28 Best Restaurants in The Marais, Paris

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The once-run-down Marais is now the epitome of chic, but you can still find reminders of its down-to-earth past along Rue des Rosiers, where falafel shops and Eastern European delis jostle with designer boutiques. Truly ambitious restaurants are few and far between in the Marais, but picturesque old bistros, like Benoît and the wonderful Café des Musées, and smaller veggie-centric eateries are popping up all over. A brand-new generation of barista cafés serving gourmet snacks for breakfast and lunch have created their own niche, answering a need for better coffee and faster sit-down dining. The popular Breizh Café attracts young and old alike with its inexpensive and authentic galettes (buckwheat crêpes) made with quality ingredients and served with a crisp, delicious cidre from Normandy or Brittany.

Auberge Nicolas Flamel

$$$$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

There's some serious magic happening at this off-the-radar retreat set in one of Paris's oldest buildings (from 1407), once the laboratory of alchemist Nicolas Flamel. The intimate space, mixing ancient beams, stone, and wood with a streamlined contemporary design, is perfect for the chef's bewitching combinations in signature dishes like Breton langoustine with herbs crowned with caviar or roasted monkfish with tender carrots and bottarga. Deliciously subtle and surprising dessert pairings include pear William with Kalamata olives and sage. Prices are steep, but you'll appreciate leisurely savoring your meal accompanied by excellent wines and top-notch service.

51 rue de Montmorency, Paris, 75003, France
01–42–71–77–78
Known For
  • One Michelin star
  • Top-quality seasonal ingredients
  • Stunning wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Bontemps

$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

This charming courtyard café-tearoom grew out of an adorable pastry shop (next door) specializing in the French sablé, those classic melt-in-your-mouth butter cookies, with an assortment of ethereal cream fillings. Marble-topped tables, velvet chairs, and other vintage-like touches make this one of the neighborhood's most charming spots for lunch, brunch, or dessert. The excellent food, homemade drinks, and stellar pastries are all icing on this scrumptious cake.

57 rue de Bretagne, Paris, 75003, France
01–42–74–10–68
Known For
  • Vintage atmosphere
  • Top-notch homemade food and pastries
  • High prices
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Breizh Café

$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

Eating a crêpe in Paris might seem clichéd, until you venture into this modern offshoot of a Breton crêperie. The plain, pale-wood decor is refreshing, but what really makes the difference are the ingredients—farmers' eggs, unpasteurized Gruyère, shiitake mushrooms, Valrhona chocolate, homemade caramel, and extraordinary butter from a Breton dairy farmer. You'll find all the classics among the galettes, but it's worth choosing something more adventurous like the cancalaise (traditionally smoked herring, potato, crème fraîche, and herring roe). You might also slurp a few Cancale oysters—a rarity in Paris—or try one of the 20 artisanal ciders on offer.

109 rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, 75003, France
01–42–72–13–77
Known For
  • Some of the best crêpes in Paris
  • Adventurous ingredients
  • Cancale oysters on the half shell
Restaurant Details
Closed Aug.
Reservations essential

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Datil

$$$$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

Since its 2023 opening, the local enthusiasm for Manon Fleury’s minimalist dining room has deepened into devotion for its passionate, conscientious cuisine that not only prioritizes fruits and vegetables, but also addresses every link in the dining chain, from ethical growers and handlers to minimizing food waste. On the plate, this translates to a refined, meticulously prepared and presented experience that highlights texture and color and offers a complexity of flavors that can be subtle or bombastic, but rarely off-key. Vegetarian diners will be at home here, although fish, shellfish and meat are only enhanced by the chef’s exquisite sensitivity to what plants can bring to a dish.

