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Sainte-Anne

Les Salines beach regularly ranked among the most beautiful in the world — Sainte-Anne is the extreme southern tip of Martinique and the seaside sanctuary of the Island of Flowers.

4.90Sud Martinique

Sainte-Anne is the southernmost commune of Martinique, set at the extreme southwest tip of the island, where the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean meet in a striking gradient of blues. It is here, on the Pointe des Salines, that the most famous beach of the island lies — and probably one of the most beautiful beaches of the Caribbean: Les Salines, long 1.5 km coconut grove of fine white sand facing a translucent sea with turquoise gradients, regularly ranked among the most beautiful beaches in the world by international guides.

But Sainte-Anne is not limited to Les Salines. The commune counts a succession of exceptional beaches that make it the seaside sanctuary of Martinique. Anse Trabaud, accessible by a 25-minute trail from Pointe Baham, is probably the wildest and most confidential — fine white sand, more agitated sea (Atlantic side), total absence of facilities. Grande Anse des Salines and Petite Anse des Salines frame the main beach and offer more peaceful coves. The Sainte-Anne village beach (centre) is a family urban beach, calm and supervised. Further east, on the Atlantic side, Pointe Faula and Pointe Marin welcome kitesurf and windsurf enthusiasts (constant winds).

The village of Sainte-Anne is one of the most picturesque of the island — small preserved fishing locality, with its church set on the beach, its colourful lanes, its authentic Creole tables d'hôtes and its morning market. 5 km northeast, Le Marin houses the largest French marina of the Antilles (800 berths) and is the starting point for all yacht or catamaran outings to the white seabeds of François.

The Three Anses trail (10 km, 4-5h, easy level) connects Anse Trabaud to Pointe des Salines via Anse Bonneville and Anse Méo — one of the most beautiful coastal hikes of the island, with exceptional panoramas over the sea and access to coves otherwise inaccessible.

What we love

  • Les Salines beach: regularly ranked among the most beautiful beaches in the world
  • Exceptional diversity of beaches: Salines, Anse Trabaud, Petite Anse, Grande Anse, Pointe Marin
  • Authentic fishing village with morning market and Creole tables d'hôtes
  • Three Anses trail: spectacular coastal hike (10 km)
  • Optimal diving and kitesurf conditions in carême (warm sea, constant trade winds)

What to know

  • Les Salines very crowded on weekends and during holidays (arrive before 9am)
  • Parking sometimes difficult at Les Salines in peak season, paid at Pointe Marin
  • Limited accommodation in the village itself: prefer surrounding villas or nearby Le Marin
  • Atlantic side sometimes affected by sargassum (brown algae) at certain periods
  • No nightlife beyond the village: quiet family atmosphere in the evening

Situation

Où se situe Sainte-Anne ?

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Frequently asked questions

How to get to Les Salines beach?+
From Sainte-Anne village, plan 10 minutes by car via the D9 to the Salines parking (free, but saturated on weekends and during holidays). From there, beach access is on foot through the coconut grove (200 m). Imperatively arrive before 9am in high season to find a place nearby — otherwise, the annex parking is 500 m further. No public transport serves Les Salines: the car is essential.
What is the difference between Les Salines and Anse Trabaud?+
Les Salines: emblematic equipped beach (parking, beach lolos, partial supervision, deck chair rental), 1.5 km of white sand facing the calm Caribbean Sea — ideal for swimming, snorkeling and photography. Very crowded. Anse Trabaud: wild beach accessible by 25-min trail from Pointe Baham (no facilities, no supervision), fine white sand facing the more agitated Atlantic Ocean — ideal for isolation and wild landscape lovers. Little frequented.
Where to stay in Sainte-Anne?+
Three options. In the village: a few hotels (Hotel La Dunette, Domaine du Cap Macré) and beachfront rentals (€90-200/night off-season) — authentic fishermen atmosphere. Around Les Salines: independent villas with private pool 5-10 min by car (€120-300/night depending on standing and season) — ideal romantic option. Le Marin (5 km northeast): more economical hotels and residences (€70-130/night), access to marina for boat outings.
When to visit Les Salines to avoid crowds?+
Before 9am or after 4pm in high season. At 9am, the first visitors settle; at 11am-3pm, the beach is saturated on weekends and during holidays. Prefer Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday to avoid the weekend. In low season (May, June, November), the beach is almost deserted during the week. Bring your picnic (few lolos in activity) or reserve at beach snacks (€10-18 per Creole dish). Parasol and towel essential (rental possible €5-8/day).
Is the Three Anses trail difficult?+
No, it's an easy coastal trail: 10 km loop (or 7 km round trip if you leave from Pointe des Salines), 4-5 hours of walking, total elevation less than 100 m distributed. It crosses three confidential beaches: Anse Trabaud, Anse Bonneville and Anse Méo (or Petite Anse depending on variant). Trail marked in orange and yellow by the ONF. Precautions: depart early in the morning (before 9am) to avoid midday heat, plan 2 L of water, hat, sunscreen, closed walking shoes (presence of manchineel in some sections), swimsuit for wild swims.
Are there restaurants at Les Salines?+
A few lolos (Creole beach snacks) are installed on Les Salines beach, generally active from 10am to 4pm: grilled fish, accras, rice red beans, fresh fruit juices, ti-punch. Plan €12-20 per dish. The offer is limited and variable by day: bring your picnic if you want flexibility, or plan lunch at Sainte-Anne village (5 km, 10 min by car) where Creole restaurants are numerous and of quality.

Our verdict

Sainte-Anne is the seaside sanctuary of Martinique — the one you absolutely cannot miss in a Martinican stay. Les Salines alone justify the trip, but Anse Trabaud, the Three Anses trail, the fishing village and the diversity of surrounding beaches make Sainte-Anne an ideal base for 5 to 7 days of stay. Settle in an independent villa or a beachfront rental (€60-150/night off-season, €120-250 in carême), rent a car to explore the surrounding coves, and schedule Les Salines early in the morning to avoid crowds. Visit from December to April for the best climate; May is an excellent budget compromise. The ritual: ti-punch at sunset on the village beach, with the church steeple in the background.

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The Editors
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"Pic touristique haute saison sèche."

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