France

Paris Travel Planning & Itineraries

The benchmark European capital. 20 arrondissements of Haussmann-era uniformity with enough variation that every neighbourhood feels distinct. The Louvre, Versailles, a cathedral rebuilding itself, and the densest concentration of Michelin stars in the world. First-timers get overwhelmed; repeat visitors realise Paris is best at 6am or after 9pm when the daytime crowds have gone. Walkable, iconic, unforgiving if you don't book ahead.

Our AI planner helps you pace your Paris days, pick the right neighbourhoods, and build a route that makes sense.

Planning Your Paris Trip

Best Time to Visit

April-June and September-October are the sweet spots — mild temperatures, blooming parks, long days. July-August are hot, humid, and locals leave town (many small restaurants close in August). December is magical for Christmas markets and windows but cold and wet. Avoid the week of Fashion Week (late February/September) and the Olympics window unless that's the point.

Budget Overview

Budget: $90-130 USD/day (budget hotel in 10th/11th arr, bakery breakfast EUR3-5, bistro lunch formule EUR15-20, metro). Mid-range: $220-380 USD/day (boutique hotel in 6th/7th, bistro dinners, museum passes, maybe one Michelin lunch). Luxury: $800+ USD/day (Le Bristol, Ritz, George V, 2-star Michelin dinners, private driver). Skip the "tourist menu" restaurants around the Eiffel Tower — they are the worst food in Paris at double the price.

Getting There

Fly into Charles de Gaulle (CDG) for most long-haul or Orly (ORY) for European/domestic. From YYZ, CDG is 7 hours direct on Air Canada or Air France. From CDG, take the RER B train to central Paris (~EUR12, 35-50 min) or a Roissybus to Opera (~EUR16). Avoid the CDG taxi line unless you have heavy luggage — it's slow and expensive (~EUR60 flat rate to central Paris).

Getting Around

Metro is the fastest way — dense, cheap, and reaches everything. A Navigo Easy card or carnet of 10 tickets saves money. Walking between the Louvre, Tuileries, and Saint-Germain is part of the experience. Velib bikes are great for the Seine. Avoid taxis/Ubers during rush hour — the metro is 3x faster. The RER C gets you to Versailles.

How many days do you need?

Most travellers spend 3 days in Paris. Our AI planner generates a custom day-by-day itinerary based on your travel dates.

Who is Paris best for?

couples honeymoon first-time

Common Paris planning mistakes

1

Eating near the Eiffel Tower

Every restaurant with an Eiffel Tower view is a tourist trap. Walk 10 minutes into the 7th arr residential streets for real bistros.

2

Queueing at the Louvre

Buy timed-entry tickets online. Enter through the Carrousel du Louvre mall entrance (less queue) instead of the Pyramid.

3

Only seeing the 1st-8th arrondissements

The real Paris is in the 10th, 11th, 19th, and 20th — canal Saint-Martin, Belleville, Menilmontant. Go there for one day.

4

Not booking restaurants ahead

Every good Paris bistro is booked 2-3 weeks out. Walk-ins at lunch work better than dinner.

Paris Neighbourhoods

Le Marais (3rd/4th)

The trendiest historic district — medieval streets, boutiques, LGBTQ+ friendly, the best falafel in the city. Central and walkable. Best for: first-timers, couples, shoppers.

Saint-Germain (6th)

The literary Left Bank with the famous cafés (Flore, Deux Magots), the best bookstores, and Luxembourg Gardens. Elegant and quiet. Best for: repeat visitors, slow travelers.

Montmartre (18th)

The hilltop village with Sacré-Cœur, the Place du Tertre, and the cobblestone streets. Touristy by day, charming at night. Best for: photographers, Amélie fans.

Latin Quarter (5th)

Historic student neighbourhood with the Panthéon, Luxembourg Gardens nearby, Shakespeare and Company bookstore. Slightly touristy but walkable to everything. Best for: first-timers, budget travelers.

7th Arrondissement

The Eiffel Tower district with grand boulevards, Rodin Museum, and some of the fanciest hotels. Elegant and central. Best for: luxury travelers, iconic views.

Canal Saint-Martin (10th)

Hip canal-side neighbourhood with independent cafés, vintage shops, and younger crowds. Away from tourists. Best for: younger travelers, foodies, second visits.

Paris Food & Drink

Septime

Neo-bistro / 1 Michelin

11th arr. World 50 Best. Daily-changing EUR135 tasting menu. Book exactly 3 weeks ahead at 10am Paris time.

Le Comptoir du Relais

Classic bistro

Yves Camdeborde original. No reservations at lunch — arrive at noon. Cassoulet, confit, terrines.

