PARIS

There are two Parises. There is the Paris of the photographs — the one that exists in every Instagram grid and every travel supplement and every conversation with someone who went once in 2019 and has been dining out on it since. And then there is the Paris that has been quietly doing its own thing, indifferent to all of this, for several centuries.

We go to the second one. The Chez Georges near the Bourse, where the waiter stopped handing Nouri a menu sometime around the third visit and started just bringing things. The Barthélémy fromagerie in the 6th that stays open until eight and will teach you what a Comté is actually supposed to taste like if you are willing to listen. The Saturday morning Paul Bert Serpette market, where the serious antique dealers are set up in Allée 1 before nine and largely done by noon — not because they are leaving, but because the people worth selling to have already been and gone.

We go in spring or autumn. Never August. The city empties of Parisians in August and fills with everyone else, which is precisely the wrong ratio. April and October are the months. The light in both is extraordinary in a way that explains, without requiring further explanation, why painters kept coming back.

The mistake most people make in Paris is treating it like a checklist. It is not a checklist city. It is a neighborhood city. Pick the 6th and the 7th and live there for two days — the fromagerie, the bookshop, the bistrot where the prix fixe lunch costs €22 and nobody is pretending otherwise. Then pick the 9th and the 11th. The city will reveal itself in a way that the monument-to-monument version flatly refuses to.

The hotel market has had a genuinely interesting few years. Hôtel Balzac reopened in 2024 on the site of Honoré de Balzac's last residence — Festen Architecture, quiet street just off the Champs-Élysées, a secret bar that has not yet been found by the people who would ruin it. Le Grand Mazarin in the Marais has the right size and the right price and the right address. And then there is the other tier — Le Bristol, The Ritz, Le Crillon — which requires no argument because it has never needed one. The gap between those two things is where most of this list lives.

One more thing, and it is the most useful thing on this page. Breakfast at Le Meurice gets you Cédric Grolet without the queue. His standalone shop has an hour-long line by eight in the morning. The hotel's breakfast service does not. This is the difference between a good Paris trip and a great one, and now you know it.

By Albert & Nouri Beesemer · April 2025
All recommendations independently visited. No sponsored placements. Ever.

Paris's boutique hotel market has had a genuinely exciting five years. These are the properties that earned the recommendation.

Hôtel Balzac
VV PICK

Hôtel Balzac

8TH ARR · CHAMPS-ÉLYSÉES · FROM ~€350/NIGHT

Reopened 2024 on the site of Honoré de Balzac's last residence. Festen Architecture, one Michelin Key, Pierre Gagnaire restaurant. Quiet street just off the Champs-Élysées. The secret bar is the reason to stay.

Maison Souquet
VV PICK

Maison Souquet

9TH ARR · PIGALLE · FROM ~€300/NIGHT

A former maison close turned into one of the most atmospheric small hotels in Paris. 20 rooms, Haussmann bones, intimate and deliberately theatrical. The neighborhood is the point — Pigalle at its best.

Brach
VV PICK

Brach

16TH ARR · TROCADÉRO · FROM ~€300/NIGHT

Philippe Starck's Paris hotel — a converted printing house in the 16th. The rooftop, the pool, the gym, and a genuinely good restaurant. Less central than it should be but worth the compromise for what you get.

Le Grand Mazarin
VV PICK

Le Grand Mazarin

4TH ARR · MARAIS · FROM ~€280/NIGHT

The Marais address, the right size, the right price. 60 rooms in a building with Haussmann bones and a thoughtful contemporary interior. The best value proposition in the central Paris boutique market.

Nolinski Paris
VV PICK

Nolinski Paris

1ST ARR · PALAIS-ROYAL · FROM ~€400/NIGHT

The Paris original of the group — what Nolinski Venezia aspires to. On the Avenue de l'Opéra, the Palais-Royal around the corner. The same bottles, the same Christofle, the same standard.

Hotel Lutetia
VV PICK

Hotel Lutetia

6TH ARR · SAINT-GERMAIN · FROM ~€600/NIGHT

The only Art Deco palace hotel on the Left Bank, reopened after a four-year renovation in 2018. The bar is one of the great hotel bars in Paris. Saint-Germain is the neighborhood. The price is high but the location is irreplaceable.

9 Confidentiel

9 Confidentiel

9TH ARR · FROM ~€200/NIGHT

One of the most affordable genuinely good boutique hotels in Paris. The 9th is the right neighborhood.

