25 Ways to Enjoy Paris in Winter

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25 Ways to Enjoy Paris in Winter
Ellen A
By Ellen A

“Winter was come indeed bringing with it those pleasures of which the summer dreamer knows nothing…” Proust

Paris in January, February, March… the chilled and quiet months that make it possible to slip back easily into the 19th century: Proust’s world of cozy interiors, the Garnier Opera House, and delectable hearty meals.

In addition to some of the obvious pleasures of less-trammeled museum corridors, we can warm up with cognac in the plush corners of the grand hotel bars. There are teatimes, cooking classes, les soldes, and the music halls and restaurants of rue de la Gaîté.

Why go to Paris in the coldest months? Because it’s affordable, romantic, uncrowded, and full of extraordinary surprises both indoors and outside.

Rooftop view of the back of the Palais Garnier from Galeries Lafayette. Photo credit: Ellen A

Here are 25 ways to make the most of a winter trip.

1) Catch the lowest airfares

January through early March post some of the lowest airfares from North American cities and elsewhere. French Bee has fares hovering around $800 roundtrip from Los Angeles, San Francisco or Newark to Paris Orly airport.

Statue of Jeanne d’Arc. Photo credit: Ellen A

2) Choose from a greater range of hotels and apartments

To be fair, staying in Paris is never cheap, but many hotels and Airbnbs will be available at a reasonable rate, particularly for longer stays.

With an apartment, you can bring pastries, cheeses, paté, and even whole meals from a traiteur back to your place to enjoy. And it’s a rule that if you make the coffee, your partner goes out to get croissants in the morning!

Choose a hotel instead if you’d like assistance with reservations, transport, and directions around town. Even two-star hotels can be quite nice, but they may not have an elevator, room service, or strong wifi. Most three- and four-star hotels will have many amenities and staff who speak English. Mid-range prices per night in winter will be about $250 to $400/night for a double.

Galettes des Rois displayed at bakeries in January. Photo credit: Ellen A

3) Stay in the center of the city

A few classic hotels to consider:

Hotel Caron de Beaumarchais (3 star) romantic French period décor in a great Marais location.

Hotel Bachaumont (4 star) elegance in the trendy 2nd arrondissement.

Or any of these well-reviewed places in the Latin Quarter:

Hotel Clément (2 star)

Hotel Parc Saint Severin (4 star)

Grand Hotels des Balcons (2 star) or

Hotel de l’Abbaye (4 star).

For a splurge, there are enticing boutique hotels like the celebrity-secret Hotel San Regis (5 star) in the 8th near the Champs-Elysées, or Le Narcisse Blanc (5 star with restaurant, pool and sauna) in the chic 7th arrondissement.

Hostels that have both shared bunkrooms and private rooms can work for students and others on a tight budget. Try Generator in the 10th near Gare du Nord  or The People – Marais in the 4th.

The Hotel Chopin (2 star) in the 9th offers simple but characterful accommodation near a wax museum in one of the 19th century passages. Or try the Hotel Pratic, a no frills spot in an excellent location on Place du Marché Ste Catherine in the Marais.

Hotel Chopin. Photo credit: Ellen A

4) Book a special evening event in advance

Buy tickets in advance to the ballet, a concert, or a play you can look forward to, particularly if the event will be in a glorious setting like the Garnier Opera House.

Theatre in Paris selects shows with English translations projected above the stage, and also sells tickets to musicals and magic shows that need no translation.

Music hall theaters like the legendary Bobino and others on rue Gaîté in Montparnasse (14th) are similarly welcoming for an international audience. You don’t need to understand French to enjoy a production like Opera Locos (performers singing famous arias to each other) or Black Legends (an homage to African-American music stars) at the Bobino.

Interior of the Garnier Opera House. Photo credit: Ellen A

5) Read a book or two set in Paris – before you go

Your appreciation of the city will be deepened by reading a good historical novel, a biography, memoir, mystery or romance – whatever genre you prefer – to set the scene and heighten your connection with Paris past and present.

Wallace Fountain in front of Shakespeare and Co © Eric Parker at Creative Commons

6) Discover having all of Paris (nearly) to yourselves

January, February and early March are low months for tourism in general, so you won’t find yourself elbowing for a table at the bistros or desperate for a ticketed time slot to visit a popular venue like the Hotel de la Marine. The streets are yours, so flâner to your heart’s content!

Hotel de la Marine, the monument-museum on the Place de la Concorde. Photo credit: Ellen A

7) Walk, briskly – to your own Parisian soundtrack

Stride along the length of the Tuileries Gardens in sturdy winter boots, or across Place des Vosges, and later down the Champs-Élysees. Relish being away from your daily concerns and enveloped by the winter beauty of Paris.

