How to Book a Paris Food Tour (Cheese, Wine, Pastries & the Shops Locals Actually Use)

Paris has a lot of bad food tours. The city has so many travelers with so much money and so little time that the market is flooded with mediocre “French food experiences” where you eat a baguette on a bench and call it a day. Avoiding the bad ones and finding the actually good ones takes some effort. That is what this guide is for.

I have done six Paris food tours in five years, mostly in Le Marais, Montmartre, and the Latin Quarter. Some were excellent and reshaped how I eat in Paris permanently. One was a waste of $60 and two hours I will never get back. The difference is almost entirely about the guide, the neighbourhood, and whether the itinerary includes real, working food shops or tourist-trap versions. Here is what I learned.

Paris street corner boulangerie in the evening with warm window light
A classic Paris boulangerie at closing time — the little hand-lettered sign in the window that says “Fermé” goes up at 7:30pm and the remaining pastries end up half-price on a back shelf. If you walk past a neighbourhood bakery at 7:15pm with cash in your pocket, you can often walk out with three croissants for the price of one. The regulars know this. Now you do too.

Quick Picks — My Three Favourite Paris Food Tours

🥇 Best overall walking food tour: Paris: Montmartre Cheese, Wine & Pastry Guided Walking Tour — around $127, three hours, six tasting stops plus wine, and a guide who actually knows the Montmartre shop owners by name. The highest-reviewed Paris food tour I could find.

🥈 Best for Le Marais foodies: Paris Le Marais Walking Food Tour with Secret Food Tours — around $103, focused on the Jewish and French fusion food of Le Marais, includes falafel, rugelach, and a cheese stop. Best neighbourhood for food variety.

🥉 Best morning breakfast tour: A Morning in Paris Food Tour: Croissants, Baguettes & Chocolate — around $126, 9:30am-12:30pm, hits five bakeries and a chocolate shop before lunch. Perfect for visitors who want to taste everything in one go while fresh.

Parisian patisserie window with colourful macarons and pastries on display
A classic Paris patisserie window in Saint-Germain, where the macarons are arranged by colour in the morning and gradually sold down through the day. By 3pm you can tell which flavours were popular — the rows with the fewest gaps are always pistachio and salted caramel. The ones that do not sell are raspberry rose (too floral for most people) and liquorice (too divisive).

Why Paris Food Tours Are Actually Worth It

I used to be skeptical of food tours. I like to eat, I know how to read a menu, why would I need a guide? Then I took my first one in Le Marais in 2020, and I changed my mind in about 45 minutes.

The reason a good food tour is worth the money is not the food itself — it is the access. Paris has thousands of bakeries, cheesemongers, wine bars, and chocolatiers, and the gap between the tourist ones and the genuine ones is enormous. A good guide takes you to shops where the owner has been running the business for 30 years, knows exactly where their sourdough starter comes from, and will spend 10 minutes explaining why their raw-milk Roquefort has to age for exactly four months to taste right. You cannot buy that kind of access for €8 by walking in off the street on your own.

The second reason is context. Eating a croissant in Paris is nice. Eating a croissant after your guide has explained that the shape “croissant” is actually Austrian in origin, that the French version has been through five distinct evolutions since 1920, and that the secret to a good one is using real French butter at 82% fat (not 80% like the industrial stuff) — that is different. You taste it differently. You notice things you would have missed. The food stops being a snack and starts being an experience.

Paris street with classic French bakery and cyclist passing by
The classic Paris street scene: an old stone boulangerie on the corner, a bike leaning against the window, and the smell of fresh bread drifting out every time the door opens. That door opening is the reason food tours usually start around 9:30am — the 8am rush is over and the baker is in good spirits, which means you might get taken into the back to see the ovens. Earlier than 9:30, the baker is too busy. Later than 11, the croissants are sold out.

The Three Neighbourhoods for Paris Food Tours

Virtually every serious Paris food tour happens in one of three neighbourhoods: Le Marais, Montmartre, or Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Each has a totally different character and a totally different food story, and picking the right one for you matters.

Le Marais is the most diverse. It is the historic Jewish quarter of Paris, it is also the centre of modern Parisian LGBTQ+ culture, and it has the best mix of traditional French food and international influences (Jewish bakeries, Middle Eastern falafel, North African spice shops, French patisseries). A Marais food tour gives you the most variety in one 3-hour walk.

Montmartre is the most atmospheric. The streets are cobbled, the buildings are tall and shuttered, and every turn gives you a view of Sacré-Cœur looming overhead. Food tours here tend to focus on the traditional French staples — cheese, wine, bread, pastry — because that is what the neighbourhood specialises in. If you want the postcard version of “eating in Paris,” Montmartre delivers.

Saint-Germain-des-Prés is the most refined. It is where the 1950s literary cafés (Café de Flore, Les Deux Magots) still operate, where Pierre Hermé has his flagship macaron shop, and where the most famous chocolatiers in Paris keep their workshops. Food tours here skew upscale — expect grand patisseries, hot chocolate at Angelina, and tastings of top-end chocolates. Less variety than Le Marais, but higher-end products.

Paris street market with fresh produce at Maison Collignon in Montmartre
Maison Collignon is a tiny grocery shop in Montmartre that became famous after it appeared in the 2001 film Amélie — the owner of the shop in the movie was mean to her elderly customer, and the real-world Maison Collignon is not mean at all but does sell an expensive range of French pantry staples. It is on the Montmartre food tour route and you can pick up a jar of proper French Dijon here that you will not find in any supermarket back home.

