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D Day Tour of the Normandy Beaches

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I wasn’t sure about a guided D Day tour of the Normandy Beaches because my obsession with the history of the Second World War means I envisioned exploring Normandy on my own.

I wanted to wander without a timeline through the area that I had researched, read about, and obsessively watched on Band of Brothers (like 300 times)! Franky, I was cocky enough to believe that I knew it all. (Ha!)

Before I left for France, though, a friend insisted that I take a guided D Day tour of Normandy. I listened, and I’m so glad that I did!

Let’s dive in!

What You Should See on a D Day Tour of Normandy

There are a LOT of D Day tours out there, so it can be hard to narrow down the options.

Whether you choose a self-guided tour or a guided tour of the Normandy Beaches and beyond, make sure that you see, at a minimum, the following sites:

Caen Memorial Museum: D Day Exhibits

You’ll want to start your tour at the Caen Memorial Museum and spend at least half of a day. Many organized tours will include the D Day exhibits at the museum, but I really enjoyed wandering this on my own and recommend that you do the same.

In order to see the Caen Memorial Museum outside of the tour, I took a train from Paris to Caen and joined my guided tour there at the museum after designing my own D Day tour of the exhibits. (This just means I wandered freely for hours!) I actually went back to the museum after the tour as well!

Mind the opening hours on holidays as they can be restrictive. But most days the museum is open from 9 am to 7 pm.

It costs about 20 euros for a full-priced ticket to the Caen Memorial Museum (if you go outside of an organized D Day tour.)

The Pointe du Hoc Must Be a Part of Your D Day tour

Taking the high ground is an enduring idiom for a damned good reason. That becomes very clear at Pointe du Hoc on your D Day tour of Normandy and its beaches.

Pointe du Hoc on the d day beaches

“WWII Buff” I claim to be, but I had no idea that the 2nd Ranger Battalion scaled a 100-foot cliff at Pointe Du Hoc to disable the German artillery that was firing on the landings at Omaha and Utah beach.

Standing at the top of those 100-foot cliffs, the highest point between the Utah and Omaha beaches, one cannot physically imagine climbing them at all, let alone against fierce resistance. The 2nd Ranger Battalion started climbing with more than 220 men.

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Two days later, the damaging German guns were disabled and the highway and German supply lane south of Pointe Du Hoc was cut. But just 90 men of the 2nd Ranger Battalion were left when their relief arrived.

The ground near Pointe Du Hoc – even to this day – is pockmarked with the evidence of a hailstorm of Allied bombs on this high ground.

Pointe du Hoc on a d day tour of normandy
This ground was level before the Allied bombs forever changed the landscape

From this clifftop vantage point, it’s impossible not to notice that this view is from the German perspective. Exploring the German fortifications with its barbed wire still intact and the mazes of haphazardly built concrete thruways is surreal.

Fortifications 3
German Fortifications

The D Day Beaches

Of course, you’ll want to see the beaches of Normandy on your D Day tour.

Omaha Beach and the other Normandy Beaches must be part of any D Day Tour
The beaches of Normandy quiet and peaceful on a December afternoon

It is difficult to explain the powerful emotions of standing on that quiet sand and attempting to picture the peaceful waters as they were on D Day. When these same peaceful waters were filled with the unprecedented naval power of the Allied Forces and the blood of those who never made it ashore.

Or to comprehend the courage it must have taken to storm that beach with its fortified hills and to withstand the Hellfire from above.

The guided portion of my D Day tour had only Omaha Beach on the itinerary, but we had Canadians in our group who requested to see Juno Beach.

juno beach on a d day tour

I felt lucky to honor the Canadian lives given that day as well as the American lives (and other Allied soldiers).

If you do take a guided tour, ask to see more than one beach and consider visiting a D Day beach that your countrymen did not land on. It helps to understand the immensity of the action on that day.

The American Military Cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer

The French Government gave the United States a good chunk of high ground overlooking Omaha Beach for the creation of the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial. As an American, it was important for me to see this cemetery.

