Cheap Flights to Paris
France
CHEAPEST ROUTE
BostonParis
BOS to CDG • ~8h flight
Est. $289
estimated round trip
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LGA$305~8hView →
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About Paris

Paris is one of those cities that actually lives up to the hype — but only if you approach it right. Americans who show up expecting everyone to speak English and museums to be uncrowded are in for a rude awakening. The ones who learn a few French phrases, book the Louvre in advance, and spend their mornings in a neighborhood boulangerie rather than a tourist café have genuinely transformative trips. The city rewards preparation and penalizes passivity.

Flights from the US have become competitive enough that savvy travelers regularly snag roundtrip fares under $500 from the East Coast on Air France, Delta, or Norse Atlantic. The sweet spot for booking is 2-4 months out, and the sweet spot for visiting is May, early June, September, or October — when the weather is legitimately good, the light is extraordinary, and you're not shoulder-to-shoulder with every other tourist on the planet. July and August are packed and sometimes oppressively hot since most buildings lack AC.

The euro exchange rate in 2025-2026 is workable for Americans — typically around $1.08-1.12 per euro — which makes Paris expensive but not London-expensive. Budget travelers can survive on €80-90 a day if they're strategic: picnic lunches from a fromagerie and boulangerie, a cheap lunch menu (plat du jour) at a neighborhood bistro, and free entry to most national museums on the first Sunday of each month. Mid-range travelers spending €150-200 a day can eat and drink very well.

Paris is genuinely a city of 20 distinct arrondissements with wildly different characters. The 1st and 4th have the tourist monuments; the 11th and 10th have the best bar scenes; the 6th and 7th have old-money Paris; the 18th around Montmartre has the most-photographed skyline. Skip the packaged Seine cruise operators at the main docks and instead take a Batobus day pass (€22) that functions as a hop-on, hop-off water transit system — actually useful for getting around.

Best Months
may, june, september
Currency
EUR ()
Euro
Visa (US Citizens)
US passport holders do not need a visa for tourist stays up to 90 days in any 180-day period under the Schengen Agreement — this 90-day limit applies across all Schengen countries combined, not just France. The EU's ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorization System) pre-travel registration system is expected to launch in mid-2025; by 2026 it will be fully required and costs approximately €7, valid for 3 years. Register online before departure at the official ETIAS website (etias.com). Your US passport must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your departure date from the Schengen area. No proof of onward travel is technically required but customs agents at CDG occasionally ask; having your return ticket on your phone resolves this immediately.

Best Time to Fly to Paris

Click any month for weather, crowds, and what's on.

BestShoulderPeak / Expensive
Best:May (67°F)Great weather — book early
Avoid:JulyPeak prices and crowds

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Airport to City: How to Get There

The RER B train is the definitive best option: it runs directly from CDG Terminal 2 and T1 (via a free CDGVAL shuttle) to central Paris stops including Gare du Nord, Châtelet-Les-Halles, and Saint-Michel in 35-45 minutes for €11.80 per person — buy tickets at the airport machines and validate before boarding. Taxis are metered with fixed fares mandated by law: €36 flat rate to the Left Bank (south of the Seine) and €31 to the Right Bank, plus €1/bag surcharge; expect 45-75 minutes depending on traffic. Avoid the shuttle buses like Le Bus Direct (€17-19) unless you're staying near the Opéra or Arc de Triomphe, as they stop constantly and traffic kills the journey time. Uber operates at CDG and typically runs €45-65 depending on traffic and surge pricing; meet at designated rideshare pickup zones in each terminal.

Neighborhoods & Where to Stay

Le Marais (3rd & 4th arr.)
mid-range

The most walkable and genuinely livable neighborhood for first-time visitors — medieval streets, the Place des Vosges, great falafel on Rue des Rosiers, and boutique hotels in converted mansions. Hotel Pavillon de la Reine on the Place des Vosges is the splurge pick; Hotel de la Bretonnerie is the smart mid-range choice around €160/night. Avoid the tourist-trap restaurants immediately around the Centre Pompidou and instead eat along Rue de Bretagne.

