Three days covers Paris's essentials. Day 1: Eiffel Tower + Trocadéro + Seine cruise + Champs-Élysées. Day 2: Louvre + Notre-Dame + Sainte-Chapelle + Le Marais. Day 3: Montmartre + Sacré-Cœur + Musée d'Orsay + Saint-Germain. Stay in Le Marais (4th) or Saint-Germain (6th) for walkable centrality. The Paris Visite Pass ($45 / €42 for 3 days) covers all metro/bus/RER zones 1-3. Book Eiffel Tower, Louvre, and any Michelin restaurant 1-2 months ahead.
Three days is the right amount of time to cover the essentials of Paris. You can hit the headline sights without getting drained from over-scheduling. Trying to squeeze in every museum and shopping district usually backfires — it's better to cluster the locations and spend more time at each. If you have extra time, the 5-day or 7-day itineraries add nearby day-trip options.
3-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$150
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$350
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$875
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
Eiffel Tower, Seine, Champs-Élysées
Eiffel Tower · Trocadéro · Seine cruise · Arc de TriompheActivities
- 08:30 Trocadéro photo + breakfast at Café Carette 1-1.5 hours
Start with the canonical Paris photo — Trocadéro plaza directly facing the Eiffel Tower. Café Carette (3 Place du Trocadéro) serves classic French breakfast with the tower in the window. Free photo viewpoint year-round
Cost: Breakfast $20-30 / €18-28 TIP: Best morning light 7-9 AM. The plaza is free; arrive early to skip the tourist crush by 10 AM. Café Carette's pastry counter is the takeaway option for budget travelers. - 10:00 Eiffel Tower (summit climb) 2-2.5 hours
Built 1889 for the World Exposition. 324m, 1,665 steps to the top. Three observation levels — 57m (first), 115m (second), 276m (summit). The summit elevator is the headline experience. Book online 1-2 months ahead
Cost: Summit $30 / €28; 2nd floor $20 / €18; stairs $10 / €11 TIP: Book online via the official Eiffel Tower website — without advance booking expect 2-3 hour queues. Choose the morning slot for the best light and shorter waits. The 'sparkle' light show runs on the hour from sundown to 1 AM. - 13:00 Lunch — Champ de Mars picnic OR Le Petit Cler bistro 1.5 hours
Champ de Mars (the park beneath the Eiffel Tower) is the picnic spot — grab a baguette + cheese + wine from Rue Cler market for $20 / €18. Or Le Petit Cler bistro for sit-down French classics
Cost: $20-40 / €18-37 TIP: Rue Cler is a 5-min walk from the Eiffel Tower — a working-class pedestrian street with multiple food stalls. The picnic on Champ de Mars facing the tower is the classic Paris lunch. - 15:00 Seine river cruise 1-1.5 hours
1-hour boat from the Eiffel Tower or Pont Neuf piers. Pass under all the major bridges, see Notre-Dame from the water, Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, Île de la Cité. The most-photographed Paris perspective
Cost: $20-30 / €18-28 TIP: Bateaux Mouches (Pont de l'Alma) and Vedettes du Pont Neuf are the major operators. The 'sunset' or 'twilight' cruise (after 8 PM) is the most-photogenic version. Pre-booking online saves 20%. - 16:30 Champs-Élysées + Arc de Triomphe 2-2.5 hours
1.9 km of grand avenue lined with luxury shops, theaters, and the iconic Arc de Triomphe (50m) at the western end. Climb the 280 spiral steps to the rooftop observation deck for the canonical view down 12 radiating boulevards
Cost: Arc de Triomphe rooftop $16 / €15 TIP: Walk west-to-east from Place de la Concorde. The Arc de Triomphe rooftop is the daytime view; for sunset, the western side (looking down toward Place de la Concorde) is the iconic shot. Cross the underground passage — don't try to walk across the 12-way intersection. - 19:30 Dinner — Bouillon Pigalle or Le Relais de l'Entrecôte 1.5-2 hours
Casual Paris dinner. Bouillon Pigalle (9th arr.) for affordable French classics at $13-22; Le Relais de l'Entrecôte (multiple branches) for the iconic steak-frites single-dish format
Cost: $30-55 / €28-50 TIP: Bouillon Pigalle: no reservations, queue 45 min weekday evenings. Le Relais de l'Entrecôte: no reservations, queue 30-60 min. Both are walk-in only.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café Carette (Trocadéro)
16th arr. · $20-30 / €18-28
Classic French breakfast with the Eiffel Tower view. Pain au chocolat + café crème + fresh orange juice. The terrace tables face the tower.
