Western Europe · France
Paris
The undisputed capital of palace hospitality, haute couture, and three-star gastronomy, where every arrondissement is a lesson in living well.
- Suggested stay
- from 3 · 5 ideal · up to 7 nights
- Best season
- Late spring (May to mid-June) and early autumn (September to October) offer the finest weather, full cultural calendars, and gardens at their peak. Couture and fashion weeks (late January, late June/early July, late September) bring the city alive but fill the palace hotels; book months ahead. August is quiet, with many top kitchens and ateliers closed for les vacances, while December delivers Christmas windows and a festive Place Vendome.
Paris sets the global standard for luxury. It is the city that gave the world the very idea of the “palace” hotel, a designation now formally awarded by the French state and held by a tight circle of houses along the Right Bank and the Golden Triangle. Nowhere else concentrates so much grand hospitality within walking distance: the Ritz on Place Vendome, Le Bristol on the Faubourg Saint-Honore, the George V and Plaza Athenee off the Champs-Elysees, and the Seine-side Cheval Blanc by the Pont Neuf.
The table is set just as high. Paris carries the densest collection of three-star Michelin kitchens in the world, from Epicure and Le Cinq to Plenitude, Arpege, and Pierre Gagnaire, alongside a deep bench of two- and one-star rooms and the bistros that defined French cooking. Dining here is not an event you schedule around the trip; it is the trip.
Between meals there is the rest of the city: the Louvre and the Orsay, the maisons of Avenue Montaigne and the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, the ateliers where Hermes and the great jewellers still work by hand. For the discerning traveller, the real luxury is access, after hours, behind closed doors, with the right introduction.
Logistics are unusually civilised. Charles de Gaulle handles long-haul arrivals with private salons and gate-to-car escort, while Le Bourget, Europe’s busiest business aviation airport, sits twenty minutes from the Place de la Concorde.
Ideal for
Gastronomes and serious diners · Art and culture connoisseurs · Haute couture and fine jewellery shoppers · Romantic celebrations and anniversaries · Discerning repeat travellers who value access and discretion
Where to stay
The Houses
Cheval Blanc Paris
Cheval Blanc (LVMH) · Palace · 8 Quai du Louvre, 1st arrondissement, on the Seine by the Pont Neuf
LVMH's Paris flagship occupies the redesigned Art Deco Samaritaine building on the riverbank. With 72 rooms and suites, many facing the Seine, it is the newest of the city's grand houses and earned the official Palace label in 2026. Arnaud Donckele's Plenitude holds three Michelin stars.
Why The most contemporary of the palaces, with the best river views, the largest accommodations, and a three-star table in the building.
Dining: Plenitude (3 Michelin stars, Arnaud Donckele); Limbar and Le Tout-Paris
Visit hotel →Le Bristol Paris
Oetker Collection · Palace · 112 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, 8th arrondissement
The grande dame of the Faubourg Saint-Honore, a Palace hotel beloved for its 1,200 square metre French garden and impeccable service. Epicure, now under chef Arnaud Faye, retains its three Michelin stars.
Why The most discreet and residential of the palaces, on the city's finest shopping street, with a garden that feels like a private estate.
Dining: Epicure (3 Michelin stars, Arnaud Faye); Le Jardin Francais
Visit hotel →Le Meurice
Dorchester Collection · Palace · 228 Rue de Rivoli, 1st arrondissement, facing the Tuileries
An 18th-century landmark on the Rue de Rivoli, Le Meurice pairs Versailles-inspired grandeur with Philippe Starck flourishes. It holds the Palace designation and overlooks the Tuileries Garden.
Why Classic Right Bank glamour facing the Tuileries, steps from the Louvre and Place Vendome, with an Alain Ducasse dining room.