Add earbuds with your favorite music, and you can really take in the heart of the architecture, the history and the people. A few suggestions:

Lully (Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme)

Isham – The Moderns (Film soundtrack)

Edith Piaf (Sous les Ciels de Paris, Je Ne Regrette Rien, La Vie en Rose)

Josephine Baker (J’ai Deux Amours)

Charles Trenet (Menilmontant)

Ella Fitzgerald (I Love Paris)

Charles Aznavour (La Bohème)

Joe Dassin (Champs-Élysees)

Joni Mitchell (Free Man in Paris)

Marc Lavoine (Le Pont Mirabeau)

Zaz (Paris Sera Toujours Paris)

Orelsan with Stromae (La Pluie)

View to Ile St Louis. Photo credit: Ellen A

8) Vary your pleasures across each arrondissement

Whenever possible, plan several activities within a given area to limit your time in the cold and make the most of your daylight hours. Alternate indoor and outdoor pursuits, meals and snacks, but always leave room for serendipity!

A vigorous walk in the Luxembourg Gardens, for example, could be followed by either a quick bite at Treize au Jardin or a three-course lunch with soufflés at La Cuisine de Philippe, then a visit to St. Sulpice, shopping afterward at the super boutiques in the small streets of the 6th.

You might visit the Louvre before or after a walk in the Tuileries, shop on rue de Rivoli, and take an afternoon drink in the comforting bar of the Hotel Regina.

Napoleon III music room at the Louvre. Photo credit: Ellen A

The historic Palais Royal archways and striped Buren columns are great settings for some memorable photos, followed by breakfast or lunch upstairs at Cafè Kitsune (2, place André Malraux location), or a glass of Côte du Rhone and a snack at Willi’s Wine Bar.

Alternatively, perhaps you’ll lunch at the Michelin starred Restaurant Palais Royal, or at Bistrot Valois of “Emily in Paris” fame, then stroll through the Galerie Vivienne and over to the circular Place des Victoires where Louis XIV rides a spirited horse.

The Musée des Arts et Métiers in the 4th. Photo credit: Ellen A

9) Visit Museums, of course…

Imagine being able to get close (not too close!) to your favorite Van Gogh at the Orsay or having time to contemplate a Mondrian at the Pompidou.

Winter is also a super time to visit Paris’s smaller and less well-known museums. (Reservations online are recommended, sometimes mandatory). But try some that are different! Check out our list of quirky, unusual museums here.

Musée d’Orsay by edwin.11/ Flickr

10) See the Circus!

Les Folies Gruss – A special horse circus show in the Bois du Boulogne (until March 5). Some packages offer a meal or a chance to meet the horses and human performers.

Cirque d’Hiver Bouglione, 110 rue Amelot, 11th. Entertaining physical feats and humor suitable for all ages (until March 5).

Les Folies Gruss. Photo credit: Poppy Pearce

11) Visit contemporary art galleries and artists

Art galleries abound in Paris, so look for those representing the style of contemporary art you prefer. Place des Vosges and rue de Seine have a number of galleries.

You may also enjoy visiting the artists’ studios open to the public at 59 rue de Rivoli, or in the Centquatre-Paris cultural center (5 rue Curial in the 19th).

The semi-annual sales in Paris. Photo: Kasia Dietz

12) Shop!

Les Soldes – Paris’s biggest half-yearly sales are held from mid January to early February. You’ll see progressive discounts at most of the big department stores.

Of course there are all types of luxury and specialty shops in Paris as well. Vintage clothing shops abound in the Marais.

Look for tea at Mariage Frères or cooking utensils at E. Dehillerin for gifts. And don’t forget that many chocolate and cheese shops can specially pack products for you to take back on the plane.

Chocolate shops of note: Jean-Paul Hévin, A La Mere de Famille, Patrick Roger, Debauve & Gallais

Cheese shops: Quatrehomme, Androuet, Anne Marie Cantin

The glorious selection at E. Dehillerin/ Sarah Viehbeck

13) Bargain for vintage finds at the brocantes

Online sites like brocabrac.fr can give you dates for upcoming itinerant brocantes selling mostly antiques, porcelain, old postcards and art. One is already planned for the 14th and 15th of January at Place d’Anvers and avenue Trudaine in the 9th arrondissement.

The brocantes pop up in white tents lining Paris’s boulevards or canals throughout the winter, with booths selling hot mulled wine and snacks to tide you over as you think about those bronze bookends. Be quick!

Photo credit ©Metro Centric, Flickr

14) Wine and cheese tasting

Ô Chateau at 68, rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the 1st, offers different packages for their educational and entertaining wine tastings, some paired with cheese.

You might also look for Airbnb experiences and other private chef tours that can introduce you to the wine or cheese of your dreams. In wintertime, Brie de Meaux, Fourme d’Ambert (bleu), Banon (goat cheese in chestnut leaf), and Mont d’Or are standouts.

