Provençal and night markets in the Gulf of Saint-Tropez

Markets are the gulf s most regular events. They do not need a large programme, but they say a lot about a town: the morning hour, the square, seasonal produce and people crossing paths before the heat. In summer, night markets move that habit into the evening and follow village life after the beach.

Market stalls being set up on Place des Lices in Saint-Tropez

The regular thread of markets

The Saint-Tropez market is held on Place des Lices on Tuesday and Saturday mornings. The square is famous, but the event remains a village market first: fruit, vegetables, flowers, regional produce, clothing, everyday objects and quick exchanges around the stalls. Plane trees, cafés and the square give the market its frame, especially outside the busiest hours.

Other regular markets are held in Cogolin, La Garde-Freinet, Le Plan-de-la-Tour and Rayol-Canadel-sur-Mer, with periods that vary by town. Some run all year, others are seasonal. This variety keeps the gulf from being reduced to Saint-Tropez alone: markets also reveal inland villages and quieter communes.

Markets and flea markets in Cogolin

In Cogolin, four weekly appointments give a useful frame for planning a morning market visit or a search through second-hand stalls.

  • Wednesday Provençal market
    Every Wednesday morning, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., on Place Victor-Hugo and at the boulodrome, with more than 100 stalls selling local produce, textiles, crafts and Provençal specialities.
  • Saturday Provençal market
    Every Saturday morning, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., in the centre of Cogolin, with around 50 vendors. The exact location may change during works or local events.
  • Thursday morning flea market
    From 6 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., at the Marines de Cogolin beach car park. Booking is required for sellers. Contact: 06 08 10 94 73.
  • Sunday morning flea market
    From 6 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Jas des Robert, chemin de Négresse. Contact: 06 67 71 74 27.

These appointments are announced all year round. Times should still be checked before setting out, especially on public holidays, in bad weather or when local organisation changes.

Seasonal night markets

When summer settles in, the outing shifts towards evening. Night markets often add craft stalls, small food stands and a slow walk after the beach. They do not replace morning markets, which are more food-focused and practical, but they offer another reading of the area: lower light, pedestrian movement, families returning from the shore and terraces still open.

A simple event shaped by context

A good market visit rarely depends on one address only. Check the exact day, closing time, parking, season and weather. In peak summer, arriving early reduces access problems. In winter or spring, the same market may be shorter, more local and easier to read.

Why start there

To understand a town in the gulf, a market often says more than a long list of sights. It shows habits, accents, produce, movement and the real place of the old centre. It is a modest but solid entry point before moving on to traditional festivals, regattas or summer events.