O que fazer em Paris

Paris rewards slow travel — the city's beauty is in wandering its neighbourhoods as much as ticking off its famous landmarks. The Louvre and Eiffel Tower are unmissable, but the best Paris moments happen in a neighbourhood boulangerie, along the Seine at sunset, or in a candlelit jazz cellar in Saint-Germain.

Eiffel Tower sunset visit Louvre Museum (Mona Lisa + Winged Victory) Montmartre & Sacré-Cœur Seine River walk at dusk Versailles day trip

Guia de orçamento diário

Econômico

$80–120

Hostel + comida de rua

Intermediário

$180–300

Hotel 3 estrelas + restaurantes

Luxo

$500–1200+

Hotel 5 estrelas + alta gastronomia

Melhores atividades e experiências

1

Eiffel Tower

culturaIntermediário€29.40 summit, €18.80 2nd floor
2–3 hours

Paris's icon is unmissable at sunset when the city glows gold and the tower sparkles every hour after dark. Book online — queues without a booking can be 2+ hours.

Dica: Book the summit well in advance (weeks in peak season). Arrive 15 min before your slot. The 2nd floor has better views than most expect.
2

Louvre Museum

culturaIntermediário€22 (free under 18, free 1st Sat evening)
3–5 hours

The world's most visited museum: the Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, Winged Victory of Samothrace, and 35,000 other works. It's vast — plan your visit around the highlights you care most about.

Dica: Enter via the Richelieu wing (less crowded than the Pyramid). Go straight to the Denon wing 1st floor for Mona Lisa early then the Sully wing for antiquities.
3

Musée d'Orsay

culturaIntermediário€16
2–3 hours

The world's finest Impressionist collection in a converted railway station: Monet's Water Lilies series, Van Gogh's Self-Portrait, Renoir, Degas, Seurat. The architecture itself is extraordinary.

Dica: The top floor (Impressionists) is the reason to visit. The café on the 5th floor has extraordinary views through the station clock over the Seine.
4

Montmartre & Sacré-Cœur

culturaGrátisFree (funicular €1.90)
3–4 hours

Paris's hilltop village: the white domes of Sacré-Cœur, Place du Tertre where artists paint portraits, the vineyard, and winding cobbled streets where Picasso and Modigliani once lived. Free to explore; skip the tourist portrait touts.

Dica: The best views of Paris are from the steps in front of Sacré-Cœur — visit at sunset. Rue Lepic and the surrounding streets are the real heart of Montmartre.
5

Seine River Walk

naturezaGrátisFree
2–3 hours

Walk the Quais de Seine from Notre-Dame to the Eiffel Tower along the riverbanks — a UNESCO heritage site. The bouquinistes (green-box booksellers) have lined these banks since the 16th century.

Dica: Walk the Left Bank (Rive Gauche) from Île Saint-Louis to Musée d'Orsay. Cross to the Right Bank at Pont des Arts for best views of both banks.
6

Palace of Versailles

culturaIntermediário€20 palace + €10 gardens (fountain days)
Full day

The Sun King's palace of 700 rooms, the Hall of Mirrors, and 800 hectares of baroque gardens — the most visited château in the world. Take the RER C (40 min from central Paris, €3.85 each way).

Dica: Go early and head directly to the Hall of Mirrors before the crowds arrive. The Marie-Antoinette estate (Petit Trianon + Hamlet) requires a separate ticket but is less crowded.
7

Centre Pompidou

culturaIntermediário€15
2–3 hours

Europe's finest modern art museum in an inside-out building with coloured pipes: Picasso, Kandinsky, Matisse, Duchamp, and major temporary exhibitions. The rooftop terrace has exceptional 360° views.

Dica: The building's exterior (escalators, coloured pipes) is free to admire. The rooftop view from the exterior escalators is better than inside. Free on the first Sunday of the month.
8

Marché d'Aligre & Bastille Market

gastronomiaEconômicoFree entry, budget €10–20 for food
2 hours

Paris's best traditional market: fresh cheese, charcuterie, oysters, rotisserie chickens, seasonal vegetables, and the covered Beauvau market with its specialist food shops. Bustling Tuesday–Sunday mornings.

Dica: Get there by 9–10am for the best produce. The flea market section (brocante) on the outer ring is excellent for vintage finds.

Atividades gratuitas em Paris

  • Walking along the Seine river banks (UNESCO heritage site)
  • Jardin du Palais-Royal
  • Musée Carnavalet (Paris history museum — free permanent collection)
  • Père Lachaise Cemetery (Jim Morrison, Édith Piaf, Oscar Wilde)
  • Promenade Plantée elevated park

Melhores áreas para explorar

Le Marais (3rd & 4th arr.)

Architecture, galleries, LGBTQ+ scene, Jewish quarter, shopping

Saint-Germain-des-Prés (6th)

Cafés, bookshops, antiques, Musée d'Orsay proximity

Montmartre (18th)

Sacré-Cœur, artistic history, village feel, cabaret

Bastille / Oberkampf (11th)

Nightlife, restaurants, local Paris feel, lower prices

Île Saint-Louis

Most romantic neighbourhood, Berthillon ice cream, Seine views

Perguntas frequentes

How many days do I need in Paris?

3 days covers the major landmarks. 5 days lets you explore neighbourhoods, do a Versailles day trip, and discover the city at a slower pace. A week is ideal for a first visit.

Is the Paris Museum Pass worth it?

Yes if you plan to visit 3+ major museums in 2 days. The 2-day pass (€52) covers Louvre, Musée d'Orsay, Versailles, Centre Pompidou, Sainte-Chapelle, and 50+ other sites. You skip ticket queues, which alone is worth it in peak season.

When is the best time to visit Paris?

April–June (spring flowers, pleasant weather, fewer tourists than July–August) and September–October (harvest season, warm days, beautiful light). Avoid August when many Parisians leave but tourists flood in.

How do I get around Paris?

The Métro is excellent — a carnet of 10 tickets (€17.35) covers all your journeys. Walking is the best way to discover the city between Métro stops. Vélib' bike-share is excellent for the river banks and flat areas.