Everyone has been to Paris. Almost nobody has been to Paris correctly. The city rewards slowness — the long lunch, the afternoon in a bookshop, the wrong turn that leads to the right café.
Paris is not a city of monuments. It's a city of rituals. The morning café, the afternoon walk, the late dinner. Get these right and the monuments take care of themselves.
Saint-Germain & Le Marais
Skip the tourist hotels near the Eiffel Tower. Stay in Saint-Germain-des-Prés — where the bookshops and galleries set the tone — or Le Marais, which has the best restaurants, the best bars, and the best morning walks in the city.
Le Meurice on the Rue de Rivoli is the great palace hotel option: Belle Époque grandeur, Tuileries view, and a bar that Dalí made his second home. For something smaller, the boutique hotels around the Canal Saint-Martin offer the neighbourhood feel that the bigger arrondissements can't.
The Bistro Is Not Dead
The Parisian bistro — unpretentious, ingredient-led, quietly magnificent — is alive and thriving if you know where to look. Le Comptoir du Relais in the 6th doesn't take reservations at lunch. Show up. Order the steak frites. Watch how it should be done.
"The best meal in Paris is not necessarily the most expensive one. It's the one where nobody is trying to impress you."
For a special occasion: Septime in the 11th is the benchmark for modern Parisian cooking. And the natural wine list at Frenchie Bar à Vins is one of the finest in the city — no reservation, just show up early.
Not the Louvre
Go to the Musée de l'Orangerie instead. Two oval rooms. Monet's Water Lilies filling them exactly as he specified. Tuesday mornings, when it opens, you may have the rooms to yourself. Spend an hour. Don't rush. This is what museums are for.
The Fondation Louis Vuitton in the Bois de Boulogne is worth the trip for the building alone — Frank Gehry at his most ambitious. The collection is remarkable; the architecture is extraordinary.
Walk More. Plan Less.
The Canal Saint-Martin neighbourhood in the 10th is where Paris lives when it's not performing for tourists. Coffee at Ten Belles. Natural wine at Septime la Cave. Vintage shopping on the Rue de Marseille. A long lunch that becomes an early dinner.
Walk from République to Oberkampf on a Sunday morning. The city will reveal itself.