LOCAL TIPS
TIPPING
Tipping is not mandatory in France as service is included in the bill by law, but leaving €1–2 per person at a restaurant or rounding up a cafe bill is appreciated and common for good service. For taxis, rounding up to the nearest euro is the norm.
SAFETY
Paris is generally very safe for families, but be vigilant around major tourist sites like the Eiffel Tower, Sacré-Cœur, and on the Metro for pickpockets. Keep bags zipped and in front of you in crowded areas. Avoid approaches from strangers offering 'free' bracelets or asking you to sign petitions near monuments.
TRANSPORT
The Paris Metro is efficient, affordable, and family-friendly — buy a carnet of 10 tickets (or use the Navigo Easy card) for savings. Children under 4 ride free and children 4–9 ride at half price. Buses offer above-ground views for sightseeing. Consider the Navigo weekly pass if you plan to use transit heavily.
ETIQUETTE
Always greet shopkeepers and restaurant staff with 'Bonjour' when entering and 'Merci, au revoir' when leaving — it is considered rude not to. Speak softly in restaurants, dress neatly especially for nicer dining, and avoid eating on the Metro. French people appreciate even a small effort to speak French, so learning a few basic phrases goes a long way.
WHAT TO PACK
Pack light layers — June mornings can be cool and evenings may require a light jacket or cardigan even when afternoons are warm
Bring comfortable walking shoes with good support, as Paris is best explored on foot and cobblestones can be tough on unprepared feet
Carry a small reusable water bottle and a compact umbrella or packable rain jacket, as brief afternoon showers are common in June
YOUR ITINERARY
MORNING
Eiffel Tower Visit — Start your Paris adventure at the city's most iconic landmark. Arrive early (around 9am) to beat the worst of the crowds and book tickets online in advance. Take the elevator to the second floor for spectacular panoramic views — for families with younger children, the second floor offers the best balance of wow-factor and practicality. Spend time on the Champ de Mars lawn afterward for photos and a moment to soak it all in.
2–2.5 hours · €18–€26 per adult (second floor lift), €4.50–€9 for children aged 4–11; book online in advance to avoid queues
LUNCH
Café du Marché or a boulangerie picnic near the Champ de Mars — grab fresh baguette sandwiches, quiche, and pastries from a local bakery like Boulangerie Julien or Eric Kayser for an authentic and budget-friendly outdoor lunch on the grass in 7th Arrondissement (Champ de Mars area)
~€8–€15 per person
AFTERNOON
Le Marais Exploration — Place des Vosges & Jewish Quarter — Head across the city to the historic Le Marais district, one of Paris's most atmospheric and well-preserved neighborhoods. Begin at Place des Vosges, the oldest planned square in Paris (1612), where kids can run in the arcaded gardens. Wander into the Jewish Quarter (Rue des Rosiers) for falafel and pastry shops. Duck into courtyards, independent boutiques, and the free exterior of the Hôtel de Ville. The neighborhood is wonderfully walkable and full of hidden architectural details from the 17th century.
3 hours · Free to explore; budget for shopping or snacks
DINNER
L'As du Fallafel on Rue des Rosiers for a legendary and affordable falafel wrap — a genuine Paris institution and beloved by locals — or nearby bistro Café des Musées for classic French cuisine like steak frites and crème brûlée in a relaxed family-friendly setting in Le Marais, 4th Arrondissement
~€10–€15 per person (falafel) or €25–€35 per person (bistro)
EVENING
Seine River Sunset Stroll & Illuminated Paris — After dinner, walk down to the banks of the Seine and stroll along the riverbank toward Île de la Cité and Notre-Dame Cathedral (currently beautifully restored after its 2024 reopening). As dusk falls around 10pm in mid-June, watch the city lights come on and catch the Eiffel Tower's sparkling light show that occurs every hour on the hour after dark — a magical family moment that never loses its charm. Grab a gelato or crêpe from a riverside vendor.
MORNING
Musée d'Orsay — Spend the morning at one of the world's greatest art museums, housed in a stunning Beaux-Arts former railway station. The Musée d'Orsay is home to the world's finest collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterpieces including works by Monet, Renoir, Degas, Van Gogh, and Cézanne. For families, the large clock windows and impressive architecture are as memorable as the art. Focus on the Impressionist galleries on the upper floor and the main hall sculpture for a manageable 2-hour visit that won't overwhelm children.
2–2.5 hours · €16 per adult; free for visitors under 18; book online in advance to skip the queue
LUNCH
Café Varenne or Café de Flore (for the iconic Left Bank experience) — alternatively, grab lunch at a classic French brasserie like Brasserie Lipp on Boulevard Saint-Germain for onion soup, croque-monsieur, and moules frites in a lively atmosphere in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 6th Arrondissement
~€18–€28 per person
AFTERNOON
Montmartre & Sacré-Cœur Basilica — Take the Metro to Montmartre, Paris's bohemian hilltop village that still feels distinct from the rest of the city. Climb (or take the funicular — great for kids!) to the gleaming white Sacré-Cœur Basilica for sweeping views over all of Paris. Wander through the Place du Tertre, where artists set up easels and paint portraits. Explore the winding cobblestone streets, discover the last remaining vineyard in Paris (Clos Montmartre), and browse independent chocolate and souvenir shops. Visit the quirky Espace Dali museum if the family enjoys surrealist art.
