每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Réunion's road network connects Saint-Denis to the rest of the island, but the mountain terrain means journeys can involve winding coastal routes or steep inland roads. A private Daytrip transfer puts a local, professional driver behind the wheel so you arrive without the stress of navigating unfamiliar mountain roads or hunting for parking in a busy capital. Your driver can also recommend stops along the way — the coastal scenery on the approach to Saint-Denis is worth slowing down for.
A focused half-day (4 to 5 hours) covers the main highlights: the market, the historic center, and a museum or two. If you want to add the Jardin de l'État and a walk along La Montagne trail, plan for a full day. Most travelers find that 6 to 7 hours feels unhurried without overstaying — you leave with full memories rather than a rushed checklist.
It's arguably the best starting point. Saint-Denis gives you an immediate sense of what makes Réunion genuinely unlike anywhere else — the French administrative overlay, the Creole architecture, the multilingual street life, the food that blends four culinary traditions in one market stall. Arriving here first calibrates your expectations and makes every other part of the island feel richer by comparison.
The Saint-Denis Market is the emotional heart of the city — expect towers of vanilla pods, turmeric, and local chili alongside handmade crafts and street food. The Léon Dierx Museum houses one of the finest art collections in the Indian Ocean region. The Rue de Paris colonial streetscape is one of the best-preserved in the French overseas territories. And the Jardin de l'État offers a green, shaded escape that doubles as an open-air botanical lesson.
Saint-Denis delivers a rare combination you won't find anywhere else on the island: the energy of a genuine working city layered over centuries of Creole, French, Indian, and Chinese culture. A day here means colonial mansions, spice-laden markets, world-class art at the Léon Dierx Museum, and the lush Jardin de l'État — all within easy walking distance of each other. It's less a transit hub and more a destination that rewards slow exploration.
The historic city center is compact and best explored on foot. Most of the key attractions — the market, the Rue de Paris mansions, the Léon Dierx Museum, and the Jardin de l'État — sit within a walkable radius. Traffic in the city center can be heavy during midday, so plan your arrival before the lunch rush if possible. Having a driver drop you at a central point and arrange a pick-up time gives you full freedom to explore at your own pace without clock-watching for a bus or worrying about parking.