The gold-crowned Neo-Byzantine basilica 'La Bonne Mere' crowns the city's highest point at 162m, its Virgin statue the very symbol of Marseille you see from the sea sailing in. The open tourist train leaves the Vieux-Port, runs the seafront corniche past Vallon des Auffes and the Palais du Pharo, then grinds up to the summit for the definitive 360 panorama over the Old Port, the islands and Chateau d'If, with a ~20-min stop at the top. The steep climb on foot would eat half your port-day energy; the train is the smart cruiser move and the basilica itself is free to enter.
What to expect
You board the open-air tourist train at Vieux-Port near Quai des Belges and glide past the seafront corniche, with views of Vallon des Auffes and the Palais du Pharo unfolding as you travel. The train then climbs steeply to the 162-meter summit where Notre-Dame de la Garde—the gold-crowned Neo-Byzantine basilica and Marseille's iconic symbol—crowns the highest point of the city. You'll have roughly 20 minutes at the summit to explore the basilica (free entry) and soak in the definitive 360-degree panorama: the Old Port, the islands, and Château d'If spread below you. The entire loop takes the physical toll out of what would otherwise be an exhausting uphill walk, letting you conserve energy for other port activities.
Direct wins big. The ship's 'Marseille & Notre-Dame de la Garde' coach excursion is $90-120 pp, and it is mostly charging you for a bus to a free church. The Euro 10 tourist train (or local bus 60 for a couple euros) gets you the same basilica and the corniche drive for a fraction of the price, saving ~$80-110 pp. Only downside vs the ship: no live guide narration, so read up first or pair it with the e-bike tour.
Good to know
The €10 Circuit 1 ticket ($11 pp) departs directly from Vieux-Port near Quai des Belges—no need to book ahead, just walk over from the pier and queue; the journey and summit stop total roughly 45 minutes to 1 hour. Plan this excursion early in your port day (aim for the first 2–3 hours) to avoid afternoon crowds and ensure a comfortable buffer back to the ship. Bring water and sunscreen; the open train offers no shade and the summit stop is fully exposed. If you want historical context the train won't provide, pair this with a quick read on Notre-Dame's backstory beforehand, or combine it with a guided e-bike tour for deeper narrative.