3–3.5 hours · Sacré-Cœur free; funicular €2 per person; Espace Dali €13 adult, €8 child
DINNER
Le Relais de la Butte or Refuge des Fondues — the latter is a legendary and fun Montmartre institution serving only fondue with wine in baby bottles (a quirky, memorable family experience), reservations recommended in Montmartre, 18th Arrondissement
~€22–€35 per person
EVENING
Montmartre Evening Atmosphere & Optional Cabaret — Linger in Montmartre as the evening crowds thin and the neighborhood takes on a romantic golden glow. For families with older children or teens, the Moulin Rouge's exterior on Boulevard de Clichy is a quintessential Parisian sight worth a photo stop even without attending the show. Enjoy a citron pressé or kir at a terrace café on Place du Tertre and people-watch as street musicians play into the night. Head home via Metro around 9:30–10pm for a balanced end to an active day.
MORNING
Versailles Day Trip — Palace & Gardens — Dedicate your final morning to a trip to the Palace of Versailles, just 40 minutes from central Paris by RER C train. Arrive as early as possible (doors open at 9am) to beat tour groups. Marvel at the Hall of Mirrors, the Royal Apartments, and the extraordinary formal gardens designed by André Le Nôtre. Children love the sheer scale of the palace and the fountains in the gardens. On Tuesdays the Musical Fountains Show runs in the gardens — a spectacular free-with-garden-ticket experience. Book palace tickets online weeks in advance as they sell out.
4–4.5 hours (including travel) · €21 per adult for palace + gardens; free for EU residents under 26; RER C train €7.50 round trip per adult
LUNCH
Lunch at La Flottille, the restaurant inside the Versailles gardens near the Grand Canal — a beautiful setting for a proper sit-down lunch amid royal landscape — or pack a picnic from a Paris boulangerie to enjoy on the Grand Canal lawn like a true Parisian in Versailles Gardens
~€15–€25 per person (restaurant) or €8–€12 (picnic)
AFTERNOON
Rue Mouffetard Market Street & Latin Quarter — Return to Paris and head to one of the city's most authentic and lively market streets, Rue Mouffetard in the Latin Quarter. This medieval street is lined with fromageries, charcuteries, wine shops, flower stalls, and fresh produce vendors — a feast for the senses and a window into everyday Parisian food culture. Let the kids try cheese samples, pick up macarons from a local pâtisserie, and browse the covered Marché des Enfants Rouges nearby. Afterward, stroll through the beautiful Luxembourg Gardens (Jardin du Luxembourg) where children can sail wooden model boats on the central pond — a beloved Paris tradition.
3 hours · Free to explore; budget for food tastings and treats (€10–€20)
DINNER
Le Comptoir du Relais in Saint-Germain for an exceptional French bistro dinner (book weeks ahead — it's worth it) featuring seasonal dishes, charcuterie, and classic Burgundian cuisine; alternatively, Polidor on Rue Monsieur-le-Prince, a historic literary brasserie open since 1845 with reliably good traditional French food at fair prices in Saint-Germain-des-Prés / Latin Quarter, 6th Arrondissement
~€30–€45 per person (Le Comptoir) or €22–€30 per person (Polidor)
EVENING
Farewell Seine Cruise & Final Night Stroll — End your Paris trip with a Bateaux-Mouches or Vedettes du Pont Neuf river cruise along the Seine, gliding past Notre-Dame, the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, and the beautiful Haussmann bridges all lit up at night. The 1-hour cruise is a relaxed, romantic, and kid-friendly way to see the city's greatest landmarks from a new perspective. After the cruise, take one last walk along the illuminated riverbanks, picking up a final crêpe suzette or pain au chocolat from a late-night vendor as a sweet farewell to Paris.
HIDDEN GEMS
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Promenade Plantée (Coulée Verte) — the world's first elevated park, built on a disused 19th-century railway viaduct in the 12th arrondissement, offering a tranquil tree-lined walkway high above the city streets that most tourists never discover
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Passage des Panoramas — one of Paris's oldest covered shopping arcades (1800), tucked off the Grands Boulevards, filled with vintage stamp dealers, old postcard shops, and affordable bistros that feel frozen in the 19th century and are beloved by locals
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Clos Montmartre Vineyard — Paris's last remaining urban vineyard, hidden on a steep hillside in Montmartre between Rue des Saules and Rue Saint-Vincent, producing a small harvest each October and completely overlooked by most visitors walking just meters away
WARNINGS
⚠️
Pickpocketing is a significant issue at all major tourist sites including the Eiffel Tower, Sacré-Cœur, the Metro, and near Notre-Dame — use anti-theft bags, keep wallets in front pockets, and be especially watchful in crowded queues and on busy Metro lines 1 and 4
⚠️
Book tickets for the Eiffel Tower, Musée d'Orsay, Versailles, and popular restaurants well in advance — sometimes weeks or months ahead — as they frequently sell out during June, and on-the-day entry is often impossible or involves very long queues in peak summer season