Bordeaux vs Toulouse: Which is better for expats?

Two cities in southwest France, an hour and a half apart by TGV, both regularly appearing at the top of every list of the best places to live in France, and yet genuinely different in ways that matter enormously when you are choosing where to build a new life. Bordeaux and Toulouse are not interchangeable. Picking between them is one of the most common decisions expats from the US and UK face when planning a move to this part of France, and the right answer depends almost entirely on what you are actually looking for.

This guide is built from the real-world experience of working with expats across both cities. Not tourism brochure material, practical, honest comparison designed to help you make a decision that will still feel right three years in.

Both cities are excellent. The question is not which is better, it is which one fits the life you are trying to build.

Table of Contents

Bordeaux vs Toulouse side by side

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Bordeaux

  • Wine capital of France
  • Elegant, UNESCO-listed centre
  • Strong expat infrastructure
  • Atlantic coast under an hour away
  • TGV to Paris, around 2 hours
  • More established expat community
  • Higher property prices in centre
  • Calmer, more refined pace
VS
🚀

Toulouse

  • Aerospace and tech hub
  • La Ville Rose, pink brick city
  • Younger, more dynamic energy
  • Pyrenees and Med within reach
  • TGV to Paris, around 4 hours
  • More competitive rental market
  • Lower property prices overall
  • Student city and vibrant nightlife

What each city actually feels like to live in

Character is the thing that no comparison table captures but that matters more than almost anything else in a city choice. You can read statistics about rental prices and TGV times, but whether a city feels right, whether you can imagine yourself walking its streets in ten years and feeling at home, is something you only really understand through time spent there.

Bordeaux has a particular quality of elegance. The centre, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is built from pale limestone that catches the light in a way that makes almost every street feel photogenic. It is a city that has known wealth and culture for centuries, and it shows, in the architecture, in the food and wine culture, in the measured, self-assured pace of daily life. This is not stuffiness. It is confidence. Bordeaux knows what it is, and it wears it lightly.

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Most popular with expats

Bordeaux

The consistent front-runner for American and British expats moving to southwest France. Elegant, manageable, and exceptionally well-connected, Bordeaux offers what most people imagine when they picture French city life, and it delivers it reliably.

Why people choose it

  • UNESCO world heritage centre
  • Atlantic coast under an hour away
  • Strong, established expat community
  • Excellent food, wine and restaurant culture
  • TGV to Paris in around 2 hours
  • Good international schools and services

Worth being aware of

  • Property prices have risen sharply
  • Rental market highly competitive
  • Very hot summers inland
  • Can feel quieter than younger cities

Toulouse is a different energy entirely. Known as La Ville Rose, the pink city, for the distinctive terracotta brick of its buildings, it has a warmth and vibrancy that feels different from Bordeaux’s limestone cool. The city is France’s aerospace capital, home to Airbus and a vast network of engineering, technology, and research institutions. This means a large, young, highly educated professional population, and all the cultural and social energy that comes with it. Toulouse is a city in motion in a way Bordeaux is not.

🚀
Dynamic and growing

Toulouse

France's fourth-largest city and its aerospace capital, energetic, younger in profile, and more affordable than Bordeaux. Toulouse rewards those who engage with it on its own terms, and offers a lifestyle that many expats find more dynamic than they expected.

Why people choose it

  • Lower rental and property costs
  • Younger, more dynamic atmosphere
  • Pyrenees day trips year-round
  • Mediterranean coast around 1.5 hours
  • Strong university and cultural scene
  • Excellent food, cassoulet country

Worth being aware of

  • Very competitive rental market
  • Farther from Paris by train
  • Competing with Airbus professionals
  • Less established expat infrastructure

Cost, connectivity, and day-to-day life

Factor🍷 Bordeaux🚀 Toulouse
City sizeSmaller, more containedLarger, more sprawling
Rental marketCompetitive, fast-movingVery competitive, Airbus factor
1-bed price per m²16–20 € in centre15–17 € on average
Property purchaseHigher — risen sharplyMore accessible overall
TGV to Paris~2 hours~4 hours (improving)
Coast accessAtlantic, 45 minMediterranean, 1.5 hrs
MountainsPyrenees, 2 hrsPyrenees, 1.5 hrs
Expat communityLarge, well-establishedGrowing, less established
Student populationModerateVery high
Cultural identityWine, maritime, elegantAerospace, Occitan, vibrant
On rental competition in Toulouse

