The hardest part of a French Polynesia family trip isn't the flights, it's the inter-island logistics once you arrive. I've planned the land-based version for families and watched them spend half the holiday in airports and on transfers between islands. A small ship solves that: you unpack once and wake up somewhere new. On the Paul Gauguin, around 330 guests, that means more time in the water and less time wrangling bags. Here's why it tends to work for families travelling together.
One unpacking, many islands
French Polynesia is spread across a lot of ocean, and hopping islands independently means repeated check-ins, ferries and inter-island flights. Schedules and connections can change, so it's worth confirming any independent legs close to travel. A cruise removes most of that friction; the islands come to you while the family settles into one cabin for the week.

Shore days the whole group can share
What makes it work for mixed ages is the range ashore: gentle lagoon snorkelling for the kids, a 4WD island tour for grandparents, a dive for the teenager. On Motu Mahana, the private island off Taha'a, everyone lands in the same place and then does their own thing, which is the sweet spot for multi-generational groups.
Built-in downtime
Families burn out when every day is a mission. Sea days and the ship's marina give you easy, low-effort fun between the big excursions, and meals across the three restaurants keep everyone fed without a daily restaurant hunt. That rhythm of effort and rest is what keeps a long trip enjoyable for all ages.

Frequently asked questions
Is a cruise really easier than staying on the islands?
For families, usually yes. You unpack once and skip most inter-island ferries and flights, though any independent legs you add should be confirmed close to travel as schedules change.
What can different ages do together ashore?
Plenty: easy lagoon snorkelling, gentle island tours, and the private-island day at Motu Mahana give kids, parents and grandparents a shared base with options for each.
How big is the ship?
The Paul Gauguin carries about 330 guests, small enough to feel manageable with children and to reach islands larger ships can't.
Planning a Paul Gauguin voyage? Tell us your dates and what you're dreaming of and we'll map it out for you.