Oeufs en Meurette at Camille. Photo credit: Ellen A

15) Enjoy cafes and brasseries at any hour

Most of those popular cafes that were jammed with visitors in the spring or summer will now have free tables. More folks will be eating inside as outdoor heaters have been banned. Look for hearty winter fare on the daily menus, like oeufs meurettes, hachis parmentier, cassoulet, and tartiflette.

16) Warm up in Tearooms and Coffee shops

There’s no harm in stopping for coffee or tea, even several times a day, in cold weather. Paris now boasts dozens of great custom-brewed coffee shops like Coutume and La Caféotheque. The tearooms typically offer light savory fare at lunchtime and always something sweet. Some favorites:

Queen Ann (5, rue Simon le Franc, 4th) for inventive quiches and delectable desserts in a half-timbered room.

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Mariage Freres – Classic tea purveyors with three locations in Paris where you can sip one of hundreds of their tea varieties while having brunch or dessert, then buy some to take home in their iconic black canisters.

Carette – An elegant long room on the north side of Place des Vosges, Carette is equally a pleasant place for tea and finger sandwiches, or to share a bottle of champagne with friends later in the day.

 

 

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17) Explore hotel lounges and bars for tea, a glass of wine or a cocktail

A few of the palace hotels have become so security conscious that you practically need a reservation to just go in to have a drink at the bar, but many still welcome walk-ins, like the charming Hotel de l’Abbaye on the Left Bank, where you may find the fire lit on a cold day, and the elegant Hotel Regina on the Right Bank near the Louvre whose handsome “English Bar” is tailored with wood and red velvet.

Hotel Regina – English Bar. Photo credit: Ellen A

18) Take a cooking class in English

Take home a taste of Paris by learning to make real butter croissants and a baguette in a baking class, or several classic sauces and a great viniagrette in a small group class. Some half-day classes begin with shopping at a street market with the chef, then making a lunch that all share together.

La Cuisine, 80 quai de l’Hotel de Ville, 4th

Cook’n with Class, 6 rue Baudelique, 18th

 

19) Learn how to create a perfume

Book ahead for perfume workshops where you can take your own creation home:

Fragonard – at the Musée du Parfum – 3-5 Square de l’Opéra-Louis Jouvet, 9th  (95 euros)
Le Studio des Parfums – 7 rue des Francs Bourgeois, 4th arr. (95 to 320 euros)

 

courtesy of La Cuisine Paris

20) For some monorail-type views of Paris streets and Haussmannian architecture: Ride the metro line 6 from one end to the other

Beginning perhaps at Étoile, the metro closest to the Arc de Triomphe, try to sit or stand near the windows of this popular line so you can see the Eiffel Tower as you cross the Seine, then skim over the cafés and traffic of several quarters of the Left Bank. Line 6 switches from underground darkness to broad daylight, in some places passing within just a few meters of the elegant cut stone apartment buildings. On your way back, stop off at Bir Hakeim metro to walk out onto the steel-columned bridge immortalized in Christopher Nolan’s film Inception.

Arc de Triomphe aerial view. Photo credit: Rodrigo Kugnharski / Unsplash

21) Take outdoor photos in the brilliant winter light

Bare tree branches don’t block the views – long vistas along the Seine and through the parks. Catch golden light on the south side of the Haussmannian buildings in the afternoon. The Louvre pyramid makes a great backdrop, as does the Eiffel Tower in photos taken from Trocadéro plaza.

Louvre in the snow. Photo credit: Ellen A

22) Enjoy Nighttime Music – Jazz, Classical & New Bands

The evenings are long but lively in winter. Music never stops. Classical concerts are held in many of the beautiful churches and chapels like the Madeleine and St. Germain des Près, some by candlelight.

Some jazz clubs like Chez Papa (3 rue Saint Benoit, 6th) and night spots with a variety of piano, song and cabaret like Aux Trois Mailletz (56 rue Galande, 5th) also serve delicious meals.

For more contemporary music, with bands like Avions, Eggs and Normcore, try places like l’International at 5 rue Moret, 11th.

The Bearded Gypsy Band at the Festival Django Reinhardt. Photo: Flickr/ PeterTea

23) Gambling!

“Fancy a flutter?” as some Brits say. Paris is a great place to dress up a bit and play James Bond at the gambling tables. Poker and Punto Banco are popular at Le Club Barrière at 104 Champs-Élysées. The Club Montmartre at 84, rue de Clichy in the 9th arrondissement is an attractive venue to play in as well.

The historic Casino de Paris in Montmartre. © Meredith Mullins

24) Go to the Movies

To see some of the best new French films with the benefit of English subtitles, look for the schedule of films sponsored in various Paris movie houses by entrepeneur Manon and her friends at Lost in Frenchlation. Some of the showings include appearances and discussion with the directors.

