---
title: "Paris in 4 Days in 2026: The Honest Itinerary No One Writes"
excerpt: "A real 4-day Paris itinerary for 2026 travelers from the US, UK and Australia: Marais and Pompidou on day one, Louvre at opening on day two, Versailles day trip on day three, Montmartre on day four. Navigo Easy passes, USD-equivalent costs, boutique hotels vs Airbnb, ETIAS authorization, and the best months to go. No filler, no \"City of Light\" cliches."
description: "A real 4-day Paris itinerary for 2026 travelers from the US, UK and Australia: Marais and Pompidou on day one, Louvre at opening on day two, Versailles day trip on day three, Montmartre on day four. Navigo Easy passes, USD-equivalent costs, boutique hotels vs Airbnb, ETIAS authorization, and the best months to go. No filler, no \"City of Light\" cliches."
slug: "paris-4-day-itinerary-first-timers-2026-neighborhoods-museums-costs"
locale: "en"
canonical: "https://voyspark.com/en/journal/paris-4-day-itinerary-first-timers-2026-neighborhoods-museums-costs"
author: "Curadoria Voyspark"
published_at: "Thu May 14 2026 03:32:14 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
updated_at: "Wed Jun 03 2026 15:30:18 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
vertical: "destination"
reading_time_minutes: 16
word_count: 3000
hero_image: "https://s3.voyspark.com/voyspark-images/articles/paris-roteiro-4-dias-brasileiros-2026-bairros-museus-custos/hero.jpg"
tags:
  - "paris"
  - "franca"
  - "roteiro"
  - "europa"
---

# Paris in 4 Days in 2026: The Honest Itinerary No One Writes

Four days in Paris is the most common scenario for first-time Europe travelers. Fly in from JFK, LAX, LHR or SYD, open a Europe trip with a city break before continuing to Rome or Amsterdam, and have 96 hours to "see Paris." Most people come back feeling they saw nothing — because they tried to see everything.

This itinerary starts from a different premise: you will not see Paris in 4 days. You'll see **four specific pieces of Paris**, each with its own logic, without sprinting between points in an Uber while feeling guilty about skipping the Musée d'Orsay. People who need Orsay come back. You need Paris functioning, not a checklist.

The four-day breakdown below has a geographic logic: each day concentrates on one arrondissement (or one axis) and you walk between points. The Métro is only for opening and closing the day. That single decision changes everything about your fatigue and what you actually absorb.

---

### Before you fly: what changed for 2026

**TL;DR**: The big news is ETIAS — the European Travel Information and Authorisation System. From October 2026 (the rollout was pushed twice, but this time it's happening), every US, UK, Canadian, Australian and visa-exempt passport holder must apply online before boarding any flight to a Schengen country, Paris included.

The big change is **ETIAS** — the European Travel Information and Authorisation System. From October 2026 (the rollout was pushed twice, but this time it's happening), every visa-exempt traveler must apply online before boarding any flight to a Schengen country, Paris included.

**ETIAS in practice:**

- Costs **€20** (free for under 18 and over 70)
- Approval usually in **minutes**, maximum 96 hours
- Valid for **3 years** or until your passport expires
- Apply at [travel-europe.europa.eu/etias](https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias_en) — any other site is a scam
- It's not a visa. You still get up to 90 days in any 180-day window

Your passport must have **at least 3 months validity beyond your return date** and have been issued within the last 10 years. Travelers from JFK and LHR get bounced at check-in over this — verify before you pack.

Travel insurance is **no longer optional**: enforcement at European airports increased through 2025 and travelers without coverage have been turned away. Minimum **€30,000** in medical coverage is the Schengen baseline. Honest plans run **$3-6 per day** (World Nomads, SafetyWing, Allianz Travel).

---

### Day 1 — Le Marais and Pompidou (you just landed, walk slowly)

**TL;DR**: The rule for day one in Paris after a red-eye from JFK or LHR: no Eiffel Tower, no big museum, no tight schedule. You arrived destroyed. Marais is the perfect neighborhood for this day. Start late — lunch at the Marché des Enfants Rouges (rue de Bretagne, open since 1615, the oldest covered market in Paris).

The rule for day one in Paris after a red-eye from JFK, LAX or LHR: **no Eiffel Tower**, no big museum, no tight schedule. You arrived destroyed. Marais is the perfect neighborhood for this day.

Start late — lunch at the **Marché des Enfants Rouges** (rue de Bretagne, open since 1615, the oldest covered market in Paris). Order Moroccan at Le Traiteur Marocain (€15) or Japanese at Taeko (€18). Coffee at the market bar, espresso €1.80.