Saint-Germain-des-Prés (6th arr.)
luxury

The literary Left Bank neighborhood where Hemingway and Sartre did their writing — now dominated by luxury boutiques and €8 coffees at Café de Flore, which you should experience once. Hotel Bel Ami is the modern luxury pick; Hotel d'Aubusson has actual historical character. The Jardin du Luxembourg is the best park in Paris for a morning run or afternoon wine picnic.

Oberkampf / République (11th arr.)
budget

Where younger Parisians actually live and drink — the best bar street in Paris is Rue Oberkampf, and the natural wine bar scene here (Le Servan, Septime Cave) is worth a full evening. Budget-friendly apartments on Airbnb run €70-100/night and you're on the Metro line 5 and 9. Avoid the immediate area around Place de la République at night, which attracts a rough crowd on weekends.

Montmartre (18th arr.)
budget

Undeniably beautiful hilltop neighborhood with the best city views in Paris, but heavily tourist-trappy around Sacré-Cœur — walk two blocks away and it becomes a genuine village. Les Deux Moulins (the Amélie café at 15 Rue Lepic) is legitimately worth visiting; the Sunday market at Place des Abbesses is excellent for cheese and charcuterie. Stay in the lower part near the Pigalle Metro for easy access to the rest of the city.

Canal Saint-Martin (10th arr.)
mid-range

The most Instagram-worthy neighborhood in Paris that still feels authentic — iron footbridges over the canal, the famous Du Pain et des Idées bakery (croissants worth queuing for), and the best brunch scene in the city. Hotel du Nord (made famous by a 1938 film) is now a bar rather than a hotel, but the stretch of quai is genuinely lovely. Hotel Taylor is a well-priced boutique option at around €130-150/night.

Trocadéro / Passy (16th arr.)
luxury

The most photogenic Eiffel Tower views come from the Trocadéro esplanade, which is also in this residential, upscale neighborhood — quieter and more Parisian than the tower's immediate surroundings. Shangri-La Paris is the ultimate luxury splurge (former Napoleon III residence with Tower views from the pool). This neighborhood is best experienced as a day destination rather than a base; it's quiet at night and Metro connections are limited.

Daily Budget: What to Expect

Budget
$95/day

€20 hostel dorm bed at Generator Paris or St Christopher's Gare du Nord, €8 boulangerie breakfast (croissant, café au lait), €14 plat du jour lunch at a neighborhood bistro, €12 picnic dinner from Monoprix (cheese, bread, wine, fruit), €14.90 Navigo day metro pass, €10 one paid museum or activity, €15 drinks

Mid-Range
$210/day

€130 two-star or boutique hotel like Hotel Jeanne d'Arc in Le Marais, €8 café breakfast, €22 sit-down lunch with wine at a brasserie, €45 dinner at a proper bistro like Bistrot Paul Bert, €14.90 Navigo day pass, €25 museum entrance and one activity, €25 afternoon wine and snacks

Luxury
$650/day

€350 four-star or design hotel like Hôtel du Petit Moulin or Hotel Bel Ami, €25 hotel breakfast or café, €60 lunch at a starred or notable restaurant like Septime, €130 dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant, €30 private Uber rides instead of Metro, €55 premium experiences like private museum tour or Seine evening cruise

What to Eat in Paris

1

Croissant from Du Pain et des Idées (34 Rue Yves Toudic, 10th) — this is not the croissant you get at a chain café; the lamination creates dozens of audible shatter layers and the butter flavor is distinct. Go before 11am or the best ones are gone.

2

Steak frites at Bistrot Paul Bert (18 Rue Paul Bert, 11th) — the côte de bœuf is for two people, cooked perfectly rare by default, and the handcut fries are fried in beef tallow. Reserve a week in advance; this is the benchmark Parisian bistro experience.