Château Voltaire

Château Voltaire

1ST ARR · FROM ~€350/NIGHT

A new property near the Louvre with a strong design sensibility. On the list.

Hotel Rochechouart

Hotel Rochechouart

9TH ARR · FROM ~€180/NIGHT

The best value in the 9th. A carefully renovated 1920s building, the Art Deco bones intact.

La Fondation

La Fondation

6TH ARR · FROM ~€250/NIGHT

A quiet Left Bank option with a genuine residential feel. The garden is the thing.

The Paris palace tier — among the finest hotels in the world.

Costes

Costes

1ST ARR

Le Castiglione rooms only — the old rooms are small and not worth the price. The courtyard restaurant is the real reason anyone goes to Costes.

Saint James

Saint James

16TH ARR

A château in the 16th that operates as a private members club with hotel rooms. The garden in summer is one of the great Parisian rooms.

Le Bristol

Le Bristol

8TH ARR

The Palace hotel that Parisians actually use — less performative than the Ritz, better food than the Crillon. Eric Frechon's Epicure is three Michelin stars.

The Peninsula

The Peninsula

8TH ARR

The Avenue Kléber address, the best spa of any Paris palace, the rooftop bar. The Peninsula standard applied to Paris.

Le Meurice

Le Meurice

1ST ARR

Breakfast here for Cédric Grolet without the queue. The restaurant is Alain Ducasse. The Dalí Suite is the most interesting room in a Paris palace hotel.

Plaza Athénée

Plaza Athénée

8TH ARR

Avenue Montaigne. The fashion week hotel. Alain Ducasse. The Bar at the Plaza is a Paris institution.

The Ritz

The Ritz

1ST ARR

Since 1898. Hemingway's bar. The Vendôme address. No further explanation required or possible.

Le Crillon

Le Crillon

8TH ARR

Place de la Concorde. The most beautiful palace hotel facade in Paris. Les Ambassadeurs bar is worth the visit whether or not you're staying.

Le Royal Monceau

Le Royal Monceau

8TH ARR

Philippe Starck, art bookshop, cinema, the best hotel art collection in Paris. Raphaël Haumont in the kitchen.

La Réserve

La Réserve

8TH ARR

The most serious small luxury hotel in Paris. 40 rooms. Gabriel de Broglie's former hôtel particulier. The restaurant is two Michelin stars.

The restaurants near the tourist monuments are, without exception, performing for visitors. Walk past them. The ones below are cooking for Parisians.

Maxim's
8TH ARR · FRENCH BRASSERIE

Since 1893, on the Rue Royale. Art Nouveau interior untouched. The most beautiful dining room in Paris. Go for the room as much as the food — the cooking is classical French done correctly.

ORDER: SOLE MEUNIÈRE · SOUFFLÉ
Lapérouse
6TH ARR · FRENCH

The oldest restaurant in Paris, on the Quai des Grands Augustins since 1766. The private salons upstairs — where courtesans scratched their diamonds into the mirrors to test their authenticity — are still bookable. Go for the history and stay for a menu that earns it.

ORDER: TASTING MENU
Chez l'Ami Louis
3RD ARR · FRENCH BISTROT

The most famous roast chicken in Paris, which is saying something. Since 1924. The foie gras is half a liver. The portions have not been reduced to meet modern sensibilities. Cash only, book weeks ahead.

ORDER: ROAST CHICKEN · FOIE GRAS · FRITES
No official website or Instagram
Frenchie
2ND ARR · MODERN FRENCH

Gregory Marchand's restaurant in the Sentier neighborhood that changed how Paris thought about neo-bistrot cooking when it opened. Still excellent, still worth the reservation difficulty.

ORDER: TASTING MENU
Septime
11TH ARR · MODERN FRENCH

One Michelin star, natural wines, a kitchen that has trained half the serious chefs in Paris. Impossible to book through normal channels — use a concierge or try the bar next door La Cave.

ORDER: TASTING MENU
Le Voltaire
7TH ARR · FRENCH BISTROT

The Left Bank bistrot that the fashion and art world uses as a canteen. The terrace faces the Seine. The cooking is precise and unfussy. Arrive without a reservation and eat at the bar.

