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Cheap Flights to Guadeloupe: When to Actually Book

Published on October 15, 2025 · by Ismael Samuel

Cheap Flights to Guadeloupe: When to Actually Book

Finding a cheap flight to Guadeloupe is no lottery: it’s a matter of timing. After years on the ground welcoming travelers who paid anywhere from €380 to €1,200 round-trip for the very same seat, I can confirm it: the difference almost never comes from the airline, but from the moment you clicked “book.” Here are the booking windows that actually work depending on your departure month, the hard numbers behind the impact of school holidays in zones A, B and C, and the territorial continuity aid that many residents forget to claim.

How much does a plane ticket to Pointe-à-Pitre really cost?

Four airlines serve Pôle Caraïbes airport (PTP) nonstop from Paris: Air France (Orly and CDG), Air Caraïbes (Orly), Corsair (Orly) and French Bee (Orly). The flight takes about 8 h 30 outbound and 7 h 45 on the way back, thanks to the trade winds.

Over a full year, here are the Guadeloupe ticket price ranges I see for a Paris–Pointe-à-Pitre round trip, checked bag included:

  • Low season (May, June, September, October, November outside All Saints’ break): €380 to €550
  • Shoulder season (March outside holidays, late April, early December): €500 to €700
  • High season (mid-December to late February, Easter break): €750 to €1,100
  • Absolute peaks (Christmas week, New Year’s Day, February across all zones): €900 to €1,300

Keep in mind: the very same French Bee A350 can show €369 on a Tuesday in June and €1,050 on December 20. The price reflects demand, not service.

Vue depuis le hublot d'un avion en vol, aile au-dessus des nuages, illustrant un trajet aerien vers la Guadeloupe
En avion vers la Guadeloupe : reserver son vol au bon moment fait la difference sur le prix — © Francesco Ungaro (Pexels, Pexels License)

When to book a cheap flight to Guadeloupe: the month-by-month windows

This is where it all comes down to. Booking “as early as possible” is a myth: too early and the airlines haven’t yet opened their economy fare classes; too late and they’re sold out. Here are the optimal windows depending on your departure month.

Departing in high season (December to February)

  • Christmas and New Year’s: book 8 to 10 months ahead, meaning between February and April. By September, fares under €900 have vanished.
  • January outside the holidays: the ideal window is 5 to 6 months ahead (July-August). Paradoxically it’s a great deal: the dry season is in full swing, but demand drops off after January 5. You’ll find round trips at €650.
  • February: this is the trap month, because all three school zones run back to back. Book 7 to 9 months ahead, ideally before the end of June.

Departing in shoulder season (March-April)

  • March outside holidays: 3 to 4 months ahead is enough. Fares around €550 stay available late.
  • Easter break: follow the February logic, 6 months ahead minimum.

Departing in low season (May to November)

  • May, June, September to November: the window is wide, 2 to 3 months ahead, and Corsair or French Bee flash sales drop regularly (round trips spotted at €380-420). This is the period when watching price alerts pays off the most.
  • July-August: careful, this is the “affinity” high season (Caribbean families, the diaspora). Book 5 to 6 months ahead, meaning between January and March, to stay under €700.

The right reflexes when you book

  • Fly Tuesday, Wednesday or Saturday: these days are on average 8 to 15% cheaper than Fridays and Sundays.
  • Compare Orly and CDG: on Air France, the same flight can vary by €60 to €90 depending on the Paris airport.
  • Set up price alerts the moment your plan exists: you’ll learn the “normal price” for your dates and instantly recognize a real promotion.
  • Lock in the ticket first, then take your time choosing your accommodation. Our complete guide to Guadeloupe helps you weigh up Grande-Terre versus Basse-Terre before locking in your dates.

