Free‐living red coralline algae play an important role in the carbon and carbonate cycles of coastal environments. In this study, we examined the physiology of free‐living coralline algae forming maerl beds in the Bay of Brest (Brittany, France), where Lithothamnion corallioides is the dominant maerl (i.e., rhodolith) species. Phymatolithon calcareum and Lithophyllum incrustans are also present (in lower abundances) at a specific site in the bay. We aimed to assess how maerl physiology is affected by seasonality and/or local environmental variations at the inter‐ and intraspecific levels. Physiological measurements (respiration, photosynthetic and calcification rates) were performed using incubation chambers in winter and summer to compare ...