Dining: Restaurant le Meurice Alain Ducasse (Michelin-starred); Le Dali
Visit hotel →Bulgari Hotel Paris
Bulgari Hotels & Resorts (LVMH) · Palace · 30 Avenue George V, 8th arrondissement, in the Golden Triangle
Opened in December 2021 on Avenue George V, the 76-room Bulgari Hotel brings Roman jewellery-house glamour to the Golden Triangle and earned the official Palace label in 2026. Its restaurant, Il Ristorante, is curated by three-Michelin-starred chef Niko Romito (whose own restaurant Reale holds three stars).
Why The newest palace, with arguably the finest hotel spa in the city and a coveted Golden Triangle address among the maisons.
Dining: Il Ristorante Niko Romito; Bulgari Bar
Visit hotel →Mandarin Oriental, Paris
Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group · Five-star luxury · 251 Rue Saint-Honore, 1st arrondissement, between Place Vendome and the Tuileries
A contemporary luxury house on the Rue Saint-Honore, prized for its serene interior garden, one of the calmest oases in the 1st arrondissement. Note that the property lost its formal Palace designation in the June 2026 Atout France revision, though it remains a peer-level address.
Why The most peaceful of the central five-stars, with a hidden garden and an unbeatable position among the Place Vendome and Rue Saint-Honore boutiques.
Dining: Sur Mesure par Thierry Marx historically; Camelia and the inner garden restaurant
Visit hotel →Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris
Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts · Palace · 31 Avenue George V, 8th arrondissement
An Art Deco icon just off the Champs-Elysees, the George V holds the Palace label and is famous for housing three Michelin-starred restaurants simultaneously, a combined six stars anchored by Le Cinq's three, alongside its lavish floral artistry.
Why No hotel in the world offers a denser concentration of Michelin stars, making it the definitive gastronomic base in Paris.
Dining: Le Cinq (3 stars); L'Orangerie (2 stars); Le George (1 star)
Visit hotel →Where to dine
The Tables
Epicure (Le Bristol)
3 Michelin starsContemporary French · Hotel gastronomic restaurant
Refined, light-filled dining opening onto Le Bristol's garden, with classic French technique under chef Arnaud Faye.
Le Cinq (Four Seasons George V)
3 Michelin starsHaute French · Hotel gastronomic restaurant
Opulent gilded dining room and grand classic French cuisine, the flagship of the George V's trio of starred restaurants.
Plenitude (Cheval Blanc Paris)
3 Michelin starsContemporary French · Hotel gastronomic restaurant
Arnaud Donckele's sauces-led cuisine with Seine views, one of the city's most sought-after tables.
Arpege
3 Michelin starsVegetable-forward French · Independent fine dining
Alain Passard's temple of garden-driven cooking, where vegetables from his own estates are treated with the precision once reserved for meat.
Alleno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen
3 Michelin starsModern French · Independent fine dining
Yannick Alleno's pioneering extraction-based sauces in a 19th-century pavilion off the Champs-Elysees gardens.
Pierre Gagnaire
3 Michelin starsAvant-garde French · Independent fine dining
The original disruptor of French haute cuisine, still inventive after decades, on Rue Balzac near the Arc de Triomphe.
Guy Savoy
2 Michelin starsHaute French · Independent fine dining
A grand classic in the former Mint on the Left Bank, famed for its artichoke and black truffle soup.
Jean Imbert au Plaza Athenee
1 Michelin starClassic French revisited · Hotel gastronomic restaurant
Jean Imbert's reinvention of grand French tradition in the Plaza Athenee's spectacular dining room on Avenue Montaigne.
What to do
Experiences
Private after-hours Louvre access
By appointmentCultural
Privately guided visits to the Louvre arranged outside public hours or before opening, led by an art historian, focusing on the Mona Lisa, the Venus de Milo, and the French painting galleries without the crowds.
Why Standing alone with the world's greatest masterpieces is an experience money rarely buys; it requires the right curator-level connections.
Hermes and maison atelier visits
By appointmentShopping and craft
Behind-the-scenes introductions to the workshops and private salons of the great houses, including by-appointment styling and high-jewellery viewings at the maisons on Avenue Montaigne and Place Vendome.
