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CITY
Paris is one of the most rewarding cities in Europe for first-time visitors because its famous sights are part of real city life. The Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, Notre-Dame, the Seine, grand gardens, old streets, cafés, and museums all sit close enough to shape one complete experience. The best things to do in Paris are not only about checking off landmarks, but also about feeling how the city changes from one neighbourhood to another.
Paris began as a settlement on the Seine and became the capital of France in the Middle Ages. Later, it grew into a centre of royal power, art, fashion, learning, revolution, and modern culture. That long history is still visible today, from Gothic churches and royal squares to wide boulevards and world-famous museums.
For visitors, Paris is special because it offers beauty, history, food, shopping, viewpoints, and simple walks in one city. A first trip can cover the major Paris must-see places while still leaving room for quieter corners that make the city feel more personal.
The map below includes all attractions from this guide, including the Eiffel Tower, Louvre Museum, Notre-Dame, Montmartre, the Seine riverbanks, major museums, gardens, viewpoints, shopping streets, and historic neighbourhoods. It also marks several traditional and iconic restaurants, plus main travel points such as Gare du Nord, Gare de Lyon, and the Beauvais Airport shuttle stop.
The list starts with the most iconic Paris places to visit, then continues with museums, gardens, neighbourhoods, viewpoints, shopping areas, and special stops that add more depth to the city.
The Eiffel Tower is Paris’s defining landmark and the sight most visitors connect with the city before they arrive. Built for the 1889 World’s Fair, it was supposed to be dismantled after 20 years, but it became the lasting symbol of Paris.
You can enjoy the tower from the ground, from Champ de Mars, from nearby viewpoints, or from its upper levels. Champ de Mars is the large park beside the Eiffel Tower and one of the easiest places to see the tower at full height. It is useful for relaxed photos, short breaks, and open views without paying for entry.
The second floor already gives excellent city views, while the summit gives the highest public view when weather and access allow. Summit tickets are best booked online in advance because they can sell out. If online tickets are gone, same-day tickets at the tower may still be possible, but only subject to availability and with queues. The summit is reached by elevator from the second floor, so even visitors using the stairs still need an elevator for the very top.
The first floor is more useful than many visitors expect. It has Madame Brasserie, a glass floor area, exhibitions, and space to pause during the visit. The second floor has the Jules Verne restaurant, shops, and some of the best views of central Paris. Both main restaurants should be reserved separately in advance, and a restaurant booking does not replace a normal tower ticket if you also want to visit other levels. If you are fit, the stairs can be a smart option to the first and second floors, especially when elevator queues are long or stair tickets are easier to get.
Tip: Book summit tickets early, and reserve tower restaurants separately if you want to eat there.
The Louvre gives Paris its strongest link between royal history and world art. Before it became a museum, the building was a royal palace, so the visit is not only about paintings and sculptures. The palace itself is part of the experience.
The museum is enormous, with famous works such as the Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory of Samothrace. But first-time visitors should also notice the building around them: grand staircases, decorated ceilings, courtyards, and palace rooms. The Napoleon III Apartments in the Richelieu Wing are especially useful if you want to see the rich palace side of the Louvre. They show Second Empire luxury with chandeliers, gold decoration, salons, and dining rooms.
For most visitors, a focused route is better than trying to see everything. Choose a few main sections, then add one palace area so the visit feels more complete. A 2–3 hour visit is enough for a first impression, but art lovers can easily spend half a day or more.
Tip: Plan a route with masterpieces and at least one palace section.
Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris anchors the historic heart of the city on Île de la Cité. Built mainly from the 12th to 14th centuries, it is one of the great Gothic churches of Europe and a major symbol of medieval Paris.
After the 2019 fire, the cathedral reopened in December 2024. Visitors can now see the restored interior, including the nave, stained glass, chapels, stone details, and the feeling of a working cathedral. Entry to the main cathedral is free, and optional free reservations can help reduce waiting at busy times.
The towers are a separate visit from the cathedral interior. You can climb them again, but this is a paid timed visit with 424 steps and narrow passages. There is no simple lift-style viewpoint experience here, so it is better for visitors who are comfortable with stairs and heights. The reward is a close look at the upper parts of the cathedral and a historic view across Paris.
