Île de Ré, France

Hôtel de Toiras

Price per night from$317.84

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR286.61), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

The quay, the secret

Setting

French Atlantic isle

On the quayside of Île de Ré’s idyllic Saint-Martin port, Hotel de Toiras is a breezy base for cycling trips to this entirely flat isle’s remote villages and beaches. Bright, antique-dotted rooms fan off the hotel’s 11th-century tower or fringe its leafy courtyard garden, but it’s all centred on George’s, the hotel’s restaurant, cocktail bar and wine cellar, stocked with the owner’s lip-smacking Château Clarisse.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

€50 to spend at George’s restaurant

Facilities

Photos Hôtel de Toiras facilities

Need to know

Rooms

18, including nine suites.

Check–Out

12 noon. Earliest check-in, 3pm.

More details

Some rates include breakfast, which features eggs, a basket of pastries, artisanal honey, organic jams and yoghurt, fresh coffee, a selection of Mariage Frères teas and more.

Also

It’s wise to have your wheels organised before arrival, and for this purpose the hotel has partnered with one of the island’s best rental shops, YooToo. Book through the hotel and get 10 per cent off your bike hire.

Hotel closed

The hotel closes each year from December to February.

At the hotel

Quayside terrace, restaurant, cocktail bar, wine cellar, courtyard garden. In rooms: free WiFi, minibar, air-conditioning.

Our favourite rooms

Didier Le Calvez and his wife Olivia have recently refreshed all guestrooms with carefully chosen, locally discovered antiques, and coupled with gentle hues such as pastel purple, marigold or royal blue and some original stone fireplaces, it all makes for a genteel atmosphere. The George Washington presidential suite (the Founding Father’s ancestors were from Île de Ré) has that added touch of refinement thanks to leather easy chairs and a reading nook in the tower, plus an enormous separate lounge overlooking the harbour.

Spa

There’s no spa here, but Hotel de Toiras shares the services of the in-house team at nearby Villa Clarisse, who specialise in face and body treatments. Treatment rooms and a sauna are being installed at Villa Clarisse, too, in time for summer 2023.

Packing tips

Don’t expect many Lycra-clad Tour de France wannabes here – the bikes most people borrow come with low crossbars and baskets, but do bring an outfit that you’ll be comfortable riding in for several hours a day. And dust off your GCSE French (or top up on Duolingo); it’ll be more than welcomed here.

Also

Hotel de Toiras is in a historic building with only some rooms at ground level and some slightly-less-than-wheelchair-friendly steps and doorways, plus there are cobbles in the vicinity of the quayside, meaning this isn’t particularly accessible.

Pet‐friendly

Pooches up to 10kg are welcome for a fee of €50 each. See more pet-friendly hotels in Île de Ré.

Children

The island is geared up for families, with beaches earmarked as child-friendly and lots of French and other European visitors using the island for their summer-holiday break – it’s a good idea to work out what the dates are for these.

Best for

Hotel de Toiras welcomes all children, with those aged 12 and over considered an adult. There’s no kids’ club or creche to speak of but babysitting and nanny services can be provided for an extra fee – the amount depending on the day and season.

Food and Drink

Photos Hôtel de Toiras food and drink

Top Table

Inside, there’s a table for two opposite the kitchen and against the huge window overlooking the quayside terrace, which is top spot for sunset. Outside, take your pick from the row of comfy cane sofas under the parasols.

Dress Code

Blend in with the locals by sporting white jeans, boat shoes and a Breton shirt.

Hotel restaurant

George’s restaurant, named after the owners’ son (who spent a recent summer honing his skills here in the kitchen), doubles as the light-filled breakfast room and, later, as a cocktail bar. Chefs can be seen busy at work behind the low partition, but your gaze will likely be drawn towards those huge windows, which provide the town’s finest vantage over the harbour. Here, too, is the terrace that puts you among the gentle hubbub of summer-evening strollers. The menu is modern but with a strong regional focus: half-baked red tuna, macaron vinaigrette and cucumber; exquisite lobster pasta; Atlantic pollock with a saffron-infused marinara sauce; locally reared lamb with spinach and roast potatoes. Leave room for the eye-wateringly alcoholic rum baba or the peach melba served Île-de-Ré style. 