And of course, there are many films in English (advertised as “voix original” – V.O.) at Paris’s first run theaters and revival movie houses.

Le Champo – Espace Jacques-Tati. Photo: LPLT / Wiki Commons

25) Have late night talks of great importance

With your loved ones, or with a stranger, there is no better place than Paris in wintertime for those long conversations that may change your life. Allow yourself the time to discover what really matters to you and the people you care about. That’s also a gift to bring home.

And perhaps, it will snow…

There’s only a slim chance that it will be cold enough to snow while you are in Paris, but if it does, you will never forget it. Reason enough to book your next trip in winter!

Place Salvador Allende (7th). Photo credit: Ellen A

Lead photo credit : Notre Dame. Photo credit: Ellen A

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By Ellen A

Following a long and fulfilling career as a government attorney in California, Ellen retired to France several years ago with her husband, a novelist. They are enjoying a second life here in Paris with their unruly Cairn terrier, and make frequent visits to Normandy, where they are restoring a small village house.

Comments

  • Patricia Kale
    2024-01-15 05:30:56
    Patricia Kale
    Bravo Ellen! Truly inspired writing and selection of sights to see in Paris. You are a breath of fresh air in this stuffy Anglocentric publication.

    REPLY

  • Tony Powell
    2024-01-11 07:45:40
    Tony Powell
    Hi Ellen, we are currently in france from Australia. Having completed a couple of house and pet sits, we are now in relaxation mode before returning to the Gold Coast heat in Queensland on January 26. We are so looking forward to again being in Paris during the winter and the cosy cafes and happy hours sipping our Rose and Rouge in the latin Quarter our favourite arridissoment. We enjoy reading Bonjour Paris articles, and getting new and interesting places to visit, and things to do in Paris, keep up the great work. kind regards, Tony Powell

    REPLY

  • Victoria Zebrower
    2023-08-25 04:49:31
    Victoria Zebrower
    I was in Paris in the winter when it snowed as a young person working au pair near Tours. My passport was stolen or lost and I had to go to Paris to the American Embassy to get another one. I walked along the Champs-Elysees as it snowed. This was before this boulevard was redone. I still remember the beauty and the air. I was just standing on a corner and two German speaking women thought I looked lost so they told me that it was the Champs-Elysees. I have only been able to go back to Paris a few more times and always in the summer. I was sad when I brought my husband there for his first visit in July 2019. The crowds were difficult and the city seemed really dirty to me. We tried to go to the Bourdelle museum in the 15th, we were staying in a tiny and very affordable hotel in the 14th, but the museum was so crowded we didn’t even go in. We love a little museum, the Zadkin (sp?). My in-laws, one of whom was French, talked about their visit in the winter to Paris and how much they enjoyed it for a lot of the reasons you mention. I think this is a very inspiring article and a great idea. Thank you Ellen.

    REPLY

  • Patricia A Hacker
    2023-08-25 01:09:14
    Patricia A Hacker
    I was in Paris a few years back and it snowed. The people really don't know what to do with it. My hotel was on rue Mathurins, just a wee bit from Haussman etc.I walked up Haussman and the sidewalks weren't even cleaned off at 11 a.m., not that it was that deep. The only place not with snow was from the edge of the buildings to about a foot into the sidewalk. Then there were the foolish women trying to walk with their fashionable heels in the snow they could have broken something. My mother was born in Millau so I at least am 1/2 French. I love Paris, I love to wander (or used to - I am now 88 and as of about the time the virus started, my travelling days in Paris or France itself is now gone. I have been to Paris about 80 times, all times except the summer, the first couple of times an independent tour and then all on my own even went to Bort les Orgues where my aunt and uncle lived, that's another tale.

    REPLY

  • Jay McCormick
    2023-02-09 07:29:54
    Jay McCormick
    Re music, don't forget the album Place Vendome with the Swingle Singers and the Modern Jazz Quartet...

    REPLY

  • Ed Cobleigh
    2023-01-06 12:28:08
    Ed Cobleigh
    I have some comments. Don't drink Cognac, it will instantly label you as a tourist if you're trying to fit in. 97% of all Cognac is exported. The French drink Bas Armagnac. L'Hotel de la Marine is closed due to a fire. I recommend two books to prepare for a visit, The Pilot: Fighter Planes and Paris, a novel, and The First Fighter Pilot-Roland Garros, a bio. But I would say that as I wrote them. Take a day trip by RER to Le Bourget airfield to visit L'Musée de la Air et Le Espace. It is the largest and oldest air museum in Europe. You can see exhibits from the dawn of flight to Concorde to space craft. Don't pass up Berthillon ice cream, even in winter. Go straight to the mother church of glacé itself on L'ile Saint Louis and score a coronet.

    REPLY