Tip: Reserve the cathedral and tower visits separately if you want both.
Montmartre brings a hilltop village feeling to Paris, with steep lanes, small squares, artists, cafés, and wide views over the city. It feels very different from the formal gardens and grand boulevards closer to the Seine.
A useful way to visit is to arrive at Abbesses metro station, because it puts you already inside Montmartre instead of starting from the busier lower approach near Anvers. Abbesses is a very deep station, so use the lift if you do not want a long stair climb just to reach street level. From there, you can walk gradually through the neighbourhood before reaching Sacré-Cœur.
What to see in Montmartre:
If you want to avoid the steep final climb, the Montmartre funicular near Square Louise Michel takes you up to the basilica area in about 1 minute 30 seconds. This is useful with children, tired legs, or hot weather.
Tip: Start at Abbesses, explore the streets, then finish at Sacré-Cœur for the view.
The Arc de Triomphe gives Paris one of its strongest ceremonial views, with history, symmetry, and skyline value in one place. Napoleon ordered the monument in 1806, and it now stands at the centre of a large traffic circle where twelve avenues meet.
At ground level, visitors can see the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and the eternal flame. The rooftop is the main reason to enter. From the top, the Champs-Élysées stretches in one direction, La Défense rises in another, and the Eiffel Tower appears clearly across the city.
This is one of the best viewpoints for understanding the city layout because the avenues spread out in a star shape below you. It is especially good near sunset or after dark when traffic lights and buildings create a strong city scene. There are stairs to the terrace, so it is a more active visit than it first appears.
Tip: Use the underground passage and never cross the roundabout by foot.
Musée d’Orsay turns a former railway station into one of the most enjoyable museums in Paris. The building was created for the 1900 Universal Exhibition, and its clocks, high roof, and open central hall still give it a strong sense of arrival.
The museum is best known for Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art. Works by Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cézanne, Van Gogh, and others make it a top choice for visitors who want major art without the size of the Louvre. The layout feels easier to manage, and a 2–3 hour visit is enough for many first-timers.
Do not treat it only as an art stop. The old station design, upper clock view, sculpture areas, and river-facing location all make the museum feel different from the Louvre. It is especially good if you want a beautiful building and famous art in one visit.
Tip: Go upstairs for the famous clock view over Paris.
A Seine River cruise shows Paris from the route that shaped the city. Many major landmarks face the river, including the Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame, the Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, and several famous bridges.
Most sightseeing cruises last around one hour, so they are easy to include even on a busy first trip. They are also useful when you want a break from walking but still want to see the city. Many cruises start near the Eiffel Tower, Pont de l’Alma, Pont Neuf, or central river piers, depending on the company. Pont Neuf is worth noticing along the way because, despite its name meaning “New Bridge,” it is the oldest standing stone bridge in Paris.
The riverbanks are also part of the experience. Walking between Île de la Cité, the Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, and the Eiffel Tower area gives some of the most classic Paris views without needing a ticket. This is one of the easiest ways to enjoy Paris for free.
Tip: Choose an evening cruise for softer light and illuminated monuments.
Sainte-Chapelle has one of the most powerful interior views in Paris. The upper chapel is almost surrounded by stained glass, creating a space full of colour, height, and light.
Built in the 13th century for King Louis IX, the chapel was designed to hold important Christian relics. Today, the main reason to visit is the upper level, where tall windows show biblical scenes in deep blue, red, and gold. The chapel is not large, but the effect is unforgettable on a bright day.
The Conciergerie is next door and can add useful historical context to the same visit. It was part of the former royal palace complex and later became closely linked with the French Revolution, especially as the prison where Marie Antoinette was held before her execution. If you want more than a short stained-glass stop, combining Sainte-Chapelle and the Conciergerie makes the Île de la Cité visit feel more complete.
Tip: Visit Sainte-Chapelle during daylight, then add the Conciergerie if you want more history.
Palais Garnier shows the grand, theatrical side of 19th-century Paris. This famous opera house opened in 1875 and remains a real performance venue, not only a monument for visitors. Opera, ballet, concerts, and other events can still take place here, depending on the season and programme.
