Best Glamping Spots Near Saint-Tropez for a Night Under the Stars

Photo by  Marian Baciu

6 min read · Saint-Tropez, France · unique glamping spots ·

Best Glamping Spots Near Saint-Tropez for a Night Under the Stars

AM

Words by

Antoine Martin

Share

Sleeping Beneath the Stars in Saint-Tropez Country

The first time I pitched a tent in the pines above the Gulf of Saint-Tropez, I understood something that no hotel concierge could ever explain. The air here smells of resin and salt at the same time, and the cicadas change their pitch around 11 p.m., just before the whole landscape goes quiet. If you are searching for the best glamping spots near Saint-Tropez, you are not looking for roughing it. You are looking for something that sits somewhere between the polished Riviera life of Pampelonne Beach and the raw scrubland that grows on the hills behind Gassin. I have spent several seasons sleeping in domes, treehouses, and safari tents scattered across this peninsula, and the places below are the ones I keep returning to, each for a different reason. What they share is a willingness to let you wake up with dew on your canvas and the smell of coffee drifting in from a reception area that, more often than not, treats you like a neighbor rather than a booking reference.


Domaine de La Romance: The Dome Experience in La Môle

Domaine de La Romance

About twenty-five kilometers northwest of Saint-Tropez center, up the road toward La Môle, there is a property that used to be a lavender farm before the current owners converted it into a small collection of dome tent Saint-Tropez visitors now book months in advance. I stayed in dome number three on a Tuesday in late September, and the rest of the property was nearly empty, which meant the owners, a couple originally from Lyon, sat with me over a bottle of Côtes de Provence rouge and told me the history of the land. Each dome is anchored on a wooden platform and fitted with a real mattress, linen sheets, and a small wood-burning stove. The bathroom is shared but immaculate, housed in a separate stone building that the owners keep at a comfortable temperature even in October. The price during shoulder season is around 140 euros per night, rising to 220 euros in July and August, which puts it in the mid-range for luxury camping Saint-Tropez options.

The insider detail most tourists miss is the orchard at the back of the property. There are fig trees and old olive trees that the owners let guests pick from freely. I ate more figs per minute than I thought physically possible one afternoon. The only real drawback is that the road up to La Môle is narrow and unlit after dark, so if you drive back late from dinner in Saint-Tropez, you need sharp eyes and a low speed. This property connects to the broader character of the region because it represents what many Provençal farmers have done in the last decade, shifting from agriculture to hospitality while keeping the land productive.


The Treehouse Stay Above Gassin

Résidence les Crottes

Gassin sits on a hill about five kilometers east of Saint-Tropez, and from the Résidence les Crottes, you can see the entire gulf laid out below you like a painted backdrop. They have a treehouse stay Saint-Tropez locals know about but rarely see advertised internationally. The structure is built into the canopy of old cork oak trees, reached by a wooden staircase with about thirty steps. Inside, there is a queen bed, a small kitchenette, and a balcony that faces west, which means you catch the sunset over Cap Camarat without leaving your bed. I spent two nights here in June, and the temperature inside stayed remarkably cool during the day because the oak canopy provides genuine shade rather than the thin shade of a parasol.

The night rate is around 160 euros, which includes a continental breakfast delivered in a wicker basket each morning. What most visitors do not know is that there is a small natural swimming hole about a five-minute walk downhill through the maquis, fed by a spring that runs even in late summer. The owners pointed it out to me on a hand-drawn map the first morning, and I used it every day to cool off before heading down to Pampelonne. The treehouse has no Wi-Fi, which initially annoyed me but ended up being one of the best parts of the stay. This place ties into Saint-Tropez history because Gassin itself is one of the oldest perched villages in Provence, and the cork oak forests surrounding it have been harvested commercially for centuries. Sleeping in one of those trees feels like temporarily joining a landscape that long preceded the yachts in the harbor.


Camping Clair de Lune: Safari Tents in Grimaud

Camping Clair de Lune

In Grimaud, a medieval village about three kilometers inland from the gulf, Camping Clair de Lune offers a set of safari tents that are larger than you might expect. Each tent sleeps four and is furnished with actual furniture, not camping gear. I visited in early May, outside the summer rush, and the camping was quiet enough that the only sound at dawn was a rooster from a nearby farm. The communal pool opens at 9 a.m., and if you are there first, it feels like your own private basin. Rates start around 110 euros per night for a tent that sleeps two, climbing to about 190 euros in high season. The tents are elevated on wooden decks, and the bathrooms are just a short walk away in a central block.

The detail I appreciated most was the on-site bread delivery. Every morning, a local boulanger drops off croissants and pain au chocolat at reception, and you can place your order the night before. The only real inconvenience is the walk down to the beach, which takes about twenty-five minutes on foot along a road with no sidewalk, so having a car or bicycle is essentially mandatory. Grimaud itself is worth a long afternoon on its own, with the ruins of a castle at the top and narrow streets full of ceramic shops. This is the oldest part of the Saint-Tropez hinterland, and the camping taps into that legacy by being exactly the kind of modest, well-run operation that French families have been using for generations.


Le Camp: Luxury Bivouacs at Ramatuelle

Le Camp

Head south from Pampelonne, past the turnoff for Tahiti Beach, and you eventually reach Ramatuelle, a village that has always been more reserved than its famous beach neighbor. Le Camp sits on about thirty hectares of private park

Share this guide

Enjoyed this guide? Support the work

Filed under: best glamping spots near Saint-Tropez

More from this city

More from Saint-Tropez

Top Sports Bars in Saint-Tropez to Watch the Match With the Crowd

Up next

Top Sports Bars in Saint-Tropez to Watch the Match With the Crowd

arrow_forward