Paris
France

Paris

City of Light

By Elena Marchetti/ Senior Travel Editor

Why Paris, and why now.

Paris rewards the traveler who picks an arrondissement and commits to it. The city is small enough to cross on foot, but the difference between waking in the Marais and waking near the Champs-Elysees is the difference between living in Paris and visiting a postcard of it.

Choose your quarter before your hotel. The 7th gives you the Eiffel Tower and quiet wealth, the Marais gives you medieval lanes and galleries, Saint-Germain gives you cafe culture that still means something. The room matters less than the five-minute radius around it.

Top neighbourhoods

Le Marais

The 3rd and 4th, medieval streets that survived Haussmann. Independent galleries, vintage boutiques, coffee on Place des Vosges, and a dinner scene that runs late. Stay here for atmosphere over grandeur.

Saint-Germain-des-Pres

Left Bank literary Paris, the Cafe de Flore, antique dealers, and the Luxembourg Gardens a short walk south. Polished, expensive, and walkable across the river to the Louvre.

7th Arrondissement

Quiet, grand, and residential. The Eiffel Tower, the Rodin Museum, and the Rue Cler market street. Choose this for space and calm, and accept that nightlife means a taxi.

Montmartre

The 18th, up the hill. Sacre-Coeur, the last working vineyard in Paris, and lanes that empty of tourists after dark. Romantic if your hotel sits above the crowds, exhausting if it sits in them.

Best time to visit Paris

The sweet spot is late spring, May to June, and early autumn, September to October, when the light is mild, the gardens peak, and the terraces fill without the heat. August empties out as Parisians leave, so many favourite restaurants close, though hotel rates soften. Winter, November to March, is grey but the cheapest stretch of the year, and the museums are finally yours. For the best balance of weather and value, aim for the second half of September.

Best luxury hotels in Paris