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Le François White Sands & Joséphine's Bathtub: Choosing a Responsible Tour

Published on March 23, 2026 · by Ismael Samuel

Le François White Sands & Joséphine's Bathtub: Choosing a Responsible Tour

As a concierge, I’m often asked which activity you simply must not miss in Martinique. My answer hasn’t changed in ten years: spend a morning on the white sands of Le François. Water that reaches only your waist a kilometre from shore, milk-white sand underfoot, wooded islets scattered across the lagoon. It’s unique in the Caribbean, and yet fragile. This guide isn’t a catalogue of offers: it’s a how-to for choosing the right tour, understanding the islets, and enjoying Joséphine’s Bathtub without harming the very thing you came to admire.

Understanding the white sands before you set off

The white sands aren’t beaches: they’re shallows, broad plateaus of coral sand submerged under 60 cm to 1.30 m of water, far from land, in the lagoon sheltered by the double coral reef of the east coast. A few key points:

  • The milky, turquoise water comes from sunlight bouncing off the pale sand: an optical effect, not an added colour.
  • The temperature stays between 27 and 29 °C year-round — comfortable swimming in any season.
  • Le François is 25 km from Fort-de-France (a 40-minute drive) and 30 minutes from Aimé Césaire airport (Le Lamentin).
  • You can only reach them by boat: no white sand bank is within swimming distance, and a shallow remains a living ecosystem (seagrass beds, sea urchins, starfish) that is fragile.

Joséphine’s Bathtub, between legend and reality

The highlight remains Joséphine’s Bathtub. Tradition has it that Joséphine de Beauharnais, born in Les Trois-Îlets before becoming empress, came here to cool off: a charming story, impossible to verify. What is very real is the feeling of standing in the middle of the ocean, in translucent water. Local ritual calls for a white-sands ti-punch prepared on board and shared standing in the water.

Excursionnistes debout dans les eaux turquoise peu profondes de la Baignoire de Joséphine, dans la baie du François en Martinique, avec bateau d'excursion et kayaks près des îlets
La Baignoire de Joséphine, haut-fond de la baie du François — © Patrifor (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

The string of islets: knowing where you’re stepping

Le François’s other treasure is its islets: a dozen little islands dotting the lagoon. Knowing their names helps you follow a skipper’s route.

  • Îlet Oscar: the most iconic, with its listed wooden Creole house; you don’t go ashore (it’s inhabited private property), but the anchorage is superb.
  • Îlet Thierry: known for its table-d’hôte dining and lunch stops, a chic Robinson Crusoe vibe.
  • Îlet Frégate, Îlet Long, Îlet Métrente: low islets fringed with sea grapes, perfect for shade and snorkelling.
  • Pointe Thalémont and neighbouring banks: this is where the main white sands and Joséphine’s Bathtub are found.

Good to know: nearly all of Le François’s islets are privately owned, and it’s that status that protected them from concrete development. An operator with negotiated access to an islet for lunch therefore offers you a genuine privilege — an excellent criterion for choosing.

Choosing your operator: the heart of the decision

This is where the success of your day is decided. Le François has a dense range of options, and not all boats are equal.

Group trips by catamaran or motor launch

The most common and affordable option: you board with 15, 30, sometimes 50 passengers, in a friendly atmosphere.

  • Half-day (about 4 hrs): €45 to €65 per adult, ti-punch usually included.
  • Full day with lunch on an islet (6 to 7 hrs): €80 to €105 per adult, drinks included.
  • Child rate: reduced by 30 to 50%, sometimes free for toddlers.

Private trips with a skipper

You book the boat for your group alone (6 to 12 people): privacy, calm and flexible timing, perfect for a family or a birthday. Expect €380 to €580 for the boat for a half-day and €650 to €950 for a full day, skipper included.

Licence-free rental, for the self-reliant

You rent a craft of under 6 hp, no licence needed, for around €130 to €190 a day. Tempting, but not advised for beginners: navigating among the coral heads means knowing how to read the colour of the water, or you’ll damage the reef.

My local criteria so you don’t get it wrong

  • Check for negotiated access to an islet for lunch and snorkelling gear provided in good condition.
  • Make sure water and the white-sands ti-punch are included: staying hydrated matters under the sun.
  • Favour a recent engine, read the reviews (quality comes mainly from the skipper) and book directly with a Le François operator rather than through a platform that piles on its commission.

