French Southern Territories
Phone Code
+262
Capital
Port-aux-Francais
Population
~140 (seasonal researchers)
Native Name
Territoire des Terres australes et antarctiques fr
Region
Africa
Southern Africa
Timezone
French Southern and Antarctic Time
UTC+05:00
On This Page
The French Southern and Antarctic Lands comprise one of Earth's most remote and inaccessible territories—scattered sub-Antarctic islands and archipelagos in the southern Indian Ocean where howling winds, towering waves, and extreme isolation create landscapes untouched by civilization except for small scientific research stations. This French overseas territory spans several island groups: the volcanic Kerguelen archipelago rising from abyssal depths 3,300 kilometers southeast of Madagascar, the Crozet Islands' dramatic cliffs hosting millions of seabirds, tiny Amsterdam and Saint-Paul islands as volcanic specks in vast ocean, and the Scattered Islands in the Mozambique Channel. No indigenous population has ever existed here—only rotating teams of 30-140 researchers and support staff occupy stations studying everything from atmospheric physics to penguin colonies, with populations fluctuating seasonally. The islands present landscapes of stunning desolation: glaciers calving into fjords, black sand beaches pounded by Southern Ocean swells, tussock grass bending before relentless winds, massive colonies of king penguins numbering hundreds of thousands, elephant seals hauling their bulk onto rocky shores, and albatrosses wheeling overhead on three-meter wingspans. Visiting requires special authorization from French Polar Institute (IPEV) and typically happens only aboard supply vessels making quarterly runs or rare expedition cruises charging astronomical prices for the privilege of landing on these pristine shores. These territories represent nature at its most raw and magnificent—places where human presence remains temporary footnote in landscapes shaped entirely by geology, weather, and wildlife creating ecosystems found nowhere else on Earth.
French Southern Territories Access & Authorization
The French Southern and Antarctic Lands are NOT open to general tourism and require special authorization for any visit. Access is controlled by the French Polar Institute Paul-Émile Victor (IPEV) and the Territory administration in Réunion. Authorization is typically granted only to accredited researchers joining scientific missions, essential support personnel, or participants on rare, extremely expensive expedition cruise ships that have secured advance permission to land. Tourist visits are extraordinarily limited—perhaps a few hundred people per year total across all islands, compared to zero in most years before expedition cruising emerged. To visit, you must either: 1) Join a scientific expedition (requires academic credentials and research purpose), 2) Book passage on one of the handful of expedition cruises visiting per year (typically departing from Réunion or South Africa, costing $15,000-$50,000+ for 2-3 week voyages), or 3) Secure special permission for documentary/media purposes. The Territory's prefecture in Saint-Pierre, Réunion, issues authorizations. No commercial flights serve the islands—access is entirely by sea via research vessel or expedition ship, with voyages taking days through some of Earth's roughest waters. Kerguelen receives quarterly supply ship Marion Dufresne from Réunion (5-day crossing), while other islands see even less frequent service. Weather can delay or cancel landings even for authorized vessels. There are no hotels, restaurants, or tourist infrastructure—visitors on expedition cruises typically don't disembark at research stations but make zodiac landings at approved sites to view wildlife while avoiding disturbance to scientific work and ecosystems. This is adventure travel at its most extreme and exclusive.
Common Visa Types
Scientific Mission Authorization
Accredited researchers joining IPEV scientific programs
Expedition Cruise Landing Permit
Pre-authorized landings by permitted expedition vessels
Essential French Southern Territories Information
Visiting the French Southern Territories represents one of Earth's most challenging and exclusive travel experiences—these sub-Antarctic islands scattered across the southern Indian Ocean see only scientific researchers, essential personnel, and rare expedition cruise passengers willing to endure multi-day ocean crossings through stormy seas for fleeting encounters with pristine wilderness. The Kerguelen archipelago—largest of the island groups—rises from abyssal ocean depths as volcanic peaks and plateaus covering 7,215 square kilometers (larger than Delaware), with dramatic fjords, glaciers, windswept tundra, and Port-aux-Français research station housing 50-110 people depending on season. Wildlife dominates the landscape: massive king penguin colonies numbering hundreds of thousands of birds packed onto beaches, elephant seals weighing up to 4 tons hauled out on rocky shores, fur seals defending territories, wandering albatrosses nesting on tussock slopes, and endemic Kerguelen shags fishing coastal waters. The Crozet Islands—five volcanic islands northeast of Kerguelen—host Alfred Faure station and even more spectacular seabird colonies with millions of macaroni penguins, plus unique king penguin colony at Baie du Marin. Tiny Amsterdam Island (55 km²) and Saint-Paul Island (7 km²) rise as volcanic cones farther north in slightly warmer waters, hosting huge populations of rockhopper penguins, Amsterdam albatross (endangered species breeding nowhere else), and fur seals. The islands present landscapes of stark beauty: black volcanic cliffs plunging into churning ocean, green tussock grass and low vegetation (no trees grow here), glacial features on Kerguelen's higher elevations, and skies filled with seabirds. Weather is notoriously harsh—Kerguelen experiences strong winds averaging 35 km/h year-round with gusts exceeding 200 km/h, frequent rain and sleet, and temperatures rarely exceeding 15°C even in summer. For the extremely limited number of visitors who reach these shores—whether researchers stationed for months or expedition cruisers on brief landings—the experience delivers profound sense of Earth's wildness and the insignificance of human presence in landscapes shaped entirely by nature's most powerful forces.