Then, **a walk through the Marais with no fixed destination**:

- **Place des Vosges** — Paris's oldest square (1612), Victor Hugo lived at No. 6 (free museum)
- **Rue des Rosiers** — the Jewish stretch, falafel at L'As du Fallafel is a ritual (€10)
- **Rue de Sévigné** — French designer boutiques not yet taken over by global brands
- **Musée Carnavalet** — Paris history, free, 30,000 objects, nobody goes and it's absurd

Late afternoon: **Centre Pompidou** (€15, or free the first Sunday of the month). Whether or not you like modern art, the 6th-floor terrace has the best panoramic view of Paris after the Tour Montparnasse. Terrace-only access costs €5.

Dinner: **Chez Janou** (rue Roger Verlomme, Provençal, order ratatouille and mousse au chocolat — they bring the whole bowl and you serve yourself). Reserve 3 days ahead on thefork.com. A couple spends **€90-110**.

**Walk back to the hotel.** It's flat, safe, and the Marais at night with lit facades is one of the strongest visual memories of the city.

---

### Day 2 — Louvre at opening, Tuileries, Champs-Élysées (the tourist axis, done right)

**TL;DR**: 6:30 wake up. 7:30 breakfast on the street. 8:30 in line at the Louvre. Why? Because after 10 a.m. the Louvre becomes a convention center with a pyramid in the background. Tour buses dump 800 people every hour.

**6:30** wake up. **7:30** breakfast on the street. **8:30** in line at the Louvre.

Why? Because after 10 a.m. the Louvre becomes a convention center with a pyramid in the background. Tour buses dump 800 people every hour. People who arrive early see the **Mona Lisa in 4 minutes** with no elbowing. People who arrive at noon stand in a 50-minute line for her and leave angry.

**The Louvre strategy that works:**

- Buy online with a **timed slot** at [louvre.fr/en/visit/hours-admission](https://www.louvre.fr/en/visit/hours-admission) (€22, skips the box office)
- Enter via the **Carrousel du Louvre** (the underground mall passage) — faster than the pyramid
- Focus on **3 wings, not 8**. Suggested: Denon (Mona Lisa, Winged Victory, Venus de Milo), Sully (Egyptian antiquities) and Richelieu (Napoleon III apartments)
- **Leave by 11:30**. Don't push to exhaustion. Louvre fatigue ruins the rest of the day

Quick lunch at **Café Marly** (under the arcades, pyramid view, €25 mains) or a standard bakery on rue de Rivoli (€8 sandwich).

**Afternoon in the Tuileries:** walk east-to-west through the garden (1564, designed by Le Nôtre). Stop at the **Musée de l'Orangerie** if time allows — Monet's Nymphéas in two oval rooms, €12.50, a 40-minute experience that's worth more than 2 hours of saturated Louvre.

Continue: **Place de la Concorde** (Egyptian obelisk, the guillotine of Louis XVI stood here) → **Champs-Élysées** climbing up to the **Arc de Triomphe**. The Champs in 2026 is what it's always been: an expensive tourist trap, global retail, bad food. But the Arc is worth it (€16 to climb, view of Paris's historical axis).

**Dinner off the tourist axis:** Uber/Métro to the 11th arrondissement. **Le Servan** (rue Saint-Maur), modern bistro, couple **€140 with wine**. Or budget pick: **Le Comptoir Général** (canal Saint-Martin), Franco-African food, €25 per head.

---

### Day 3 — Versailles (the day trip that needs real planning)

**TL;DR**: Whoever pencils Versailles in for "after Wednesday lunch" never gets there. Versailles needs a full day and the right day. Why a full day: the palace itself takes 3 hours, the Domaine de Marie-Antoinette (Petit Trianon, Hameau) takes 2 more, Le Nôtre's gardens take 3 hours if you walk to the Grand Canal.

Whoever pencils Versailles in for "after Wednesday lunch" never gets there. Versailles needs a full day and the right day.

**Why a full day:** the palace itself takes 3 hours, the **Domaine de Marie-Antoinette** (Petit Trianon, Hameau) takes 2 more, **Le Nôtre's gardens** take 3 hours if you walk to the Grand Canal. The complex is 800 hectares total.

