Cheap Bastia from Birmingham: an all-in weekend from ~£382

Le clocher de l'église Saint-Jean-Baptiste au bout d'une ruelle de la vieille ville de BastiaPhoto: Unsplash · images.unsplash.com/photo-1711451754064-45b8518023a8

Bastia is Corsica's northern gateway, a working port city on the island's eastern coast in France, and it rewards travellers who like their beauty a little unpolished. Coming in from Birmingham (2h50 by plane), you arrive in a place where fishing boats still bob in The Old Port, tall ochre houses lean over the water, and the pace stays refreshingly local rather than resort-slick.

That local feel is exactly why Bastia is kind to a budget. You can spend a full day wandering Place Saint-Nicolas, the Baroque interior of Saint-Jean-Baptiste Church, the ramparts of The Citadel (Terra Nova), and the Oratory of the Immaculate Conception without paying to enter much of anything. It makes an easy base for exploring Cap Corse and the coast, so your money stretches further than it would in the island's pricier resort towns.

The all-in budget, line by line

Estimated split margin ~£31
~£382 / £387 budget
Transport ~£119
Lodging ~£146
On-site ~£117
Free budget left ~£5

Indicative estimate for 2 nights, 1 traveler. A range, never a firm price.

Getting there from Birmingham

From
Birmingham (BHX)
To
Bastia (BIA)
Mode
Flight
Est. duration
~2h50
Distance
~1 380 km

Duration and distance are indicative (as the crow flies). Book early and target weekday departures to cut the transport cost.

Doing Bastia on a budget

The best of Bastia is free to look at: strolling The Old Port at golden hour, sitting on Place Saint-Nicolas (one of the largest public squares in France), and climbing up into The Citadel cost nothing. Churches like Saint-Jean-Baptiste and the Oratory of the Immaculate Conception are free to step inside, so your cultural itinerary can be built almost entirely around walking. Save your euros for a market picnic of Corsican charcuterie and cheese, which beats sit-down restaurant prices, and fill your bottle at public fountains as you go.

Getting around and where to stay

Bastia is genuinely walkable, and the core sights (The Old Port, Place Saint-Nicolas, the churches, and Terra Nova) sit within a compact area you can cover on foot. Staying near the port or the citadel keeps you close to everything and cuts transport costs to zero, while cheaper rooms often sit a little further back from the waterfront. For day trips up Cap Corse or down the coast, local buses and the regional train are far lighter on the wallet than car hire if you are travelling solo or as a couple.

When to visit for the best value

Summer is peak season in Corsica, so July and August bring the highest accommodation prices and the biggest crowds around the port. Travelling in the shoulder seasons of spring and autumn usually means milder weather, lower room rates, and a calmer city that still has plenty open. If your dates from Birmingham are flexible, aim outside the mid-summer window to get the most out of every euro.

What to do in Bastia?

Museums, neighbourhoods, must-sees: here's what to see on site.

What to do in Bastia: see the guide →
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Best time to go

For Bastia, aim for June, July, September: nice weather and still-reasonable prices.

Ready for Bastia?

See the full guide: what to do, where to stay, and the all-in weekend budget.

See the full guide →

Reach Bastia from another city

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