Inside, the building is rich with marble staircases, gilded halls, painted ceilings, chandeliers, mirrors, and balconies. It is a good visit even if you are not attending a performance, because the public rooms feel like a palace for music and theatre.
There are two main ways to experience it. You can book a ticket for a performance, which is the best choice if you want the building to feel alive. Or you can visit during the day on a self-guided or guided visit. Access to the auditorium can change because of rehearsals and performances, and no visit ticket fully guarantees that room will be open.
Tip: Check both performance tickets and daytime visit times before choosing how to go.
The Champs-Élysées gives Paris one of its grandest city walks, linking Place de la Concorde with the Arc de Triomphe in a long, direct line. Even if you do not come for shopping, the avenue still helps you understand the scale and ceremony of central Paris.
The street has luxury names, international shops, cafés, cinemas, and heavy foot traffic. Its value comes less from quiet charm and more from history, scale, and the feeling of walking a national avenue used for parades, celebrations, and major city moments. The view toward the Arc de Triomphe is the highlight.
For smaller boutiques and more character, use Le Marais, Rue Saint-Honoré, or Saint-Germain later in the trip. For the classic Paris axis, the Champs-Élysées still belongs on a first-time route.
Tip: Walk from Concorde toward the Arc de Triomphe, not the other way around.
The Catacombs reveal a darker and more unusual side of Paris beneath the streets. These underground tunnels were once limestone quarries before becoming an ossuary in the late 18th century.
The standard visit is not only a guided tour. Most visitors enter with a timed ticket and follow a fixed one-way route at their own pace, usually with an audio guide included or available depending on the ticket. Guided tours and skip-the-line tours also exist, but they are not the only way to visit.
The route passes through cool, narrow tunnels lined with human bones arranged in walls and patterns. It is memorable, but it is not for everyone. The route is around 1.5 km long and includes 131 steps down and 112 steps back up. The temperature stays around 14°C, and the floor can be uneven or slippery.
The Catacombs are not wheelchair accessible and are not recommended for visitors with serious mobility problems, claustrophobia, or certain health conditions. Online booking is strongly recommended because visitor numbers are limited.
Tip: Bring a light jacket and avoid large bags.
Luxembourg Gardens gives central Paris a calm, elegant break between sightseeing stops. Created around the Luxembourg Palace, the gardens mix formal lawns, tree-lined paths, fountains, statues, flowers, and the famous green chairs used by locals and visitors.
The gardens are free to enter, which makes them one of the best no-cost places to enjoy Paris. They feel relaxed without feeling empty. Students, families, workers, and travellers all use the space, which gives it a local atmosphere. Children often gather around the pond with small sailing boats, while adults come to read, walk, or rest.
This is also one of the most useful places for families in central Paris. There are open paths, seating areas, shade, and space to slow down after museums or long walks. It is especially helpful between the Latin Quarter and Saint-Germain-des-Prés.
Tip: Come here when you need a slower hour between major sights.
Les Invalides brings together royal architecture, French military history, and Napoleon’s legacy. Louis XIV founded the complex in the 17th century as a hospital and home for wounded soldiers, and its golden dome is now one of the main landmarks of the Left Bank.
The most famous part is the Dôme des Invalides, where Napoleon’s tomb sits under the high dome. The Army Museum covers armour, weapons, uniforms, wars, and French military history in much more detail. Even a shorter visit gives a strong sense of scale through the courtyards, church, and dome.
This is a good choice if you want a major historic site that feels different from an art museum. It also combines well with Pont Alexandre III or the Rodin Museum, because all three places sit close enough for a strong Left Bank route.
Tip: Visit Napoleon’s tomb first if you only have limited time.
Le Marais is one of the best neighbourhoods in Paris for visitors who want atmosphere beyond the biggest monuments. It has old streets, elegant squares, boutiques, cafés, galleries, Jewish heritage, and some of the best casual food areas in the centre. The neighbourhood feels more intimate than the grand boulevards because many streets are narrow, historic, and easy to explore on foot.
