the chais and the private tasting rooms at these estates requires advance booking through the château's negociant or directly with the export director.
For collectors with existing relationships at these estates, FFGR drivers are experienced with the specific access protocols at each property — the entry gate at Lafite is different from the visitor reception at Mouton, which operates a dedicated wine museum that manages its own appointment bookings. We provide the vehicle; our clients provide the appointment. The combination is what makes the day work.
Saint-Émilion and Pomerol — the Right Bank
Saint-Émilion is forty-five minutes east of Bordeaux city. The village itself — a UNESCO World Heritage site — has a pedestrian centre that limits vehicle access; FFGR drivers park at the designated chauffeur hold on the Route de Libourne and walk with the client or arrange to meet at specific locations within the village on request. Pétrus and the other grand Pomerol estates are five minutes north of Saint-Émilion, on flat limestone plateau accessible by road without difficulty.
For clients purchasing en primeur in Saint-Émilion, the négociant visits are typically in the village on the Place du Marché or the surrounding streets. Several of the premier crus classés of Saint-Émilion (Cheval Blanc, Ausone, Angélus) have dedicated reception facilities outside the village centre that allow direct vehicle access.
En primeur week — the April wine futures programme
Bordeaux en primeur — the annual tasting week in April when the négociant houses and châteaux open their cellars to the wine trade and press for barrel tastings of the previous vintage — is the most concentrated week in the Bordeaux wine calendar. Between two hundred and three hundred châteaux participate; serious buyers and writers taste eighty to one hundred wines in two to three days.
For en primeur clients, FFGR provides a full programme vehicle: Bordeaux Saint-Jean pickup on the Monday morning, full four-day programme, return to the TGV on Friday evening. The driver manages the daily schedule — typically three to four châteaux per day with négociant lunches, some in the Médoc, some on the Right Bank — and maintains the specific vehicle access requirements for each property. We also carry the client's sampling kit and cellar notes between properties.
The négociant houses — Place de Bordeaux protocol
The Place de Bordeaux — the négociant trading system through which most Bordeaux wine is allocated — operates from the Chartrons quarter on the left bank of the Garonne. The major négociant houses (CVBG, Millésima, Ginestet, Duclot, Joanne) have offices in the Chartrons or the nearby Bacalan district. Business meetings with négociants — whether for allocation discussions, purchase agreements, or cellar visits — are a standard component of any serious Bordeaux trip.
FFGR drivers know the Chartrons quarter and the parking restrictions along the Quai des Chartrons. For meetings at Duclot or Joanne, the vehicle accesses via the Rue du Dehez; for CVBG on the Quai des Chartrons, the vehicle positions on the Quai itself during business hours.
How to book a Bordeaux wine tour with FFGR Paris
Bordeaux wine tour programmes should be confirmed at least one week in advance for standard visits, and six weeks in advance for en primeur week (April). En primeur vehicle availability is extremely limited — we recommend confirmation by February for an April programme.
Contact us at reservation@ffgrparis.com or WhatsApp +33 7 43 46 14 91 with: programme dates, whether you require Paris–Bordeaux road transfer or Bordeaux-only chauffeur, châteaux and négociant appointments if known, hotel in Bordeaux, and the number of passengers. We provide a full programme with driving distances, appointment timing windows, and restaurant recommendations for each evening.
Reservierung
A Bordeaux wine programme executed correctly is one of the great private travel experiences available in France. FFGR Paris provides the ground logistics — the vehicle, the driver who knows the Médoc, the château access protocols, and the daily programme that makes the most of each vineyard appointment. Contact us: reservation@ffgrparis.com · WhatsApp +33 7 43 46 14 91.
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