
France
Paris, hand-curated: the Louvre and Notre-Dame, Marais cafés and Montmartre, the Eiffel Tower over the Seine, one neighbourhood a day — every fact verified before you fly.
Regions of Paris
Louvre & Tuileries
The monumental heart of the Right Bank — I.M. Pei's glass pyramid, the Tuileries' gravel allées and fountains, and the Palais-Royal's quiet arcaded garden, all walkable along the Seine.
Le Marais
The historic aristocratic quarter turned Paris's hippest district — 17th-century mansions, Picasso's private townhouse, and the Pletzl's falafel counters packed into a few walkable, car-light blocks straddling the 3rd and 4th arrondissements.
Île de la Cité & Latin Quarter
Two Seine islands cradle Notre-Dame's rebuilt spire and Sainte-Chapelle's stained glass, while the steep, market-lined lanes of the Left Bank climb past the Panthéon's dome to Rue Mouffetard's crêpe stands and the Sorbonne's oldest bookshops.
Saint-Germain-des-Prés & Orsay
Cobbled Left Bank streets where Sartre and Hemingway once argued in cafés, framed by the Musée d'Orsay's Impressionist collection and the bell tower of Paris's oldest church.
Eiffel Tower & Trocadéro
The Eiffel Tower rises straight from the wide lawns of the Champ de Mars while, across the Seine, the Trocadéro's terrace and the Palais de Chaillot's twin curved wings frame the postcard view every visitor comes for.
Montmartre
A hilltop artists' village of steep cobbled stairways and café terraces, crowned by the Sacré-Cœur's white domes and Paris's finest skyline view.