French pharmacies have long been a must-visit for skincare lovers thanks to their thoughtful mix of high-quality and affordable products. Known for stocking dermatologist-approved staples and gentle formulas, these shops make it easy to find products that deliver results. The lightweight sunscreens, hydrating creams, and soothing thermal water sprays you’ll find at pharmacies throughout Paris and beyond have earned a loyal following over the years.
Charlotte Palermino, co-founder and CEO of Dieux, is among the many beauty experts who swear by them. “The most exciting things at a French pharmacy are lovely moisturizers at a good price, gold-standard sunscreens, and delightful body products that you cannot find in the US,” she says.
While we’ll take any excuse to visit France, you don’t actually have to buy a plane ticket to experience the magic of French pharmacies. Many of these cult-favorite beauty products are now easy to order online. Below, you’ll find some of the most sought-after French pharmacy finds, all available to purchase from the comfort of your own home. (But still feel free to book that Paris trip!)
FAQ:
Why are French pharmacies so popular?
The pharmacists at these establishments are incredibly knowledgeable, and they offer a curated selection of dermatologist-approved products with proven formulas, often at prices that feel more accessible than luxury brands.
Can I only buy these products in France?
No. While shopping in person is part of the charm, most bestsellers are now available online through retailers like Amazon.
‘My grandmother, a widow, sold her livestock in the 1940s and bought this land to start a vineyard. That’s where she made the wine,” says Pepa Fernández proudly, pointing towards a weathered building no bigger than a garden shed. We’re standing between two fields on a chalky road skirted by poppies, daisies and thistles. One field is lined with neat rows of lush vines, the other with small bush vines soon to bear monastrell grapes (the most dominant variety in these parts). In the distance, a sandy-coloured mountain range peppered with pine trees sits beneath a cloudless blue sky.
Pocket-sized Pepa is the face of Bodega Balcona, a family-run organic winery in Spain’s south-eastern province of Murcia. The vineyard lies in the picturesque Aceniche valley, in Bullas – one of Murcia’s three wine DOPs (denominaciónes de origen protegida), alongside Yecla and Jumilla. Each has its own wine route, scattered with museums and vineyards.
My girlfriend and I are in the area to explore Murcia’s food and drink scene after a tipoff from an old friend who grew up in the city (Murcia is the name of both the province and its capital). The province hosted two of Spain’s most prestigious culinary events last year: the Repsol Guide Soles gala and the Michelin Guide gala.
Salto del Usero in Bullas is a lovely spot for a cooling dip. Photograph: Antonio Lopez/Alamy
“Murcia is one of the best food cities in Spain,” a suave Granada-based gentleman in a fedora tells me on the way to the tasting room. We soon learn that its wine is pretty special, too, as we make our way through Bodega Balcona’s roster of earthy natural wines. Each glass is paired with national and regional dishes: cold cuts, local cheeses, almonds, tuna empanadas, and a Murcian favourite made by Pepa’s nephew, pastel de carne – a hearty meat and egg pie topped with flaky pastry.
After, we drive to the nearby Salto del Usero waterfall, where kids are paddling and teenagers are sunning themselves on rocks, like lizards. Following a quick dip in the chilly plunge pool, we go to meet Paco Franciso Muñoz Reales, who runs an organic farm nearby with his German wife, Heidi.
Laid-back and softly spoken, Paco is part of a local cooperative of growers, including Pepa, using ecological farming methods. He explains there was a little bit of tension with local farmers when he first started, but things have settled down. On a tour of his five-hectare estate, he shows me a seed bank tucked inside a pantry, rows of apricot, olive and lemon trees, and a tomato patch.
Outside Murcia Cathedral with a pastel de carne, a meat and egg pie that’s a specialty of the region. Photograph: Panther Media Global/Alamy
Nicknamed the garden of Europe, Murcia accounts for around 20% of Spain’s fruit and vegetable exports. This agricultural heritage stems from a vast network of fertile gardens, or huertos, that surround the city of Murcia, where baroque buildings, palm-lined riverbanks and buzzing tapas bars cluster around Plaza de las Flores. La Huerta de Murcia, as the fertile area is called, also influences local food culture, with Sundays traditionally reserved for family meals at rustic restaurants.
Each spring, the city also throws the Bando de la Huerta festival – a lively celebration of rural life where locals don traditional dress and feast on regional dishes. We arrive a few weeks later, so instead visit the rustic El Cañal Los Almillas restaurant, where we tuck intoheaped platters of beef entrecote dusted with a layer of rock salt, and a fresh tomato salad with olives and lettuce, accompanied by plates of lemon (Murcianos squeeze lemon on everything). We finish with a classic Murcian dessert of crispy, deep-fried paparajotes – battered lemon leaves served with a dollop of ice-cream.
The restaurant is named after the city’s canal system, which are part of an irrigation system dating back to Moorish times. “Think of it as the Segura River being the heart and the canals the veins that deliver the blood,” our guide, Antonio, explains.
David López, the chef at the fine-dining restaurant Local de Ensayo, tells us these ancient systems are still in use today as he shows us around his huerto. López visits his patch daily, growing everything from lettuce, beans and cucumber to strawberries and aubergines. Fruit and vegetables feature prominently in traditional Murcian cooking, in dishes such as ensalada murciana (tomato salad with tuna, olives and egg) and arroz con verduras (rice with vegetables).
“It’s a way of life for me, somewhere I can bring the children to plant things and watch them grow,” López says while trudging through the mud, checking his crops. About 20% of the produce used in his restaurant comes from his garden, the rest being supplied by an ecological farmer with a stall at Verónicas market, which sells fruit, vegetables, meat, fish and olive oil to the city.