ORDER: STEAK TARTARE · CRÈME BRÛLÉE
Ralph's
6TH ARR · AMERICAN-FRENCH

The Ralph Lauren restaurant inside the Boulevard Saint-Germain flagship. The garden courtyard is one of the most beautiful lunch settings in Paris. The burger is better than it has any right to be.

ORDER: THE BURGER · CLUB SANDWICH · CÔTE DE BŒUF
Bistrot des Tournelles
4TH ARR · FRENCH BISTROT

A Marais bistrot that does everything correctly — the cooking, the room, the wine list, the fact that it is full of people who live in the neighborhood. Go for lunch on a weekday.

ORDER: TARTARE · SEASONAL PLAT DU JOUR
La Renommée
10TH ARR · FRENCH BISTROT

The Canal Saint-Martin neighborhood's best kept secret. A zinc bar, paper tablecloths, a daily menu on the blackboard. The kind of Paris that tourists photograph and locals actually eat in.

ORDER: PLAT DU JOUR · WHATEVER IS ON THE BOARD
Relais Plaza
8TH ARR · FRENCH BRASSERIE

Inside the Plaza Athénée, the more accessible of the hotel's two dining rooms. Art Deco interior. The Saturday lunch crowd is Paris at its most elegant and completely unaware of it.

ORDER: DOVER SOLE · CÔTE DE VEAU
Le Grand Café
9TH ARR · BRASSERIE

Open 24 hours. Since 1875. The seafood plateau is the reason to go at midnight. No reservation required, no good reason not to.

ORDER: PLATEAU DE FRUITS DE MER · ONION SOUP
Le Bon Georges
9TH ARR · WINE BAR & BISTROT

A small wine bar and bistrot in the 9th that has been doing this correctly for years. Natural wines, seasonal cooking, the kind of room where you stay two hours longer than planned.

ORDER: CHARCUTERIE · SEASONAL PLAT
Le Duc
14TH ARR · SEAFOOD

The best fish restaurant in Paris, which is a serious claim made by serious people for decades. Since 1967. The turbot is the order. Book ahead.

ORDER: TURBOT · RAW SEAFOOD PLATEAU
Mokonuts
11TH ARR · MIDDLE EASTERN-FRENCH

Omar Koreitem and Moko Hirayama's small restaurant in the 11th. Lunch only. The cooking is unlike anything else in Paris — Middle Eastern and Japanese influences through a French lens. The cookies are famous. The restaurant deserves more attention than the cookies.

ORDER: WHATEVER IS ON THE BOARD · THE COOKIES
Parcelles
11TH ARR · WINE BAR

A natural wine bar in the 11th with small plates that are consistently better than they need to be. The wine list is the point but the food earns its place.

ORDER: CHARCUTERIE · CHEESE · SEASONAL PLATES
Sushi Park
8TH ARR · JAPANESE

Counter sushi in Paris at the level of Tokyo counter sushi. An extraordinary claim that is accurate. Book months ahead.

ORDER: OMAKASE ONLY
Reservation through your concierge only
Le Grand Véfour
1ST ARR · FRENCH GASTRONOMIC

The most beautiful restaurant room in Paris, in the Palais-Royal arcades since 1784. Every table has a plaque of the famous person who sat there — Napoleon, Victor Hugo, Colette. The cooking matches the room.

ORDER: TASTING MENU
Chez Georges
2ND ARR · FRENCH BISTROT

Since 1964, near the Bourse. The quintessential Paris bistrot — the one that all other Paris bistrots are measured against and most fall short of. Andouillette for the brave. Steak tartare for everyone else.

ORDER: STEAK TARTARE · ANDOUILLETTE · PROFITEROLES
Reservations by phone only
Hotel Amour
9TH ARR · FRENCH

The restaurant and garden at the Hotel Amour in Pigalle. The garden in summer is one of the most reliably pleasant lunch settings in Paris. Go on a weekday.

ORDER: BURGER · SEASONAL SALADS
Sant Ambroeus
8TH ARR · ITALIAN

The New York institution's Paris outpost near the Champs-Élysées. The Milanese breakfast and the pasta at lunch. The espresso is the best in the 8th.

ORDER: CORNETTO · PASTA · RISOTTO
Sugaar
11TH ARR · BASQUE

Basque pintxos and txakoli in the 11th. Stand at the bar. Order everything on the board. One of the most enjoyable casual meals in Paris.

