New Hotel Openings in France 2026
From a reimagined private island on the Côte d’Azur to vineyard estates in Burgundy, design-led boutique stays in Paris, and a Provençal village retreat expanding its story, France’s newest hotel openings signal a distinct shift in how we travel. This is not about grand unveilings or headline luxury—it’s about nuance.
Across the country, a new generation of hotels is emerging: intimate city addresses, slow-living wine estates, destination spa retreats, and quietly ambitious restorations that place equal emphasis on heritage and experience. Whether it’s the cinematic energy of a Left Bank hideaway, the restorative pull of a countryside spa, or the rarefied calm of an island escape, each opening offers its own perspective on modern French living.
What connects them is intention. A move towards spaces that feel lived-in rather than staged, immersive rather than performative. The kind of places you arrive at—and immediately understand.
These are the addresses shaping France in 2026.
For the full Lux Nomade hotel round-up, see The 56 most anticipated new hotels of 2026.

Zannier Île de Bendor, Bandol
https://zannierhotels.com/ile-de-bendor/
Just off the coast of Bandol, Île de Bendor re-emerges after a five-year transformation—reimagined under Zannier Hotels as one of the Riviera’s most compelling new escapes. Once a cultural enclave, the island has been stripped back and rebuilt with intention, replacing density with space and restoring a sense of quiet autonomy. Ninety-three rooms are dispersed across the island in a way that feels organic rather than planned, integrated into the landscape rather than imposed upon it. The experience is deliberately low-key. Days unfold between eight distinct dining venues, artist ateliers, and a destination spa, while a central square quietly anchors the social rhythm. Accessed only by boat, the island retains a sense of remove that feels increasingly rare along the Côte d’Azur. This is not the Riviera at its most visible—but at its most refined.


Hôtel Crillon le Brave, Provence
https://www.crillonlebrave.com
Perched above the Provençal landscape with uninterrupted views of Mont Ventoux, Hôtel Crillon le Brave returns in April 2026 following an extensive and carefully considered refurbishment. Rather than altering its essence, the expansion builds on it—introducing three restored historic houses and ten additional rooms designed with longer, more communal stays in mind. The shift is subtle but significant. The property now lends itself as much to multi-generational gatherings and celebratory escapes as it does to quiet retreats. Interiors remain grounded in the region—textured stone, soft linens, and a palette that mirrors the surrounding hills—while new spaces introduce a more layered experience. A reimagined spa anchors the next chapter. Hammam, sauna, jacuzzi and cold baths sit alongside an adults-only pool, while programming extends beyond wellness to include cookery workshops and dedicated children’s activities. Alongside Tata Harper treatments, SeeMyCosmetics introduces a more advanced, results-driven dimension. This is Provence with depth—evolving, but entirely rooted in place.


Les Sources de Vougeot, Burgundy
https://www.les-sources-de-vougeot.com/
In the heart of Burgundy’s Côte de Nuits, Les Sources de Vougeot offers a more introspective take on luxury—one shaped by heritage, landscape and time. Set within a restored 16th-century residence once belonging to the Abbots of Cîteaux, the property embraces its history without overstatement. The design approach is restrained. Original stonework and architectural details remain visible, layered with soft, contemporary interiors that feel domestic rather than decorative. Floral textiles, muted tones and natural materials create a sense of calm that mirrors the surrounding vineyards. Life here follows a slower rhythm. Mornings begin with light filtering across the vines, afternoons stretch into tastings along the Route des Grands Crus, and evenings settle into something quieter—cellars, conversation, and a deep connection to place. It’s not about spectacle. It’s about immersion—Burgundy, experienced properly.


L’Aventure, Paris
In Paris’s 16th arrondissement, L’Aventure arrives as something more complex than a hotel. Conceived by Beaumarly, it exists somewhere between a private club, a restaurant, and a design-led stay—built around atmosphere rather than convention. Interiors by Martin Brudnizki set a cinematic tone. Art Deco influences meet theatrical detailing, with marble, velvet and low lighting shaping the energy of the ground-floor spaces. Upstairs, the mood shifts entirely. The 15 rooms, designed by Vincent Darré, lean surreal—layering hand-painted elements, vintage pieces and an unexpected sense of play. The result is immersive. Evenings begin downstairs but rarely end there, unfolding gradually across spaces designed for movement, conversation and a certain kind of Parisian spontaneity. This is not a place to simply check into. It’s somewhere to stay within.


Hôtel Salvia, Paris
Discreetly positioned on Rue Cujas in the Latin Quarter, Hôtel Salvia reflects a quieter shift in Parisian hospitality—towards intimacy, restraint and a more personal sense of luxury. Smaller in scale, the hotel feels intentionally underplayed. Its setting, moments from the Sorbonne, informs the experience: intellectual, layered, and subtly evolving. Rather than competing with the city’s grand hotels, Salvia offers something more nuanced—a place that integrates seamlessly into its surroundings. Days here are unstructured by design. Coffee spills into long walks across the Left Bank, afternoons drift between bookshops and galleries, and evenings unfold without agenda. It doesn’t attempt to redefine Paris. It simply refines how it’s lived.