Place des Vosges is the classic highlight. This early 17th-century square has red-brick facades, arcades, trees, and a peaceful garden in the centre. It is one of the most beautiful squares in Paris and a good place to slow down after busier sights.
What to see in Le Marais:
Le Marais is especially good in the late afternoon or early evening, when shops, cafés, and restaurants feel lively. It is also a useful area for a relaxed meal because it has more character than many places beside the biggest landmarks.
Tip: Start at Place des Vosges, then walk through the side streets toward Rue des Rosiers and Rue des Francs-Bourgeois.
Place du Trocadéro gives the most famous full view of the Eiffel Tower. From the terrace near Palais de Chaillot, the tower stands directly across the Seine, with the gardens and fountains below creating a classic Paris photo scene.
This is one of the best places to photograph the Eiffel Tower because the view is wide, direct, and easy to frame. Sunrise is the calmest time, while evening brings lights, crowds, and a stronger city atmosphere. From the terrace, you can walk down through the gardens toward the river and continue to the Eiffel Tower.
The spot is best treated as a viewpoint, not a long attraction. It is ideal before or after visiting the Eiffel Tower, or as a separate photo stop if you want the tower in your pictures without going up it.
Tip: Go early if you want photos without heavy crowds.
The Panthéon gives the Latin Quarter one of its most serious and symbolic monuments. Originally built as a church, it later became a national mausoleum for major figures in French history.
Inside, the building feels grand and formal, with a high dome, wide nave, painted details, and a crypt below. The crypt is the most meaningful part of the visit, with tombs of figures such as Voltaire, Victor Hugo, Émile Zola, Marie Curie, and Jean Moulin.
The Panthéon also sits close to the Sorbonne, Luxembourg Gardens, and Rue Mouffetard. That makes it easy to include in a wider Latin Quarter walk instead of treating it as a distant single stop. On some visits, dome access may also be available separately, giving another elevated view of Paris.
Tip: Spend enough time in the crypt, not only the main hall.
Tuileries Garden and Place de la Concorde create one of the best free walks in central Paris. The route links the Louvre with the start of the Champs-Élysées, passing through formal gardens, open views, fountains, and historic space.
The Tuileries has long paths, sculptures, chairs, trees, flowerbeds, and ponds. It is a natural place to rest after the Louvre or before visiting Musée de l’Orangerie. Place de la Concorde feels very different because it is large, open, and monumental, with fountains, an Egyptian obelisk, and views toward the Arc de Triomphe.
This area is also useful for understanding Paris on foot. In one short route, you connect the Louvre, gardens, Place de la Concorde, the Seine, and the Champs-Élysées axis.
Tip: Walk this route from the Louvre toward Concorde in late afternoon.
Pont Alexandre III adds elegance and strong photo value to a walk along the Seine. Built for the 1900 Universal Exhibition, it connects the area near Les Invalides with the Grand Palais side of the river.
The bridge is famous for its gold statues, sculpted lamps, detailed metalwork, and open views. It is a quick stop, but it gives several Paris landmarks in one scene, including the Eiffel Tower, the Seine, and the golden dome of Les Invalides.
This bridge is especially useful if you are walking between the Left Bank museum area and the Champs-Élysées side. It can also be one of the best simple photo stops in Paris because you do not need to enter or book anything.
Tip: Stop here near sunset when the gold details look warmer.
The Latin Quarter brings together old Paris, student life, bookshops, food streets, and historic learning. Linked with the Sorbonne, it has long been one of the city’s intellectual areas, but it also feels lively and everyday.
This area is also useful for casual food and drinks at lower prices than you usually find beside the biggest landmarks. Rue Mouffetard has market stalls, cafés, small restaurants, crêpes, bakeries, and simple places to eat. Around the Latin Quarter, you can also find student-friendly streets with casual restaurants and bars, although quality can vary on the most touristy lanes.
What to see in the Latin Quarter and around Rue Mouffetard:
This is a strong choice when you want atmosphere more than a single monument. It is also one of the better areas to find a simple meal away from the most expensive tourist streets.
Tip: Visit Rue Mouffetard in the morning for food-street atmosphere, or early evening for casual drinks.
