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5 Days in Paris: A Realistic Itinerary for First-Time Visitors

5 days in Paris gives you enough time to do more than just collect landmarks. It lets you keep one or two iconic days, add real neighborhood time, and leave room for weather swaps or one larger splurge without turning the whole trip into a museum marathon.

By Mara Vale for Eurly

How this guide was built: this itinerary prioritizes booking logic, area-based pacing, and the kind of five-day Paris trip that still feels enjoyable on day five instead of like an extended queue-management exercise.

Last verified: 2026-04-20

5 Days in Paris at a glance

Day Focus Why it works
Day 1 Historic center + gentle evening settles you in without wasting the first day on overreach
Day 2 One major landmark or museum day handles the highest-friction booking day early
Day 3 Left Bank or Montmartre contrast day keeps Paris from feeling like one long monument corridor
Day 4 Museum, market, or classic grand day gives you room for a deeper anchor or a weather swap
Day 5 Favorite-neighborhood return + flex time lets the trip end with confidence instead of box-ticking

If you are thinking about using one of these five days for Versailles, Giverny, or another outing, check our best day trips from Paris guide before you replace an in-city day that might suit the trip better.

Before day 1: choose the right base

Rue de la Huchette in the Latin Quarter, Paris, with bookshops and cafés
Day 1 ends in the Latin Quarter — Paris’s student and bookshop neighbourhood

If your hotel is still undecided, start with where to stay in Paris. Five days gives you more freedom than a short weekend, but a weak base still wastes time, especially on late returns and day-two booking mornings. If your flight timing is still fuzzy, sort out the Paris airport to city guide before you lock a hotel far from your easiest arrival route.

Day 1: Historic center, Seine, and a soft landing

Morning

Keep day one centered on the historic core near your base. That usually means Ile de la Cite, the Seine, or one easy first neighborhood such as Le Marais or Saint-Germain-des-Pres.

Afternoon

Pick one anchor block only. This is not the day for the Eiffel Tower, a giant museum, and Montmartre all in one stretch.

Evening

Stay near the hotel for dinner and make the first evening feel pleasant rather than productive.

Transit note

Walk first, then use transit only if it meaningfully shortens the day.

Backup plan

If arrival delays or fatigue hit, one good neighborhood walk and one good dinner still count.

Day 2: Big-ticket Paris

Morning

Use day two for your highest-priority booked attraction: the Eiffel Tower, Louvre, or Musee d’Orsay. Buy from the Eiffel Tower official ticket office, the Louvre official ticket page, or the Musee d’Orsay visitor page where possible.

Afternoon

Cluster the rest of the day nearby. If you do the Eiffel Tower, keep the afternoon on the same side of the river. If you do the Louvre or Orsay, keep the rest of the day museum-light and walkable.

Evening

This is a better night for a polished dinner or longer walk than day one, but still keep the return simple.

Transit note

The mistake here is zigzagging across Paris just because another famous name is technically reachable.

Backup plan

If your timed slot falls apart, pivot to our best things to do in Paris guide and replace the day with one lower-friction highlight plus a good neighborhood.

Day 3: Left Bank or Montmartre day

Musée d'Orsay main hall with its enormous clock face, Paris
Day 3: The Musée d’Orsay clock hall — one of the great museum interiors in Europe

Morning

Choose one strong contrasting Paris mood. For many first-timers, that means either the Left Bank or Montmartre.

Afternoon

Let the rest of the day grow out of that choice instead of trying to do both. Five days in Paris is still not long enough to make every day geographically messy.

Evening

Use the evening to protect atmosphere. Paris rewards evenings that feel close to the day’s zone.

Transit note

This is where the right hotel from our Paris travel guide starts paying you back.

Backup plan

If the weather is ugly, turn this into a church, museum, or covered-market day instead of forcing scenic walking.

Day 4: The deeper-day choice

Morning

Use day four for the thing that does not fit neatly into a 3-day Paris trip.

  • Choose Versailles if you want one grand classic add-on and are happy to devote a real chunk of the day to it. Use the official Chateau de Versailles visitor planning page.
  • Choose a second major museum or a neighborhood-heavy city day if you would rather stay in Paris proper.

Afternoon

If you go to Versailles, keep the evening light. If you stay in Paris, use the extra time for a slower museum or market-led block rather than adding a second major timed slot.

Evening

Protect the evening from ambition fatigue. This is where five-day Paris trips get better or worse.

Transit note

If your route for day four starts looking like a train ride plus two long walks plus another ticketed entry, simplify it.

Backup plan

If queues, weather, or transport make Versailles feel like a hassle, keep the day in-city. Paris still has more than enough substance without a day trip.

Day 5: Favorite return, shopping, or the version of Paris you actually liked

Formal gardens of the Palace of Versailles with fountains and parterres
Day 5 option: The gardens of Versailles — 800 hectares, best on a dry morning

Morning

Use the final day for the area or activity you most want to repeat or deepen. Five days gives you the luxury of choosing based on what actually worked, not what you assumed would work.

Afternoon

Leave a flex window. That can become a final museum, shopping block, long lunch, or one last slow neighborhood walk.

Evening

Finish somewhere that feels emotionally right for Paris, not mechanically efficient.

Transit note

Bias toward the simplest route. The last day is not the day to prove how much extra ground you can cover.

Backup plan

Use this day as your weather swap if one of the earlier plans went sideways.

Book ahead only where it counts

  • your hotel
  • the one or two attractions you would genuinely regret missing
  • Versailles only if it is a real trip priority
  • arrival-day transport if your flight timing is awkward

Everything else can stay looser. Five days in Paris does not mean five days of timed entries. If the ticket stack is starting to feel expensive, pause and compare it with our Paris budget guide.

Museum closures and pass reality

  • The Louvre is currently closed on Tuesdays, so do not build your plan around a Tuesday Louvre day without checking the official schedule.
  • Musee d’Orsay is currently closed on Mondays, so verify your day order on the official visitor page.
  • The Paris Museum Pass official site is useful only if you are honestly planning enough pass-covered sights.
  • Mirror ticket sellers are still one of the easiest Paris mistakes to make.

Who should use this 5-day Paris itinerary

  • first-time visitors who want more than a highlights sprint
  • travelers who care about one or two major museums but do not want every day dominated by them
  • couples or slower-paced travelers who want room for atmosphere and good dinners

If you only have a long weekend, use our Paris 3-day itinerary instead.

FAQ

Is 5 days too much for Paris?

No. Five days is usually where Paris starts feeling enjoyable rather than just impressive, because you can stop treating every hour like a test.

Should I do Versailles on a first 5-day Paris trip?

Only if it is a real priority. It fits much better into five days than three, but it still works best when you accept that it takes most of a real day.

Which area works best for 5 days in Paris?

Le Marais and Saint-Germain-des-Pres are still the easiest all-around choices, but a practical base can matter just as much as an atmospheric one if you have early starts or museum-heavy plans.

Official Paris resources

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