Welcome to
Paris
France
Paris is the benchmark against which all other cities are measured — a living monument to art, architecture, cuisine, and romance that has drawn dreamers for centuries. Walking its grand boulevards and hidden passages, you encounter the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and Notre-Dame, but also intimate wine bars, flower markets, and bakeries perfecting the croissant. The French capital rewards slow travel: the longer you stay, the more you understand why artists, writers, and lovers have always chosen to call it home.
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Arc de Triomphe
Napoleon's monument to military glory, straddling the world's most famous roundabout.

Canal Saint-Martin
A tree-lined waterway where Paris slows down and gets genuinely local.

Catacombs of Paris
Six million Parisians rest beneath the city's streets in eerie, bone-lined tunnels.

Centre Pompidou
The building that turned architecture inside-out — and redefined modern art.

Champs-Élysées
Paris's most famous avenue, built for spectacle and still delivering it.

Eiffel Tower
The iron lattice that turned a city's skyline into the world's most recognizable postcard.

Fondation Louis Vuitton
Frank Gehry's glass-sailed masterpiece houses world-class contemporary art in the Bois de Boulogne.

Jardin des Tuileries
The grand formal garden connecting the Louvre to the Champs-Élysées axis.

Le Marais
Paris's most layered neighborhood: medieval streets, modern galleries, and an unbeatable Jewish deli on every corner.

Louvre Museum
Eight thousand years of human civilization housed in a former royal palace.

Luxembourg Gardens
Paris's most beloved formal garden, where chess players and children coexist beautifully.

Montmartre
Paris's most atmospheric hilltop village, crowned by a gleaming white basilica.

Musée Picasso
The full arc of Picasso's restless genius, housed in a 17th-century Marais mansion.

Musée Rodin
Rodin's sculptures in the very house and garden where he made them.

Musée d'Orsay
The world's greatest Impressionist collection, housed in a stunning converted railway station.

Musée de l'Orangerie
Home to Monet's Water Lilies, painted on a scale that fills entire rooms.

Notre-Dame Cathedral
The Gothic cathedral that defines Paris, finally restored and reborn after fire.

Palace of Versailles
The château that redefined royal ambition — and French history along with it.

Palais Garnier
The world's most theatrical building, built to be seen as much as heard.

Palais Royal
A royal garden, colonnaded arcades, and 300 years of Parisian intrigue in one square.

Panthéon
France buries its greatest minds beneath one of Paris's most beautiful domes.

Place des Vosges
Paris's oldest planned square, still the city's most elegant gathering place.

Père Lachaise Cemetery
A 110-acre outdoor museum where Paris buries its most famous dead.

Sacré-Cœur
A Romano-Byzantine basilica crowning Montmartre with panoramic views over Paris.

Sainte-Chapelle
Fifteen meters of medieval stained glass that turns sunlight into something sacred.

Septime
The restaurant that made Paris's 11th arrondissement a dining destination.
Why should you go to Paris
What other travelers have to say, based on real reviews.