Musée de l’Orangerie proves that a smaller museum can still be one of the most memorable places in Paris. Its main highlight is Claude Monet’s Water Lilies, displayed in two oval rooms designed to surround visitors with soft colour and light.
The museum sits beside the Tuileries Garden, close to Place de la Concorde and the Seine. That makes it easy to add without losing half a day. The visit is especially good for travellers who want major art but prefer a calmer and shorter museum experience than the Louvre or Musée d’Orsay.
The Water Lilies rooms are the clear reason to come, so avoid rushing through them. The museum also has other works, but the best value is the quiet, immersive feeling of Monet’s large panels.
Tip: Go early or later in the day for a quieter Water Lilies room.
Galeries Lafayette Haussmann turns shopping into sightseeing. The main department store is famous for its colourful glass dome, curved balconies, fashion floors, food sections, and seasonal displays.
The building is the reason many visitors come, even without a long shopping plan. The central dome gives the store a grand Belle Époque feeling, while the rooftop terrace offers a useful free view when open. Boulevard Haussmann also has Printemps nearby, making this one of the main shopping areas in Paris for fashion, beauty, gifts, and department-store browsing.
This is also a practical rainy-day stop. You can shop, eat, see the interior, and enjoy a city view in one place. Around Christmas, the windows and decorations make it even more popular.
Tip: Go to the rooftop first, then explore the dome and store floors.
Moulin Rouge and Pigalle show the cabaret, nightlife, and entertainment side of Paris. The Moulin Rouge opened in 1889 and is still famous for its red windmill, stage shows, music, feathers, and long connection with Montmartre nightlife.
The wider Pigalle area has different moods. Boulevard de Clichy is bright, busy, touristy, and full of theatres, bars, and adult shops. South Pigalle feels more stylish and local, especially around Rue des Martyrs, where you find cafés, bakeries, restaurants, and cocktail bars.
You can come for a paid show or just see the famous exterior during an evening walk. For most first-time visitors, the best route is to combine a quick Moulin Rouge photo with a nicer food or drink stop nearby.
Tip: Pair Moulin Rouge with Rue des Martyrs for a better evening route.
Père Lachaise Cemetery feels like a quiet stone city inside Paris. It is the most famous cemetery in the capital, with tree-lined paths, old tombs, small chapels, sculptures, and memorials spread across a large hilly area.
Many visitors come to find the graves of Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison, Édith Piaf, Frédéric Chopin, Molière, and other famous figures. The atmosphere is bigger than the names, though. The cemetery is peaceful, historic, and sometimes surprisingly beautiful, especially in quieter corners.
Because it is large and not always easy to navigate, a little planning helps. The paths can also be uneven, so comfortable shoes matter more here than many visitors expect.
Tip: Use a map because famous graves can be hard to find.
Montparnasse Tower is not a beautiful building, but it gives one of the clearest skyline views in Paris. Its biggest advantage is that the Eiffel Tower appears in the view, which makes the panorama more complete than the view from the tower itself.
The observation deck has indoor and outdoor areas, so it is useful in different weather. It can also be a good alternative if Eiffel Tower tickets are sold out or if you want a simpler high viewpoint. Sunset and blue hour are the best times because the city changes from daylight to lights.
This viewpoint is also practical because the visit is simpler than many major monuments. You go mainly for the view, so it does not need a long visit unless you want to wait for the lights.
Tip: Arrive before sunset and stay until the skyline lights up.
The Rodin Museum combines sculpture, gardens, and a peaceful mansion setting near Les Invalides. It is one of the best smaller museums in Paris for visitors who want art without a long, crowded museum day.
The collection focuses on Auguste Rodin, with famous works such as The Thinker, The Kiss, and The Gates of Hell. The garden is a major part of the experience, not just an extra. Sculptures sit among lawns, trees, paths, and open spaces, giving the visit a slower and more relaxed rhythm.
The Hôtel Biron setting also adds elegance to the museum. This is a good choice after Les Invalides or Pont Alexandre III because the area already has several strong sights close together.
Tip: Visit on a dry day so you can enjoy the sculpture garden properly.
Paris can fill several days on its own, but one classic day trip adds royal history, formal gardens, and a very different view of France.
