The best things to do in Paris depend less on how many landmarks you can name and more on what kind of trip you want. A good first Paris trip mixes one or two headline experiences with enough neighborhood time to make the city feel real, especially if your hotel location and day-by-day route are already pointing you in the right direction.
By Mara Vale for Eurly
How this guide was built: this page separates high-friction must-dos from lower-pressure Paris experiences so first-time visitors can choose what is truly worth a timed slot.
Last verified: 2026-04-18
Best things to do in Paris: quick strategy
- Pick one or two headline attractions you would regret missing.
- Protect at least one half-day for walking, eating, and seeing where Paris feels best outside a queue.
- Use our Paris 3-day itinerary if you want these ideas turned into a realistic route.
- Choose your base first in our where to stay in Paris guide so your activity list matches your hotel geography.
Top 10 first-timer picks in Paris
| Experience | Why it is worth it | Time needed | Book ahead? | Skip if… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eiffel Tower | classic first-trip payoff and a strong emotional anchor | 2 to 3 hours | yes | you hate queues and do not care about the icon itself |
| Louvre | the clearest all-purpose first museum in Paris | 2 to 4 hours | yes | you do not want a big museum day |
| Musee d’Orsay | easier museum energy with a strong visual reward | 2 to 3 hours | yes | you already planned another major museum anchor that day |
| Ile de la Cite + Sainte-Chapelle | historic heart of Paris with one memorable indoor stop | 1.5 to 3 hours | yes for Sainte-Chapelle if it is a priority | your day is already overloaded |
| Montmartre + Sacre-Coeur | the best high-atmosphere hill neighborhood for many first-timers | 2 to 4 hours | no for the area, verify if booking anything structured | steep walking and crowds will annoy you |
| Seine walk or cruise | easy Paris mood with low planning overhead | 1 to 2 hours | only if you want a specific cruise time | you prefer neighborhood time over scenic cruising |
| Le Marais wandering | food, historic streets, and good first-trip atmosphere | 2 to 4 hours | no | you want a quieter or more polished neighborhood |
| Saint-Germain-des-Pres and nearby Left Bank blocks | classic cafe-and-bookshop Paris without needing a heavy plan | 2 to 4 hours | no | you want a budget-first afternoon |
| One market or food-street stop | gives the trip texture and breaks up museum energy | 45 to 90 minutes | no | you are treating Paris as pure landmark tourism |
| One Paris evening walk or viewpoint | helps the trip end like Paris instead of a checklist | 1 to 2 hours | only if using a timed attraction | you already packed the day too tightly |
Top ticketed experiences
These are the experiences I would consider booking ahead if they are a real priority for your trip, not just because they look famous in a list.
- One major museum or landmark that anchors the day.
- One viewpoint or evening experience if that matters to your trip memory.
- One guided or structured experience only if you want someone else to remove the planning overhead.
Why they are worth it: they give your trip shape and help avoid the “I saw a lot but remember very little” problem. If you are trying to keep the trip realistic, use the Paris 3-day itinerary to decide where one of these actually fits.
Skip if: your trip is already heavy on timed entries or your energy drops when every hour is spoken for.
One neighborhood experience I would not skip
Even if you do the Eiffel Tower and one major museum, make room for one neighborhood that you experience slowly rather than as a shortcut. For many first-time visitors, that means Montmartre, Le Marais, or Saint-Germain-des-Pres. Paris improves the moment it stops feeling like a line between monuments, which is one reason the where-to-stay page matters so much.
Free and lower-cost Paris wins
- A long neighborhood walk in an area with strong street life.
- A market stop timed to the right part of the day.
- A church, square, or bridge-view break that resets your pace without adding much friction.
- An evening stroll in a neighborhood close to your base instead of another big transit loop.
These are often the parts people remember most clearly because they leave room for mood and surprise.
Mini plan: classic first Paris half-day
Morning
Choose one major sight or museum and give it the cleanest part of your day.
Afternoon
Walk a nearby neighborhood, stop for lunch without rushing, and resist the urge to bolt across the city for one extra box-check.
Best for: short trips and first-time visitors who want both a headline moment and actual city atmosphere.
Mini plan: low-pressure Paris afternoon
Morning
Keep the first part of the day flexible or use it for travel recovery.
Afternoon
Do one neighborhood block, one market or food stop, and one scenic walk or viewpoint.
Best for: arrival day, rainy day swaps, or anyone who hates rigid travel days.
Mini plan: museum-light Paris day
Morning
Choose one sight with a strong visual payoff.
Afternoon
Build the rest of the day around streets, food, and one shorter indoor stop instead of stacking another large museum.
Best for: travelers who want Paris to feel like a city, not just a collection of entry tickets.
What to book ahead versus leave flexible
Book ahead:
- the one attraction you care about most
- anything with a timeslot that would meaningfully change your day if sold out
Leave flexible:
- markets
- scenic walks
- neighborhood wandering
- secondary stops that can move with weather and energy
If you are also trying to keep the trip affordable, match this page with our Paris budget guide before you turn every day into a paid day, and use the airport guide if your first activity day still depends on how smoothly arrival goes.
Official booking links for major Paris sights
- Eiffel Tower official ticket office
- Louvre tickets and prices
- Musee d’Orsay visit page
- Sainte-Chapelle official site
Common mistakes
- Treating every famous place as equally worth your time.
- Stacking three timed attractions and leaving no room to enjoy the city between them.
- Choosing activities before sorting the hotel location.
- Using day one for your biggest queue.
Mara’s better rule
If an activity list makes Paris feel tighter, louder, and more expensive before you even arrive, it is probably the wrong list. A better Paris list works with your base, your route, and your budget, not against them.
FAQ
What should first-time visitors prioritize in Paris?
Prioritize one or two headline experiences, a smart central base, and enough walking time to enjoy neighborhoods. Paris improves when you let the city breathe between major sights.
Do I need to book attractions in advance in Paris?
Only the ones you truly care about. The more of Paris you pre-lock, the more likely you are to miss the low-pressure parts that make the trip feel enjoyable.
What are good free things to do in Paris?
Neighborhood walks, markets, river-adjacent strolls, church stops, and viewpoint-style pauses are all strong low-cost wins if they fit the weather and your base.
Official Paris resources
Next reads
- Start with the main Paris travel guide
- Use our where to stay in Paris guide to pick a smarter base
- Turn this into a route with our Paris 3-day itinerary
- Fix arrival-day logic with our Paris airport to city guide
- Keep spending under control with our Paris budget guide
- Plan onward travel with our Paris to Amsterdam route guide

