Paris
City Guide

Paris

France · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €80.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language French
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Paris
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

One Straight Line Through the Heart of Paris

09:00

Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris

Religious
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Start at the Parvis Notre-Dame while tour buses are still en route. The morning sun catches the south facade and the reconstructed spire — walk around to Square Jean XXIII behind the cathedral for the flying buttresses glowing in direct sunlight. The restoration after the 2019 fire is complete, and the stonework has never looked this luminous in living memory.

Tip: The best full-cathedral photo is from Petit Pont on the south side, with the Seine in the foreground. The west facade (main entrance) is backlit in the morning — don't waste time trying to shoot it. If the queue to enter is under 15 minutes, step inside for 5 minutes: the new interior lighting after the restoration is genuinely worth seeing.

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10:30

Pyramide du Louvre

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Cross Pont Neuf — Paris's oldest bridge — and walk 10 minutes west along the Right Bank; the Conciergerie's turrets make a good mid-walk photo over your shoulder. At this hour most visitors are queuing inside the museum, leaving the Cour Napoléon courtyard surprisingly empty. The glass pyramid catches mid-morning light at a low angle, creating mirror-sharp reflections in the surrounding pools. Frame it through the Passage Richelieu arch for a composition most tourists miss entirely.

Tip: Stand on the small metal marker at the exact center of the courtyard for perfect symmetry. The inverted pyramid is inside the underground Carrousel du Louvre — free to walk in, takes 3 minutes if you want to see it. Don't bother with the museum store outside: same products, worse prices than the one inside.

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12:00

Angelina

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €20

Walk through the Louvre's northern arcade and turn right on Rue de Rivoli — 5 minutes to the dark green facade at No. 226. Skip the sit-down salon queue: go straight to the comptoir (takeaway counter) on the left side of the entrance. Grab a Chocolat chaud L'Africain (€8.50, three African cocoa origins blended so thick a spoon stands up in it) and a Mont-Blanc (€9.50, the chestnut cream pastry they've perfected since 1903). Cross the street into the Tuileries Garden, find a green metal chair by the octagonal pond, and eat with the Louvre behind you and the Eiffel Tower ahead — this is how Paris does lunch.

Tip: The takeaway counter rarely has more than a 5-minute wait before 12:30 — the salon line reaches 40 minutes. Add a croque-monsieur (€16) if you need fuel for the 3km afternoon walk. Don't buy macarons here — Ladurée and Pierre Hermé are both far better for that.

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14:00

Arc de Triomphe

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

The walk here is the experience itself: stroll the central axis of the Tuileries for 15 minutes under double rows of chestnut trees, cross Place de la Concorde beneath the 3,300-year-old Egyptian obelisk, then step onto the Champs-Élysées. This 2km boulevard slopes gently uphill, the Arc de Triomphe growing larger with every step — the early afternoon sun illuminates its carved stone reliefs in full clarity. Up close the scale overwhelms. Take the underground passage to stand directly beneath the vault and see the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with its eternal flame.

Tip: Stand on the pedestrian traffic island halfway up the Champs-Élysées for the classic 'avenue stretching to the Arc' shot. Access the Arc ONLY via the underground passage on the right (north) side — never cross the roundabout on foot. If you want the rooftop panorama (€16, 284 steps, no elevator), budget an extra 45 minutes — the view down all twelve radiating avenues is unmatched.

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15:30

Tour Eiffel

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 12 minutes down Avenue Kléber. The moment you step onto the Trocadéro esplanade, the Eiffel Tower appears framed across the Seine — the single most iconic view in Paris. At this hour the afternoon sun lights up the iron lattice from the southwest in warm gold, the best light of the entire day for this angle. Take your time. Then descend through the Jardins du Trocadéro, cross Pont d'Iéna, and stand at the Tower's base: look straight up through the iron geometry — the scale from directly below is staggering. Walk the length of Champ de Mars as the light turns golden toward evening.

Tip: For the postcard shot, stand dead center of the Trocadéro steps. For a crowd-free photo, move to the far right edge of the Palais de Chaillot terrace. Skip the Champ de Mars lawn for upward shots — the low angle squashes the Tower. Street vendors here sell mini Eiffel Towers aggressively; a firm 'non merci' and keep walking. Do not accept anything handed to you — string bracelets and petition clipboards are scams targeting tourists in this area.

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19:00

La Fontaine de Mars

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €45

Walk 10 minutes southeast from the Tower base along Avenue de la Bourdonnais, turn left onto Rue Saint-Dominique — the 7th arrondissement's most charming market street, lined with fromageries and boulangeries already closing for the day. This corner bistro with red-and-white checked tablecloths has poured wine since 1908. Order the Confit de canard du Sud-Ouest (duck confit, €28 — the skin shatters like caramelized glass) and finish with the Baba au rhum (€14 — the waiter drenches it tableside from a bottle of aged rum). A glass of Côtes du Rhône starts at €8. Budget €40-50 per person.

Tip: Arrive at 19:00 sharp when dinner service starts — you can usually land a terrace table without a reservation. By 19:30 the wait begins. The corner terrace at Rue Saint-Dominique and Rue de l'Exposition is one of the most photogenic dinner spots in Paris. Skip Le Jules Verne inside the Eiffel Tower — €200+ for mediocre food and a view you've already seen better from Trocadéro.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Paris?

Most travelers enjoy Paris in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Paris?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Paris?

A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Paris?

A good first shortlist for Paris includes Pyramide du Louvre, Arc de Triomphe, Tour Eiffel.