Everything you need to plan the perfect Paris trip — from iconic landmarks to hidden gems, food, culture, and practical travel tips.
Paris. The mere mention of the name conjures images of glittering iron lattices, candlelit bistros, and centuries of art stacked floor-to-ceiling in grand palaces. But the French capital is far more than a postcard — it is a living, breathing city that rewards curious travellers at every corner. Whether you are visiting for the first time or returning for the tenth, there is always something new to discover.
This definitive guide by piyocab.com covers the absolute best things to do in Paris, France — curated for every type of traveller, from history buffs and foodies to families and budget explorers. We have organised everything by category so you can plan your Paris itinerary with confidence.
No visit to Paris is complete without standing beneath the Eiffel Tower. Built by Gustave Eiffel for the 1889 World's Fair, this 330-metre iron masterpiece is the most visited paid monument on Earth. Ride the lift to the second floor for breathtaking panoramic views, or splurge on the summit for unrivalled 360-degree vistas across the city.
Pro tip from piyocab.com: Book your Eiffel Tower tickets online at least 2–3 weeks in advance, especially in peak summer months (June–August). The first floor has a glass floor section — surprisingly exhilarating!
Opening hours: Daily 09:30–23:45 (last lift at 22:30). Extended hours in summer.
Cost: From €11.80 (stairs to 2nd floor) to €28.30 (lift to summit).
Home to over 35,000 works of art — including the Mona Lisa, the Venus de Milo, and the Winged Victory of Samothrace — the Louvre is one of humanity's greatest cultural repositories. Give yourself a full day and download the official app to navigate its nine wings intelligently.
piyocab.com insider tip: Visit on Wednesday or Friday evenings when the museum stays open until 21:45. Crowds thin significantly after 17:00.
Cost: €22 per adult. Free for under-18s and EU residents under 26.
After years of painstaking reconstruction following the devastating 2019 fire, Notre-Dame Cathedral reopened to visitors in late 2024. The restored Gothic masterpiece is more magnificent than ever, with its iconic twin towers and the hauntingly beautiful rose windows returned to their former glory. Visiting feels genuinely historic.
Location: Île de la Cité, 4th arrondissement. Free entry; timed ticket reservation recommended.
Standing at the head of the famous Champs-Élysées, the Arc de Triomphe honours those who fought and died for France. Climb to the rooftop terrace for one of the best free-ish views in Paris — the symmetrical boulevards radiating outward create a spectacular urban panorama.
Cost: €13 adults. Free for under-18s.
Housed in a stunning converted Beaux-Arts railway station on the Left Bank, the Musée d'Orsay holds the world's largest collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art. Monet, Renoir, Degas, Van Gogh, and Cézanne all live here. Budget at least three hours.
Claude Monet personally designed the two oval rooms in the Orangerie to display his monumental Water Lilies series. Seeing these enormous canvases in person — surrounded by natural light exactly as Monet intended — is one of the most moving art experiences available in Paris.
The inside-out architecture of the Pompidou Centre is as much an attraction as the art within. Europe's largest collection of modern and contemporary art is housed across its floors, and the rooftop offers excellent city views. The surrounding piazza is a hub of street performers and cafés.
Set in a beautiful 18th-century mansion with tranquil sculpture gardens, the Musée Rodin is one of Paris's most serene museum experiences. The Thinker and The Kiss are displayed here, and the rose garden alone is worth the entrance fee.
Perched on the city's highest hill, Montmartre retains the soul of the artistic community that once drew Picasso, Modigliani, and Toulouse-Lautrec. Wander cobbled lanes lined with ateliers and flower boxes, watch painters at work on Place du Tertre, and crown your visit at the dazzling white domes of Sacré-Coeur Basilica.
One of the few Paris districts to survive Haussmann's 19th-century renovations, Le Marais is a maze of medieval streets, Renaissance mansions, art galleries, boutique shops, and excellent falafel. The Place des Vosges — Paris's oldest planned square — is a jewel at its heart.
The spiritual home of Parisian intellectual life, Saint-Germain is where Hemingway, Sartre, and Simone de Beauvoir once debated philosophy over coffee. Today the neighbourhood remains one of the most elegant in Paris — perfect for café-hopping, gallery-browsing, and boutique shopping.
For a taste of authentic, multicultural Paris away from the tourist trail, head north to Belleville for vibrant street art and some of the city's best Chinese and North African food. Canal Saint-Martin's iron footbridges and tree-lined towpaths offer one of the most photogenic strolls in the city.
A bateau mouche (glass-roofed river boat) cruise along the Seine is one of the best ways to orient yourself in Paris and see multiple landmarks in one go. Evening cruises are especially magical as the monuments are illuminated. The Eiffel Tower's sparkle show at the top of each hour is a highlight.
Best operators: Bateaux Parisiens, Vedettes du Pont-Neuf, Bateaux-Mouches. Cost from ~€15–18 per adult.
The Palace of Versailles is one of the greatest achievements of European royal architecture — a 700-room palace surrounded by 800 hectares of manicured gardens, grand fountains, and the famous Hall of Mirrors. It is a full-day commitment and worth every minute. The garden fountain shows run on select weekends in 2026 — check chateauversailles.fr for current dates.
