GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut
GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut

Your walk from
Saint Jean Pied de Port to
Etsaut

You'll walk 124 kilometres east from Saint Jean Pied de Port, taken into the high Pyrenees by way of the beech forests of Iraty rather than the high ridges, with the limestone plateaus of the Pierre-Saint-Martin coming up and the Vallée d'Aspe falling away to Etsaut. A route that crosses from the Basque country into Béarn.

Distance
124 km · 77 mi
Ascent
6,230 m
Duration
–5 days
Trips from £435pp See packages →
From per person
Plan your trip
French Pyrenees France
Trail Essentials
Start
Saint Jean Pied de PortPyrénées-Atlantiques
End
EtsautPyrénées-Atlantiques
Distance
124 km77 miles
Total Ascent
6,230 m20,440 ft
Difficulty
Demanding
Hilliness
Mountainous
Time to Complete
Hiker
5 days ~24 km/day

When to Walk

Best Good Avoid
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
The GR10 Section 2 runs 77 miles east from Saint Jean Pied de Port, the old pilgrim staging post at the foot of the Pyrenees, to Etsaut in the Vallée d'Aspe — through the green hills of the Pays Basque, past the prehistoric stone circles at the Cromlechs d'Okabe, across the suspended footbridge of the Passerelle d'Holzarté, into the limestone country of the Pierre-Saint-Martin, and out across the Plateau de Lhers into Béarn. You climb 6,200 metres across seven walking days. The character is two cultures stitched together: Basque shepherd country giving way to the bigger limestone country of the high Pyrenees, with the language, the cheese, and the cattle changing as you go.
Walking the GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut

How The Trail Unfolds

Your trail divides naturally into three parts — not by day, but by country. You walk the green hills and beech forests of the Pays Basque; you cross the gorges and climb into the limestone of the high Pyrenees; and from there, you descend the long valleys into Béarn.

The Basque Country
Saint Jean Pied de Port to Logibar

The Basque Country

Green hills, beech forest, and shepherds selling cheese at the cols you cross — the Basque world before the mountains close in.

You climb out of Saint Jean Pied de Port through the green Basque hills toward Estérençuby, then up onto the Phagalcette plateau where farmsteads thin and the country opens. By day three you've crossed Col d'Irau — where shepherds still sell their cheese to passing walkers — and reached the prehistoric stone circles at the Cromlechs d'Okabe before dropping into the vast beech forest of Iraty. The final stage descends along pastoral ridges past palombière hunting posts to Logibar and its old inn. The Basque country gives way as you arrive.

Into Béarn
Logibar to La Pierre-Saint-Martin

Into Béarn

Across the suspended Holzarté footbridge and into a 1,250-metre climb that lifts you out of the Basque country and into the limestone of the high Pyrenees.

You leave Logibar climbing through woodland to the Passerelle d'Holzarté — a 64-metre suspended footbridge thrown across the gorge in 1920 for timber extraction, 180 metres above the river — then up onto the open pastures of the Plateau d'Ardakhotchia and over the cultural boundary at Col d'Anhaou. The next day takes you out of the valley on a single 1,250-metre climb through the Ravin d'Arpidia and the Bois de Lèche to Col de la Pierre-Saint-Martin at the Spanish border. The ski station beyond it makes a strange end to a hard day.

The Aspe Valley
La Pierre-Saint-Martin to Etsaut

The Aspe Valley

Lapiaz limestone, the section's exposed high point, then a long descent through cirque and Béarnais stone village down to Etsaut.

You cross the Arres de Camplong, a vast lapiaz plateau where fractured limestone forms a lunar terrain of fissures and sinkholes. At the Pas de l'Osque, 1,922 metres up and the section's high point, you scramble through a breach between rock spurs with a fixed cable for the exposed bit. The descent opens onto the Cirque de Lescun and drops to the village. The final day crosses the Plateau de Lhers, climbs to Col de Barrancq through firs once cut for the French naval dockyards, then drops through Borce to the river crossing into Etsaut.

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Big Trail Adventures

GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut

GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut

Regular price $856.00
Regular price Sale price $856.00
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Taxes included.
Number of Travellers
    • Breathtaking Pyrenean landscapes
    • Diverse terrain 
    • Authentic mountain villages and culture

We recommend securing your dates early to guarantee hotel availability.

Included

  • 6 Nights in gite/hostel accommodation (dormitory space)
  • Breakfast each morning
  • Dinner (except day 1 which is B&B)
  • Transfer on Day 6 
  • Hard copy of local maps and route notes (provided at 1st accommodation)
  • Full gpx route to follow
  • Comprehensive Digital Guidebook
  • On-trail support from our UK team

Excluded

  • Travel Insurance
  • Travel to and from the start/finish
  • Tourist Taxes
  • Personal Equipment
  • Evening meal on day 1

Solo hiker? Contact us and we'll help build your adventure.

