Paris does not reward people who stay on the bus. The best parts of this city happen between the landmarks: a bakery you weren't looking for, a courtyard you almost walked past, a view of the Seine that no one else noticed. Walking is how you find them.
Here is a neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood guide with real distances, practical tips, and the bakery stops that make the whole thing worth it.
Le Marais: medieval streets and the city's oldest square
The Marais (3rd and 4th arrondissements) is where medieval Paris is still alive. Narrow streets, 17th-century townhouses, and Place des Vosges, the oldest planned square in the city, built in 1612. A full loop covers about 2.4 kilometres and takes roughly an hour.
Start at Place des Vosges and work through Rue des Francs-Bourgeois, lined with boutiques tucked into historic buildings. The Jewish quarter along Rue des Rosiers is a few minutes north, where L'As du Fallafel draws a queue that moves fast. The Marais is flat, well-paved, and easy to navigate.
Latin Quarter: where the university shaped the streets
The Latin Quarter (5th arrondissement) gets its name from the centuries when Latin was the common language at the Sorbonne. Bookshops, narrow passages, and the Pantheon watching over everything from the top of the hill.
A walking route covers about 5 kilometres from the Pantheon down through Rue Mouffetard (one of the oldest market streets in Paris) to the Jardin des Plantes. Stop at the tiny Place de la Contrescarpe for a coffee. The square is surrounded by cafes that have served students for generations.
Montmartre: the climb is the point
Montmartre (18th arrondissement) is a hill, and the walk up is part of the experience. A 2.7-kilometre route from Abbesses metro takes about two hours if you stop to look at things, which you should.
The Sacre-Coeur basilica at the summit offers one of the best panoramic views of Paris. Below it, Place du Tertre still has working artists at their easels, though it gets crowded after 11am. For a quieter side, follow Rue Lepic downhill. Monet, Renoir, Van Gogh, and Picasso all lived on these streets.
Champs-Elysees to the Tuileries: Paris in a straight line
Start at the Arc de Triomphe and walk southeast down the Champs-Elysees, through the Place de la Concorde, and into the Tuileries Garden. About 3 kilometres, 35 to 45 minutes at a steady pace. The lower section near the gardens is quieter than the busy upper stretch. From the Tuileries you can see the Louvre directly ahead. Three major landmarks, one straight walk, almost no navigation required.
Seine riverbanks and Ile de la Cite
The Seine riverbanks are a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The stretch from Pont de l'Alma to Ile Saint-Louis covers about 5 kilometres and passes the Musee d'Orsay, the bouquinistes (secondhand booksellers whose green stalls have lined the river since the 16th century), and Notre-Dame Cathedral.
Notre-Dame reopened in December 2024 after five years of reconstruction following the 2019 fire. Entry to the nave is free. The cathedral is open Monday to Friday 7:50am to 7pm and weekends 8:15am to 7:30pm, with extended Thursday hours until 10pm. New stained-glass windows are being installed in 2026, but the cathedral is fully open and worth the visit.
Ile de la Cite is small enough to walk end to end in 15 minutes. The flower market at Place Louis Lepine and the quiet corners of Sainte-Chapelle make it worth slowing down.
The bakery-and-walk strategy
Pair each neighbourhood with a bakery stop. Three that locals actually go to:
- Saint-Germain-des-Pres (6th arr.): La Maison d'Isabelle at 47ter Boulevard Saint-Germain won the best croissant in Paris prize. Opens 6am Tuesday to Sunday. Grab one and walk five minutes south to the Jardin du Luxembourg: free entry, 25 hectares, and the Medici Fountain.
- Near Bastille/Marais (11th arr.): Maison Landemaine on Boulevard Beaumarchais sits between the Bastille Market (Thursday and Sunday mornings) and Place des Vosges. Pain au chocolat, then start your Marais walk.
- Canal Saint-Martin (10th arr.): Du Pain et Des Idees on Rue Yves Toudic is famous for its escargot pastries. Closed weekends. Walk south along the Canal Saint-Martin, cross into the Marais, and you have a full morning covered.
Paris is roughly 10 kilometres across. Most neighbourhoods in this guide sit within 30 minutes of each other on foot, and the metro fills the gaps. An AudaTours walking tour of Paris gives you GPS-triggered narration at every landmark, so you can keep your eyes on the city instead of a guidebook. Tours download fully to your phone and work offline.
Pick a neighbourhood, grab a pastry, and start walking. Individual tours cost a few dollars, or get every Paris tour (and 2,000+ worldwide) with an Unlimited subscription. Browse all available walking tours to find your route.