American cemetery on a D Day tour

Here you can walk between the meticulously aligned rows of crosses and read the names of those who stormed the beaches, scaled the walls, or jumped from planes into enemy territory on the “Day of Days”. It is impossible not to notice that the unprecedented air, land, and sea efforts of D-Day meant the ultimate sacrifice from every corner of America.

crosses
Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial

The artificial port at Arromanches should be part of your D Day tour

The allis manufactured the pieces of two large, artificial ports in Britain to be towed to the Normandy beaches and assembled after the victory of D Day.

artificial port on a d day tour

You can still the remains of this impressive engineering wonder today. You do get a very good overview of this at the museum as well.

tours of Normandy and its beaches

Best D Day tours

I really enjoyed my guided overnight D Day tour with LinkParis.com. I was able to customize the tour, touring the museum on my own, but still utilizing the train transportation that was coordinated for me, the tour of the D Day sites in Normandy with an excellent guide and driver, and the hotel stay.

The tour was about $500 inclusive of transportation, overnight stay, and guide.

I was really grateful that I wasn’t heading straight back to Paris after my guided D Day tour because I really needed some time to decompress in Caen. But there are some well-rated Normandy day-tour options out there if that’s more your speed.

Where to stay in Caen

If you do decide to stay overnight in Normandy outside of an organized D Day tour, check out this map with available accommodations in the area:

Where to eat in Caen

I had one of my best meals in France at Le P’tit B, a French/Italian restaurant in a pedestrian-only street in Caen. Maybe it was the great value of the pre-fixe meal or the great, reflective conversation. That’s bound to happen after such an intense day of touring the D Day sites of Normandy.

More reading on WWII and France

Visit here for my curated list of non-fiction books about WWII. Bookshop allows you to purchase from independent booksellers. You can even choose to support a bookstore near you!

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About the Author

Hi! I’m Jen!

I’m a freelance writer and travel blogger who quit my nine-to-five after my fiancé, Jeff, died of cancer at the age of 40. When he died, I realized that life is just too short to delay our dreams. Since my dream was to travel and write, I now travel and write full-time. Today I wear hiking boots instead of heels and collect experiences instead of things.


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20 Comments

  1. Just discovered your blog while searching D-Day tours. Love your attitude and your writing. I’ve been living with the belief to live your dreams since I was in my early 20s. D-Day has been on my list for years and now I’m hoping to visit Normandy in May/June.

    1. Thank you Scott! Did you make it to Normandy? I hope so!

  2. Very thought-provoking blog! There are very few who take out time and engage in D Day tour. Bu taking such a tour one can peek into the history and remember those souls that departed fighting for a cause.

    1. Thank you so much for reading! I found that D-Day tour to be just everything. I want to do another. And maybe a Band of Brothers tour in Belgium and beyond!

    1. Thank you! I’ll check out your site as well.

  3. What an interesting and thought-provoking tour! I really had never thought of doing a D Day tour, but I do think it’s a wonderful way to connect with and honor our past, our fallen soldiers, and our veterans. And, I think I would really have to stay in Caen overnight. I imagine these tours make for a very emotional day.

    1. Oh, I’m so glad this is on your travel radar now! Thanks for reading, Cris!

  4. This is such a great post! My husband and I just finished watching the “Greatest Events of WWII in Color” documentary on Netflix, and we were just talking about what an incredible experience it would be to visit Normandy and the sights for D-Day. Such a significant point in history. This is a super helpful guide for when we get the chance to visit. Thanks for sharing!

    1. I loved that documentary! I assume you’ve watched Band of Brothers? It’s wild to stand on the beach looking up at the guns that they dismantled. Thanks for reading Brittany!

  5. It’s difficult to fathom the horrors of what happened here. Thanks for all the tips, as I’d like to visit and pay my respects.

    1. You are welcome, Megan! Thank you for reading!

  6. i learned SO much reading your blog. i hope to see these normandy beaches in person one day…. and immerse myself in such a complex history as you did.

    1. I hope you do! It is a hard but beautiful day. Thanks for reading, Shelley!

  7. Visiting this area of France has been on my bucket list for ages, but I had no idea there were so many historical things to see! I’d love to go on a tour here – thanks for the tips!

    1. You are welcome, Krista! Thank you for reading!

  8. WOW! I would love to take a tour and visit those beaches!

    1. I hope you do, Alex! Thanks for reading!

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