Lunch
Champ de Mars picnic from Rue Cler
7th arr. · $20-40 / €18-37
Baguette + Camembert or Brie + saucisson + bottle of Côtes du Rhône from Rue Cler vendors. Picnic on Champ de Mars facing the Eiffel Tower.
Dinner
Bouillon Pigalle or Le Relais de l'Entrecôte
9th arr. or various · $30-55 / €28-50
Bouillon Pigalle for the iconic affordable French bistrot. Le Relais de l'Entrecôte for the single-dish steak-frites with Café de Paris sauce. Both are essential Paris food experiences.
Hotel → Trocadéro: Metro Line 6 to Trocadéro. Trocadéro → Eiffel Tower: 10-min walk. Eiffel Tower → Champs-Élysées: Seine cruise drops near Concorde, then 5-min walk. Champs-Élysées → Bouillon Pigalle: Metro Line 12 to Pigalle (15 min). Paris Visite Pass at $45 / €42 for 3 days covers all Day 1-3 transit.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Louvre, Notre-Dame, Le Marais
Louvre · Sainte-Chapelle · Notre-Dame · Le MaraisActivities
- 09:00 Louvre Museum (Mona Lisa + essentials) 3-4 hours
The world's largest art museum — 380,000+ objects in 73,000 sqm. The Mona Lisa (Salle 711, Denon Wing), Venus de Milo, Winged Victory of Samothrace, Code of Hammurabi are the canonical highlights. The architecture (former royal palace) is itself a destination
Cost: $23 / €22 (free first Sunday) TIP: Book online via the official Louvre website. The Sully Court entrance has shorter queues than the Pyramid. Mona Lisa room is busiest 11-2 PM — try 9:30 AM or after 4 PM. Skip-the-line tickets via Klook or Get Your Guide. - 13:00 Lunch — Café Marly (Louvre courtyard) or Tuileries Garden 1.5 hours
Café Marly is the Louvre courtyard café with covered terrace overlooking the I.M. Pei pyramid. Or walk to Tuileries Garden and grab a bistrot lunch at Le Saint-Régis
Cost: $32-65 / €30-60 TIP: Reservations for Café Marly recommended. The Tuileries Garden has lakeside chairs ($1-2 / €1-2 fee) for picnic-style lunches. The Angelina café (228 Rue de Rivoli) is the hot-chocolate destination. - 14:30 Sainte-Chapelle 45 min - 1 hour
Built 1248. 13th-century Gothic chapel with the most-spectacular stained-glass interior in the world — 15 windows covering 615 sqm, depicting 1,113 biblical scenes. The upper chapel is the photo destination
Cost: $13 / €12 entry TIP: Inside the Palais de Justice (security checkpoint at entrance). Photography permitted but no flash. The afternoon sun illuminates the windows differently than morning — both work. Combined ticket with Conciergerie at $20 / €18. - 16:00 Notre-Dame Cathedral (exterior) 45 min - 1 hour
Built 1163-1345. The 13th-century Gothic cathedral. Damaged in the 2019 fire and reopened December 2024. The exterior is the iconic photo from the Pont au Double or Pont Saint-Louis bridges
Cost: Free exterior; interior $3 / €3 TIP: The cathedral is fully restored as of Dec 2024 — interior visits reopened. Reserve a time slot via the cathedral website. The exterior is photographed from across the Seine on the Île Saint-Louis side. - 17:30 Le Marais walking 1.5-2 hours
The 3rd-4th arrondissement. Edo-era stone-paved alleys (Rue des Rosiers, Place des Vosges, Rue des Francs-Bourgeois). The most-preserved medieval district in Paris. Boutique shopping, cafés, and the Picasso Museum cluster
