If you spend any time on the Côte d’Azur, there’s a good chance someone will insist that you must try a Pan Bagnat. And honestly, they’re right. This humble-looking sandwich is one of Nice’s most iconic foods, a portable burst of Provençal sunshine that tells the whole story of the region’s flavors in every messy, olive-oil-dripping bite.
The origins of the Pan Bagnat go back centuries, to a time when workers, fishermen, and families needed something hearty, affordable, and nourishing to take with them throughout the day. Its name literally means “bathed bread,” which gives you a hint of what’s coming: this is not a delicate sandwich. It’s a Mediterranean power move with simple ingredients, bold flavors, and absolutely no fear of olive oil. In fact, the sandwich was basically invented to use up day-old bread by soaking it in oil until it softened again. Nothing wasted. Everything delicious.
When we visited in January, I arrived with the Pan Bagnat already on my must-try list. We tasted a few from the local patisserie in Villefranche, but the one that stayed with me was from Ma Première Boulangerie in La Turbie. It was everything I’d hoped for: bright, salty, and generously soaked in olive oil. We ate them on our outings - from the coastal trail at Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat to the hilltop village of Sainte-Agnès, each bite perfectly matching the Mediterranean views around us.






At its core, a Pan Bagnat is essentially the salade niçoise turned into a sandwich, but the real ones, the ones you get at markets or tiny boulangeries in Nice, are a bit more rustic and far more opinionated than the tourist-friendly versions. A proper one starts with a round pain de campagne or a small boule. The bread gets sliced horizontally and generously drizzled with high-quality olive oil. No butter. No mayonnaise. Olive oil is the heart and soul of the whole thing.
Then comes the filling, which feels like a greatest-hits playlist of southern French ingredients: ripe tomatoes, boiled eggs, raw onion sliced whisper-thin, anchovies or tuna (sometimes both, and locals have very strong opinions about which is “correct”), Niçoise olives, radishes, basil, and crisp green peppers. Everything is seasoned simply - salt, pepper, olive oil, and then the sandwich is allowed to rest so all the flavors sink into the bread. The result is a beautiful, controlled chaos of juicy vegetables, salty punchy fish, and rich oil-soaked bread that somehow manages to be both refreshing and deeply satisfying.
Visually, it’s not trying to win any beauty pageants. It’s chunky, colorful, and slightly messy, the kind of sandwich whose fillings try to sneak out the sides as soon as you pick it up. But that’s part of its charm. When you unwrap it and see the bright reds, greens, and yellows peeking through the olive oil-kissed bread, you immediately know you’re in for something good.
Taste-wise, a Pan Bagnat is bright, bold, and confidently Mediterranean. The tomatoes bring sweetness, the olives bring brine, the eggs add creaminess, and the anchovies and tuna deliver that savory hit that keeps everything grounded. Every bite is layered and complex, and somehow the olive oil ties the whole thing together like a citrusy, herbal ribbon. It’s the kind of sandwich that feels like a small meal and a small vacation at the same time.
In Nice, it’s wildly popular. You’ll see it in bakeries, markets, beach snack stands (not in January, unfortunately) and even at home picnics in parks or at the port. Locals eat it for lunch, hikers take it on the trails, and food lovers hunt down the “best” one (which is a slightly hopeless exercise because everyone in Nice insists their favorite spot is the true original).
So why try it? Honestly, because it captures the spirit of Nice so well. It’s unfussy, sun-drenched, and incredibly flavourful. It’s one of the few dishes that genuinely tastes like the landscape it comes from; the sea, the gardens, and the olive groves. It’s also wonderfully portable. You can grab one, wander through Vieux Nice, sit by the water, and just let the whole Mediterranean mood wash over you.
In a city famous for glamour, the Pan Bagnet is refreshingly real. It’s proof that sometimes the most unforgettable food is the simplest. And once you’ve had a good one, you’ll never look at “just a sandwich” the same way again.




A local association in Nice is dedicated to preserving and promoting the Pan Bagnat. Here's a list of authentic incredients according to the organization.