Hotel bar

Take a seat on one of the high stools surrounding the Blue Note bar and its Calacatta marble counter. Here, friendly staff will mix you cocktails precisely to your taste, or pour you another glass of Didier’s Château Clarisse.

Last orders

George’s is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and will adjust its opening times for your convenience. The Blue Note bar opens 6pm–11pm.

Room service

Order anything from the menu at George’s and have it brought to your room between 7am and 10pm.

Location

Photos Hôtel de Toiras location
Address
Hôtel de Toiras
33 Avenue Victor Bouthillier
Saint-Martin-de-Ré
17410
France

Saint-Martin-de-Ré is the principal town of Île de Ré, a very flat, peaceful, 30-kilometre-long island off La Rochelle on France’s Atlantic Coast, reachable by crossing the impressive concrete curve of Île de Ré bridge.

Planes

La Rochelle Airport is just across the water, with flights arriving from major cities throughout Europe. The relatively new bridge means you can be on the island in around 15 minutes by taxi. Or, the hotel can arrange a transfer (€60 one way).

Trains

It’s roughly three hours by train from Paris Gare du Nord to La Rochelle railway station. From there, the hotel can arrange a transfer (€75 one way), or you can take a cab or bus, although beware that the bus stops at every village on the island and doesn’t actually enter the ancient walls of Saint-Martin-de-Ré, instead stopping near a car park just outside.

Automobiles

There are vehicles on the island but the preferred mode of transport by virtually everyone is bicycle (even dogs are towed in little carriages by their cyclist owners). If you do bring your own car, you can use the hotel's secure parking for €30 a day.

Other

The arrival of the bridge in 1988 effectively ended the need for a ferry to the island from La Rochelle, but you can take a boat trip to hop between other Atlantic isles and the nearby Fort Boyard, the 19th-century fortification made famous by the eponymous game show.

Worth getting out of bed for

A well-marked lattice of cycle paths through salt marshes (the un-manned salt wagons at their perimeter work on an honesty-bar basis), vineyards and pine forest link the popular (as well as less visited) beaches with the handful-or-so sleepy villages on this entirely level, 30-kilometre-long island, and every few miles you’ll be tempted to dismount at the copious little oyster shacks lining the routes. In fact, few places are more geared up for the dual pleasures of cycling and oyster-quaffing than Île de Ré. Hotel de Toiras has partnered with YooToo, an excellent rental cabin (where you’ll get 10 per cent off), from which you can choose push bike or e-bike, with or without baskets.

The hotel is set in the island’s principal town, Saint-Martin-de-Ré, the entrance into which is through the ornate Portes des Campani and whose sea-lapped 17th-century ramparts were designed by Vauban and make for a pleasant after-dinner stroll. Pay a visit to the Ernest Cognacq Museum at the far end of town for more local-history tidbits. Grab a packed lunch of warm baguettes, local cheese, lamb stew or garlicky herring salad from the town’s covered market. Or, for an eye-popping prototype of the mediaeval marché of your dreams, head to the neighbouring port town of La Flotte. We could spend an entire day at bountiful La Flotte market sampling the suckling pig, salted fish, potato salad and other treats entirely unique to this corner of France. Expect queues at the shops around its perimeter, too, such as for bread and pastries at Boulangerie Feuillette.

With your bike basket bursting with cheese and baguettes, you’re ready to pedal proudly to the beach. To the south, beyond the village of Le Bois-Plage-en-Ré, lies the lengthy, fairly popular Plage des Gollandières. To the west, through the cheerful labyrinth of salt marshes, is the quiet village of Loix and its wind-sheltered Plage du Grouin. As is often the case with beaches, you’ll be rewarded the further you go. It’s a day’s very pleasant cycling to and from the island’s north-east peninsula where you’ll find some of Île de Ré’s finest, and most desolate: Plage de Trousse-Chemise and Plage de la Patache being the most appealing – as well as Le Phare de Ré, a historic lighthouse and by far the island’s tallest viewing platform (very little else reaches higher than two storeys).