ORDER: PINTXOS · TXAKOLI
Le Servan
11TH ARR · MODERN FRENCH

The Levha sisters' restaurant in the 11th. Southeast Asian and French influences, natural wines, one of the most interesting kitchens in Paris.

ORDER: TASTING MENU · WHATEVER IS SEASONAL
Clamato
11TH ARR · SEAFOOD

The seafood bar from the Septime team. No reservations. Arrive at opening and take a counter seat. The oysters and the sea urchin toast.

ORDER: OYSTERS · SEA URCHIN TOAST · CEVICHE
Le Gallopin
2ND ARR · FRENCH BRASSERIE

A Belle Époque brasserie near the Bourse with a mahogany interior that has not changed since 1876. The pre-theatre crowd and the post-market crowd. Steak frites.

ORDER: STEAK FRITES · ONION SOUP
La Petite Chaise
7TH ARR · FRENCH

The oldest restaurant in Paris still in operation, since 1680. The Saint-Germain address. Classic French cooking with no pretension. The prix fixe is the move.

ORDER: PRIX FIXE MENU
Le Tout Paris
8TH ARR · FRENCH

The rooftop restaurant at the Cheval Blanc hotel in La Samaritaine. The view over the Seine and the Ile de la Cité is the argument. Tatiana Levha in the kitchen.

ORDER: TASTING MENU

Paris takes its bakeries more seriously than any other city. These are the addresses that justify the reputation.

Ritz Comptoir

1ST ARR

The retail counter from the Ritz kitchen. The croissant is the best in Paris, which in Paris means the best in the world. Queue early — they sell out by 9am.

Tapisserie

11TH ARR

From the Septime team. The pastries apply the same precision as the restaurant. The tarte au citron.

Mamiche

9TH ARR

The brioche and the pain de mie. A bakery in the 9th that has earned a serious following and justifies all of it.

The French Bastards

11TH ARR

The croissant is extraordinary. The name is the only unconventional thing about it.

La Maison d'Isabelle

5TH ARR

Best croissant on the Left Bank, confirmed by the Concours du Meilleur Croissant de Paris. Near the Sorbonne. Go early.

Cyril Lignac

7TH ARR

The television chef's bakery is considerably better than its celebrity provenance suggests. The éclairs and the tarte aux fraises.

Le Meurice breakfast for Cédric Grolet

1ST ARR

The pastry chef who changed the conversation about French pastry. His fruit sculptures and his trompe l'oeil are sold from a counter at Le Meurice. The queue at his standalone shop is an hour. At breakfast service inside Le Meurice, there is no queue.

Noir

2ND ARR

The serious coffee shop. Specialty roasters, the right equipment, a genuine understanding of extraction. The best espresso in Paris.

Café Nuances

9TH ARR

A small specialty coffee shop in the 9th with excellent single origins and a room that rewards staying in.

Paris bars range from the historic to the genuinely great. These are the rooms worth being in after dinner.

Les Ambassadeurs

8TH ARR
ORDER: WHATEVER THE BARTENDER SUGGESTS

Inside the Hotel de Crillon, on Place de la Concorde. One of the most beautiful bar rooms in Europe. The Hemingway Bar at the Ritz is the more famous address — Les Ambassadeurs is the better room.

Harry's New York Bar

2ND ARR
ORDER: BLOODY MARY · SIDECAR

Since 1911. The Bloody Mary was invented here. The Sidecar was invented here. The barman school downstairs has trained more Paris bartenders than any other institution. It is a tourist bar that is also genuinely excellent.

Serpent à Plume

1ST ARR
ORDER: HOUSE COCKTAILS

Go downstairs. Do not do dinner. The basement bar in what was once a Belle Époque private mansion is one of the most atmospheric rooms in Paris after dark. The cocktails are the point.

Billie

11TH ARR
ORDER: NATURAL WINE

A vinyl bar in the 11th. Natural wine, good music, the kind of room that fills by 9pm with people who live in the neighborhood. Go late.

Au Petit Fer à Cheval

4TH ARR
ORDER: KIR · GLASS OF SOMETHING FRENCH

A Marais institution since 1903 — the horseshoe bar that gives it its name is the original zinc counter. The café during the day, the bar in the evening. Order a Kir.

Caveau de la Huchette

5TH ARR
ORDER: WHATEVER IS COLD

A jazz club in a 14th-century cellar on the Left Bank, operating since 1946. Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton played here. Go after dinner, late, and stay.

