Antibes sits on France’s famous Côte d'Azur on the Mediterranean Sea,
near to the Italian border. It is twenty kilometres from Nice and twelve
kilometres from Cannes.
Due to its location, Antibes
basks in a typical Mediterranean climate of long hot summers and mild winters.
The peak summer season in Antibes is an uncomfortable affair. In July
and August the weather is idyllic with blissful, bearable highs of 27ºC, minimal rainfall
and around twelve hours of sunshine a day. As such, tourists from all over
Europe and beyond flock to this little town to enjoy its beautiful parks and manmade
beaches, fascinating museums and yachting harbours; prices soar and crowds
thicken. June and September see fewer tourists, though still very many, and the
temperatures are still delightful. Daytimes see temperatures around the early
20s while night times cool off to around 16ºC. The sun shines for around nine
hours a day, rain is rare and the sea is pleasant at around 20ºC.
It is clear why it is the choice of so many to visit Antibes in the summer
months, but it is perhaps preferable to visit in the months of late spring and early
autumn when the crowds and prices are more amenable. However, this could mean
an entirely different type of holiday. While visitors at this time of year will
be blessed with some beach weather, it is cooler; museum visiting and walking
might be more suitable activities to the weather, especially in early spring
and late autumn. May and October can receive temperatures in the low 20s during
the day, but nights can get quite chilly, dropping down to around 13ºC. May
sees more sunshine than October and it is marginally less likely to rain, but
in October the sea temperature is still warm from the summer and still
swim-able at 19ºC. April and November receive average highs of 17ºC with chilly
nights under 10ºC.
Winter time sees average highs around 13ºC which many will
agree is still quite pleasant. However, it can often be cooler and the nights
see average lows around 4ºC. Sunshine can be expected for a respectable four or
five hours each day and the beaches are usually pleasant, if the sea too cold
at 12ºC for swimming. Rain is most likely from October till April, but is does
not fall heavily or for prolonged periods. Even in the months of highest
precipitation only nine days on average per month will see any rain. Antibes still sees
visitors at this time of year as it is only sunbathing and swimming that are
ruled out by the weather, which is still vastly more pleasant than the English
winter. The scenery and cultural attractions remain.
Antibes owes its climate to
its location between the Mediterranean Sea and the Alps.
The Alps serves as protection, blocking winds carrying bad weather, and the Mediterranean moderates the temperature on the coast with
breezes in the summer and warm currents in the winter. Antibes is sometimes subject to the cold
Mistral wind in the winter.
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