Discover French Southern Territories
Ways to Experience This Destination
Join accredited scientific mission requiring advanced degrees and research purpose—spend 2-14 months at research station conducting fieldwork studying sub-Antarctic ecosystems, wildlife, climate, or atmospheric physics in extreme isolation.
Book passage on rare expedition ship visiting sub-Antarctic islands—2-3 week voyage from Réunion/Cape Town with zodiac landings at permitted sites to view king penguin colonies, elephant seals, and albatrosses in pristine wilderness (weather permitting).
Document extraordinary concentrations of sub-Antarctic wildlife—massive king penguin colonies, albatross breeding grounds, elephant seal rookeries, and dramatic volcanic landscapes found nowhere else on Earth.
Experience Earth's wildest maritime environment at its most remote—traverse stormy Southern Ocean, land on islands visited by only hundreds of people per year, witness nature at its most powerful and untouched.
Money & Currency
Euro (€, EUR)
Currency code: EUR
Practical Money Tips
Euro (EUR) — official currency, but no commercial economy exists on the territory
The French Southern and Antarctic Territories (Terres australes et antarctiques françaises, TAAF) use the euro as their official currency. However, this is largely academic for travelers — the TAAF comprises several uninhabited subantarctic island groups (Kerguelen Islands, Crozet Islands, Amsterdam Island, Saint Paul Island, and the Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean) with no permanent civilian population. There are no ATMs, no banks, no shops, no hotels, and no commercial services of any kind. The only inhabitants are rotating scientific and military personnel stationed at research bases who are fully supplied by France. No tourist currency exchange applies.
No ATMs or banking services — territory is inaccessible to conventional travelers
There are zero ATMs, bank branches, payment terminals, or any commercial financial infrastructure anywhere in the French Southern Territories. The territory is administered by France but has no public access infrastructure. Access is exclusively via French polar research vessels (Marion Dufresne and Astrolabe, operated by IPEV — French Polar Institute) which supply the scientific stations on Kerguelen, Crozet, Amsterdam, and the Scattered Islands. No private vessel landings are permitted without authorization from TAAF administration in Saint-Pierre, Réunion Island.
No payment infrastructure of any kind — the territory is not a tourist destination
No card payments, no contactless terminals, no Apple Pay, no Google Pay, and no cash transactions exist in the French Southern Territories. There is literally nothing to buy — no shops, no restaurants, no accommodation, no guides, and no services for the public. Scientific personnel at Kerguelen (Port-aux-Français base), Crozet (Alfred Faure base), and Amsterdam (Martin de Viviès base) are provisioned directly by IPEV and do not need money on-site. The TAAF is one of the most remote and inaccessible territories on Earth.
Extreme remoteness — access only through authorized scientific expeditions
The only realistic way a non-military visitor might ever reach the French Southern Territories is aboard a dedicated expedition cruise vessel. A small number of specialized polar expedition companies (e.g., Ponant, Heritage Expeditions) occasionally include Kerguelen or Crozet on ultra-rare itineraries, requiring both TAAF authorization and careful multi-week voyage planning from Réunion or South Africa. Such expeditions cost approximately €15,000–30,000+ per person. If you are planning one, all financial arrangements are made in advance through the expedition operator — there are no on-site expenses. Budget planning for the TAAF means budgeting for the expedition itself, not for in-territory spending.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
The French Southern Territories represent Earth's wildest and most exclusive travel destination—remote sub-Antarctic islands requiring special authorization, accessible only via rare expedition cruises or scientific missions. Witness massive king penguin colonies, albatross breeding grounds, and pristine wilderness in one of the planet's last truly untouched regions.
Check French Southern Territories Access Requirements