Colonia

11TH ARR
ORDER: NATURAL WINE · SMALL PLATES

A natural wine bar in the 11th with a Latin American sensibility. The wine list is extraordinary. The small plates are consistently better than expected.

Paris is still the city where shopping rewards walking. The best shops are not on the Champs-Élysées. They are in the covered passages, the quiet streets of the Marais, and the arrondissements that tourists have not yet discovered.

La Grande Épicerie

7TH ARR · FOOD HALL

The food hall attached to Le Bon Marché. Save room for the pastries — their bakery is excellent. Have a Saint-Honoré. The cheese counter and the prepared foods are also worth the detour.

E. Dehillerin

1ST ARR · KITCHEN EQUIPMENT

The professional kitchen shop that has been supplying Paris chefs since 1820. Copper pots, carbon steel pans, equipment that will outlast everything else you buy in Paris. Les Halles, near the covered passages.

Dover Street Market

1ST ARR · FASHION & PERFUME

Rei Kawakubo's multi-brand concept store — the perfume store in a separate space is particularly worth visiting. The fragrance selection is unlike anything available in a conventional boutique.

Mariage Frères

4TH ARR · TEA

Since 1854, in the Marais. The most serious tea house in Paris — over 700 references, a tea museum upstairs, and a restaurant serving tea-smoked salmon and tea-infused dishes at lunch.

Jacques Solovière

2ND ARR · SHOES

Handcrafted shoes made in France. The last is the most elegant available in Paris at this price point. The loafers are the thing to buy.

Debauves & Gallais

7TH ARR · CHOCOLATE

The oldest chocolatier in Paris, supplying the French royal family since 1800. The pistoles — thin discs of flavored chocolate — are the reason to go. On the Rue des Saints-Pères.

Maître Parfumeur et Gantier

1ST ARR · PERFUME

Ambre du Népal is the best candle in Paris. This is not a small claim. The house has been making gloves and perfume since 1988 and the quality is consistent throughout.

Charvet

1ST ARR · SHIRTS & TIES

Place Vendôme since 1838. The shirt maker that all other Paris shirt makers are measured against. The tie selection alone justifies the visit even if you buy nothing.

Cifonelli

8TH ARR · BESPOKE TAILORING

One of the great bespoke tailoring houses in Paris — the Augusto Cifonelli shoulder is one of the most recognized details in European tailoring. By appointment.

Jovoy

1ST ARR · NICHE PERFUME

The best niche perfume shop in Paris. François Hénin's selection is extraordinary and his knowledge of the houses is genuine. Allow two hours.

Palais Royal Arcades

1ST ARR · SHOPPING ARCADE

The covered galleries surrounding the Palais-Royal garden. Didier Ludot for vintage couture, Rick Owens, Stella McCartney, the Comédie-Française entrance, Pierre Hardy. An afternoon, not an hour.

Barthélémy

7TH ARR · CHEESE

The finest fromagerie on the Left Bank, supplying the Élysée Palace. The Rue de Grenelle address. The Saint-Nectaire and the Comté are the benchmarks.

L'Éclaireur

8TH ARR · FASHION

A multi-brand concept store that has been ahead of the curve in Paris retail for thirty years. The Avenue des Champs-Élysées location has the best selection.

Puiforcat

8TH ARR · SILVER & TABLEWARE

The silversmith to the French court, operating since 1820. The tableware and flatware collections are among the finest produced in France. Avenue Matignon.

Épices Roelinger

5TH ARR · SPICE MERCHANT

Chef Olivier Roelinger's spice shop on the Left Bank. The blends are specific, considered, and impossible to replicate at home without coming back here.

Chapal

8TH ARR · LEATHER & AVIATION

The heritage leather brand that supplied the French Air Force. Aviator jackets, leather goods, and clothing with a genuinely specific point of view.

Dries Van Noten

7TH ARR · FASHION

The rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré address. The Belgian designer's Paris flagship, worth visiting for the space as much as the collection.

Husbands

2ND ARR · MENSWEAR

A small menswear brand near the Palais-Royal making relaxed, considered clothes in good fabrics. The linen suits are the reason people find it.

Saint Laurent Babylone bookstore

7TH ARR · BOOKS

The Yves Saint Laurent Foundation bookstore near the museum. The design and fashion book selection is the finest in Paris.