Cost: Free walking TIP: Place des Vosges (built 1612) is the historical centerpiece. Pause at Café Mariage Frères for tea, or Bofinger for traditional Alsatian. The Jewish quarter (Rue des Rosiers) has the L'As du Fallafel destination. - 19:30 Dinner — Bistrot Paul Bert or L'As du Fallafel takeaway 1.5-2 hours
Bistrot Paul Bert (11th arr.) for the textbook contemporary bistrot with the iconic Grand Marnier soufflé. Or L'As du Fallafel takeaway sandwich for the Marais street-food experience at $11 / €10
Cost: $11-90 / €10-85 TIP: Bistrot Paul Bert needs 1-2 week reservations. L'As du Fallafel walk-in takeaway is the casual alternative — eat standing or on a Marais bench.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Du Pain et des Idées (Canal Saint-Martin)
10th arr. · $5-12 / €5-11
The pain des amis (signature sourdough) + escargot pistache + flat white. Walk along Canal Saint-Martin afterward. Closed weekends.
Lunch
Café Marly (Louvre courtyard) or Tuileries picnic
1st arr. · $25-65 / €23-60
Café Marly's covered terrace overlooks the I.M. Pei pyramid. Or buy a baguette + cheese at Place du Marché Saint-Honoré for a Tuileries Garden picnic.
Dinner
Bistrot Paul Bert or L'As du Fallafel
11th arr. or Le Marais · $11-90 / €10-85
Bistrot Paul Bert for the textbook bistrot dinner (book 1-2 weeks ahead). L'As du Fallafel for the iconic Marais sandwich at $11 / €10 — walk-in capable.
Hotel → Louvre: Metro Line 1 to Palais Royal–Musée du Louvre. Louvre → Sainte-Chapelle: 15-min walk via Pont du Carrousel. Sainte-Chapelle → Notre-Dame: 5-min walk. Notre-Dame → Le Marais: 10-min walk via Pont au Double. Marais → Bistrot Paul Bert: Metro Line 8 to Faidherbe–Chaligny (15 min). Day 2 transit covered by Paris Visite Pass.
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Montmartre, Sacré-Cœur, Saint-Germain
Sacré-Cœur · Montmartre · Musée d'Orsay · Café de FloreActivities
- 08:30 Montmartre walk (before crowds) 2 hours
Walk up from Abbesses metro station (Line 12) through the cobblestone streets. The Place du Tertre (artists' square) and Sacré-Cœur Basilica are the destinations. Morning light is the only time the village isn't crushed with tourists
Cost: Free walking TIP: Avoid the funicular tourist trap — the climb up Rue Foyatier (stairs) is the canonical approach. Skip the Place du Tertre painters who'll insist on sketching you for €40+. The actual art galleries are on Rue Lepic and Rue des Abbesses. - 10:30 Sacré-Cœur Basilica + dome climb 1-1.5 hours
Built 1875-1914. The Romano-Byzantine white-domed basilica atop Montmartre's 130m hill. Free entry to the basilica; €8 / $9 to climb the 300 steps up the dome for the highest panoramic Paris view
Cost: Basilica free; dome $9 / €8 TIP: Dome closes 6:30 PM (summer) / 5 PM (winter). The view encompasses the entire Paris skyline including the Eiffel Tower (4km away) and Notre-Dame. Photography permitted on the dome. - 12:30 Lunch — Le Consulat or Pink Mamma 1.5 hours
Le Consulat (18 Rue Norvins) is the iconic pink corner café in Montmartre — featured in countless Paris postcards. Pink Mamma (Pigalle) is the Instagram-favorite contemporary alternative with a glass-roof rooftop
Cost: $32-55 / €30-50 TIP: Le Consulat is tourist-priced but the location is the value. Pink Mamma needs reservations 2-4 weeks ahead — book via TheFork. - 14:30 Musée d'Orsay 2-2.5 hours