One factor that is easy to underestimate when searching for a rental in Toulouse is the Airbus effect. The city's aerospace industry draws a large pool of highly paid young professionals, French and international, who are competing for the same well-located one and two-bedroom properties that most expats are looking for. This makes the rental market more competitive than the price points alone suggest. A strong, well-constructed dossier and a clear cover letter are even more important in Toulouse than in most French cities.

Geography, climate, and what surrounds you

Both cities sit in southwest France, but their geographical personalities are different in ways that shape everyday life. Bordeaux faces west, it is an Atlantic city, with the ocean breeze that comes with it, the pine forests of Les Landes stretching to the south, and a coastline that is genuinely spectacular and largely undeveloped. The Gironde estuary runs through the heart of the wine country that has made the city famous worldwide. If your idea of a perfect weekend involves cycling through vineyards, swimming at an Atlantic beach, and being home in time for dinner, Bordeaux is designed for you.

Toulouse faces south and east. The Pyrenees are closer, you can be at a ski resort or hiking trail in around an hour and a half in the right conditions, and the Mediterranean coast at Sète or Montpellier is reachable in under two hours. The city sits at the heart of Occitania, a region with its own language, history, and cultural identity that gives Toulouse a distinctive character that is quite different from the more internationally legible identity of Bordeaux. The food culture here is deeply rooted, cassoulet, foie gras, and the extraordinary Occitan culinary tradition, and the city’s outdoor lifestyle leans toward mountains and waterways rather than beaches.

The climate question

Both cities experience hot, dry summers with temperatures regularly exceeding 35°C in July and August. Neither has a monopoly on pleasant weather, both offer warm springs, mild autumns, and relatively gentle winters compared to northern France. Bordeaux has slightly more Atlantic influence, which can mean more cloud and rain in winter. Toulouse is slightly further south and benefits from more sunshine overall, but is also more exposed to the Mistral-adjacent winds that occasionally sweep down from the mountains.

The practical realities of settling in

Bordeaux has been a top expat destination for longer than Toulouse, which means the infrastructure for international arrivals is more developed. English-speaking estate agents, international schools, expat social networks, bilingual doctors and lawyers, all of these are easier to find and more established in Bordeaux than in Toulouse. For someone arriving in France for the first time, without French language skills and without a network, this can make a genuine difference to how manageable the early months feel.

Toulouse is catching up rapidly, and its international population has grown significantly in recent years partly driven by the aerospace industry. There are expat communities, English-speaking services, and international schools, but they are less established and less visible than in Bordeaux. If you have good French, a high tolerance for navigating systems without a support network, and are excited by a city that is more authentically French in its day-to-day texture, this is not a problem. If you are still finding your feet with the language and the bureaucracy, Bordeaux’s more developed expat infrastructure may provide important reassurance in the early stages.

  • Language: Bordeaux has more English-speaking services and a larger population of long-term English-speaking expats. Toulouse is more French in its everyday texture, which can be an advantage if you want full immersion but challenging if your French is still developing.
  • Social life: Bordeaux’s expat community offers quicker social integration for newcomers. Toulouse’s younger population and student culture create a different social energy, potentially more interesting for those under 50, but requiring more active effort to build connections.
  • Schools: both cities have international school options, but Bordeaux’s options are more established and the community around them more developed.
  • Healthcare: both are university cities with good hospital infrastructure. Bordeaux has more English-speaking practitioners available, which matters particularly in the early months before your French is strong enough for medical appointments.
Visit both before you decide

The difference in feel between Bordeaux and Toulouse is real and significant, but it is almost impossible to appreciate fully from photographs or descriptions alone. If you are seriously considering either city, spending time in both before committing is not optional. Walk the streets, eat in the restaurants, visit the market, and test the commute from the neighbourhoods you are considering. Most people who have done this report a clear preference afterwards that they could not have predicted from research alone.

