Premium Destination · Colmar · Alsace · Grand-Est · 2026
Europe's other capital of prestige travel — intact heritage, starred gastronomy, world-class viticulture.
1228
Founding year — a preserved medieval centre, classified safeguarded sector
51 Grands Crus
The Alsace Wine Route — exceptional Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris
2027
Announced opening of Le Chasseur — first true ex nihilo 5-star hotel
For a long time, Colmar was presented in guidebooks as a picturesque detour on the road between Strasbourg and the Black Forest — the "little Venice of Alsace", the half-timbered houses, the Christmas market. This presentation still works for mass tourism. It has ceased to be the right reading grid for understanding what has been happening here for the past decade. Today, Colmar is establishing itself as one of Europe's most discreetly high-performing prestige destinations, and premium international travellers — American, British, Korean, Japanese, Emirati, Indian, Brazilian — have understood this before many European prescribers.
The reason lies in a rare equation. Colmar concentrates, in a compact format walkable in a few hours, what UHNWI travellers now seek elsewhere: intact architectural heritage, gastronomy at the highest European level, a world-class wine scene, human-scale five-star hospitality, and a daily security level many capitals have lost. All of it accessible in three hours from Paris, two from Zurich, two from Frankfurt, and minutes from Basel-Mulhouse-EuroAirport.
Heritage, but the real thing
Colmar's historic centre is not a reconstruction. It is a safeguarded sector the city has had the intelligence to protect without museumifying it. The Pfister House, the Maison des Têtes, the Saint-Martin collegiate church, the Tanners' Quarter and Little Venice compose an ensemble that premium travellers immediately recognise as one of Europe's "intact" places — alongside Salzburg's old town, central Bruges or Český Krumlov. This heritage integrity, now rare in Western Europe, is what turns a visit into an experience.
The Unterlinden Museum, since its renovation by Herzog & de Meuron, plays in another category: Mathias Grünewald's Isenheim Altarpiece is displayed in museographic conditions that have drawn the attention of international specialist press. For demanding cultural clienteles — collectors, curators, aesthetes — this is a destination argument in its own right, not merely a tourist stop.
Prestige hospitality: a maturing ecosystem
Colmar's high-end hotel offer has long been anchored by La Maison des Têtes, a Relais & Châteaux five-star hotel housed in a listed 1609 building. The house embodies what Alsace does best: discreet elegance, French service worked without ostentation, a recognised table, and the permanent awareness of occupying a monument. For many international travellers, it is through this address that they discover Colmar is a real destination for a stay, not a stop.
The Esquisse Hôtel & Spa Colmar - MGallery has broadened this five-star offer with a more contemporary signature. And the dynamic will accelerate: the Le Chasseur project — an ex nihilo five-star hotel village whose construction permit was validated by the Nancy Administrative Court of Appeal in October 2025 — entered construction in 2026 for an announced 2027 opening. Its ambition: a "hotel village" combining accommodation, dining, wellness, events and ancillary services, with noble-material architecture integrated into the landscape. For the international premium market, this is the signal that Colmar is moving from "stopover city" to full-fledged "destination" status.
Around this five-star core, a network of superior four-stars, character houses and private villas structures the offer for two- to five-night stays — for couples, families, or small privatised groups.
Gastronomy: one of France's highest Michelin-star densities per capita
The Haut-Rhin department, of which Colmar is the economic sub-prefecture, concentrates one of France's highest Michelin-star densities relative to population. Around Colmar, within thirty minutes' drive, premium travellers access several starred tables including JY's by Jean-Yves Schillinger in the city itself, and the Auberge de l'Ill at Illhaeusern — one of Europe's most enduringly recognised tables. Add to this a scene of young Alsatian chefs reinventing regional cuisine, a high-end winstub tradition with no equivalent elsewhere in France, and a network of private chefs able to operate in a privatised villa for a bespoke dinner.
For international travellers who have already done Paris, Lyon, Saint-Étienne or Roanne, the Alsatian gastronomic density around Colmar has become a stay-driver in its own right. This is one of the strongest arguments we put forward with our American, Asian and Middle Eastern UHNWI clients.
The Wine Route: a world-class wine heritage
Colmar is the economic capital of the Alsace vineyard and the natural gateway to the Alsace Wine Route. Alsace produces one of the world's most beautiful palettes of white wines — Riesling, Gewurztraminer, Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc, Sylvaner, Muscat — to which are added rapidly improving Pinot Noir and Crémants d'Alsace that have become a European reference. The region counts 51 classified Grands Crus, world-renowned estates such as Trimbach, Hugel, Zind-Humbrecht, Marcel Deiss, Domaine Weinbach, Marc Kreydenweiss, and a network of character winemakers whose encounter, properly organised, is one of the most memorable experiences one can offer a serious enthusiast.
The wine villages around Colmar — Riquewihr, Eguisheim, Kaysersberg, Hunawihr, Turckheim — regularly feature among the "most beautiful villages in France" and constitute, for the premium international traveller, a succession of tableaux that few European regions can line up with such density. Eguisheim was even voted Favourite Village of the French in 2013, a distinction that still weighs in international prescription.
Access and geographic position: an underestimated asset
A large part of what makes Colmar attractive for premium travel comes from a factor too rarely mentioned: its access. Three hours from Paris by direct TGV, two hours' drive from Zurich and Basel-Mulhouse-EuroAirport (business terminal, private jets), two hours from Frankfurt and three from Munich, Colmar is one of Europe's best-connected cities at the crossroads of four major UHNWI markets: France, Switzerland, Germany and the Benelux. For an Asian or American traveller arriving at Zurich or Frankfurt in business class, the transfer to Colmar is shorter and more comfortable than to most premium Alpine destinations.