Best practices: protecting the white sands

It’s the subject too often skipped, and yet the one that will decide the state of the lagoon twenty years from now. Victims of their own success, the white sands suffer from trampled seagrass and litter. An informed visitor makes a real difference.

  • Don’t walk on the seagrass or the coral: stay on the bare white sand. Seagrass beds are fish nurseries.
  • Take nothing: sea urchins, starfish and corals stay in the water. A starfish taken out into the air dies within minutes.
  • Reef-safe sunscreen or a rash guard: standard chemical filters contribute to coral bleaching.
  • Zero waste in the water: bring everything back, cigarette butts included.
  • Choose a skipper who anchors on sand and uses mooring buoys rather than dropping the anchor on coral.

These gestures cost nothing, and a good operator will remind you of them unprompted — a sign of professionalism.

Vue aérienne de l'Îlet Long et des fonds blancs environnants du François en Martinique, bancs de sable et lagon turquoise
L'Îlet Long et les fonds blancs du François vus du ciel — © Mickaël BRUNO (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

When to go and how to organise it

Martinique runs to the rhythm of two seasons:

  • The Carême (dry season), from December to April: the ideal window, flat sea in the morning and maximum visibility. It’s high season, so book 2 to 3 days ahead.
  • The rainy season (June to November) is still doable, but the trade winds strengthen and sargassum can reach the Atlantic coast (the sheltered lagoon stays less exposed).
  • Carnival (February–March) enlivens the whole island: keep a day free for the parades.

Martinique being a French overseas territory: euro, French and Creole, dialling code +596, a time difference of −5h in winter and −6h in summer compared with Paris. Favour morning departures, around 9 am: calmer sea and fewer crowds. To reach the pontoon, a rental car is strongly recommended: the island is 80 km across and public transport serves the pontoons poorly. In your bag: reef-safe sunscreen, hat, sunglasses, water shoes and a waterproof pouch.

Extending your day around Le François

Le François is a stop on the Rum Route: the Clément and Saint-James distilleries (AOC agricultural rum) are a few minutes away. Further north, the Caravelle peninsula at La Trinité (Tartane, surf, the lighthouse and the ruins of Château Dubuc) deserves a day. On the seaside front, save time for the South: Les Salines at Sainte-Anne, Anse Dufour, Anse Noire and its volcanic sand. To build your itinerary, lean on our complete guide to Martinique.

Where to stay to explore without rushing

To enjoy the white sands in the calm of the morning, it’s better to sleep near the east coast or the centre rather than in Fort-de-France. At Hostel Toucan, we offer a selection of homes for accommodation in Martinique, with a concierge service that can book your boat trip with a local operator committed to protecting the lagoon. By booking directly with us, you enjoy:

  • Direct booking with no platform fees: you pay the fair price, with no hidden commission.
  • Free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival.
  • WhatsApp assistance 7 days a week: a better time slot, a skipper to recommend? We answer like a friend on the spot.

Do you own a property on the east coast and want to make the most of it with peace of mind? Discover our concierge service for owners, from check-in to cleaning. Choose a serious operator with access to an islet, aim for a Carême morning, adopt the right habits, and you’ll come away with one of the finest memories of your trip.

FAQ

What’s the difference between the white sands and Joséphine’s Bathtub?

The white sands refer to all the sandy shallows of the Le François lagoon, where you can stand far from shore. Joséphine’s Bathtub is the best known of these shallows, tied to the legend of Joséphine de Beauharnais and the ritual of a ti-punch enjoyed standing in the water. Trips usually include both.

How much does a tour of Le François’s white sands cost?

Expect €45 to €65 per adult for a group half-day (ti-punch included) and €80 to €105 for a full day with lunch on an islet. Private trips with a skipper start at around €380 for the boat. Children often get a 30 to 50% discount.

How can I enjoy the white sands without harming the lagoon?

Stay on the bare white sand rather than on seagrass and coral, take neither sea urchins nor starfish, apply reef-safe sunscreen or wear a rash guard, bring your waste back, and choose a skipper who anchors on sand. These simple gestures protect a fragile ecosystem.

Can you reach Le François’s islets on foot or by swimming?

No. The white sands are accessible only by boat, and most of Le François’s islets are private property where you can’t land freely. It’s that status that has preserved the site. Go through an operator who has negotiated access to an islet.

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