Why Access to bespoke pieces, waiting-list bags, and high jewellery shown privately is reserved for established clients and well-connected concierges.
Champagne house private tour and tasting
Private charter day tripWine
A chauffeured or helicopter day trip to Reims and Epernay for private cellar tours and tastings at the grandes marques, returning to Paris the same evening.
Why Private reception at the prestige houses, with vintages not poured on standard tours, in a single seamless day from the city.
Seine private yacht or vintage Riva cruise
Private charterAdventure
A privately chartered classic boat along the Seine at golden hour or after dark, with the monuments illuminated, often paired with a Champagne service or a meal from a palace hotel kitchen.
Why The most romantic and exclusive way to see Paris, away from the crowded bateaux-mouches.
Versailles private tour with King's Apartments access
By appointment, private guideCultural
A private guided visit to the Chateau de Versailles including the private royal apartments not on the standard route, with timed early access to the Hall of Mirrors and the gardens.
Why Skip-the-line is the baseline; private access to rooms closed to the public and a scholarly guide make it extraordinary.
Helicopter transfer and aerial tour
Private charterAdventure
Helicopter flights from the Paris region for aerial sightseeing of the city and chateaux, or fast transfers to the Loire, Champagne, or the coast.
Why Note that helicopter flights directly over central Paris are restricted; departures operate from helipads outside the city, so plan transfers accordingly.
Shopping
The Maisons
Avenue Montaigne
The spine of Paris haute couture in the 8th arrondissement, a short, dense parade of flagship maisons running between the Champs-Elysees and the Seine, anchored by the Plaza Athenee.
Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore
The historic luxury street of the Right Bank, home to the Hermes flagship and a procession of fashion and accessories houses near the Elysee Palace and Le Bristol.
Place Vendome and Rue de la Paix
The world capital of high jewellery and fine watchmaking, a perfect octagonal square lined with the grandes maisons of joaillerie and horlogerie, beside the Ritz Paris.
By appointment
High jewellery salon viewings at Van Cleef & Arpels, Cartier, and Boucheron on Place Vendome · Private styling and made-to-measure appointments at Dior and Chanel on Avenue Montaigne · Hermes bespoke and special orders at the Faubourg Saint-Honore flagship
Arrival & departure
Coming & Going
Airports
Main international gateway, ~25 to 45 minutes from central Paris depending on traffic. Long-haul first and business arrivals; private VIP salons and gate-to-car escort available.
Europe's busiest business aviation airport, ~20 minutes from central Paris. General and business aviation only; multiple FBOs and private terminals.
Secondary commercial airport south of the city, used for some European and domestic routes; also handles business aviation.
Private terminals
- Signature Flight Support (Signature LBG) FBO at Le Bourget
- Universal Aviation FBO at Le Bourget, with private apron, heated hangar and wide-body ramp
- Advanced Air Support FBO at Le Bourget
- Dassault Falcon Service and Jetex facilities at Le Bourget
Meet & greet · gate escort
- Private VIP meet-and-greet and gate-escort concierge services operating at CDG and Orly
- Hotel-arranged airport greeters and limousine coordination from the palace hotels
First-class & arrivals lounges
- Air France La Premiere lounge at CDG Terminal 2E for First-class and qualifying passengers
- Dedicated VIP salons at CDG for private arrivals (e.g. Salon 200-type private terminal services)
- Numerous oneworld, Star Alliance, and SkyTeam premium lounges across CDG terminals
Private transfers
- Chauffeured luxury car and limousine transfers (Mercedes S-Class, Maybach, and van options) arranged by hotels and dedicated operators
- Helicopter transfers from the Paris region for onward journeys (note central-Paris overflight restrictions)
- Private classic-boat and yacht charters on the Seine for in-city movement and events
Private aviation
- Le Bourget (LBG) is the primary private aviation airport, ~20 minutes from the Place de la Concorde, with full FBO and ground-handling services
- CDG can accept large private and head-of-state aircraft with prior arrangement
- Multiple FBOs at Le Bourget offer heated hangars, VIP lounges, conference rooms, gourmet catering, and crew facilities
Immigration fast-track
VIP fast-track through immigration, security, and customs is available at CDG via dedicated meet-and-assist providers, with gate greeting, escort through immigration lines, and luggage handling. At Le Bourget, business aviation passengers clear formalities privately within the FBO.