**Why the right day:**

- **Tuesday is closed** (the entire complex)
- **Saturday and Sunday are mobbed** (50,000 visitors per day in summer)
- **Wednesday to Friday** is the sweet spot
- **Fountain shows** (Grandes Eaux Musicales) only Sat-Sun-holidays — if you want them, accept the crowds

**Getting there:**

- **RER C** towards Versailles Château Rive Gauche
- Board at Saint-Michel Notre-Dame, Musée d'Orsay or Champ de Mars
- Ride is **35-45 min**, ticket €4.55 (not covered by zone 1 Navigo — you need the specific ticket)
- Leave the hotel at **7:30**, arrive **8:45**, enter **9:00** at opening

**Ticket:** Passport with full access + gardens = **€32**. Reserve a timed slot at [chateauversailles.fr](https://en.chateauversailles.fr). Without a reservation the line hits 2 hours.

**Inside itinerary:**

1. **9-12**: Main palace — Hall of Mirrors, King's Apartments, Royal Chapel
2. **12-1**: lunch at **La Petite Venise** inside the park (€25) or bring a sandwich from Paris
3. **1-3**: gardens to the Grand Canal (rent a bike, €8/hour, saves an hour of walking)
4. **3-5**: Domaine de Marie-Antoinette — the Hameau is the prettiest and least-visited corner

**Coming back:** the last RER C runs at ~11:30 p.m., but grab a 5-6 p.m. train for a relaxed dinner in Paris. Suggestion: **Bouillon Pigalle** (rue Frochot, classic French food, plate €12, no reservations, the 30-min line is worth it).

---

### Day 4 — Montmartre and Sacré-Coeur (farewell with a view)

**TL;DR**: Day 4 is the goodbye day. Don't try to cram in another museum. Do Montmartre slowly, morning climbing up, afternoon free in the center for one last loop. Morning (8:30-12): Lunch: descend rue Lepic (street market in the mornings), eat at Le Relais Gascon (specialty: giant salad with sarladaise potatoes, €16).

Day 4 is the goodbye day. Don't try to cram in another museum. Do Montmartre slowly, morning climbing up, afternoon free in the center for one last loop.

**Morning (8:30-12):**

- Métro **Abbesses** (line 12) — the station has the **deepest elevator in the Paris Métro** and the wall with "I love you" in 311 languages (Place des Abbesses)
- Climb on foot via **rue Yvonne le Tac → rue Tholozé** (Studio 28 from Amélie Poulain)
- Stop at **Moulin de la Galette** (the windmill from Renoir's painting, still operating as a restaurant)
- Continue to **Place du Tertre** — yes, touristy, but arriving by 9 a.m. avoids the invasion
- **Sacré-Coeur** opens at 6:30 a.m., closes at 10:30 p.m., **free entry**. The dome costs €8 and has a better view than the Eiffel Tower (and is at higher altitude)

**Lunch:** descend **rue Lepic** (street market in the mornings), eat at **Le Relais Gascon** (specialty: giant salad with sarladaise potatoes, €16). Or higher on Montmartre, **La Maison Rose** (the pink house from Utrillo's painting, €30 mains, go for the setting).

**Afternoon:** depending on your flight, two options:

**Option A — One last loop in the center:**
- Walk along the **Canal Saint-Martin** (10th arrondissement)
- Coffee at **Du Pain et des Idées** (the best bakery in Paris according to Le Fooding, croissant €1.50)
- Aperitif at **Le Comptoir Général** or a brewery on the water

**Option B — Eiffel Tower without rush:**
- Métro to **Trocadéro** (line 6) — the exit has the classic tower photo
- Walk across the **Champ de Mars** with wine in a plastic cup (it's legal and a local tradition)
- Climb the tower only if you booked online (**€29.40 elevator to the top**). Without a reservation, forget it — walk-in line passes 2 hours in summer

**Farewell dinner:** if you still have stamina, **Septime** (11th, one Michelin star, €105 tasting menu, reserve 3 weeks in advance). Otherwise, any **neighborhood bistro** with plat du jour + a €25 bottle of wine.

---

### Transport: Métro, Navigo and what to skip

**TL;DR**: The Paris Métro in 2026 is the best urban transit value in Western Europe. RER, Métro and buses integrated, 2-4 min frequency in commercial hours, absurd coverage. Smart purchase:

The Paris Métro in 2026 is the best urban transit value in Western Europe. RER, Métro and buses integrated, 2-4 min frequency during commercial hours, absurd coverage.