LAmi Jean

Basque bistro

7th arr. Stephane Jegos rotisserie lamb and rice pudding for two. Loud, perfect.

Poilane

Bakery (since 1932)

The famous round sourdough loaf with the P stamped on it. Boulevard de Grenelle or rue du Cherche-Midi.

Du Pain et des Idees

Bakery

10th arr, canal Saint-Martin. The pistachio escargot is their signature. Closed weekends.

Le Mary Celeste

Natural wine + oysters

Marais cocktail bar with half-shell oysters and funky natural wines. Walk-in only.

Frenchie

Neo-bistro

2nd arr. Gregory Marchand alumni of Fifteen (Jamie Oliver). The original tight dining room, book weeks ahead.

Day Trips from Paris

Versailles

45 min by RER C

Louis XIV palace, Hall of Mirrors, Marie Antoinettes estate, and the gardens. A full day — go on Tuesday when the Louvre is closed anyway.

Giverny

75 min by train

Monets house and water-lily garden. Best April-October. Small-group tours from Paris include transport and lunch.

Champagne region (Reims or Epernay)

45 min by TGV

Krug, Veuve Clicquot, Moet, Taittinger — all within walking distance of Reims station. 45 min on the TGV.

Chartres

70 min by train

The gothic cathedral with the original 12th-century stained glass. Quieter than Notre-Dame and twice as impressive.

Ready to build your Paris days?

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Popular Paris Itineraries

Get a day-by-day Paris itinerary in 60 seconds — morning, afternoon, evening. Premium adds Paris hotel picks with VIP perks, restaurant recommendations, and insider tips.

A Sample Paris Itinerary

Here’s a flavour of what our AI planner builds. Generate your own personalized Paris itinerary in 60 seconds.

Day 1

Arrive + Right Bank classics

  • CDG arrival via RER B
  • Jardin des Tuileries stroll
  • Louvre late-entry (Wed/Fri 9:45pm)
  • Dinner at a 1st arr bistro — Au Pied de Cochon
Day 2

Marais + Left Bank

  • Place des Vosges morning coffee
  • Musee dOrsay (Impressionist wing)
  • Saint-Germain-des-Pres walk
  • Dinner + cocktails at Le Mary Celeste
Day 3

Versailles Day Trip

  • RER C from Saint-Michel (go early, 8am)
  • Palace + Hall of Mirrors
  • Marie Antoinettes estate + hamlet
  • Back to Paris for Septime dinner
Day 4

Montmartre + Canal Saint-Martin

  • Sacre-Coeur + Place du Tertre
  • Du Pain et des Idees pastries
  • Canal Saint-Martin picnic
  • Dinner in the 10th at Chez Marianne or a neo-bistro
Day 5

Eiffel + Champagne + Departure

  • Trocadero Eiffel Tower photos
  • Musee Rodin garden
  • Champagne tasting at Caves Taillevent
  • CDG departure via Roissybus
Destination Guides

Paris Travel Guides

Everything you need to plan Paris like a local — curated hotels, restaurant picks, neighbourhood maps, and hidden gems. Instant PDF download.

Paris Travel FAQ

How many days do I need in Paris?

Four to six days for first-timers. Three days only hits the absolute icons (Louvre, Eiffel, Notre-Dame exterior, one neighbourhood walk). Paris rewards slowing down — café mornings, long lunches, evening strolls. Add days if you want Versailles, Giverny, or Champagne region day trips.

Do I need to pre-book museums?

Yes — the Louvre, Orsay, and Versailles absolutely. Walk-up lines in peak season run 2+ hours. Book timed entries online the night before and skip the queue. The Paris Museum Pass is worth it if you're hitting 4+ museums in 2-4 days.

Is the metro safe?

Yes, with standard big-city caution. Pickpockets on Line 1 (the tourist line) and around the Louvre and Trocadéro are a real and constant issue. Keep phones in zipped pockets, bags in front, and stay alert. The metro itself is efficient and beats taxis in traffic.

Should I tip in Paris?

Service is included by law — tipping is optional. Round up at cafés (leave coins), or add 5-10% at sit-down restaurants if service was great. Americans overtip here; French people almost never leave more than spare change. Taxis: round up to the nearest euro.

Is Paris rude?

No — it's formal. French service culture is transactional, not friendly. Say 'bonjour' when you enter any shop or restaurant and 'merci, au revoir' when you leave — that's the entire key. Americans who open with 'hi, do you speak English' without the greeting get the reputation-level rudeness. Greet first; everything else follows.

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