8e · City Palace
Le Palais des Jardins
A hotel where children discover art before cartoons.
The City Edit
A capital of art and appetite, taken at a child's pace. Here is how to give a family a great city without exhausting any member of it.
Paris is often sold to families as a logistical problem — too grand, too far between attractions, too easily ruined by tired legs. We disagree. Approached as a series of beautiful, short chapters — a single gallery, a garden, a long lunch, a carousel — it becomes the most generous city in Europe for children who already love to look at things. The trick is to want less and savour more.
Where To Stay
Three houses we'd send a design-loving family to, each scored on the Family Index.
8e · City Palace
A hotel where children discover art before cartoons.
6e · Townhouse
A literary little hotel a stroll from the Luxembourg gardens.
3e · Apartment Suites
Kitchen-equipped suites for families who like to settle in.
Museums & Culture
Monet's water lilies wrap two oval rooms — immersive, brief, and astonishing to a five-year-old. Thirty minutes is enough; the Tuileries are at the door for afterwards.
A vast science museum with a dedicated children's city for under-twelves. Book the timed children's sessions in advance; mornings are calmest.
Don't attempt all of it. Choose a single gallery — the Egyptian rooms reliably win — and leave on a high before lunch.
Walks & Architecture
Galerie Vivienne and its neighbours: nineteenth-century glass-roofed arcades, mosaic floors, and old toy and book shops. Weatherproof, wondrous, and entirely flat for small legs.
A single, slow loop of the island, an ice cream at the famous parlour, and the back of Notre-Dame from the bridges. The most photogenic hour in the city.
Iron footbridges and locks where the barges rise and fall — quietly thrilling to watch, with cafes for parents at every turn.
Eating With Children
Skip the hotel buffet once and queue with locals for a warm pain au chocolat. The ritual matters as much as the pastry.
Roast chicken, frites, and a carafe of water no one minds you refilling. Aim for 12:30, before the room fills, and let the children watch the street.
Hot chocolate thick enough to stand a spoon in. Worth dressing for; worth the queue; worth remembering.