School holidays zones A, B, C: the price gap in numbers

Guadeloupe is a very “family” destination, so it’s highly sensitive to the mainland French school calendar. Concretely, on a Paris–Pointe-à-Pitre in February:

  • Week outside the holidays (late January): €620 on average
  • First week of zone C (Paris, Versailles, Créteil, Montpellier, Toulouse): €950 to €1,100, as Paris-region demand explodes
  • Week where two zones overlap: peaks at €1,200 and above
  • Last week of the break (often zone A only): back down to €800

The strategy that works: if you have no school-age children, shift your departure by 5 to 7 days relative to the start of the zone C holidays. Average savings observed: €250 to €350 per person, meaning €1,000 to €1,400 for a family of four — a full week of accommodation on the spot. If you’re tied to school terms, leave on the first Saturday of the break rather than Friday evening.

Little-known bonus: the All Saints’ break is the best “school holiday” window of the year. Demand toward the Caribbean is lower then (cyclone season still on people’s minds, even though the actual weather is often fine) and round trips can be found between €450 and €600.

Rue coloree de Pointe-a-Pitre en Guadeloupe avec un paquebot de croisiere visible en arriere-plan
Pointe-a-Pitre, porte d'entree de la Guadeloupe a l'arrivee de votre vol — © Grook Da Oger (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Territorial continuity: the aid residents forget

If you live in Guadeloupe or are bringing family over, the territorial continuity scheme run by LADOM (the French overseas mobility agency) can seriously cut the bill:

  • Travel aid for the general public: subject to income conditions (capped family quotient), it covers several hundred euros per passenger between Guadeloupe and mainland France.
  • Study mobility pass: for Guadeloupean students enrolled in mainland France, coverage of up to 100% of the annual ticket.
  • Vocational training mobility pass: for job seekers in training outside the territory.

The application is made online on the LADOM website, before buying the ticket — that’s the classic mistake: a ticket already issued cannot be reimbursed by the scheme. Allow two to four weeks for processing. Some local authorities add occasional supplementary aid: check with the Guadeloupe Region.

And once you have the ticket?

A cheap flight to Guadeloupe also pays off on arrival. Two pieces of field advice:

  • Landing at Pôle Caraïbes: flights often arrive between 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. local time (a -5 h gap in winter, -6 h in summer vs. Paris). Book your rental car early: from December to April, rental companies are fully booked and last-minute prices double.
  • Where to stay: Sainte-Anne, Le Gosier or Saint-François in Grande-Terre for turquoise beaches; Deshaies or Bouillante in Basse-Terre for the Cousteau Reserve, the Soufrière and the Carbet falls.

At Hostel Toucan, we directly manage holiday rentals in Guadeloupe: direct booking with no platform fees (what you save on the flight, don’t hand back in commissions), free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival — invaluable when you’re watching for a flash sale and adjusting your dates — and 7-day WhatsApp assistance provided by our team on the spot. Own a property on the archipelago? Our concierge service also supports owners.

FAQ

How far in advance should you book a flight to Guadeloupe?

Allow 2 to 3 months ahead for a low-season departure (May-June, September-November), 5 to 6 months for July-August and January, and 8 to 10 months for the year-end holidays and February. Booking the moment sales open isn’t always optimal: the cheapest fare classes often open later.

What is the average price of a Paris–Pointe-à-Pitre plane ticket?

Allow €380 to €550 round trip in low season, €500 to €700 in the shoulder season and €750 to €1,100 in high season (mid-December to February). Christmas and February holiday peaks can exceed €1,200. Four airlines operate nonstop: Air France, Air Caraïbes, Corsair and French Bee.

Which is the cheapest month to travel to Guadeloupe?

June, September and October offer the lowest fares, often under €450 round trip during flash sales. September-October is the heart of cyclone season. To combine low prices and the dry season, aim for the second half of January or the month of May.

Who is eligible for territorial continuity aid for Guadeloupe?

The LADOM scheme is aimed at overseas residents subject to income conditions (travel aid for the general public), overseas students pursuing their studies in mainland France (study mobility pass) and people in vocational training outside the territory. The application must be validated before buying the ticket.

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