A Slice of History: Our Guide to Paris' Oldest Restaurants

Published: July 17, 2024

Combine culinary excellence with France's rich history at Paris' oldest restaurants.

As home to some of the world's best restaurants, it's no surprise that travellers flock to Paris for a taste of authentic French dining. For centuries, Parisian restaurants have been at the forefront of culinary innovation and some of the oldest establishments are still open - see what they are below.

Le Train Bleu

Forget the Parisian underground and embark on a completely different kind of train journey at Le Train Bleu. Built in the Gare de Lyon train station in 1901, this restaurant was designed to look nothing short of grandiose with chandeliers, brilliant arched windows and beautiful paintings filling the space. Serving classic French food, it has been frequented by many famous faces including Coco Chanel and Salvador Dali.

Bofinger

This traditional brasserie is one of the most beautiful restaurants in Paris with a breathtaking stained glass ceiling and delicate Belle-Époque details. Opened in 1864 in the heart of a Parisian neighbourhood then-dominated by Alsatians who had moved to the capital, the cuisine is heavily influenced by Alsace tastes and is well beloved for its foie gras.

Le Grand Véfour

Bask in the presence of some of Paris' most famous historical and cultural figures, including Victor Hugo, Humboldt and Simone de Beauvoir. Originally established in 1784, the restaurant continues to channel the opulent beauty of old French architecture with hand-painted pillars, chandeliers and more. Perfect for a spot of fine dining, this Michelin starred restaurant should be on every culinary critic's list.

Bouillon Chartier

Not all of Paris' oldest restaurants are fine dining establishments - the down to earth Bouillon Chartier has been serving affordable French comfort food (think stew, vegetable soup and more) for over a hundred years. The restaurant opened its doors in 1896 and has served over 50 million dishes to both hungry tourists and locals, with a line that regularly spills out onto the pavement. With a gorgeous historically listed dining room, the art deco touches add a richness of character to the establishment.

Le Procope

This 1686 restaurant is steeped in history and patrons only have to look a little more closely at the design and decor for a glimpse into the 17th and 18th century. With famous diners such as Napoleon Bonaparte (whose hat is on display) and Voltaire gracing its tables, Le Procope continues to serve classic French fare

Megan Hills
Paris Travel Expert

Build your unique Paris itinerary with our trip planner

Who's going?
Adult
1
Child (2-17)
0
How many days?

What do you want to see?