If you fancy a break from the isle’s quietude, you can always hop over the bridge for lunch or dinner in La Rochelle, whose quaint, restaurant-and-bar-lined harbour has the feel of a metropolis compared to the willful sleepiness of Île de Ré.

Local restaurants

Around the corner from Hotel de Toiras, in a courtyard opposite a cinema (which itself looks like the set in a film from la nouvelle vague), is Le Tout de Cru, which is what heaven surely looks like if you prefer your fish fishy and your crustaceans piled high on silver platters lined with seaweed. Across the quay is Bistrot du Marin, serving entrecôte and filet de boeuf with cured sausage, tuna rillettes, tomate burratina and oysters (natch). It’s loved by locals for its friendly staff and comprehensive drinks menu.

Bring the kids to get their fingers messy at Ben-Hur for simple dishes such as crevettes and grilled sardines served to you under an awning at unfussy plastic tables. Cycle out of town along the sea wall and the first oyster shack you’ll find is the sea-facing Ré Ostréa, whose easygoing atmosphere and plate after plate of crustaceous goodies might force you to re-think your plans for the day. Inland, another fine oyster layover is La Cabane du Feneau, which opens for lunch only, serves its fruits de mer in wicker baskets, and is worth booking in advance.

If you are heading to the island’s north-west, make a pit stop in the agreeable port town of Ars-en-Ré, with its fine church tower, Clocher d'Ars-en-Ré, and a cobbled square on which you’ll find Crêperie L'Océane. You won’t be disappointed by its chantilly cream and Grand Marnier masterpiece.

Reviews

Photos Hôtel de Toiras reviews
Chloe Frost-Smith

Anonymous review

By Chloe Frost-Smith, Writerly roamer

Attempting to go sans alcool as much as I can these days, I do however, make an exception for my best friend’s wedding. Held at Saint-Martin-de-Ré’s sea-fronting Bastion the evening before, the dancing continued into the early hours of this morning. ‘We hear it was a big one’, the charming Ornella chuckles as I hoarsely ring down for room service at Hôtel de Toiras, which turns out to be a most restful sanctuary to nurse the mother of all rosé hangovers. I opt for le detox menu, an assortment of energy-boosting berries, juices, yoghurt and granola which is delivered on silver trays directly to the end of my bed. With the addition of a generous basket of freshly baked cakes and pastries, my not-so-petit déjeuner looks like a scene from Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette, especially against the whimsical backdrop of birdcage wallpaper (by Nina Campbell) decorating the pistachio-green walls. 

My bedroom is named Evangeline after the heroine of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem, A Tale of Acadie, which tells how she is tragically separated from her beloved Gabriel on their wedding day – only to be reunited with her long lost love on his deathbed, many years later. In the 17th century, Canada’s Acadian population mostly owed its Poitevin-Saintongeais heritage to seafaring ancestors hailing from the Île de Ré and nearby Nouvelle-Aquitaine. As heartachingly romantic and anchored to the island as this story is, I refrain from mentioning the inspiration behind my bedroom to my newly-wed friend (matrimonial superstitions and all that). 

It turns out that our (more peaceful) Bastion takeover isn’t the first time that the English decided to descend on the French Atlantic coast – though any attempts to take up permanent residence on the Île de Ré were thwarted several centuries ago by the Maréchal de Toiras, the island’s swashbuckling governor who withstood the English siege in 1627 (and later gave his name to the hotel). Remnants of the region’s battle-torn history remain, including the 12th-century mediaeval tower which abuts my bedroom and once stood as a lookout for the port’s fortress. Today, there’s a strategically positioned ladder leaning against the rounded inner wall for you to keep watch over Saint-Martin’s picturesque harbour (though the closest you’ll spot to a pirate is Orlando Bloom – aka Will Turner – who holidays here most summers).