Ex Libris

4TH ARR · BOOKS

An independent bookshop in the Marais with a strong design, art and architecture section. Worth an afternoon.

Paris has been producing things worth looking at for several centuries. These are the experiences worth building your days around — beyond the obvious.

Paul Bert Serpette

SAINT-OUEN · FLEA MARKET

The best section of the Marché aux Puces — Allée 1 and Allée 3 of Paul Bert for serious antiques dealers, Serpette for furniture and objects. Saturday and Sunday mornings. Go early.

Fondation Louis Vuitton

16TH ARR · MUSEUM

Frank Gehry's building in the Bois de Boulogne is reason enough. The contemporary art collection inside it — Basquiat, Hirst, Koons, but also serious institutional commissions — makes it Paris's most significant contemporary museum.

Bourse de Commerce — Pinault Collection

1ST ARR · MUSEUM

Tadao Ando's intervention inside the 19th-century commodities exchange. The Pinault collection's Paris home — different works to the Venice venues. The building is one of Ando's finest European projects.

Canal Saint-Martin

10TH ARR · NEIGHBORHOOD

Walk the canal on a Sunday morning when the roads are closed to cars. The locks, the iron footbridges, the cafés with their chairs out. The 10th and the 11th at their most Parisian.

Foldérol

11TH ARR · WINE & ICE CREAM

Wine and ice cream in the 11th. The combination is correct. The natural wine list is serious and the ice cream is made in-house. Go in the late afternoon.

Palais de Tokyo

16TH ARR · MUSEUM

The largest contemporary art museum in Europe. Open until midnight. No permanent collection — only temporary exhibitions, which means every visit is different. The Monsieur Bleu restaurant inside has one of the great Paris terraces.

Hôtel de la Marine

8TH ARR · MUSEUM

The former royal furniture depository on Place de la Concorde, open to the public since 2021 for the first time in 250 years. The 18th-century apartments are restored exactly. The audio guide is theatrical and worth using. Free on the first Sunday of each month.

Fondation Cartier

14TH ARR · MUSEUM

Jean Nouvel's building on the Boulevard Raspail is one of the finest pieces of contemporary architecture in Paris. The art inside — focused on international and often overlooked artists — consistently surprises. The garden is public and worth sitting in.

Musée de l'Orangerie

1ST ARR · MUSEUM

Monet's Nymphéas in the oval rooms they were designed for. The light changes throughout the day — go in the morning for the best natural light. The Walter-Guillaume collection of Post-Impressionists downstairs is consistently undervisited.

Les Enfants du Marché

4TH ARR · MARKET

The covered market in the Marais — producers, wine merchants, cheese makers, prepared foods. The natural wine section is excellent. Saturday mornings.

Grand Rex

2ND ARR · CINEMA

The largest cinema in Europe, opened 1932, Art Deco interior entirely intact. See anything, just to be in the room. The backstage tours are also available and worth an hour.

Saint-Roch

1ST ARR · CHURCH

The church that Louis XIV's architect designed and where Corneille, Le Nôtre, and Diderot are buried. Napoleon famously fired grapeshot at Royalist insurgents from its steps in 1795. Quiet, uncrowded, extraordinary.

Day trip — Airelles Versailles

VERSAILLES · SPECIAL OCCASION

The only hotel inside the Palace of Versailles grounds — specifically, inside the Château de la Reine building. A completely different version of the palace from the one tourists see. Book months ahead.

Day trip — L'Abbaye des Vaux de Cernay

CERNAY-LA-VILLE · COUNTRY ESCAPE

50km from Paris in the Chevreuse valley. A 12th-century Cistercian abbey converted into a hotel. The kind of escape that makes Paris feel like it is in another country.

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Any restaurant on the Champs-Élysées

Tourist prices, not Parisian food.

Any café charging over €6 for an espresso

Stand at the bar. Pay the correct price.

Ladurée on the Champs-Élysées

The Rue Bonaparte location is better and less crowded.

The Moulin Rouge

Unless someone else is paying and you have never been.

Any restaurant within 200 meters of the Eiffel Tower

The view is the product. The food is not.

Venture Vetted accepts no payment for editorial recommendations. Every hotel, restaurant and shop listed has been visited and selected independently by Albert and Nouri Beesemer. Affiliate links may earn a small commission at no cost to you — this never influences what we recommend or what we don't.