Continue reading

Panoramic Paris skyline showing the Eiffel Tower
Blog

Most Popular Tourist Attractions in Paris - Top 10

Paris has more household-name attractions than just about any other city in the world. You’ve heard of the Moulin Rouge, right? Not even in the top 10! That’s because the City of Light has more world-class monuments, museums, parks and palaces than you can wave une baguette très grand at. Some of them (looking at you, the Louvre) are the most popular attractions of their kind on the entire planet. Here, then (in no particular order) are the top 10 most popular attractions in Paris… Eiffel Tower Let’s begin with the glaringly obvious, shall we? One of the world’s most iconic structures, the Eiffel Tower is right at the top of every Paris sightseeing itinerary worth its salt. No wonder then, that it’s Paris’s most popular attraction (and indeed the world’s most-visited paid monument), pulling in a whopping 6m+ latticework-lovers every year. Join the queue to take the elevator to the top or, if you have the legs (and stomach) for it, join a 674-step guided climb to the second floor and catch the elevator the rest of the way up from there. There are also many queue-dodging ways to admire the Iron Lady: from the steps of Sacré-Cœur, from the Tour Montparnasse, or on a classic Bateaux Parisiens Seine river cruise. Disneyland Paris Did you know that the effortlessly romantic Eiffel Tower isn’t the most popular spot for marriage proposals in Paris? Nor is it the swoonsome Sacré-Cœur. No, it isn’t even the love-lock-festooned Pont des Arts. The most popular place for proposals in Paris, dear reader, is Disneyland. Blame the social media generation. Anyway, Disneyland Paris is actually 20 miles out of town, but it would be churlish to omit France’s premier attraction (over 16 million visitors annually, fact fans) on a technicality. Catch the train to reach it from Paris proper and say ‘hey’ to Mickey Souris and Donald Canard. The Louvre Museum We continue our journey through Paris’s catalog of ‘biggest and best’ with the mighty Louvre – home, of course, to the enigmatic Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo and, perhaps as a direct result, the planet’s most popular museum. It’s also the largest: a vast multi-level labyrinth of hallways, staircases and galleries that cover 652,300 square feet and house some 616,000 pieces of art. Grab that coveted selfie in front of the distinctive courtyard pyramid before elbowing your way inside to the main event(s). Pro-tip: you’ll need a map and a plan of attack to make the best of your visit. Palace of Versailles As extravagant and flamboyant as the king for whom it was built, Louis XIV’s opulent confection is a fairytale wonderland of mirror-festooned hallways, art-crammed galleries, lavish state rooms, and manicured gardens that overflow with ornate fountains and priceless statues and sculptures (in fact the world’s largest outdoor sculpture collection, as if you hadn’t already guessed). Visit Marie Antoinette’s rustic model village, marvel at the colonnaded pink marble confection that is the Grand Trianon, and take time out for a moment of quiet reflection in the extraordinary Hall of Mirrors. Notre-Dame Cathedral Notre-Dame has been stealing the hearts of tourists for centuries, so it wasn’t about to let a little thing like a blazing inferno change all that. Even while closed, its soaring bell towers, picture-perfect spire and stunning medieval rose windows are essential on any serious Paris sightseeing itinerary. Heck, you could even take a sketchpad and notebook along with you to see if inspiration hits you. You never know, you could be the next Picasso, Hopper, Matisse or Victor Hugo: all were famously enchanted into creating great art by la Grande Dame de Paris. Montmartre Fans of Amelie will find much to enjoy in the Montmartre district, home to many of the locations used in the quirky 2000 movie. Take a stroll along atmospheric cobbled lanes and squares, pausing to pose for a snap by the neon-red Moulin Rouge windmill. Or get a selfie of a different kind in the Place du Tertre, where local artists will paint or sketch your caricature for a few euros. Art-lovers should hit up the Musée de Montmartre for its fine collection of pieces from Toulouse-Lautrec’s Moulin Rouge series, plus other French Impressionist masterpieces. Then, of course, there’s the do-not-miss confection that is the Sacré-Cœur Basilica with its commanding views across Paris to the Eiffel Tower and beyond, particularly romantic at sunset. Musée d’Orsay The second of Paris’s ‘big two’ museums, and just across the Seine from the Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay houses the world’s largest collection of Impressionist and post-Impressionist art within the hallowed Beaux-Arts walls of the former Gare d'Orsay railway station. If French art and sculpture is your bag, you’ll be in clover here, with highlights that include iconic pieces by Manet, Monet, Renoir, Rodin, Cézanne and van Gogh. Don’t miss ol’ Vincent’s stunning Starry Night over the Rhône and Whistler’s Mother, and hit up the fifth-floor café, where a huge station-clock window affords exhilarating views across the Seine to the Louvre and Sacré-Cœur. Arc de Triomphe and the Champs-Elysées No Paris top 10 would be complete without this Place Charles de Gaulle icon. Standing 164 feet high at the western end of the Champs-Élysées, the Arc de Triomphe is a soaring neoclassical memorial to those who died in combat during the Napoleonic and French Revolutionary wars. Pay your respects in the vault, or climb the 284 steps to the top for more of those awe-inspiring Paris views. Afterwards, lighten the mood with a spot of window shopping along the eye-wateringly expensive Champs-Élysées boulevard, and treat yourself to a macaron or six at the legendary Ladurée. Luxembourg Gardens This exquisitely manicured park is a great option for escaping the hubbub of some of Paris’s more oversubscribed attractions (looking at you, Eiffel Tower and the Louvre). Meander over the 6th arrondissement, where over 56 acres of green space includes – deep breath – the baroque beauty of Luxembourg Palace, a small lake where you can sail charming wooden toy boats, pétanque courts, pony rides, walking trails, formal gardens, and one of Paris’s biggest kids’ playgrounds. Grab a picnic of fresh breads and regional cheeses from the local street market and make a day of it!  Père Lachaise Cemetery Paris’s largest cemetery is also its most popular, thanks to its huge network of meandering lanes flanked by gothic gravestones, titanic tombs and magnificent memorials to the great and good of Paris and beyond. Stroll its atmospheric walkways and look out for the elaborate resting places of some of the cemetery’s most famous permanent residents, among them Chopin, Molière, Oscar Wilde, Édith Piaf and Jim Morrison of The Doors. And, if you don’t fancy navigating it yourself, a guided walking tour is a great way to get the lowdown on all the salacious scandal and gossip of yore, as well as ensuring you don’t get lost! Save on Paris’s most popular tourist attractions Save on admission to Paris attractions with The Paris Pass. Check out @TheParisPass on Instagram for the latest top tips and attraction info.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
The Sacre-Couer Basilica in Paris's Montmartre district.
Blog