13 rue des Gravilliers, Paris, 75003, France
01–80–05–74–98
Known For
  • Passionate foodie following
  • Exquisite food and wine pairings
  • Prices commensurate with the experience
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends. No lunch Mon. and Tues.
Reservations essential

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La Caféothèque

$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

This was Paris's first coffee bar, founded by former Guatemalan ambassador to France turned coffee ambassador, Gloria Montenegro. With three spacious rooms, all coffee preparations under the sun, and a daily special brew chosen from among dozens of varieties of meticulously sourced beans from plantations around the globe, this is a Paris institution.

52 rue de l'Hotel de Ville, Paris, 74004, France
01–53–01–83–84
Known For
  • Rigorously sourced, hard-to-find beans
  • Excellent coffee of the day
  • All roasting done in-house
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Pain de Sucre

$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

A dazzling array of gourmet pastries here includes all the classics in imaginative and delicious flavor combinations. There are also impossibly moist individual cakes, Paris's best baba au rhum, sublime cookies, and the specialty guimauve, a flavored, melt-in-your-mouth marshmallow. Be sure to sample the gorgeous Rosy Rosa dome cake with almond, rose-infused almond milk, and creamy dark chocolate all on a black sesame biscuit topped with rose petals. Next door, savory gourmet breads, quiches, sandwiches, and other takeout foods make this the perfect refueling stop after a visit to the Centre Pompidou. There's also outdoor seating in warm weather.

Parcelles

$$$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

One of the city's best-kept secrets, this gem of bistro has been a fixture since 1936, and the new owners have retained the old-world vibe that's ever harder to come by in Paris, especially in the Marais. Cozy and full of charm—with beamed ceilings, stone walls, and a timeless decor—the atmosphere perfectly highlights chef Julien Chevallier's deliciously down-to-earth and seasonally inspired meats, fish, and charcuterie. A masterful wine list featuring natural wines rounds out the experience. Book a terrace table in summer. Stock up on gourmet items to bring home with you at the épicerie next door.

13 rue Chapon, Paris, 75003, France
01–43–37–91–64
Known For
  • Excellent selection of natural wines
  • Charming old-world feel
  • Lovely terrace seating
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends
Reservations essential

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Une Glace à Paris

$ | Marais Quarter Fodor's Choice

Smoked chocolate . . . orange-carrot-ginger . . . coffee--black cardamom . . . these are just a few of the intriguing ice cream and gelato flavors featured at Paris's Instagram-famous glacier. Expect only the best seasonal ingredients plus cream and sugar in the ice creams and loads of fresh fruit in the nondairy sorbets. You can taste as many flavors as you like to help you decide, and servings, by the boule, are generous. There are lots of frozen cakes and pastries, too.

15 rue St-Croix de la Bretonnerie, Paris, 75004, France
01–49–96–98–33
Known For
  • Imaginative and creative flavor pairings
  • Lots of nondairy and gluten-free choices
  • Free samples
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Au Bourguignon du Marais

$$$ | Marais Quarter

This handsome, contemporary Marais bistro and wine bar is the perfect place to enjoy traditional fare and excellent Burgundies served by the glass and bottle. Unusual for Paris, food is served nonstop from noon to 11 pm, and you can drop by just for a glass of wine in the afternoon. Always on the menu are Burgundian classics such as jambon persillé (ham in parsley aspic jelly), escargots, and boeuf bourguignon (beef stewed in red wine). More up-to-date picks include a cèpe-mushroom velouté with poached oysters, although fancier dishes are generally less successful.

52 rue François-Miron, Paris, 75003, France
01–48–87–15–40
Known For
  • Traditional bistro atmosphere
  • Hearty Burgundian cuisine
  • Sidewalk dining with nice views of the Marais

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Au Petit Fer à Cheval

$ | Marais Quarter

This cozy bar is always packed, and tables often spill out onto the sidewalk. Come for a hearty meal, a cup of coffee, or a glass of wine.

