Paris Restaurants

A new wave of culinary confidence has been running through one of the world's great food cities and spilling over both banks of the Seine. Whether cooking up grand-mère's roast chicken and riz au lait or placing a whimsical hat of cotton candy atop wild-strawberry-and-rose ice cream, Paris chefs—established and up-and-coming, native and foreign—have been breaking free from the tyranny of tradition and following their passion.

Emblematic of the "bistronomy" movement is the proliferation of "gastrobistros"—often in far-flung or newly chic neighborhoods—helmed by established chefs fleeing the constraints of the star system or passionate young chefs unfettered by overblown expectations. Among the seasoned stars and exciting newcomers to the scene are Yannick Alléno, who left behind two Michelin stars at Le Meurice to open his locavore bistro Terroir Parisien at the Palais Brogniart and earned three stars at the storied Pavillon Ledoyen within his first year at the helm; David Toutain at the exceptional Restaurant David Toutain; Sylvestre Wahid at Brasserie Thoumieux; and Katsuaki Okiyama's Abri.

But self-expression is not the only driving force behind the current trend. A traditional high-end restaurant can be prohibitively expensive to operate. As a result, more casual bistros and cafés, which reflect the growing allure of less formal dining and often have lower operating costs and higher profit margins, have become attractive opportunities for even top chefs.

For tourists, this development can only be good news, because it makes the cooking of geniuses such as Joël Robuchon, Guy Savoy, Eric Frechon, and Pierre Gagnaire a bit more accessible (even if these star chefs rarely cook in their lower-price restaurants) and opens up a vast range of new possibilities for exciting dining.

Like the chefs themselves, Paris diners are breaking away from tradition with renewed enthusiasm. New restaurants, wine bars, and rapidly multiplying épicieries (gourmet grocers) and sandwich shops recognize that not everyone wants a three-course blowout every time they dine out. And because Parisians are more widely traveled than in the past, many ethnic restaurants—notably the best North African, Vietnamese–Laotian, Chinese, Spanish, and Japanese spots—are making fewer concessions to French tastes, resulting in far better food.

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  • 1. Angelina

    $ | Louvre

    Founded in 1903 and patronized by literary luminaries like Marcel Proust and Gertrude Stein, Angelina is famous for its chocolat "l'Africain"—an ultra-rich hot chocolate topped with whipped cream. The beautiful chestnut "Mont Blanc" pastry is the ideal accompaniment. Book well in advance online to avoid being disappointed.

    226 rue de Rivoli, Paris, Île-de-France, 75001, France
    01–42–60–82–00

    Known For

    • The most famous hot chocolate in Paris
    • Opulent, Belle Époque setting
    • High popularity so book online in advance
  • 2. Assemblages

    $ | Marais Quarter

    At this restaurant set on a pretty street leading right into the Place des Vosges, it's hard to know if you've landed in someone's chic private salon or their woodworking studio. Carpenter and wine lover Eric Wilmot shares his passion for wood and wine (and Harley-Davidsons) in this stylishly intimate space, featuring Persian rugs and velvet chaises, where you can indulge in some stupendous wines handpicked by the owner and served alongside a tempting array of nibbles—homemade foie gras, smoked salmon, artisanal cheeses, and some seriously decadent desserts.

    7 rue de Birague, Paris, Île-de-France, 75004, France
    09–52–58–61–12

    Known For

    • Hard-to-find wines
    • Intimate atmosphere with a carpentry shop behind glass
    • Gorgeous interiors

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.
  • 3. Aux Cerises

    $ | Eiffel Tower

    Don't expect to be mobbed by tourists at this bright café two minutes from the Champs de Mars. Locals love it for the sidewalk terrace and garden seating in the back—not to mention the good coffee, tea, and stellar brunch. Even if you don't snag a seat outside, the charming interior is a cheerful spot to tuck into a heaping plate of eggs Benedict, smoked salmon tartine, or avocado toast. There are also fresh fruit smoothies and home-baked pastries. Its all-day hours (seven days a week) makes it the perfect place for a well-priced lunch or teatime. Reservations are always a good idea, especially on weekends.