Curator’s notes — pending verification
- Machine-drafted from research. Verify hotel operators, Michelin stars and any dated claims before publishing.
- Palace designations changed in the June 2026 Atout France revision: Bulgari Hotel Paris, Cheval Blanc Paris, and Hotel Fouquet's gained the official Palace label, while Mandarin Oriental Paris and Park Hyatt Paris-Vendome were removed. The hotels remain peer-level luxury properties regardless of the label.
- Guy Savoy holds two Michelin stars in the 2026 guide (down from three since 2023); confirm the current rating before recommending.
- Epicure at Le Bristol is under chef Arnaud Faye and retains three Michelin stars in the 2026 guide.
- Restaurant le Meurice Alain Ducasse holds two Michelin stars in the 2026 guide (overseen by Alain Ducasse with executive chef Amaury Bouhours); the record's non-specific 'Michelin-starred' label is retained but the count is two, not three.
- At the Four Seasons George V the three on-site restaurants hold six stars combined in the 2026 guide: Le Cinq (3), L'Orangerie (2), and Le George (1). The original record listed L'Orangerie as 1 star, which has been corrected to 2. Note L'Orangerie's chef leadership is changing (Bertrand Noeureuil reported to take over in summer 2026) and Le George is under Simone Zanoni; reconfirm at time of booking.
- Bulgari Hotel Paris's restaurant Il Ristorante is curated by three-Michelin-starred chef Niko Romito, but the Paris outpost itself is not independently confirmed to hold Michelin stars; the 'three-star chef' phrasing refers to the chef's own restaurant Reale, not the Bulgari Paris room. Confirm any star claim for the Paris location specifically.
- Rolex does not appear to operate a standalone flagship boutique on Place Vendome itself; it is represented in the immediate Place Vendome / Rue de la Paix area through authorized retailers and service points (e.g. Dubail). Treat its listing among the Place Vendome maisons as 'present via authorized dealer,' not a Rolex-owned boutique.
- Specific named CDG private salon services (e.g. exact salon names and operators such as 'Salon 200') and their current availability should be confirmed at time of booking, as third-party VIP providers change.
- Helicopter sightseeing directly over central Paris is restricted by regulation; flights operate from helipads outside the city core.
- Exact Michelin star counts for one- and two-star properties shift annually; verify against the current Michelin Guide France before finalizing a client itinerary.
- Bulgari Hotel Paris / Il Ristorante: could not confirm whether the Paris restaurant itself holds any Michelin stars in the 2026 guide. Chef Niko Romito holds three stars at his own restaurant Reale, but no source confirmed an independent star award for the Bulgari Paris outpost. Kept in the record; star claims for the Paris location should be confirmed before publishing.
- Rolex on Place Vendome: kept in the maisons list but flagged. Patek Philippe operates a confirmed standalone salon at 10 Place Vendome, but Rolex appears to be represented via authorized dealers/service points (e.g. Dubail) in the Place Vendome / Rue de la Paix area rather than a Rolex-owned flagship on the square itself.
- L'Orangerie chef transition: the 2026 two-star rating is confirmed, but leadership is reportedly changing (Bertrand Noeureuil cited as incoming head chef in summer 2026). Kept the corrected two-star count; chef and continuity of rating should be reconfirmed at booking.
- Specific named CDG private salon services (e.g. exact 'Salon 200' naming and operators): not independently verified; third-party VIP providers and salon names change and should be confirmed at time of booking.
- Le Meurice Alain Ducasse: the record's vague 'Michelin-starred' label was retained rather than rewritten to a count; the confirmed 2026 figure is two stars, noted in flags.