**Smart purchase:**

| Option | Best for | Cost | Worth it? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single t+ ticket | One specific ride | €2.15 | No |
| Paper 10-ticket carnet | discontinued since 2021 | — | — |
| **Navigo Easy + 10 tickets** | 2-4 day tourist | €17.35 (€2 card + €15.35) | **Yes** |
| Navigo Découverte (weekly) | Full week | €30.75 + €5 card + photo | Only if >5 days |
| Paris Visite 1-2-3-5 days | tourist doing day trips | €13.55-65.80 | Includes RER zone 5 (Versailles/Disney/CDG) |

**Airports:**

- **CDG → city center:** RER B €11.80 (45 min) or Roissybus €16.60 (60 min). Uber runs $60-85
- **Orly → city center:** Orlyval + RER B €14.50, or Tram 7 + Métro €4.30 (slower). Uber $45-60

**Essential apps:** Bonjour RATP (official, navigation), Citymapper (compares routes live), Uber and G7 (official taxi).

---

### Accommodation: boutique vs Airbnb (and where to stay)

**TL;DR**: Paris tightened short-term rentals in recent years. Airbnb works, but with rules: Honest 2026 ranges (couple, 4 nights):

Paris tightened short-term rentals in recent years. **Airbnb works, but with rules:**

- Apartments can only be rented **up to 90 days per year**
- Fines of **€10,000-50,000** for illegal listings (you don't pay, but the listing disappears)
- Look for a **DA-XXX-XXX** number in the listing — that's the mandatory municipal registration
- Without it, you risk last-minute cancellation

**Honest 2026 ranges (couple, 4 nights):**

| Type | Central neighborhood | Total price |
|---|---|---|
| Private hostel room | République/Bastille | €280-400 |
| Honest 3* hotel | Marais/Latin | €560-900 |
| **Boutique hotel** (best balance) | Marais/Saint-Germain | €1,000-1,700 |
| 4* historic | Tuileries/Opéra | €1,800-3,200 |
| Classic 5* | Champs/George V | €4,000+ |
| 1-bedroom Airbnb | Marais/11th | €420-800 |

**Recommended boutiques:**

- **Hôtel Jeanne d'Arc** (Marais, 3*, €180/night) — old, charming, best location in its tier
- **Le Pavillon de la Reine** (Place des Vosges, 5*, €450/night) — quiet luxury
- **Hôtel National des Arts et Métiers** (3rd, design, €280/night) — rooftop with view

**First-time neighborhoods:**

1. **Le Marais (3rd/4th)** — first pick. Central, flat, walkable to everything
2. **Saint-Germain (6th)** — beautiful but expensive and packed with tourists
3. **Latin Quarter (5th)** — student energy, nightlife, cheaper
4. **Bastille/11th** — local feel, best for eating
5. **Montmartre (18th)** — pretty but far and on a hill

**Avoid for first-time:** Pigalle (cheap tourism + red-light), La Défense (no soul), Belleville (far and requires prior knowledge).

---

### Real costs in USD in 2026

**TL;DR**: Base rate €1 = USD $1.10 (2026 average). US/UK credit cards: pick one with zero foreign transaction fee — standard cards quietly add 2-3% per swipe.

Base rate **€1 = USD $1.10** (2026 average, fluctuates ±5%). US/UK credit cards: pick one with **zero foreign transaction fee** — standard cards quietly add 2-3% per swipe. Best choices: Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture, Wise, Revolut.

**Couple, 4 full days:**

| Item | Honest standard | Comfort | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lodging (4 nights) | $850 | $1,500 | $3,400 |
| Breakfast (4x) | $60 | $110 | $200 |
| Lunch (4x couple) | $190 | $300 | $600 |
| Dinner (4x couple) | $340 | $600 | $1,200 |
| Museums + attractions | $180 | $260 | $410 |
| Local transport | $45 | $75 | $115 |
| Versailles (ticket + transport) | $90 | $90 | $90 |
| **Subtotal** | **$1,755** | **$2,935** | **$6,015** |
| Shopping/extras | $280 | $560 | $1,500 |
| **TOTAL (no airfare)** | **$2,035** | **$3,495** | **$7,515** |

Airfare round-trip in 2026 varies widely: **JFK-CDG $480-900**, **LAX-CDG $620-1,100**, **LHR-CDG $90-220** (or take the Eurostar), **SYD-CDG $1,400-2,400**. Use Google Flights, ITA Matrix, Skyscanner — Air France, Delta, United and British Airways usually have the best fares.