    47 av. de Suffren, Paris, Île-de-France, France
    01–42–73–92–97

    Known For

    • Superb brunch or lunch served seven days a week
    • Reservations a good idea on weekends
    • Minutes from the Eiffel Tower
  • 4. Bontemps

    $ | Marais Quarter

    This charming courtyard café-tearoom grew out of an adorable pastry shop (next door) specializing in the French sablé, those classic melt-in-your-mouth butter cookies, with an assortment of ethereal cream fillings. Marble-topped tables, velvet chairs, and other vintagelike touches make this one of the neighborhood's most charming spots for lunch, brunch, or dessert. The excellent food, homemade drinks, and stellar pastries are all icing on this scrumptious cake.

    57 rue de Bretagne, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France
    01–42–74–10–68

    Known For

    • Vintage atmosphere
    • Top-notch homemade food and pastries
    • High prices

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 5. Breizh Café

    $ | Marais Quarter

    Eating a crêpe in Paris might seem clichéd, until you venture into this modern offshoot of a Breton crêperie. The plain, pale-wood decor is refreshing, but what really makes the difference are the ingredients—farmers' eggs, unpasteurized Gruyère, shiitake mushrooms, Valrhona chocolate, homemade caramel, and extraordinary butter from a Breton dairy farmer. You'll find all the classics among the galettes, but it's worth choosing something more adventurous like the cancalaise (traditionally smoked herring, potato, crème fraîche, and herring roe). You might also slurp a few Cancale oysters—a rarity in Paris—or try one of the 20 artisanal ciders on offer.

    109 rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France
    01–42–72–13–77

    Known For

    • Some of the best crêpes in Paris
    • Adventurous ingredients
    • Cancale oysters on the half shell

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Aug., Reservations essential
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  • 6. Cedric Grolet Opera

    $ | Grands Boulevards

    Pastry chef extraordinaire Cedric Grolet made his name at Le Meurice, the palace hotel just down the street, with his exquisite sculpted fruits—glorious trompe-l'oeil versions of the real thing made with various chocolates filled with creamy fruit or nut ganache. At this cafe near the Opéra, you can sample the master's sublime cookies and breakfast pastries along with other gourmet delights.

    35 av. de l'Opéra, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
    01–83–95–21–02

    Known For

    • Some of the most masterfully designed sweets in Paris
    • Gourmet tea and coffee
    • Perfect breakfast pastries

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 7. Fragments

    $ | Marais Quarter

    If you're serious about what's in your coffee cup, head straight to this streamlined café near the Place des Vosges, where you'll find only the best from roasters around Paris. A short but spot-on menu features avocado toast with a poached egg, cinnamon buns, and homemade cakes and cookies. The weekend brunch is very popular; arrive early or prepare to wait a little.

    76 rue des Tournelles, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France

    Known For

    • Great coffee
    • Popular brunch
    • Good homemade desserts
  • 8. La Caféothèque

    $ | Marais Quarter

    This was Paris's first coffee bar, founded by former Guatemalan ambassador to France turned coffee ambassador, Gloria Montenegro. With three spacious rooms, all coffee preparations under the sun, and a daily special brew chosen from among dozens of varieties of meticulously sourced beans from plantations around the globe, this is a Paris institution.

    52 rue de l'Hotel de Ville, Paris, Île-de-France, 74004, France
    01–53–01–83–84

    Known For

    • Rigorously sourced, hard-to-find beans
    • Excellent coffee of the day
    • All roasting done in-house

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 9. Le BAL Café Otto

    $ | Montmartre

    Set in a bright, modern space on a tiny street in the lower reaches of Montmartre, the popular Le BAL Café Otto caters to a diverse clientele who come for the great coffee, delicious homey food, lively crowd, and the art gallery/bookstore. Italian- and French-inspired cuisine (like spelt risotto with mushrooms, hazelnuts, and creamed spinach) during the week rests alongside a traditional weekend brunch menu featuring items like tender pancakes, fried eggs with ham and roasted tomatoes, and buttery scones with jam. On Sunday in spring and summer, brunch is truly an event, with artists, hipsters, expats, and young families enthusiastically enjoying all of the above. Note that the café closes at 10 pm on Wednesday and Thursday and 7 pm on Friday and Sunday, so perhaps look elsewhere for dinner.