30 rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, 75004, France
01–42–72–47–47
Known For
  • Late-night hours until 2 am
  • Charming sidewalk seating
  • Well-prepared classics like beef tartare and duck confit
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Au Petit Versailles du Marais

$ | Marais Quarter

It’s worth a visit to this popular café just to see the listed historic ceilings and delightfully old-fashioned interiors. The sweets may not reach the ambition of some of the designer pâtisseries in the neighborhood, but it’s as picturesque spot as can be for a coffee and a classic tarte tatin, eclair, raspberry tart, or a savory croque monsieur for lunch in the salon de thé or on the sidewalk terrace in warm weather.

Babka Zana

$ | Marais Quarter

To be enveloped in the aroma of freshly baked babka is almost as swoon-worthy as biting into a tender brioche babka filled with creamy pistachio-orange flower, chocolate-hazelnut, or buttery poppy seed at this unpretentious bakery a stone’s throw from the Place des Vosges. The pistachio-rose rugelach and the nougat-orange babka rolls are to die for, as are the deli sandwiches and savory breads.

8 rue du Pas de la Mule, Paris, 75003, France
09–83–87–48–09
Known For
  • Quality coffee to stay or to go
  • Best babka in the city
  • Supplies for snacking in Place des Vosges
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Benoît

$$$$ | Marais Quarter

Without changing the vintage 1912 setting, superchef Alain Ducasse and Thierry de la Brosse of L'Ami Louis have subtly improved the menu, with dishes such as marinated salmon, frogs' legs in a morel-mushroom cream sauce, and an outstanding cassoulet served in a cast-iron pot. It's a splurge to dine here, so go all the way, and top off your meal with the caramelized tarte tatin or a rum-doused baba.

20 rue Saint-Martin, Paris, 75004, France
01–42–72–25–76
Known For
  • Glorious Marais setting overlooking the Seine with equally romantic interior
  • Affordable prix-fixe lunch menu
  • Charming outdoor terrace in warm weather
Restaurant Details
Closed Aug. and 1 wk in Feb.

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Brigat' Bakery

$ | Marais Quarter

If you want to know what the locals are craving, head over to this popular bakery a half-block from the Place des Vosges, where the bread, croissants, and gorgeous seasonal pastries like yuzu-black sesame tart, pear, and caramel sablé or pistachio mille-feuille are made on the premises. There’s also a choice of sinfully delicious gelatos.

6 rue du Pas de la Mule, Paris, 75003, France
01–57–40–83–85
Known For
  • Best artisan sourdough in the Marais
  • Delicious coffee
  • Cozy seating for a rainy day
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Café Charlot

$$ | Marais Quarter

It may not have the healthiest food in the Marais, and the coffee may not be third wave, but that doesn't keep chic locals from packing into it on a sunny (or even not-so-sunny) day. The people-watching from this choice spot—at the intersection of the à la mode shopping street Rue Charlot and the bustling Rue de Bretagne—is top-notch, and the café's 1950s film noir charm is irresistible.

38 rue de Bretagne, Paris, France
01–44–54–03–30
Known For
  • Hearty, delicious French staples and well-priced wines by the glass
  • Chic, lively atmosphere
  • Open daily from 7 am to 2 am

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Café des Musées

$$ | Marais Quarter

A true neighborhood haunt, this bustling little bistro near the Musée Picasso offers a convivial slice of Parisian life at a good value. Traditional French bistro fare is adapted to a modern audience. The best choices are the old tried-and-trues: hand-cut tartare de boeuf; rare entrecôte served with a side of golden-crisp frites and homemade béarnaise; and the classic Parmentier, with pheasant instead of the usual ground beef.

Chez Alain Miam Miam

$ | Marais Quarter

You may be tempted to call it a sandwich stand, but for Parisians it's more of a pilgrimage point at the beloved Marché des Enfants-Rouges. Alain's inspired creations burst with organic vegetables (raw or roasted), artisanal cheeses, locally cured ham, roast chicken, or pastrami, among other gourmet fillings, lodged between slices of bread, a buckwheat galette, or a socca (a Provençale flatbread made with chickpea flour). Each day brings fresh surprises on the blackboard menu, all to be enjoyed at the market's outdoor seating or at a nearby park.