The Palace of Versailles is the most important day trip from Paris and one of the greatest royal palaces in Europe. The main purpose of this trip is simple: see the palace of the French kings, walk through the Hall of Mirrors, and experience the gardens that show the scale of royal power before the French Revolution.
Inside the palace, visitors can see grand apartments, painted ceilings, royal rooms, and the famous Hall of Mirrors. Outside, the gardens are huge, formal, and designed for long walks, fountains, statues, and wide views. The estate is large, so it is better not to rush. Many visitors spend most of the day here, especially if they include the gardens and the Trianon area.
The palace is paid to enter, and garden access can also require a ticket on certain fountain or music days. A guided tour can make the visit easier because Versailles is large, popular, and full of rooms where context helps.
Travel time from Paris: about 40–60 minutes each way, depending on your starting point and train connection
Typical guided tour length: around 4–8 hours
Why visit: royal palace, Hall of Mirrors, formal gardens, French history
Time needed: full day is ideal
Paris is easy to reach by air, train, bus, or car. Most international visitors arrive through Charles de Gaulle Airport or Orly Airport. Charles de Gaulle is the larger airport and has transport links to central Paris by train, taxi, private transfer, and airport services. Orly is closer to the city and is also connected by public transport and taxis.
Paris is one of Europe’s best rail cities. Gare du Nord is important for Eurostar and train connections from London, Brussels, and Amsterdam. Gare de Lyon, Gare de l’Est, Gare Montparnasse, and Gare Saint-Lazare connect Paris with different parts of France and nearby countries.
The centre of Paris is best explored with a mix of walking and public transport. Many major sights are close enough to connect on foot, especially around the Seine, the Louvre, Île de la Cité, Saint-Germain, Le Marais, and the Latin Quarter.
For longer distances, the metro is usually faster than taxis. Use taxis or ride-hailing mainly for late nights, luggage, rain, or routes that are awkward by metro. Some metro stations have stairs and long corridors, so families with strollers or travellers with heavy bags should allow extra time.
The Paris metro is the most useful transport system for visitors. It connects most central neighbourhoods and runs often. RER trains are useful for longer routes, including airport links and trips outside the centre. Buses can be slower, but they are good when you want to see the city above ground.
A reloadable travel card or mobile ticketing can be practical for short visits. Airport trips and some regional journeys use different tickets from simple central metro rides, so check the route before buying. Keep your ticket until the end of the journey because checks can happen.
For a first visit, the best areas to stay in Paris are usually central, safe, and well connected. The Louvre, Opéra, and the 1st and 2nd arrondissements are very convenient for sightseeing. Le Marais is lively, stylish, and good for food, shops, and evening walks.
Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the Latin Quarter are excellent for classic Paris atmosphere, cafés, bookshops, and easy access to the Seine. The Eiffel Tower area is calmer and good for tower views, but it can feel less central for nightlife. Montmartre is scenic and romantic, but it is hilly, so choose the exact location carefully.
Driving into central Paris is rarely the easiest option for sightseeing. Traffic can be slow, parking is expensive, and many streets are narrow or busy. If you arrive by car, the simplest solution is to choose a hotel with parking or use a secure underground car park near your accommodation.
For day visitors, it is usually better to park once and continue by metro or on foot. Avoid moving the car between attractions, because it often takes more time than it saves.
Paris has many attractions where advance booking improves the visit. Timed tickets are especially useful for the Eiffel Tower, Louvre Museum, Musée d’Orsay, Sainte-Chapelle, the Catacombs, Palais Garnier, and Versailles. Some attractions have security checks, so a ticket does not always mean immediate entry.
For very popular places, book earlier than you think, especially in spring, summer, school holidays, and weekends. Keep some free time between major bookings because transport, queues, meals, and walking distances can take longer than expected.
The best months for Paris are usually April, May, June, September, and October. These months often give pleasant weather, good walking days, and attractive light for photos. Spring is beautiful for flowers, while early autumn is comfortable for long walks.
July and August can still be enjoyable, but expect bigger crowds at major attractions and hotter walking days. Winter is colder and darker, but it can be good for museums, lower hotel prices, Christmas lights, and fewer crowds outside peak holiday dates.