Built 1900 as a railway station, converted to a museum 1986. The world's largest collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art. Monet, Renoir, Manet, Van Gogh, Degas, Cézanne. The Beaux-Arts railway-station architecture is itself the experience
Cost: $18 / €17 entry TIP: Book online to skip queues. The 5th-floor Impressionist galleries are the headline collection — head straight there. The clock-tower view from the café on the same floor is the iconic photo. - 17:00 Saint-Germain-des-Prés walking 1.5-2 hours
The 6th arrondissement. Café de Flore, Les Deux Magots, Shakespeare and Company bookshop, Rue de Buci market street. The historic Left Bank intellectual quarter where Sartre, Hemingway, Camus held court. Walking-only district
Cost: Free walking TIP: The Rue de Buci is the food street; the Saint-Sulpice Square has the iconic fountain; Le Bon Marché (the world's oldest department store, 1838) is the elegant shopping anchor. - 19:30 Dinner — Le Comptoir du Relais or Bouillon Chartier 2-2.5 hours
Le Comptoir du Relais (Saint-Germain) is chef Yves Camdeborde's iconic bistrot. The dinner tasting requires 2-3 month advance booking; lunch is walk-in capable. Bouillon Chartier (9th arr.) is the alternative classic bouillon
Cost: $30-95 / €28-90 TIP: Le Comptoir du Relais lunch is walk-in. The L'Avant Comptoir (next door) is the standing wine bar variant. Bouillon Chartier needs no reservation, queue 45 min.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Coquelicot Montmartre (24 Rue des Abbesses)
Montmartre · $11-25 / €10-23
Classic Montmartre boulangerie-bistrot with the chocolate-croissant + espresso + fresh-squeezed orange juice trio. Quiet morning vibe before Sacré-Cœur.
Lunch
Le Consulat or Pink Mamma
Montmartre / Pigalle · $32-55 / €30-50
Le Consulat for the iconic pink-corner photo + standard French lunch. Pink Mamma for the Instagram-favorite glass-roof setting (reservations 2-4 weeks ahead).
Dinner
Le Comptoir du Relais or Bouillon Chartier
Saint-Germain or 9th arr. · $30-95 / €28-90
Le Comptoir du Relais for the iconic Camdeborde bistrot (lunch walk-in capable). Bouillon Chartier for the affordable historic 1896 bouillon experience.
Hotel → Montmartre: Metro Line 12 to Abbesses, Exit 1. Montmartre → Musée d'Orsay: Metro Line 12 to Solférino (20 min). Musée d'Orsay → Saint-Germain: 15-min walk via Rue du Bac. Saint-Germain → Le Comptoir du Relais: 5-min walk. Day 3 transit covered by Paris Visite Pass.
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
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Packing Checklist
- ✓ Comfortable walking shoes — Paris is walking-intensive (15,000-20,000 steps/day on full sightseeing days)
- ✓ Light layers — Paris weather swings 8-15°C between morning and afternoon in spring/fall; winter is 0-7°C, summer 18-25°C
- ✓ Compact umbrella — sudden rain is a year-round Paris constant
- ✓ Crossbody bag with zipper — Paris has more pickpocketing than Tokyo or Seoul; keep valuables zipped and in front
- ✓ Paris Visite Pass — $45 / €42 for 3 days covers all metro/bus/RER zones 1-3
- ✓ Reservations app — TheFork (LaFourchette) is essential for any mid-range+ restaurant
- ✓ Adapter for Type C/E plugs — different from US/Asia
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Why you can trust 3-day itinerary
Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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