There’s no single city in the world with more hotels in the Tablet selection than Paris. We tell you why, then we show you the fifteen most impressive hotels we added in the past six months alone.
By Mark Fedeli
Marketing and Editorial Director, Tablet Hotels
There are a couple of reasons why Paris has the most Tablet hotels of any city. First and foremost, the standard of hospitality there is just that high. We don’t include hotels that aren’t at the top of their game, delivering unique and consistently satisfying experiences, and Paris has a barrel of places that are up to the challenge. The second reason is because Paris has more small boutique hotels than any other city its size. Well over half the hotels in our Paris selection have fewer than 50 rooms. Compare that with New York, where only a handful of our hotels are that small.
We’ll leave it to the real estate experts and risk management consultants to work out the exact connection behind all this. What’s obvious is that, when you’re more willing to roll the dice on smaller properties — as the top hoteliers in Paris seem to be — you’ve got that many more chances to create hotels that stir our souls, like the fifteen newly added examples below.
Ernest Hemingway was so impressed by Paris, he said: “Wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you.” We say: Whenever you go to Paris, this is where you should stay.
Solly Hotel
Paris, France
Set on a leafy square in the 3rd arrondissement, a short stroll from Le Marais, Solly Hotel was once the home of the architect Salomon de Caus, a true Renaissance man if there ever was one. De Caus was also an engineer, mathematician, musical theorist, and a designer of fountains and gardens, and his Parisian residence was a testament to his love of beauty and symmetry, qualities that are still reflected in the building’s modern incarnation as a boutique hotel.
Hôtel Les Deux Gares
Paris, France
The two stations in question are the Gare de l’Est and the Gare du Nord, between which is sandwiched the incredibly colorful Hôtel Les Deux Gares, the first hotel project by the retro-obsessed English artist and designer Luke Edward Hall. And, English though he may be, the depth of Hall’s research combined with the boldness of his palette results a sort of dream-world hyper-Paris, more Parisian than the real thing.
Hôtel Botaniste
Paris, France
Between the Seine and the Bois de Boulogne, in the up-and-coming Auteuil district of the relatively distant 16th, the Hôtel Botaniste finds space for a degree of tranquility that’s hard to find in more central Parisian neighborhoods. And as its name may suggest, it’s set in a remarkably verdant corner of town; a lovely private garden, in fact, connects the hotel’s two buildings.
Bloom House Hotel
Paris, France
Bloom House intends its name to be taken quite literally — this 10th arrondissement boutique hotel, set mere blocks from both the Gare de l’Est and the Gare du Nord, is full of floral textures, live greenery, and warm-toned organic materials. Lovely enough on its own, it’s a particularly stark contrast to the stations themselves, and provides arriving travelers with a total aesthetic reset.
Hôtel Rochechouart
Paris, France
Hôtel Rochechouart, with its Art Deco façade, busy street-level brasserie, and garret-like guest rooms, embodies Pigalle’s retro charm and bohemian spirit. The original hotel opened nearly a century ago, and many of its features remain, including the antique elevator, crown molding, and grand marble staircase. But the current iteration, reimagined by the Festen design studio and part of the Orso collection, feels like a modern twist on a classic.
Hôtel Cabane
Paris, France
Hôtel Cabane has a unique layout that sets it apart from more traditional hotels in the neighborhood. The elegant ivory building, with its slate roof and arched dormer windows, resembles others on the block, but the property features a lush interior garden with a bungalow-like cabane built from local wood. With a king-sized bed, heated bathroom floors, and an air of Scandinavian chic, it’s hardly rustic — rather, it’s the most luxurious room available.
Hotel Hana
Paris, France
Between the Opéra Garnier and the Bourse, a few minutes from Little Tokyo, lies Hotel Hana, a 26-room boutique hotel whose style is both perfectly Parisian and thoroughly Japanese — which, in this case, is not a euphemism for “minimalist.” It’s the work of architect and designer Laura Gonzalez, creative director Oliver Leone, and hotelier Nicolas Saltiel, and in its richly textured cultural fusion it’s an inspiring, maximalist triumph.
Monsieur Aristide
Paris, France
Monsieur Aristide is named after a French cabaret singer portrayed in some of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s famous posters, and an artistic theme prevails, with musical instruments and flea market-sourced treasures adding to the eclectic look. The decor is unique in each room, naturally — but concrete flooring, natural linen drapery, and working rotary phones, mounted bedside, are standard features.
Drawing House
Paris, France
The Drawing Society — organizers of an art fair and an exhibition space — are now hoteliers as well, and Drawing House, an Art-themed hotel in a corner of Montparnasse well known for its artistic heritage, is among the fruits of their labor. Here you’ll find a stylish, modern 143-room boutique hotel that would be worth a look even without its artistic focus — but whose spaces are in fact filled with work by contemporary French artists.
Château des Fleurs
Paris, France
Just off the Champs-Élysées, and not much farther from the Arc de Triomphe, Château des Fleurs occupies an elegant 1910 building and aims to be nothing less than an homage to the glamour of Paris a century ago. Its interiors succeed in feeling both inimitably unique and perfectly emblematic of their setting, inspired by the Belle Époque but unmistakably contemporary in their interpretation.
Norman Hôtel
Paris, France
Paris’s Norman Hôtel is named not for Normandy but for the mid-century American artist and designer Norman Ives — and its interiors, in keeping with its namesake’s inspiration, are a tribute to modernist art and design, and to the Paris of the 1960s. It’s set close to the upper end of the Champs-Elysées, but it’s the farthest thing from busy — with just 37 rooms it’s properly boutique-sized.
Hôtel Balzac
Paris, France
Hôtel Balzac comes by its name honestly: not only is it set on the Rue Balzac, mere yards from the Champs-Élysées, but it’s built on the very site of Honoré de Balzac’s final place of residence. It’s been a hotel for some time, but was reborn in 2024 under the guidance of hotelier Olivier Bertrand, whose Saint James Paris is a local luxury-boutique institution. The Balzac seems destined for just as lofty a reputation.
Hôtel San Régis
Paris, France
The dream for any city-center luxury hotel is a location that’s at once surrounded by attractions and yet comfortably sequestered; here, on a side street in the 8th arrondissement’s famed Golden Triangle, the Hôtel San Régis manages to have it all. Nor does it suffer in the style department, with interiors by Pierre-Yves Rochon, whose work is practically synonymous with Parisian luxury hospitality.
Oh la la! Hotel
Paris, France
Romance starts when you arrive at Oh la la! Hotel. Rather than stroll into a street-level lobby, you’ll walk through a cocktail bar on Place de la Bastille and push against a bookcase that opens a secret door. From there, it’s up a spiral staircase — there’s no elevator — to the upper levels of this one-time apartment building, now shaped into bright rooms overlooking the square. It’s practically the definition of bohemian-chic.
Miss Fuller
Paris, France
The American-born dancer Loïe Fuller was nothing short of a sensation from her first appearance at the Folies Bergère; Miss Fuller the hotel celebrates her legacy and the Art Nouveau movement she personified. The building’s fanciful stone façade dates back to the late 19th century, but the interiors are the work of five artists who were invited to revitalize its rooms in the spirit of the Belle Époque.
Mark Fedeli is the hotel marketing and editorial director for Tablet and Michelin Guide. He’s been with Tablet since 2006, and he thinks you should subscribe to our newsletter.