
Update June 2025 by John Strudwick
Large marina with but no dedicated visitor section – you have to call up, there are no cleats – all loops, bouncy pontoons and very short
Accessible at any state of tide
UK hose connections
Electric on 24 hour buttons that go off at 1900 each day
Has fuel – takes up to 500 euros but a tight mooring with swirl pulling you out of marina, easy to fill up best on inner side of pontoon
Showers OK, but toilets not very nice – might say disgusting. No Laundry – nearest is in town
Market Halls every day & big market on Wednesday & Saturday, intermarche 10 minute bike ride
Good bar in town – L’Expresse, and a good choice of restaurants at the marina, Our favourite: L’Autentic wood fire exceptional cote de boeuf (and sea bream)

Positioned at the eastern end, but abutting La Baule, Pornichet is an all-weather harbour. Although large (around 1100 berths), we can normally berth on one of the larger (but slippery when wet!) pontoons just inside the harbour mole and near the fuel berth and next to the Gendarme Maritime’s offshore patrol boat.
The Capitainerie is situated at first-floor level close to the many restaurants and cafes about a 5-minute walk from the marina entrance. The marina staff have always been helpful and accommodating and we have enjoyed some good meals at the marina restaurants
A further 15 minutes’ walk across a raised causeway, brings you to the old town on Pornichet which still to us, has some olde-worlde charm whilst trying not to get over-run by the many new blocks of apartments under construction.
There is a daily fish market in the centre of the old town and a much larger weekly street market which is held nearby. We particularly enjoy an early morning walk from the marina into Pornichet buying freshly baked croissants and coffee at a local bar close to the market and then just watching the world go by!
Nick Fletcher kindly provided the above report
Report by Gavin May – July 2024
If you are familiar with the town of La Baule, you might imagine that this neighbouring marina is equally swish. It isn’t. In fact, there isn’t even marina WiFi!
24 hrs access and I guess everything works and the Welcome is friendly. Facilities were clean on our visit but are somewhat dated. With that bay, lots of sports boats, peche promenade, jet skis etc .
There are some straightforward eateries by the marina, and a chandlery and 10 plus mins away, over in the town, the in season market on Saturday is quite good with good fishmongers in Les Halles. There is a small Spar, or it is a bit of a hike to a larger Intermarche.
For a stroll, there is a wooden promenade for 45 mins or so in the direction of St Nazaire, as it were, alongside the beach.
Somewhere you might stop en route, then, rather than head for.
Incidentally, on their Web page, note that the access times refer to the drying port, not the main marina!
All tide access spells it out. Sportsboat dealers, ringos etc suggest the bay should be a lot more sheltered than on our visit. The quite large marina is…functional.
Don‘t try to work out where to berth, just call VHF 9 and they will tell you. Cafes, surfing type cocktail bars, and to the north is miles of the sandy bay and medium-rise apartment blocks stretch into the distance. Walk over the bridge causeway for 7 mins and into the town square, which is more of a large car park and has a covered market, season dependent. As a location, the marina is not the prettiest place but it is big and full for practical reasons-perhaps just why you might also come here.
Gavin May kindly provided the above report – 2021