Paris: Things Travelers Say

Sat, 10-January-2026 // Sightseeing Tickets & Passes

Paris is a city that almost everyone loves on their first visit. It is also a city that almost everyone says they would visit differently if they went back. The regrets are not about Paris. They are about the choices made before and during the trip. Here are twelve things experienced Paris travelers wish someone had told them before their first time. If you are still in the planning stage, explore what Paris has to offer and build your itinerary around what actually matters to you.


1. I would never try to see everything in one day

This comes up more than anything else. The impulse to pack the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, Montmartre, and several other landmarks into a single day is understandable, but it consistently produces the same outcome: you see everything and experience nothing. Paris needs time.


2. I would never visit the Louvre without a plan

The Louvre is the largest art museum in the world. It is also genuinely disorienting if you go in without a sense of what you want to see. The visitors who enjoy it most arrive knowing which two or three things they are there for and build the rest of the visit around those.


3. I would never go to the Eiffel Tower without a ticket

It seems like the kind of thing you can sort out on the day. You cannot, at least not reliably. Summit access sells out well in advance, and waiting in the on-the-day queue can take hours. Booking before you travel is not a luxury, it is just sensible planning.


4. I would never visit the Eiffel Tower at sunset again

The idea of watching the sun go down from the tower is genuinely appealing. The reality is long queues, crowded platforms, and a lot of waiting. Early morning is a far better option: the light is good, the crowds are thin, and the experience is completely different.


5. I would never eat at tourist restaurants again

The restaurants closest to the major attractions are almost always the worst value in the city. Overpriced, average quality, and designed to serve tables as fast as possible. Moving even one or two streets away from the main drag makes a noticeable difference.


6. I would never avoid the metro again

The Paris metro looks intimidating on a map and is quite simple once you are using it. Many first-time visitors spend money on taxis and lose time to traffic when the metro would have been faster and cheaper. A Navigo card is the easiest way to travel without thinking about it.


7. I would never rely on taxis and Uber for everything

Central Paris is not an easy city to drive through. Traffic near the main attractions can be slow, costs add up quickly, and the metro almost always beats a taxi on journey time. For sightseeing above ground at your own pace, the hop-on hop-off bus is a practical middle ground between private transport and the underground.


8. I would never eat on the main street in Montmartre again

The streets of Montmartre that see the most foot traffic are lined with restaurants that know exactly how to charge tourist prices for tourist food. A short walk in any direction leads to something much more worth your time and money.


9. I would never assume Paris is always expensive

The reputation for expense is partly earned and partly myth. A croissant from a local boulangerie, a picnic from a market, a coffee at a neighborhood café: none of these are expensive, and all of them are better than the tourist-facing alternatives. Paris is what you make of it financially.


10. I would never think Paris is only about the famous sights

The landmarks are worth seeing. But the moments people describe most fondly are rarely at the top of the Eiffel Tower. They happen on a slow drift along the Seine, in a café where nobody speaks English, or on a street where nothing in particular is happening. Those are the moments that make people want to come back.


11. I would never try to photograph everything

A trip spent looking at Paris through a screen is a lesser version of a trip spent looking at Paris. The photos are rarely as good as the memory anyway. Most visitors who visit a second time carry their phone differently.


12. I would never expect to understand Paris on my first trip

Paris is a city that reveals itself gradually. One visit is an introduction. The people who come back are the ones who accepted that on their first trip and stopped trying to squeeze everything in. They left with something to return for.


Paris Isn't Difficult. Rushing It Is.

Every regret on this list comes back to the same root cause: trying to do too much in too little time. The solution is simple even if it goes against every instinct when you are planning a trip. Do less, book the important things early, and let Paris fill in the rest. See all Paris tours and tickets on Paris City Tours →

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