Best Historical Sites in Paris to Visit

Founded by enterprising Celtic fishermen in the 3rd Century BC, Paris has had nearly 2.5 millennia to drum up a historical monument or six for your delectation. And ooh la la, does it deliver. Many of its biggest attractions – think the Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame Cathedral and Arc de Triomphe – have become national symbols, as synonymous with French identity as fresh croissants, Paris chic and the tricolore flag. Our rundown of the best historical sites in Paris to visit features all these iconic landmarks and more, including: Père Lachaise Cemetery Latin Quarter Marché des Enfants Rouges Panthéon Paris Catacombs Montmartre The Eiffel Tower This one needs no introduction, right? Perhaps the most emblematic French cultural icon of them all, The Iron Lady reigns supreme in Paris, reproduced on everything from street signs and café facades to high-end Champs-Élysées jewelry stores and tacky tourist-trap souvenir joints (Eiffel Tower cuddly toy, anyone?). But nothing beats the real thing: 984 magnificent feet of wrought-iron latticework, designed and built by Gustave Eiffel in the late 1880s. Take the elevator all the way to the top or – should you be feeling particularly energetic – climb the 674 steps to the second floor and catch the elevator from there. Either way, a champagne bar up top will help take the edge off. Notre-Dame Cathedral Setting hearts aflutter for nearly 1,000 years, Notre-Dame has been immortalized many times over in art, literature and film. We’re talking masterpieces by Matisse, Hopper, Picasso and, of course, Victor Hugo’s legendary novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame. But, again, it’s la Grande Dame de Paris herself that will get your pulse racing, all colorful medieval rose windows, soaring bell towers, ancient pipe organs, picture-perfect flying buttresses and decorative sculptures, and enormous church bells. Visitors will be able to admire its grand Gothic interiors again from late 2024, once restoration following the 2019 fire is complete. Arc de Triomphe The third of Paris’s ‘big three’, the Arc de Triomphe stands proudly on Place Charles de Gaulle at the western end of the Champs-Élysées. This 164-foot-high Neoclassical monument is a suitably grandiose memorial to those who died in combat during the Napoleonic and French Revolutionary wars. A little more forgiving than the Eiffel Tower, the arch has a mere 284 steps up to the summit, from where snap-happy families can enjoy some of Paris’s best photo opportunities, with views of the Eiffel Tower and Sacré-Cœur basilica, and along the length of the elegant Champs-Élysées boulevard to Place de la Concorde. Arc de Triomphe tickets are included with your Paris Pass. Père Lachaise Cemetery You could easily spend a whole morning strolling peaceful Père Lachaise, the largest and leafiest cemetery in Paris and home to permanent residents that include Oscar Wilde, Édith Piaf, Chopin, Jim Morrison of The Doors, the playwright Molière and many more legendary entertainers and artists of yore. Ogle titanic tombs, gothic gravestones, splendid statues and magnificent memorials to the great and good, including many more honoring France’s war dead. A fun whistle-stop tour of the cemetery takes in some of the most elaborate resting places and spills the goss on the cemetery’s most famous celebs. The Latin Quarter Set around the historic Sorbonne University on the Seine’s left bank, the Latin quarter is an absolute mecca for anyone with even a passing interest in books. Its storied lanes are chock-full of bohemian bars and sultry jazz joints once frequented by such literary luminaries as F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway, and you can pay your respects to French greats including Voltaire, Victor Hugo, Dumas, Zola and De Quincey in the magnificent Panthéon. Afterwards, take a stroll to English-language