    6 impasse de la Défense, Paris, Île-de-France, 75018, France
    01–44–70–75–51

    Known For

    • Great brunches and reliably good coffee
    • Art gallery on the premises
    • Outdoor terrace on a quiet passageway

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues., No reservations taken for weekend brunch
  • 10. Le Café Jacquemart-André

    $ | Grands Boulevards

    Tucked away in the courtyard of the Musée Jacquemart-André, this is one of Paris's best-kept secrets. For decades, Parisians have been nibbling tarte aux framboises and composed salads beneath charming colorful frescoes and elegant woodwork or out on the garden courtyard terrace. Open seven days during museum hours (with late hours on Monday and brunch on Sunday), it's a convenient place for a light lunch, a sweet from the famous pastry cart laden with all the French classics, or a coupe de champagne, whether you're visiting the museum or not.

    158 blvd. Haussmann, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–45–62–11–59

    Known For

    • Gorgeous setting, featuring the mansion's original woodwork and frescoes
    • Copious salads and gigantic pastries from the car
    • Decent prices
  • 11. Le Valentin

    $ | Grands Boulevards

    A head-turning variety of luscious pastries, classic French breakfast sweets and breads, ice cream, chocolates, and homemade jams will tempt every sweet tooth at this charming bakery and tearoom. Tucked into the historic covered Passage Jouffroy, Le Valentin is a picturesque spot for breakfast, lunch, or teatime—or buy a box of irresistible French-Alsatian sweets to enjoy on the go.

    30–32 Passage Jouffroy, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
    01–47–70–88–50

    Known For

    • Set in an 1845 covered passage
    • Charming place to sit for breakfast, lunch, or dessert
    • French-Alsatian specialties
  • 12. Matamata

    $ | Grands Boulevards

    This tiny gem of a coffee shop may not have the ambience of Paris's historic brasserie cafés, but it does have something you won't find in any brasserie in Paris—reliably excellent coffee served with care and enthusiasm. What's more, a small menu of delicious homemade sweets and sandwiches and salads at lunchtime pretty much covers all your restorative needs in a warm and friendly atmosphere.

    58 rue d'Argout, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
    01–71–39–44–58

    Known For

    • Consistently great coffee drinks of all kinds
    • Quality beans sourced from around the world
    • Friendly atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner
  • 13. Mokonuts

    $ | Oberkampf

    One of the city's best examples of the casual gourmet cafés popping up around Paris, Mokonuts is run by a talented husband-and-wife team who create delicious dishes and pastries that are as pleasing to the eye as they are to the palate. Prepare for crowds at breakfast and teatime, when you can choose from chunky multigrain cookies, sweet or savory muffins, tarts, and other sweet goodies. At lunch, locals elbow their way in for a variety of gourmet salads, sandwiches, and hot dishes. Accompany your meal with excellent coffee, a selection of teas, or a freshly made juice, like the refreshing orange-blossom lemonade. Dinner (€70) is served only by reservation for at least eight.

    5 rue Saint-Bernard, Paris, Île-de-France, 75011, France
    09–80–81–82–85

    Known For

    • Excellent coffee
    • Late hours for a café (open until 6 pm)
    • Small space, so it gets crowded fast

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 14. Pain de Sucre

    $ | Marais Quarter

    A dazzling array of gourmet pastries here includes all the classics in imaginative and delicious flavor combinations. There are also impossibly moist individual cakes, Paris's best baba au rhum, sublime cookies, and the specialty guimauve, a flavored, melt-in-your-mouth marshmallow. Be sure to sample the gorgeous Rosy Rosa dome cake with almond, rose-infused almond milk, and creamy dark chocolate all on a black sesame biscuit topped with rose petals. Next door, savory gourmet breads, quiches, sandwiches, and other takeout foods make this the perfect refueling stop after a visit to the Centre Pompidou. There's also outdoor seating in warm weather.