View full details
Your personalised Trail Book — trip overview, day by day itinerary and accommodation details

Included with every trip

Your personalised
Trail Book

Everything you need for every day of your trail — built around your exact itinerary. Your route, your accommodation, your packing list. Ready before you leave, works offline when you're out there.

Tonight's accommodation

Check-in time, room type, phone number and directions — all in one place

Day-by-day trail description

Route map, elevation profile and written description for each stage

Packing list and pre-trip checklist

Everything you need, nothing you don't. Tick items off as you go

Works offline

Open it once with data and it's yours — no signal needed on the trail

Included with every trip

Your route on every device you use

Your custom GPX file is built around your exact itinerary — day by day, door to door. Load it onto any device or app before you set off and navigate with confidence.

Works with

GPX route on Komoot iPhone app and Garmin watch
Craig, Trail Specialist at Big Trail Adventures
Talk to a Specialist

Knows the trail. Plans yours.

Craig Trail Specialist
The GR10 is the trail I point people to when they've walked Hadrian's Wall or the Tour du Mont Blanc and want something rougher and quieter. Pick the right week and you'll have shepherd's huts to yourself. Late June, before the big heat, is when I'd go.

Craig has spent over ten years in adventure travel — most of it talking walkers through trails like this one. He's helped customers plan their GR10 sections, knows where people typically misjudge the high climbs above Lescun and the limestone day on the Arres de Camplong, and has the calls in his pocket from people who've walked it the week before.

Ask Craig about the GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut

If you want to talk through your timing, your fitness, your pace, or anything the planner can't answer — call. Most of our customers do, and Craig's the one who'll answer.

The Practical Side

Before You Book

The things walkers ask us most often — answered plainly, so you don't have to ring to find out.

How fit do I need to be?

This is one of our toughest trails. You'll want to be comfortable walking 18–20 km a day in steep mountain terrain with a daypack and over 1,000 metres of ascent on the bigger days. Days 3, 5 and 6 each climb more than a thousand metres, and the section's high point at the Pas de l'Osque includes a short scramble with a fixed cable. The Explorer pace at nine days gives you the climbs at a slower rhythm, which most walkers find more sustainable than pushing through on Hiker pace.

When should I walk it?

June to September is the trail's best window — long days, dry paths above 1,500 metres, and the high passes clear of snow. Late May and early October are workable but the higher cols can still hold snow into early June and the autumn weather closes in fast. November to April we don't recommend: the route crosses ground above 1,900 metres, the shepherds' huts close, and most of the village accommodation along the way shuts for winter.

Do you include luggage transfer?

Yes — your bag is moved between accommodations every walking day, up to 20 kg per bag. You walk with a daypack carrying water, lunch and waterproofs. One thing worth flagging: a few of the higher stops (the cabane above Pierre-Saint-Martin, the refuge at L'Abérouat) are only reachable on foot, so on those days the transfer goes to the next village instead and your overnight bag stays with you. We'll set this out clearly in your trip plan.

What kind of accommodation do you book?

Small mountain hotels, family-run gîtes d'étape, and traditional auberges in the villages along the route — Auberge Logibar, the Hotel Andreinia at Estérençuby, family inns at Lescun and Etsaut. On the two highest nights you'll stay in a refuge with shared dorms and an evening meal cooked by the gardien; private rooms here are usually not available. Every other night is en-suite, with breakfast included.

Can I walk it solo?

Yes — the GR10 is well-waymarked with red-and-white blazes the whole way, the cols are obvious, and you'll meet other walkers most days in season. The two long-climb days (Logibar to Senta and Senta to La Pierre-Saint-Martin) have stretches of an hour or two where you might not see anyone — fine in good weather, worth checking the mountain forecast before you head up. We book single rooms with a single supplement; the refuge nights are dorm-shared but otherwise straightforward.

What's the realistic total cost?

Our Classic package starts at £889 per person for the seven-day Hiker pace, based on two people sharing. That covers accommodation, breakfast every morning, baggage transfer where possible, a route pack with maps and notes, and 24-hour support. On the trail, budget around €30–40 a day per person for lunches, drinks and evening meals — auberge demi-pensions tend to be the best value and include a hearty mountain dinner. Refuge nights cost a bit more for the dinner-and-breakfast combo.

Still not sure? Ring us on 0131 560 2740 — Craig usually answers.

Still Thinking?

Speak to Craig

If you've scrolled this far, we need to help you get onto this trail. The bit the planner can't help with — "is the pace right for me?", "is August really that busy?", "can we add a rest day in Keswick?" — that's a two-minute phone call. Most people who book the GR10 Section 2: Saint Jean Pied de Port to Etsaut ring first.