Which city is right for you?

Rather than declaring a winner, the most useful thing we can do is help you understand which city fits the life you are actually planning. The questions below are the ones that consistently separate Bordeaux people from Toulouse people in our experience.

Choose Bordeaux if...

  • You want a smooth entry into French life
  • Paris access is a priority
  • You want an established expat community
  • Atlantic coast and wine country appeal
  • You prefer a calmer, more elegant city feel
  • Arriving without strong French language skills
  • International schools and services matter

Choose Toulouse if...

  • You want a younger, more dynamic city
  • Lower entry costs matter to you
  • Pyrenees and Mediterranean are your playground
  • You want fuller immersion in French culture
  • You have good French and enjoy navigating independently
  • Occitan culture and food tradition appeal
  • Paris is not a regular destination
The honest bottom line

For most first-time expats moving to France from the US or UK, Bordeaux remains the more forgiving starting point. The infrastructure is more developed, the expat community larger, and the city scale more manageable. But for those who want something more authentically French, more affordable, and with better mountain access, Toulouse offers a genuinely compelling alternative, and the people who choose it rarely look back.

FAQs: Bordeaux vs Toulouse

Is Bordeaux or Toulouse better for American expats?
Bordeaux tends to be the easier starting point for American expats, its larger English-speaking community, more developed international services, and faster Paris connections make the adjustment to French life more manageable. Toulouse is an excellent choice for those who want a more dynamic, affordable city with better mountain access and a willingness to navigate a more fully French environment. The right answer depends on what you are looking for.
Which city is cheaper to live in: Bordeaux or Toulouse?
Toulouse is generally more affordable than Bordeaux, particularly for property purchase. Rental costs are somewhat similar for comparable properties, but Toulouse prices per square metre tend to run slightly lower, around 15 to 17 euros per square metre for a one-bedroom, compared to 16 to 20 euros in Bordeaux central neighbourhoods. Bordeaux property prices have risen sharply over the past decade, making purchase considerably more expensive than in Toulouse.
How far is Toulouse from the sea and the mountains?
Toulouse sits almost equidistant between the Pyrenees and the Mediterranean coast. The mountains are around 1.5 hours by car, making day trips to ski resorts or hiking trails genuinely practical. The Mediterranean, particularly around Sète or the beaches near Montpellier, is around 1.5 to 2 hours by road or fast train. This combination of mountain and sea access within comfortable day-trip range is one of Toulouse's most distinctive advantages over Bordeaux.
Is it hard to rent in Toulouse as an expat?
Toulouse has a competitive rental market, partly because of the large student population and partly because of the professional workforce drawn by Airbus and the aerospace industry. As an American expat, your dossier falls outside the standard French system, which adds a layer of challenge. A well-constructed application with clear evidence of financial stability and a compelling cover letter explaining your long-term commitment to the city is essential.
How far is Bordeaux from Paris?
Bordeaux is around two hours from Paris by TGV following the extension of the high-speed line in 2017. This makes it one of the most Paris-connected major cities in France and a genuine advantage for expats who need regular access to the capital. Toulouse by comparison is around four hours, which makes it a less practical base for regular Paris trips.
Which city has a better quality of life: Bordeaux or Toulouse?
Both cities consistently rank highly in French quality of life surveys. Toulouse has the edge in terms of sunshine hours and outdoor activity access. Bordeaux scores higher for architectural beauty, food and wine culture, and the combination of ocean and countryside proximity. The honest answer is that quality of life in both cities is genuinely excellent, the question is which version of excellent fits your priorities.
Should I rent first before buying in Bordeaux or Toulouse?
Almost certainly yes, regardless of which city you choose. Both cities have distinct neighbourhoods with significantly different characters, and understanding which area suits your daily life requires time on the ground. Renting for at least a year, ideally through different seasons, gives you the experience to make a property purchase decision you will still be comfortable with in five years.

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Alexandra Lhomond Small
Written by
Alexandra Lhomond Small
Marketing Manager · Ibanista

Originally from the south of France, Alexandra brings first-hand experience of expat life on both sides of the Channel. She leads content strategy at Ibanista, helping expats navigate their move with clarity and confidence.

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