**Payment on the street:**

- **No-FX-fee credit card** (Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture): no spread, no surprise
- **ATM withdrawals** with a Charles Schwab or Wise debit card: no fee, no spread
- **Physical cash**: bring $200-300 in euros for emergencies (taxis, small markets)
- **Contactless** works on virtually all terminals — tap your phone or watch

---

### Best time to go (and the truth about each season)

**TL;DR**: The right question isn't "when is the best time" — it's "what kind of Paris are you willing to accept."

The right question isn't "when is the best time" — it's "what kind of Paris are you willing to accept."

| Season | Temperature | Hotel price | Crowds | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Jan-Feb** (winter) | 37-46°F / 3-8°C | -40% | Empty | Empty museums, real cold |
| **Mar-Apr** (early spring) | 46-59°F / 8-15°C | Base | Medium | **Best value** |
| **May-Jun** | 54-72°F / 12-22°C | +20% | Busy | Beautiful, but Roland Garros and tourists |
| **Jul-Aug** | 64-82°F / 18-28°C | -10% | Packed with tourists, empty of locals | Paris closed, heat (up to 104°F / 40°C in waves) |
| **Sep-Oct** | 54-72°F / 12-22°C | Base | Medium | **Best month**: September |
| **Nov-Dec** | 39-50°F / 4-10°C | +30% at Christmas | Crowded in December | Christmas markets are worth it |

**September is the consensus** among Paris locals: good temperature, museums freed from school vacations, restaurants back from August recess, hotels at normal prices.

**August is a bad myth**: many restaurants close for 3 weeks, bakeries run on skeleton crews, Parisians all leave. You get Paris empty of Parisians and packed with tourists — the worst of both worlds.

---

### Expensive mistakes (and how to avoid them)

**TL;DR**: 1. Eating on the Champs-Élysées or near the Eiffel Tower — price doubles, quality drops. Walk 3 streets in 2. Paying with a credit card that has FX fees — 2-3% lost per swipe. Use a no-FX card 3. Buying the 4-day Paris Pass ($140) — only worth it if you visit 4+ paid attractions per day.

1. **Eating on the Champs-Élysées or near the Eiffel Tower** — price doubles, quality drops. Walk 3 streets in
2. **Paying with a credit card that has FX fees** — 2-3% lost per swipe. Use a no-FX card
3. **Buying the 4-day Paris Pass ($140)** — only worth it if you visit 4+ paid attractions per day. Almost nobody does
4. **Accepting a "free rose" near Sacré-Coeur** — it's a scam, they demand €10-20 afterward with pressure
5. **Going to the Eiffel Tower without a reservation** — 2+ hour line in summer. Reserve [toureiffel.paris](https://www.toureiffel.paris)
6. **Trusting Google Maps for restaurant closing hours** — outdated. Confirm by phone or Instagram
7. **Not validating your RER ticket** — instant €50 fine + insurance/visa hassle
8. **Sleeping near Gare du Nord to "save money"** — sketchy at night, illusory savings of €30 turn into €200 in Ubers and security headaches

---

### What to cut if you only have 3 days

**TL;DR**: If you're down to 3 days for any reason: If it turned into 5 days, add:

If you're down to 3 days for any reason:

- **Cut Versailles** (the palace can be seen on another trip; central Paris cannot)
- Keep Marais (day 1), Louvre+Tuileries (day 2), Montmartre+Eiffel (day 3)
- Use day 2 afternoon for Saint-Germain or the Musée d'Orsay

If it turned into 5 days, add:

- **Reims day trip** (Champagne, 45 min by TGV, Veuve Clicquot and Taittinger houses)
- **Deep Marais day** (Musée Picasso, ateliers, galleries)
- **Bois de Vincennes day** (green Paris, zoo, château)

---

## Practical appendix

**Must-have apps:**

- Bonjour RATP (official transport)
- Citymapper (route comparison)
- TheFork (30-50% off restaurant reservations)
- Too Good To Go (bakery/restaurant leftovers for €3-5)
- DeepL or Google Translate (French offline)

**Useful numbers:**

- Police: **17**
- Medical emergency (SAMU): **15**
- US Embassy in Paris: **+33 1 43 12 22 22**
- UK Embassy in Paris: **+33 1 44 51 31 00**

**Wi-Fi:** EU eSIM (Holafly, Airalo, Saily) costs **$15-25 for 7 days unlimited**. Far cheaper than US carrier roaming. Brits and Aussies get worse roaming deals than they used to post-Brexit — eSIM still wins.

**Shopping:** **Tax-free** for visitors with €100+ purchases in one store: up to 12% refund at the airport. Ask for the "détaxe" form at checkout. Bring it to the customs kiosk before security.
