GR10

📌

📍

🌐

Northern

Distance

954

km

Elev. Gain

55,000

m

Duration

50

days

Grade

T3

Route

Point-to-Point

⚡ Quick Facts
📏
954 km
Distance
📅
50 days
Duration
⛰️
2,734 m
Peak Height
📶
T3
Grade
🧭
Point-to-Point
Route Type
↗️
55,000 m
Elev. Gain
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🟢 Trail Status
Status Open
Hemisphere Northern
Timezone Europe/Paris
🗂️ Logistics
Visa Schengen Zone
Transport Easy
Parking Yes
Wild Camping Tolerated

📊 Technical Details

Distance: 954 km
Route Type: Point-to-Point
Grade: T3
Grade note:

The GR10 is a serious mountain trail requiring good fitness and basic mountain experience — more demanding than the average long-distance walk but less technical than the HRP. The central section crosses passes up to 2,734m with steep, rocky terrain. Early-season crossings (June) require crampons on some passes. A small number of stages include exposed sections and boulder scrambling. The western and eastern sections are lower and more forgiving. The route is waymarked throughout, removing the main navigation challenge of the HRP.

Navigation: Moderate
Navigation note:

Waymarked throughout with standard red-and-white GR blazes, one of the better-maintained long-distance trail networks in France. Navigation is generally straightforward, though markers can be widely spaced on high passes in poor visibility. The four FFRP topo-guides or Cicerone guidebook are standard references. IGN 1:25,000 maps and an offline mapping app (IGN Géoportail) are recommended for the central section.

Suck Factor: Mind your step
Suck Factor note:

The GR10 descends into every major valley — by design, to access accommodation and resupply — which means the climbing is relentless and much of the elevation gain is ‘wasted’ compared to the HRP’s ridge-following approach. The Ariège section (central-eastern) involves particularly deep valley crossings with corresponding massive ascents. Trail surfaces range from excellent mountain paths to loose scree and occasional boulder fields. Some sections use tarmac roads through village approaches.

Direction: EBO
Total Ascent: 55,000 m
Max Elevation: 2,734 m
Highest Point: Hourquette d'Ossoue
Lowest Point: Hendaye / Banyuls-sur-Mer (sea level)
Start Trailhead: Hendaye (Atlantic coast)
End Trailhead: Banyuls-sur-Mer (Mediterranean coast)

📅 Best Season

J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Peak
Shoulder
Off
Note:

Mid-June to late September. The western (Basque) section can be walked from May. The central high section requires crampons on some passes until early July. July–August is peak season: refuges and gîtes book out weeks in advance and the path is busy on popular sections around Gavarnie and Cauterets. September is excellent: quieter, stable weather, vivid autumn light on the Basque and Mediterranean sections. The route should not be attempted in the central section in winter without full alpine equipment.

💭 Logistics & Budget

🎒 Dirtbag
€25
per day
🎿 Flashpacker
€110
per day
Budget note:

Dirtbag assumes gîte demi-pension on cheaper stages and wild camping or refuge camping on others (~€15–25/night) with self-catered food where possible. Average assumes gîte demi-pension most nights (~€40–50 all-in). Flashpacker adds occasional hotel stays in larger towns (Luchon, Ax-les-Thermes). Cash is essential — many refuges and gîtes are cash-only, especially in the central sections. Budget an extra €200–300 for contingency cash to carry in the mountains.

Wild Camping Tolerated
Dog Friendly No
Dogs note Dogs are prohibited in the Parc National des Pyrénées (France), which covers a significant section of the central GR10 between the Ossau valley and the Néouvielle reserve. This is a strict ban enforced by park rangers. Not a suitable route for dogs.
Permit Required No
Permit note

No permit required. National park camping regulations apply within the Parc National des Pyrénées. Four official FFRP topo-guides cover the complete route (Pyrénées Occidentales, Centrales, Ariégeoises, Orientales) and are recommended alongside digital maps.

Transport Access Easy
Trailhead Parking Yes
Transport & parking note

Hendaye: TGV from Paris Montparnasse ~5hrs via Bayonne; local train from San Sebastián. Banyuls-sur-Mer: TGV to Perpignan (~5hrs from Paris Gare de Lyon) then regional train south. Several intermediate towns on the GR10 (Pau, Lourdes/Tarbes, Luchon, Ax-les-Thermes, Perpignan) have good rail connections for section hikers.

Visa Schengen Zone
Accommodation
Campsites Guesthouses Hostels Mountain Huts (Rifugi)
Accommodation

The GR10 has the best accommodation network of the three trans-Pyrenean routes. Staffed gîtes d’étape (walker hostels with meals) are available on or near most stages; staffed refuges (CAF) cover the high mountain sections; and valley towns and villages provide hotels and chambres d’hôte. Gîte demi-pension (dorm bed, dinner, breakfast) costs approximately €35–55. CAF refuges in the high mountains cost approximately €18–25 for a dorm bed; meals extra. Wild camping is permitted within the Parc National des Pyrénées only within 1 hour of a refuge or lake, between 7pm and 9am. Outside the national park, wild camping is technically restricted but widely tolerated with discretion. Booking ahead is essential for high-season (July–August) on the central stages — Gavarnie, Cauterets, and Luz-Saint-Sauveur fill quickly. Carry cash; many remote gîtes and refuges are card-free.

🎶 Vibe

Remoteness: Backcountry
Popularity: Quiet
Social Scene: Friendly
Local Interaction: Welcoming
Tourist Overrun: Zero (hikers/locals only)
Plushness: Basic (sporadic amenities)
Trash Level: Pristine
Avg Local Income: €32,000.00
Cannabis: Illegal
Alcohol: Accepted
Note:

The GR10 is the French Pyrenees in its entirety — from the soft Atlantic green of the Basque Country, where the mountains are gentle and the villages are white-walled with red shutters, through the dramatic granite cirques of the Hautes-Pyrénées with their thundering waterfalls and glacier-polished rock, through the deep forested valleys of the Ariège, and finally into the sun-bleached scrubland of Roussillon where the Mediterranean shimmers on the horizon. The gîte culture is one of the great pleasures of the GR10: arriving at a small family-run hostel after 8 hours on the mountain to a three-course dinner and a table of strangers who will become friends by the second bottle of wine. The Cirque de Gavarnie — visible from the trail in the central section — is one of the great natural theatres of Europe. The GR10 is longer and lower than the HRP, but in many ways more human: it passes through French mountain culture rather than above it.

🛟 Safety & Inclusion

Safety Score3.4/5
Terrorism Risk Low
Political Risk Negligible
Solo Female Safety Safe
LGBTQ+ Friendliness Welcoming
Racism Risk Rare
Muslim Friendliness Neutral
Jewish Friendliness Supportive
Phone Signal Peak Finder
Charging Interval Every 2-3 days
Safety note

The primary hazard is afternoon thunderstorms on high passes — build quickly and are violent. Always plan to be off high ground by early afternoon. Snow and ice on early-season passes require crampons and ice axe competence. The trail descends into every valley, which means fatigue from constant up-and-down can lead to accidents on steep descents. A PLB or satellite communicator is strongly recommended for the central high section. Carry the FFRP topo-guide emergency contact numbers.