Stade Roland Garros in the Bois de Boulogne is the home of the French Open, the only Grand Slam played on clay, where legends Rafael Nadal and Steffi Graf achieved their greatest dominance in a venue steeped in sporting history. Court Philippe-Chatrier is one of sport's most atmospheric arenas. Hotels in Paris combine Roland Garros access with the world's most romantic city — the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and outstanding French cuisine all within easy reach.
A discreet gem tucked behind a vine-covered courtyard off Place des Vosges. The rooms blend dark wood beams with contemporary textiles, and the spa feels like a secret known only to insiders. The most romantically Parisian hotel in the city.
The crimson awnings on Avenue Montaigne are a Paris icon. Inside, it's all Alain Ducasse dining, a Dior spa, and suites where the Eiffel Tower fills the window like a painting. Unapologetically palatial.
An 18th-century townhouse reimagined as a rooftop-bar-first social hotel. The rooms are compact but clever — toile wallpaper meets Hay furniture — and the Italian restaurant downstairs packs out nightly. Proof Paris can do cool without being cold.
Christian Lacroix turned a former bakery into 17 rooms of maximalist theatre. Every room is different — toile meets pop art, stripes clash with florals — yet somehow it all coheres into something deeply, joyfully Parisian.
A tranquil left-bank retreat steps from the Jardin des Plantes. The rooms are dressed in sage greens and creamy stone, the breakfast courtyard is an Instagram trap, and the neighbourhood feels like the Paris of Hemingway's memoirs.
The chicest hostel-hotel hybrid in Paris. Private rooms with en-suite bathrooms, a massive ground-floor café-bar, and a rooftop terrace overlooking Buttes-Chaumont. Budget travel with zero compromise on style.