López and his wife, Carmen, show us around the market, pointing out local delicacies like mújol (mullet), almendra marcona (almonds), langostino del Mar Menor (langoustines) and alficoz (a type of curly cucumber). We finish at Café Bar Verónicas, which to the untrained eye looks like any other neighbourhood bar: metal countertops, shelves of pickled vegetables and wine, and locals chatting loudly. However, framed newspaper reviews hint at something more.
It’s run by Samuel Ruiz and his wife, Isabel Torrecillas. The young, tattooed chef could be Spain’s Anthony Bourdain. Ruiz, who trained at the famed El Bulli, was responsible for one of Murcia’s most exciting restaurants, Kome, a tiny Japanese-style tavern. “They didn’t have social media. No website. Nothing. But people still queued down the street,” Torrecillas tells us. Ruiz decided to shut down Kome and return to his roots, opening a barra with a twist in the heart of town, she explains as a plate of caballito (little horse in Spanish) lands on the table. The popular local dish usually features deep-fried prawns, only here it’s made with fist-sized crayfish, shell and all. It’s followed by a good-sized bowl of marinera, a kind of Russian salad with anchovies, served with crisp bread and homemade mayo.
When I ask Ruiz what sauce he’s plating up, he squirts a dot on to the back of my hand. “Try it,” he grins confidently. It is a delicious homemade saffron mayonnaise with anchovy, lemon and garlic. A frozen cocktail with an umbrella appears moments later, sent from his other bar next door, Colmado San Julián.
We finish up and say our goodbyes before wandering over to López’s restaurant. As we enter, he vanishes without a word and we’re seated by a window peering into the kitchen. Dishes soon arrive at the table from his excellent tasting menu (from about £65), which champions local, seasonal ingredients. Standout plates include a wild mushroom dish packed with umami, a deep-flavoured red Calasparra rice with vegetables, and his excellent signature dessert, a cross between a flan and a crème brûlée (a favourite of the legendary Spanish food critic José Carlos Capel).
Flowers are also handed out at the Bando de la Huerta parade. Photograph: Europa Press News/Europa Press/Getty Images
The next day we drive 45 minutes out of town to Casa Borrego – a cosy eight-room gastronomic hotel with soft bucolic rooms and a burbling beck outside. For dinner, we’re treated to an elevated take on Murcian cuisine, including pani puri balls exploding with tuna tartare, and a massive pan of rich rabbit rice. Retiring to bed, we’re lulled to sleep by the sound of trickling water. With our time in Murcia nearly up, the following day we zip back to the city to hunt down one last dish: zarangollo, a simple courgette-and-egg scramble. We find it at a traditional tapas bar called Bodegón Los Toneles – all jamón legs and chalkboard menus.
We end the trip as we began with a local tipple, this time at CaféLab. Asiático is a heady blend of condensed milk, Licor 43, cognac and spices – said to hail from Cartagena. Like Murcia’s cuisine, its richness lies in the subtle layers – each one revealing something original, unexpected and distinctly its own.
Abercrombie & Kent’s expedition cruising division is partnering with its sister company, Crystal, to deliver A&K cultural sailings on Crystal ships.
Starting with a pilot cruise in August 2026, the partnership will see Crystal ships host A&K’s cultural cruises, featuring A&K’s expedition team and shore experiences.
Parent company A&K Travel Group said the collaboration is a “natural evolution of a vision to create the ultimate luxury travel ecosystem, combining A&K’s six decades of exploration with Crystal’s unparalleled onboard service excellence.” A&K Travel Group acquired the Crystal brand out of bankruptcy in 2022, remodeled the ships and relaunched the luxury line in 2023.
The inaugural A&K-Crystal voyage in August 2026 will be an Italy, Greece and Balkans 12-day sailing from Rome to Venice on the Crystal Serenity. The sailing will accommodate only 50 guests as part of the pilot program. The Serenity normally accommodates up to 740 passengers.
The voyage, from Aug. 28 to Sept. 8, 2026, starts at $22,200 per person. Reservations are open.
In 2027, A&K will offer six more cultural voyages, including Hong Kong to Yokohama, Lisbon to Portsmouth, a variety of Mediterranean routes and a Canadian itinerary, with capacity expanding to accommodate up to 125 guests per voyage.
A&K’s expedition team will accompany guests throughout the cruise (at a rate of one guide per 18 guests). There will be a choice of included shore excursions organized by A&K’s global network of local specialists, daily recap sessions with canapes and drinks, and expert-led presentations.
The first A&K-Crystal sailing will feature a visit to the Bay of Kotor in Montenegro. Photo Credit: Abercrombie & Kent
Shore excursions for the inaugural cruise include a truffle hunt on a Sicilian farmstead, a pasta-making class in Bologna, hiking to the summit of Corfu’s Mount Pantokrator, and a Blue Cave adventure in the Bay of Kotor, Montenegro.
Guests will have VIP access to the treasures of Vatican City, Rome’s Church of Saint Lorenzo and Ravenna’s Domus of the Stone Carpets. There will be a lavish welcome dinner in Rome and a sendoff in Ravenna that A&K says will be “unforgettable.”
During the cruise, guests will stay in Crystal’s Sapphire Veranda Suites — or for solo travelers, in Aquamarine Veranda Suites with no single supplement. There will be access to up to eight restaurants and bars.
Each cultural voyage will begin with two nights at a luxury hotel. Pre- and post-cruise land extensions will be available.
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