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Papeete (Tahiti)

Papeete and Tahiti are the mandatory gateway to French Polynesia: international airport, central market, waterfront food trucks and an island loop to discover the Tahitian soul before heading on to Moorea, Bora Bora or the Tuamotus.

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Papeete (meaning 'water from the basket' in Tahitian) is the capital of French Polynesia and the largest city in the French South Pacific. Located on the north-west coast of Tahiti, it has 26,000 inhabitants within the city limits and around 130,000 in the metropolitan area (one third of the Polynesian population). It is the administrative, economic, cultural and logistical centre of all of French Polynesia.

For travellers, Papeete is above all the gateway to the territory: Tahiti-Faa'a International Airport (PPT), 5 km from the city centre, is the only entry point for international flights. Many travellers spend only 1 or 2 nights there before flying on to Moorea, Bora Bora or the Tuamotus, but the city deserves deeper exploration over 2-3 nights to understand French Polynesia in its contemporary complexity.

The Papeete central market (Te Mahana, open every day except Sunday afternoon) is the soul of the city: on two floors, it brings together stalls of tropical fruits, fresh raw fish (red tuna, mahi-mahi), Polynesian crafts (tifaifai quilts, wood sculptures, pareos), black pearls and monoi. One of the most beautiful markets in the South Pacific, best visited early in the morning (5-7 am for maximum animation).

The Papeete waterfront stretches 2 km along the lagoon, from the marina (Yacht Club) to the honour quay (where cruise ships and the Aranui 5 mixed cargo dock). Here lies Place Vai'ete, where every evening from 6 pm around twenty food trucks (roulottes) set up: steak-frites, grilled fish, Chinese dishes, crêpes. One of the most authentic and economical spots in the capital (€10-15/person for a full meal).

Tahiti, the island that hosts Papeete, is the largest island in French Polynesia (1,045 km²). Shaped like a figure-eight, it splits into Tahiti Nui (the larger Tahiti, where Papeete sits) and Tahiti Iti (the smaller Tahiti, the eastern peninsula, wilder and more preserved). The island loop by car (114 km, 4-5 hours) reveals: Pointe Vénus (north, where James Cook first landed on 13 April 1769 during his observation of the transit of Venus), the Three Cascades of Faaurumai, the Vaipahi gardens and the Maraa grottoes, the Museum of Tahiti and the Islands at Punaauia (the reference ethnographic collection on Polynesia), and the Tahiti Iti peninsula with the famous Teahupoo surf spot — the mythical wave of international competitions and the site of the Paris 2024 Olympic surfing events.

What we love

  • Mandatory gateway to French Polynesia (PPT International Airport)
  • Papeete central market: one of the finest markets in the South Pacific
  • Waterfront food trucks: culinary authenticity at affordable prices
  • Spectacular island loop with Pointe Vénus, waterfalls, Museum of Tahiti
  • Teahupoo: world-class surf wave, Paris 2024 Olympic site

What to know

  • More urban and less photogenic than Moorea or Bora Bora
  • Traffic jams at rush hour (morning and evening)
  • International-standard hotels often far from the city centre
  • Black volcanic beaches less iconic than the white-sand motus

Situation

Où se situe Papeete (Tahiti) ?

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Frequently asked questions

How many days should I plan in Papeete and Tahiti?+
2 to 3 nights are enough to discover Papeete and Tahiti in good conditions before heading to the other islands. Typical itinerary: Day 1 (arrival, jet-lag acclimatisation, central market early in the morning, waterfront walk, food trucks in the evening), Day 2 (Tahiti Nui island loop by car: Pointe Vénus, Three Cascades, Museum of Tahiti at Punaauia, Papenoo valley), Day 3 (optional: Tahiti Iti peninsula, Teahupoo, south-east beaches).
What to see at the Papeete central market?+
The Papeete central market (Te Mahana) is open every day from 5 am to 5 pm (Sunday: 5-9 am only). On two floors: ground floor for tropical fruits, fresh raw fish, spices and Tahaa vanilla. Upstairs: Polynesian crafts — wood sculptures (Marquesas), tifaifai (embroidered Polynesian quilts), scented monoi, pareos, Tahiti black pearls. The market is most animated early in the morning (5-7 am) when fishermen bring their daily catch.
What is Pointe Vénus and why is it famous?+
Pointe Vénus (Tahara'a), north of Tahiti in Matavai Bay (commune of Mahina, 15 km from Papeete), is the site of James Cook's first landing on 13 April 1769 during his first Pacific expedition. Cook came to observe the transit of Venus across the Sun (3 June 1769) — hence the name — an essential astronomical measurement to calculate the Earth-Sun distance in the 18th century. Today you find a white colonial lighthouse (1867), a black volcanic sand beach, and a monument commemorating Cook, Bligh (future captain of the Bounty) and Wallis (first European to reach Tahiti in 1767).
What is Teahupoo and why is it famous?+
Teahupoo (meaning 'the wall of skulls' in Tahitian) is a fishing village on the south-west coast of the Tahiti Iti peninsula, famous for its mythical wave — one of the most powerful and most perfect waves in world surfing. The Teahupoo wave forms over a shallow coral reef (1-2 m), creating a spectacular and particularly dangerous tube. An annual stop on the World Surf League Championship Tour since 2000, Teahupoo was the site of the Paris 2024 Olympic surfing events (27 July to 4 August 2024), with the men's gold medal won by French surfer Kauli Vaast. An expert-only surf spot.
Where to stay in Tahiti?+
Several options depending on your travel style. In central Papeete: Tahiti Pearl Beach Resort (4*), Hilton Tahiti (5*, at Faa'a). In Punaauia (15 km south-west of Papeete, calmer communes with nice beaches): Manava Suite Resort Tahiti (4*, ideal for acclimatisation), InterContinental Tahiti Resort (5*, lagoon, ideal for overwater bungalows on Tahiti itself). Family pensions (economical option, €60-150/night): plenty in Mahina, Punaauia, Papara. For the Tahiti Iti peninsula: Vanira Lodge, Te Pari Village (eco-lodges). Avoid central Papeete for sleeping (noisy) — prefer Punaauia or Mahina.

Our verdict

Papeete and Tahiti are not the signature destination of French Polynesia — that title belongs to Bora Bora or Moorea. But it is the unavoidable gateway and a stay of 2-3 days deserves to be planned to understand the contemporary Tahitian soul: the central market, the waterfront food trucks, the island loop with Pointe Vénus (Cook's first landing in 1769), the Three Cascades and the Museum of Tahiti, not forgetting the Tahiti Iti peninsula with the legendary Teahupoo wave. Prioritise the dry season (May-October) and lodge preferably in Punaauia or Faa'a, calmer and with better beaches than central Papeete.

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