After a soak in the claw-foot bath tub concealed behind duck-egg-blue drapes (stitched by Parisian curtain-maker Manuel Canovas), I feel sufficiently resurrected to do battle with the day. Throwing open the shutters, I let the late morning sunshine and marina views wash over me for a few moments, with the sounds of unfurling sails and the ding-ding of bicycle bells riding on the sea breeze. Over 100 kilometres of pistes-cyclables criss-cross the island’s salt marshes, vineyards, and pine forests, putting dune-backed beaches, oyster beds and sleepy fishing villages within pedalling reach. There are several bicycle rentals just around the corner from Hôtel de Toiras, complete with attachable picnic hampers for transporting gourmet meals on wheels. The hotel’s effortlessly chic owners, Olivia and Didier Le Calvez, produce their own wine from their vineyard in Saint-Emilion – a perfect pairing with Toiras’ quayside restaurant. We ambitiously balance bottles of Château Clarisse merlot (named after the couple’s daughter) in our bicycle baskets to enjoy en plein air – not forgetting to bring the thoughtfully provided corkscrew from our room.

Download the hotel’s detailed cycling map while you’re still on the WiFi, and point your handlebars towards La Flotte, the closest of many scenic stop-offs. Here you’ll find the Abbaye des Châteliers, originally built by Cistercian monks who also dabbled in the French wine and salt trade, amongst other divinely sanctioned duties. The atmospheric ruins stand between the sea and flower-filled meadows as the island’s oldest religious site. More energetic cyclists should make the 20-kilometre trip to the ??Phare des Baleines, one of France’s tallest lighthouses, which soars above crashing waves along the north-west coast. Its cherry-red beacon can be seen for miles, and it photographs rather pleasingly in accidentally-Wes-Anderson style. Perhaps the most head-turning sight on the Île de Ré are the trouser-donning Poitou donkeys which roam the seaside fields in an array of striped, checked, and floral culottes (thought to protect them from pesky mosquitoes while working the salt marshes back in the day).

Pootling back to Saint-Martin past quaint shuttered houses, painted in a seascape-reflecting palette of blue, green and white (the colours are limited by the local council to 16 soothing shades), I dismount for a late afternoon amble. Shell-pink hollyhock climbs up the sun-stained walls of weathered buildings, and stalls selling rustic basketry, crochet cover-ups, and bags of white gold (the island’s coveted sea salt) spill onto the narrow cobblestone lanes. Aiding my dwindling blood sugar with several scoops of salted caramel ice-cream from La Martinière, I resist filling my suitcase with antique finds from the blue-fronted Barbotine and return my bicycle to its harbourfront rack.

Taking a seat on a cream outdoor banquette just metres from the water’s edge, I settle in for a leisurely dinner at George’s (named in honour of Le Calvez’s son). I am forever apologising for my shellfish allergy – especially when sojourning so close to the sea – but the attentive George’s team are quick to point out delicious alternatives to the towering platters of fruits de mer that most of my fellow diners are happily tucking into. The chuck-flap Angus beef, smothered in homemade Béarnaise sauce, promptly quashes my oyster envy, as does the velvety chocolate mousse sprinkled with flakes of local fleur de sel

Once the last of the golden light fades into the yacht-dotted horizon, I retire to the elegant Salon d’Olivia for a Pineau spritz nightcap on a high-backed wicker chair, facing a Calacatta marble fireplace and portrait of Olivia in a beautiful boater hat and ribbon-tied blouse. Clearly a woman of impeccable taste, the entrepreneur worked closely with French designer Pierre-Yves Rochon to fill the former ship merchant’s house with fabulous fabrics, antique artworks, and the sort of furniture which would look very much at home on a classic sailing boat – which, aside from the bicycle, is the best way to navigate the Charente-Maritime. Grateful though to be sleeping on dry land, I chart my current course upstairs to bed with more of the weekend ahead to spend on island time.

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Price per night from $310.52