bookstore Shakespeare and Company or hit up Paris’s semi-legendary bouquinistes, a veritable army of booksellers that line the Seine offering up a smorgasbord of literary classics, childrens’ books, antiquarian tomes and more. Marché des Enfants Rouges Paris’s thriving market culture dates to Roman times, when its first market was established on the Île de la Cité. Nowadays, there are around 100 to pick and choose from, with traders hawking everything from fresh produce, plants and flowers to antiques, knick-knacks and pets. The oldest and most historic of these is the Marché des Enfants Rouges, opened way back in the 16th century in the atmospheric Marais district, and named for the red clothes worn by children from the nearby (but now long-gone) orphanage. Now a thriving foodie destination, its where you’ll find some of Paris’s best street snacks. Follow your nose (and the long, hungry queues) to local fave Chez Alain Miam Miam for belly-busting pan-fried sandwiches, then sweeten the deal with honey baklava and mint tea from Le Traiteur Marocain. The Louvre Palace and Museum Only the planet’s largest art museum and most visited site in Paris, the Louvre was a palace long before it became a gallery in 1793. Built in the 12th Century during the reign of King Philip II, this opulent confection now provides a suitably regal space for displaying some of history’s best art. We’re talking the Mona Lisa (of course), plus the Venus de Milo and Winged Victory of Samothrace. Add to these masterpieces by (to name just a few) Caravaggio, Michelangelo, Raphael, Rembrandt and Titian and you have quite the treat for art lovers. History buffs can also check out Napoleon III’s ludicrously opulent apartments, the gilded rococo drawing room, lavish state dining rooms and more at the palace. The Catacombs Paris gives the ancient Egyptians and Mexicans a pretty good run for their money when it comes to their fascination with the dead. You’ve visited the celeb-crammed cemeteries; now get even closer to the bone(s) down in the Paris Catacombs, where a blood-freezing network of underground ossuaries houses the mortal remains of some six million Parisians. Overflowing graveyards in the 18th and 19th centuries meant a solution had to be found – and fast. These dank and macabre caverns are the result, and the experience of walking through them, surrounded by human bones, is not for the faint of heart. Legend has it that if you go down there after midnight, the skulls in the walls will begin to speak, urging you onwards to your certain doom. Sounds like an old wife’s tale to us but, just to be on the safe side, we’d suggest you stick to the daytime tours. Montmartre With the Sacré-Cœur Basilica perched at its top, like a little fondant decoration on a wedding cake, Montmartre is one of Paris’s most historic neighborhoods. Save your legs by taking the funicular railway up the hill then rewarding your efforts with a chocolate crêpe and a stroll through cobbled streets and squares that have inspired artists from Modigliani to Picasso. A romantic meander around the famous butte takes in such sights as the arty Place du Tertre, the neon-red Moulin Rouge windmill, and the Musée de Montmartre (with exhibits from Toulouse-Lautrec’s Moulin Rouge series and other French Impressionist masterpieces). Don’t miss the awe-inspiring views from the Sacré-Cœur at sunset. Accompanied by a pistachio ice cream, natch. Save on the Best Historical Sites in Paris Save on admission to Paris attractions with The Paris Pass. Check out @GoCity on Instagram for the latest top tips and attraction info.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
Eiffel Tower 2nd Floor Guided Climb
Louvre Museum

Have a 5% discount, on us!

More savings? You're welcome. Sign up to our newsletter and receive exclusive discounts, vacation inspiration and much more.

Big Bus Hop-On Hop-Off 1-Day Tour
Tours de Notre-Dame de Paris