The main Paris must-see places are the Eiffel Tower, Louvre Museum, Notre-Dame, Montmartre and Sacré-Cœur, Arc de Triomphe, Musée d’Orsay, Sainte-Chapelle, a Seine River cruise, and a walk through Le Marais or the Latin Quarter. Versailles is the best classic day trip.
Three full days is enough for the main Paris must-see attractions if you plan carefully. Four days is better because it gives more time for neighbourhoods, gardens, shopping, and a slower museum visit. Five days is ideal if you want to include Versailles without making the city part feel rushed.
With two days in Paris, focus on the Eiffel Tower, Louvre area, Notre-Dame, Sainte-Chapelle, the Seine, Arc de Triomphe, Montmartre, and one museum such as Musée d’Orsay. Do not try to add too many neighbourhoods or long museum visits, because Paris is better when you have time to walk.
In three days, you can see the main landmarks and add more variety. A good plan includes the Eiffel Tower, Louvre, Notre-Dame, Sainte-Chapelle, Seine cruise, Montmartre, Arc de Triomphe, Musée d’Orsay, Le Marais, the Latin Quarter, Luxembourg Gardens, and one viewpoint such as Montparnasse Tower or Trocadéro.
For a first visit, Le Marais, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the Latin Quarter, Opéra, and the Louvre area are the best bases. They are central, well connected, and good for walking. The Eiffel Tower area is better for views than nightlife.
Paris is walkable in the central sightseeing areas, especially around the Seine, Louvre, Notre-Dame, Le Marais, Saint-Germain, and the Latin Quarter. For longer distances, use the metro so you do not lose energy before reaching places like Montmartre, the Eiffel Tower, or Père Lachaise.
Paris can be expensive, especially for hotels, restaurants near major landmarks, and paid attractions. It is still possible to control costs by using bakeries, casual cafés, public transport, free churches, parks, river walks, and neighbourhood exploring. Booking accommodation early usually helps more than trying to save only on small daily costs.
Paris is generally manageable at night in busy central areas, but normal city care is important. Watch your phone and wallet, avoid empty side streets late at night, and be careful around crowded metro stations and tourist areas. For late returns, taxis or ride-hailing can be easier than long night transport routes.
Yes, if you keep the days realistic. Families often enjoy river cruises, parks, gardens, bakeries, easy metro rides, and short landmark visits. Very long museum days, the Catacombs, and too many timed bookings can be harder with younger children.
Some museums and monuments have free entry for certain age groups, residents, or special dates, but rules vary. Many major places are paid, including the Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, Sainte-Chapelle, and Versailles. Churches such as Notre-Dame and Sacré-Cœur are usually free to enter, though special areas can have separate access rules.
The best classic view is from Place du Trocadéro. Other good views come from the Seine riverbanks, Pont Alexandre III, Montparnasse Tower, and certain streets around the 7th arrondissement. Champ de Mars is also one of the easiest places to see the tower at full height from ground level. For photos, early morning is usually calmer than sunset.
For classic shopping, go to Boulevard Haussmann for Galeries Lafayette and Printemps. For luxury shopping, use Rue Saint-Honoré, Avenue Montaigne, and the area near Place Vendôme. Le Marais is better for boutiques, design shops, and stylish smaller stores. Rue de Rivoli and the Champs-Élysées are more mainstream and busy.
Good nightlife areas in Paris include Le Marais for bars and LGBTQ-friendly nightlife, Bastille and Rue de Lappe for busy evening streets, Pigalle and South Pigalle for cabaret and cocktail bars, Rue Oberkampf for a younger bar scene, and Canal Saint-Martin for relaxed drinks. The Latin Quarter also has student-friendly places.
Avoid packing too many museums into one day, eating only beside major landmarks, buying unofficial attraction tickets, and crossing the Arc de Triomphe roundabout above ground. Leave time for walking, cafés, and unexpected views.
Yes, Paris is easy to visit without fluent French, especially in hotels, museums, restaurants, and major attractions. English is widely used in tourist areas. Learning a few basic French words such as bonjour, merci, and au revoir still helps and often makes interactions feel more polite.