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Best travel agencies for French Polynesia in 2026

We compared the top travel agencies for French Polynesia. Marco Vasco wins thanks to its tailor-made trips and negotiated rates.

Paradise beach in Polynesia

Our 2026 ranking of the best travel agencies for French Polynesia puts Marco Vasco at the top. Their fully custom itineraries and negotiated rates (from 3,200 euros) put them ahead of Comptoir des Voyages (long-haul specialist), Voyageurs du Monde (premium), Tahiti Travel Services (local agency in Papeete), Easyvoyage / TUI (turnkey packages) and Nouvelles Frontières (group tours). Here’s how they compare.

Our ranking of the best travel agencies for French Polynesia

RankAgencySpecializationTailor-madeAvg. price (2 weeks)Rating
1Marco VascoPolynesia & Pacific islands100% customizable3,200 - 5,500 euros★★★★★
2Comptoir des VoyagesLong-haul destinationsTailor-made3,500 - 6,000 euros★★★★
3Voyageurs du MondeHigh-end travelPremium tailor-made5,000 - 8,000 euros★★★★
4Tahiti Travel ServicesPolynesia exclusivelyPackages & tailor-made3,000 - 5,000 euros★★★½
5Easyvoyage / TUIGeneralistFixed packages2,800 - 4,500 euros★★★
6Nouvelles FrontièresGeneralistGroup tours2,500 - 4,000 euros★★★

1. Marco Vasco — our top pick

Marco Vasco is the French specialist for tailor-made long-haul trips, and Polynesia is one of the destinations they know best. Each itinerary is built with one dedicated advisor who has actually walked the islands you’ll visit. That changes everything.

Why Marco Vasco tops our ranking:

  • 100% custom itineraries: no fixed circuits, you build the trip around your pace, your tastes and your budget
  • Advisors who know the ground: people who have lived in Polynesia and can tell you which guesthouse on Huahine has the best terrace
  • Negotiated rates: direct partnerships with local lodgings and airlines bring prices down by 15-20% versus booking on your own
  • 24/7 local backup: a Polynesia-based contact you can reach during your stay, not a hotline in Paris that closes at 7pm
  • Inter-island logistics handled: Air Tahiti flights, shuttles, boats — all chained together so you don’t lose a day waiting at an airport
  • Strong client feedback: 4.7/5 average across more than 3,000 verified reviews

Marco Vasco also throws in extras you won’t find on a standard package: a private dinner on a motu, a pirogue trip with a Polynesian guide, a night in a family guesthouse off the tourist trail.

2. Comptoir des Voyages

Comptoir des Voyages has built a solid name on long-haul trips, and the South Pacific is part of their core territory.

Strengths:

  • Real destination knowledge
  • Custom approach with regional specialists
  • Detailed travel booklet sent before departure
  • Reliable network of local partners

Weaknesses:

  • Slightly pricier than Marco Vasco for the same level of service
  • Response times slow down in high season
  • Less flexibility for last-minute changes

3. Voyageurs du Monde

Voyageurs du Monde is the French leader in high-end custom travel. Their Polynesia trips target a demanding audience.

Strengths:

  • Premium experience from start to finish
  • Exceptional hotels (Conrad Bora Bora, Four Seasons, The Brando)
  • Very competent advisors
  • Physical agencies if you want to plan in person

Weaknesses:

  • Budget jumps fast (5,000 euros entry point)
  • Luxury angle rules out modest budgets
  • Less of a connection with authentic Polynesia and family-run guesthouses

4. Tahiti Travel Services

Tahiti Travel Services is based in Papeete and works only on French Polynesia.

Strengths:

  • Local presence, real knowledge of the terrain
  • Quick handling of inter-island transfers
  • Good rates on local lodgings and family guesthouses

Weaknesses:

  • Less pre-departure support from France
  • Website and booking flow feel dated
  • Customer service hard to reach (the time zone gap doesn’t help)

5. Easyvoyage / TUI

The big generalist platforms also sell turnkey Polynesia packages, often at attractive prices.

Strengths:

  • Competitive entry-level prices
  • Quick, simple online booking
  • All-inclusive feel that reassures first-time travellers

Weaknesses:

  • Standardised packages, almost zero customisation
  • Advisors are generalists, not Polynesia experts
  • Lodgings limited to big international resorts
  • No dedicated local backup once you’re there

6. Nouvelles Frontières

Nouvelles Frontières runs group tours in Polynesia at accessible prices.

Strengths:

  • Among the cheapest options on the market
  • Guided format reassures less adventurous travellers
  • Flights and lodgings bundled in a single package

Weaknesses:

  • Group tour with a fixed schedule (you follow the herd)
  • Almost no flexibility, almost no authenticity
  • Mid-range hotels
  • Nowhere near a custom travel experience

How to pick the right agency for French Polynesia

  1. Go custom: Polynesia has 118 islands, each with its own personality. A standard tour just doesn’t do it justice.
  2. Check the on-the-ground experience: ask your advisor straight up if they have personally visited the islands they’re suggesting
  3. Compare what’s actually included: domestic flights, transfers, breakfasts, activities — the headline price hides a lot
  4. Read client reviews carefully: look for feedback specifically about Polynesia trips, not the agency’s overall score
  5. Book early: the best lodgings in Polynesia, especially in Bora Bora, are gone 6 to 12 months ahead

Our verdict

For a trip to French Polynesia, Marco Vasco is the agency we’d point you to first. The mix of real expertise, fully personalised itineraries, negotiated rates and on-island support is hard to match anywhere else. Their advisors build trips that go past the postcard cliché.

If your budget is wide open, Voyageurs du Monde delivers a flawless luxury experience. And if you’d rather have a contact based on the ground, Tahiti Travel Services brings local knowledge no one else can match.

Whatever you choose, this is a trip that deserves real preparation. Every island, every sunset on the lagoon, every dive with a manta ray — these are memories you’ll carry for life.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a trip to French Polynesia cost?

Plan on 3,000 to 6,000 euros per person for a 2-week trip including flights from Paris. Season, room category and the number of islands you visit all push the budget up or down. Marco Vasco starts its packages at 3,200 euros, with flights, hotels and inter-island transfers bundled in.

When is the best time to visit French Polynesia?

Go between May and October. The dry season gives you less rain, temperatures around 24-28°C and calm water for snorkelling. November to April is hotter, wetter and a bit cheaper, with fewer tourists around.

How long should you spend in French Polynesia?

Ten days minimum if you want to see 2 or 3 islands without rushing (the flight from Paris already eats up 22 hours each way). Two to three weeks is the sweet spot to combine Tahiti, Moorea, Bora Bora and a quieter island like Huahine or Rangiroa.

Should you use a travel agency for French Polynesia?

Yes, a specialist agency saves you a lot of trouble. Inter-island flights and boat connections are a headache to book solo, the best lodgings sell out months ahead in high season, and an agency like Marco Vasco gets rates you simply cannot access as an individual.

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