    14 rue Rambuteau, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France
    01–45–74–68–92

    Known For

    • Some of Paris's best pastries
    • Gourmet sandwiches
    • Takeout options for picnics

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No dinner
  • 15. Philippe Conticini

    $ | Marais Quarter

    This all-in-one café-bakery-pâtisserie, a stone's throw from République, highlights classics from genius pastry chef Philippe Conticini, like his Paris-Brest (a crispy pâte à chou filled with delicate almond-hazelnut cream) and stellar line of viennoiserie (croissants, pains au chocolat, brioches, etc). Don't miss the Chignon Praliné, filled with an insanely tasty homemade Nutella topped with roasted hazelnuts; this treat redefines the breakfast pastry.

    31 rue Notre Dame de Nazareth, Paris, Île-de-France, 75003, France
    01–42–78–93–25

    Known For

    • Sweets from one of Paris's top pastry chefs
    • Good coffee
    • Perfect for a late breakfast or teatime

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.
  • 16. Soul Kitchen

    $ | Montmartre

    Run by three friendly young women, the snug, breakfast-and-lunch-only Soul Kitchen unites a pleasantly homey decor and welcoming atmosphere with the kind of Anglo-French all-organic comfort food that soothes body and soul. Choose from Gruyère mac and cheese, chèvre and leek tarts, soul-warming soups, and a pastry counter laden with treats like homemade scones, cheesecake, tiramisu, and rich mousse au chocolat. The ladies also know their beverages: good, well-priced wines by the glass, fresh fruit and vegetable juices, and some serious coffee.

    33 rue Lamarck, Paris, Île-de-France, 75018, France
    01–71–37–99–95

    Known For

    • Charming atmosphere
    • Delicious coffee and fresh juices
    • Range of homemade dishes and desserts made fresh daily

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner, Reservations not accepted
  • 17. Terres de Café

    $ | Eiffel Tower

    A five-minute walk from the Eiffel Tower, Terre de Café is a boon to coffee lovers. It also serves gluten-free pastries, healthy fruit smoothies, and gourmet brunch options.

    67 av. de la Bourdonnais, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–50–37–39

    Known For

    • Fresh and healthy salads and sandwiches
    • Delicious homemade pastries
    • Great coffee
  • 18. Une Glace à Paris

    $ | Marais Quarter

    Smoked chocolate . . . orange-carrot-ginger . . . coffee--black cardamom . . . these are just a few of the intriguing ice cream and gelato flavors featured at Paris's Instagram-famous glacier. Expect only the best seasonal ingredients plus cream and sugar in the ice creams and loads of fresh fruit in the nondairy sorbets. You can taste as many flavors as you like to help you decide, and servings, by the boule, are generous. There are lots of frozen cakes and pastries too.

    15 rue saint Croix de la Bretonnerie, Paris, Île-de-France, 75004, France
    01–49–96–98–33

    Known For

    • Imaginative and creative flavor pairings
    • Lots of nondairy and gluten-free choices
    • Free samples

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner
  • 19. 86 Champs

    $ | Champs-Élysées

    The closest thing the pastry world has to a rock star, Pierre Hermé and his wildly imaginative flavor pairings (think raspberry, rose, and lychee; chestnut and black wheat; or jasmine and fraise des bois) are renewed every season and are never humdrum. At 86 Champs, Hermé has teamed up with fragrance and cosmetics giant L'Occitane for a colorful carousel ride of a café, with a half-moon pastry-and-chocolates counter and bar, where you can enjoy breakfast, lunch, or a quick bite. Indoor seating can be cramped; in warm weather try for a seat on the popular sidewalk terrace. Like many places on the Champs-Élysées, the dishes here are very pricey, and the service can be glacial and indifferent.

    86 av. des Champs-Élysées, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–70–38–77–38

    Known For

    • Imaginative and delicious (but expensive) pastries
    • Good coffee
    • Nice terrace with Arc de Triomphe views
  • 20. Au Petit Fer à Cheval

    $ | Marais Quarter

    This cozy bar is always packed, and tables often spill out onto the sidewalk. Come for a hearty meal, a cup of coffee, or a glass of wine.

    30 rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, Île-de-France, 75004, France
    01–42–72–47–47

    Known For

    • Open till 2 am
    • Sidewalk seating
    • Well-prepared classics like beef tartare and duck confit

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.

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