26 rue Charlot, Paris, 75003, France
09–86–17–28–00
Known For
  • Good price for the quantity and quality
  • Top ingredients
  • A favorite Parisian address
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Grand Coeur

$$$ | Marais Quarter

Soaring ceilings with exposed beams, globe lighting, velvet chairs, and marble-top tables give this superchic eatery the look of a classic brasserie gone upscale. The menu, designed by three-star chef Mauro Colagreco of the world-renowned Mirazur restaurant on the Riviera, features market-fresh French classics complemented by a wine list with plenty of by-the-glass offerings. Best of all, a spacious cobbled outdoor courtyard makes dining here a joy on nice days.

41 rue du Temple, Paris, 75004, France
01–58–28–18–90
Known For
  • Spacious courtyard terrace
  • Chic decor
  • Menu designed by a "World's Best Chef"

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L'Ambassade d'Auvergne

$$ | Marais Quarter

At this rare authentic Parisian bistro that refuses to change, settle into the dining room in an ancient Marais house to try rich, rib-sticking dishes from the Auvergne, a sparsely populated region in central France. Indulge in a heaping serving of the superb lentils in goose fat with bacon or Salers beef in red wine sauce with aligot (mashed potatoes with cheese). You might want to loosen your belt for the astonishingly dense chocolate mousse, served in a giant bowl that allows you to decide the quantity.

22 rue du Grenier St-Lazare, Paris, 75003, France
01–42–72–31–22
Known For
  • Copious quantities of classic French cuisine
  • Excellent price-to-quality ratio
  • Chocolate mousse for dessert

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L'As du Fallafel

$ | Marais Quarter

For one of the cheapest, tastiest meals in Paris, look no further than the fantastic falafel stands on the pedestrian Rue de Rosiers, where L'As (the Ace) is widely considered the best of the bunch, with lunchtime lines that extend down the street. A falafel sandwich costs €7 to go or €9 in the dining room, and it's heaping with grilled eggplant, cabbage, hummus, tahini, and hot sauce. The shawarma (grilled, skewered meat) sandwich, made with chicken or lamb, is also one of the finest in town. Although takeout is popular, it can be fun (and not as messy) to eat off a plastic plate in one of the two frenzied dining rooms. Fresh lemonade is the falafel's best match.

34 rue des Rosiers, Paris, 75004, France
01–48–87–63–60
Known For
  • The best, freshest, and biggest falafel sandwich in town
  • Fast takeout or seated service at lunch
  • Shawarma sandwiches
Restaurant Details
Closed Sat. No dinner Fri.

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La Table Cachée

$$$ | Marais Quarter

Tucked away like a boudoir behind a green velvet curtain in the lingerie department of the famous BHV department store hides this elegant dining room. It's an excellent choice for a shopping break or a gourmet dinner after store hours, when veteran chef Michel Roth pulls out the stops in dishes like buttery chicken paté en croute or pan-fried foie gras to start, followed by haddock in a vibrant beet reduction with caviar, and ending with a clementine-and-white chocolate mille-feuille. In summer, breathtaking views of Paris’s city hall (Hôtel de Ville) and the Seine behind it can be enjoyed from the fifth-floor restaurant’s stunning outdoor veranda.

La Tartine

$ | Marais Quarter

This calm café-brasserie on busy Rue de Rivoli is a local favorite with an extensive wine list. Though the food is nothing to write home about, its authentic brasserie atmosphere and inexpensive wines by the glass from every region of France make it a great place for a quick pick-me-up or an apéro on the go. It's open late, too.