3

Falafel at L'As du Fallafel (34 Rue des Rosiers, 4th) — the takeaway line is on the left, the sit-down queue is on the right, and the €7 falafel sandwich is stuffed with fried cauliflower, eggplant, cabbage, and tahini. Eat it standing on the street like everyone else.

4

Natural wine and small plates at Le Servan (32 Rue Saint-Maur, 11th) — two sisters run this converted school canteen and the menu changes daily based on market availability. Come for a €45-60 dinner and let them recommend bottles from their cellar; this is the food scene most American visitors miss entirely.

5

Macarons from Pierre Hermé (72 Rue Bonaparte, 6th) — specifically the Ispahan (rose, lychee, raspberry) or the Infiniment Vanille. Don't buy them at the airport; they've been sitting there. The flagship in Saint-Germain has the freshest inventory and you can eat them on a bench in the Luxembourg Gardens five minutes away.

Flying from the US to Paris

Airlines & Routes

  • Air France nonstop from JFK, LAX, SFO, MIA, BOS, IAD, ORD, SEA
  • Delta nonstop from JFK, ATL, BOS, DTW, LAX, SEA, SLC
  • United nonstop from EWR, IAD, ORD, LAX, SFO, IAH, DEN
  • American Airlines nonstop from JFK, PHL, MIA, ORD, DFW, LAX
  • Norse Atlantic nonstop from JFK, LAX, BOS, FLL, IAD — budget carrier, book early for sub-$350 fares
  • French Bee nonstop from SFO and Newark (EWR) — ultra-low-cost, bring your own snacks
  • La Compagnie business-class-only nonstop from EWR — surprisingly affordable at $1,200-1,800 roundtrip

Flight Duration

East Coast
7-8 hours nonstop from JFK/BOS/EWR / 10-13 hours with connection
Midwest
9-10 hours nonstop from ORD/ATL / 11-14 hours with connection from other midwest cities
West Coast
11-12 hours nonstop from LAX/SFO/SEA / 13-16 hours with one connection

Safety Tips

Paris has specific, well-documented tourist crime patterns that are easy to avoid if you know them. The Eiffel Tower and surrounding Champ-de-Mars area have organized pickpocket teams, often disguised as tourists or charity clipboard workers — never sign a petition near major monuments and keep your bag in front of you at all times on the Trocadéro. The RER B from CDG is safe but keep your luggage between your knees and your phone in your pocket. The 'gold ring' scam (someone 'finds' a gold ring and asks for money) operates near Notre-Dame and the Louvre — just walk past without engaging. Gare du Nord can feel chaotic and aggressive late at night; it's one of the few Paris areas where you should walk with purpose and avoid eye contact. Scooter theft of bags from restaurant tables is increasingly common — never hang your bag on the back of a chair on a sidewalk terrace. Metro Line 4 through central Paris is safe during the day but late-night service on outer lines can be rough; taxis and Uber are both legitimate and comparable in price after midnight. The city is overall very safe by major city standards and solo female travelers report feeling comfortable in most neighborhoods through late evenings.

Insider Tip

The Paris Museum Pass (€52 for 2 days, €66 for 4 days, €78 for 6 days) pays for itself on day one if you visit the Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, and Sainte-Chapelle — but the real hidden value is that pass holders use a different entrance queue that's dramatically shorter. At the Louvre specifically, pass holders enter through the Richelieu wing entrance on Rue de Rivoli, completely bypassing the 45-90 minute pyramid queue. Buy the pass online at parismuseumpass.com before you arrive and activate it at your first museum visit.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest way to fly to Paris?

The cheapest route to Paris from the US is typically from Boston (BOS), with estimated round-trip prices around $289. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.

What is the best time to visit Paris?

The best time to visit Paris is April, May, September, October. Late spring and early fall are peak Parisian weather — sunny, 60-70°F, and the city actually feels livable. Summer is too hot and crowded; winter is gray and depressing.

Do US citizens need a visa to visit Paris?

Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days within any 180-day period (Schengen Area).

How long is the flight from the US to Paris?

Flight time from the US to Paris (CDG) is approximately 8 hours from Boston. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to Europe.

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