Getting there: RER C train from central Paris (40 minutes). Open Tuesday–Sunday.
Cost: From €20 for palace only; gardens free (except fountain show days).
A guided food tour through a Parisian market or neighbourhood is genuinely one of the most enjoyable ways to spend a morning in the city. Sample buttery croissants from a boulangerie, aged cheeses, charcuterie, macarons from Pierre Hermé, and classic French onion soup. The Marais, Montmartre, and Rue Mouffetard are excellent areas for food exploration.
Often overshadowed by Notre-Dame just steps away, Sainte-Chapelle is arguably the most visually stunning Gothic monument in Paris. Built by Louis IX in the 13th century to house holy relics, its upper chapel is almost entirely composed of 15-metre stained-glass windows that bathe visitors in kaleidoscopic light. Arrive early to beat crowds.
Cost: €13 adults. Often combined with Conciergerie for a reduced price.
The 55-acre Luxembourg Gardens on the Left Bank are the quintessential Parisian outdoor experience. Locals jog, children sail toy boats on the central pond, and retirees play chess beneath chestnut trees. Pack a baguette and a book and spend a leisurely afternoon here — it costs nothing and feels entirely Parisian.
A true Parisian meal is an event, not just a meal. Seek out a classic bistro offering a prix fixe menu — typically starter, main, and dessert for €15–25 at lunch. Look for handwritten chalkboard menus (ardoise) — a sign that dishes change daily and use fresh local produce.
The café is the beating heart of Parisian social life. Café de Flore and Les Deux Magots on Boulevard Saint-Germain are legendary — expensive but historically significant. For a more local experience, find a corner zinc bar in the 11th or 18th arrondissements and order a café allongé and a tartine.
Claude Monet lived and painted at Giverny for 43 years, and his famous water lily garden remains one of the most beautiful places in France. The Musée des Impressionnismes in Giverny is also running a landmark exhibition through July 2026 marking the centenary of Monet's death. Best visited April–June when the gardens peak.
Distance: 80 km from Paris. Train to Vernon then taxi/shuttle.
The Loire Valley is home to over 300 châteaux — Chambord, Chenonceau, and Amboise being the most spectacular. A guided day tour from Paris covers the highlights and is one of the best value day-trips available.
The gravity-defying island abbey of Mont Saint-Michel, rising dramatically from tidal flats in Normandy, is one of France's most recognizable landmarks. It is a long day trip (3.5 hours each way by TGV and shuttle) but deeply rewarding.
Paris is beautiful year-round but the optimal windows are April–June (spring blooms, mild weather, manageable crowds) and September–October (golden light, fewer tourists, harvest season). July–August is peak season — expect larger crowds and higher hotel prices.
The Paris Museum Pass covers entry to over 50 museums and monuments including the Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, and the Arc de Triomphe. A 2-day pass costs €55; 4-day €80. Worth it if you plan to visit 3+ major sites. Note: it does not cover the Eiffel Tower lift.
Paris is largely card-friendly, though some small boulangeries and market stalls remain cash-only. Tipping is not mandatory — rounding up or leaving €1–2 at a café is perfectly appropriate. At restaurants, 5–10% for good service is generous by local standards.
A few words of French go a long way. Always open with 'Bonjour' before any request — it is considered basic courtesy and Parisians respond warmly to the effort. 'Excusez-moi', 'merci', and 's'il vous plaît' will serve you well.
Most travellers need a minimum of 4–5 days to see Paris's major highlights without feeling rushed. A week allows you to include day trips to Versailles or Giverny and explore neighbourhoods at a leisurely pace.
The 1st–6th arrondissements put you within walking distance of most major attractions. The Marais (3rd/4th) offers excellent restaurant and nightlife access. Saint-Germain (6th) is elegant and central. For budget options, the 10th–11th arrondissements are lively, well-connected, and more affordable.
Paris can be done on a range of budgets. Free attractions include Notre-Dame, most churches, all city parks, and many permanent museum collections. Set lunch menus (formule déjeuner) offer excellent three-course meals for €15–20. A comfortable mid-range Paris trip costs approximately €150–200 per person per day including accommodation.
Paris is generally very safe for tourists. As with any major city, be aware of pickpockets in crowded tourist areas — the Metro, Eiffel Tower queues, and Sacré-Coeur steps are known hotspots. Keep valuables secured and use inner pockets or money belts. Violent crime targeting tourists is rare.
Paris is best known for the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre Museum, haute cuisine, haute couture fashion, Impressionist art, the Seine River, café culture, and its reputation as the 'City of Light' and 'City of Love'.
Paris is not merely a destination — it is an experience that accumulates layer by layer, visit by visit. The city rewards those who slow down, wander without agenda, and accept that some of the most memorable moments will happen in a café with a coffee and a newspaper, not in a museum queue.
Whether it is your first time standing wide-eyed beneath the Eiffel Tower, or your tenth return for the specific pleasure of a morning croissant in a particular boulangerie on Rue de Bretagne — Paris never disappoints.
Ready to plan your Paris adventure? Visit piyocab.com for Paris travel packages, transfer bookings, and personalised itinerary planning. Bon voyage!