24 rue de Rivoli, Paris, 75004, France
01–42–72–76–85
Known For
  • Total lack of snobbery
  • Reasonably priced champagne
  • Authentic Art Deco interior

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Le Loir dans la Théière

$ | Marais Quarter

Sink into a comfy armchair at this popular tearoom, whose name translates to "the Dormouse in the Teapot" (from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland). The savory tarts are good, but the real stars are desserts like the decadent chocolate crumble tart or mile-high lemon meringue pie. The restaurant's all-day hours are a bonus, especially for teatime, but its no-reservations policy means lines for weekend brunch can be dauntingly long.

3 rue des Rosiers, Paris, 75004, France
01–42–72–90–61
Known For
  • Popular Sunday brunch (expect lines)
  • Shabby-chic setting
  • Scrumptious desserts
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Les Enfants Rouges

$$$$ | Marais Quarter

Japanese-French fusion cuisine is wildly popular in Paris as deliciously demonstrated here at chef Daï Shinozuka’s pared-down bistro in a corner of the Marché des Enfants Rouges. Seasonal dishes like creamy pumpkin soup with mussels, parsley oil, Camargue salicorne, and preserved lemon or roasted Normandie scallops with smoky haddock cream, spinach, and roasted turnips drizzled with watercress oil dazzle the palate. For dessert, litchi mousse and granité with grapefruit gelée crowns a gratifying dining experience.

9 rue de Beauce, Paris, 75003, France
01–48–87–80–61
Known For
  • Fresh and seasonal fixed-price menus
  • Casual dining room
  • A bit on the pricey side
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. And Wed. No lunch Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Les Philosophes

$$ | Marais Quarter

All of Paris seems to collide at this lively corner café in the heart of the Marais, where you'll find pretty much whatever is your pleasure any time of the day or night. Slide into a red banquette, or take a seat on the wide wraparound terrace to watch the world go by while indulging in generous servings of all the French classics, a glass of wine, or coffee and dessert.

28 rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, 75004, France
01–48–87–49–64
Known For
  • Extensive menu
  • Lively atmosphere
  • Decent prices
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Maison Aleph

$ | Marais Quarter

Pastry chef Myriam Sabeta’s carved out a whole new niche in French sweets with her creations influenced by her childhood in Aleppo, Syria. Her signature “nids” are based on kadaïf, the buttery angel hair pastries of the Levant, which Sabet fills with cream and dried or candied fruit in original flavors such as Damascus rose, chocolate-sumac, or lemon-cardamom. Her ambrosial baklavas may be layered with Piedmont hazelnuts and lemon or Iranian pistachio and orange blossom.

20 rue de la Verrerie, Paris, 75004, France
09–83–03–42–02
Known For
  • Exotic flavors
  • Imaginative takes on Levantine pastries
  • Delicious and nutritious gourmet cereal bars

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Partisan

$ | Marais Quarter

A perfect fit in the Arts et Métiers neighborhood, this bustling spot is popular for its loft-like, industrial-style atmosphere and stellar coffee served with delicious homemade sweets. Custom coffees are roasted on the premises from beans sourced all over the world.

36 rue de Turbigo, Paris, 75003, France
06–08–25–88–32
Known For
  • Great place to linger with friends or solo
  • Heavenly fragrance of freshly roasted coffee
  • Beans for sale on-site

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Yann Couvreur

$ | Marais Quarter

You’ll find all of this brilliant young pastry chef’s latest and classic creations at this handsome pâtisserie and café, but good luck choosing between the tasty options. Known for his ambitious and subtle flavor pairings and over-the-top decadence, you'll be wowed by pastries like the Entremets Isatis, a pecan biscuit with pecan praline, creamy vanilla-bean ganache, and vanilla caramel; his exquisite lemon merengue tart topped with a tangy dollop of lemon crème; or the signature Mille Feuilles Madagascar.

23 bis, rue des Rosiers, Paris, 75004, France
No phone
Known For
  • Ambitious flavor pairings
  • Beautiful café
  • Reasonable prices for a gourmet pâtisserie

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