Cheese — The Most Intimidating Category to Shop For

France makes over 400 different cheeses. France is also home to approximately 40 of those cheeses being actually good, and the rest being fine but not worth an international flight. Knowing which to buy, and where, is one of the main reasons to take a food tour.

The categories most tours will walk you through: soft-rind cheeses (Brie de Meaux, Camembert de Normandie — pick the AOC versions, never the supermarket kinds), washed-rind cheeses (Époisses, Munster — pungent, smell like feet, taste like heaven), blue cheeses (Roquefort, Bleu d’Auvergne — the genuine Roquefort is raw sheep’s milk only, caved-aged in Aveyron), and hard cheeses (Comté, Beaufort — the 24-month aged Comtés are what separates a cheese lover from a cheese expert).

The shop to go to, if you cannot do a tour: Fromagerie Laurent Dubois in the 5th (they have won the best cheesemonger in France award multiple times). Tell them what you like, they will pick for you, and they vacuum-seal for international travel if you ask. €25-40 will get you a selection of six cheeses that will genuinely change how you think about the category.

Charming French fromagerie corner shop with cheese display in the window
The absolute classic French fromagerie — small, wooden shelves inside, a chalkboard menu on the wall listing the cheese of the day, and a shopkeeper who will probably hand you a sliver of something to try before you have even asked for anything. My tip: tell them you want “something that goes with red wine, €15 worth, please surprise me.” You will walk out with better cheese than any menu would have given you.

Wine — The Crash Course You Actually Need

French wine is the thing most Paris food tours get closest to wrong. The good tours spend time on the wine. The bad tours give you a plastic cup of something generic and move on. Pick a tour where the wine is a genuine focus.

What you want to know in 90 seconds: France has roughly ten major wine regions, but the ones that matter most to you on a tour are Burgundy (the light elegant reds and the best whites), Bordeaux (the heavy reds and long-aged wines), Rhône (the spicy reds from Côtes du Rhône and Châteauneuf-du-Pape), Loire (the crisp whites and unusual reds), and Champagne (which obviously).

A good food tour will give you four or five wines across different regions and styles, usually starting with a crisp white and ending with a full-bodied red or a dessert wine. The Montmartre Cheese, Wine & Pastry tour I recommended above includes three wine tastings integrated with the cheese pairings, which is how wine is supposed to be drunk — with food, not on its own.

If you want to go deeper, book a dedicated wine tasting class separately. Ô Chateau in the 1st and Les Caves du Louvre both run excellent English-language wine tasting classes for around €60-90 per person. Do the food tour first, then the wine class the next day if you catch the bug.

Parisian charcuterie shop with pedestrians walking past in warm sunlight
A charcuterie in the Latin Quarter — the sign “Charcuterie” means cured meats in French, and inside you will find the pig-based side of French gastronomy: saucisson sec (dry sausage), rillettes (pork spread), pâté de campagne (country pâté), and ham in every possible form. Saucisson sec is the best souvenir you can bring home from Paris — it travels well in your suitcase, it lasts for months, and it makes you look like a sophisticated traveller when you slice it for guests.

Croissants — What Separates a Good One From a Great One

Here is a thing that will change how you eat in Paris forever: there is a big difference between a €1.20 supermarket croissant and a €2.50 artisan croissant, and it has nothing to do with freshness. The difference is the butter.

A proper French croissant uses beurre de tourage — a specific high-fat butter (82% fat content minimum, ideally from a specific AOC dairy region like Charentes-Poitou) that has been pressed into flat sheets for laminating into the dough. Industrial croissants use margarine or cheaper butter with lower fat content, which is why they taste thinner and lack the satisfying crackling shatter when you bite them.

How to spot a good one visually: layers. When you break one open, a great croissant has 20-30 distinct buttery layers visible on the cross-section. An industrial one has maybe 10 and they blur together. The good ones also have a darker, more caramelised top crust because proper butter browns more than margarine.

My favourite Paris croissants: Du Pain et des Idées in the 10th (the “escargot” pastries here are next-level), Blé Sucré near Place d’Aligre (won “best croissant in Paris” in 2008 and has held standards since), and Poilâne on Rue du Cherche-Midi (more famous for bread but the croissants are classic). Any good food tour will stop at one of these.

Golden flaky French croissants fresh from the oven on a serving plate
This is what a proper French croissant looks like — deep golden colour, visible layered construction, and a slightly curved crescent shape. The colour matters. A pale yellow croissant is undercooked and will taste floury. A mahogany-brown one has been caramelised properly and will taste nutty. Aim for the middle: the ones that look like burnished gold.

Macarons — Not the Same as Macaroons, And Worth the Trip

Quick note for American readers: the French macaron is a sandwich cookie made from almond flour, two coloured shells pressed around a ganache or buttercream filling. The American “macaroon” is a coconut mound. They are completely different things and French bakers get mildly offended when you confuse them.

The best macarons in Paris come from three places. Pierre Hermé (especially the Ispahan flavour — rose, raspberry, lychee — which changed the whole macaron industry when it launched in 1997). Ladurée (more famous, more pretty boxes, slightly less technical but still excellent). Carette (less famous, often overlooked, and arguably the best value macarons in the city).

On a food tour, you will typically get to taste 2-3 flavours from one of these bakeries, which is enough to decide whether you want to buy a box afterwards. A good box of six macarons costs €15-18 at these premium shops, or €8-10 at a good neighbourhood patisserie. Eat them within 48 hours — the shells are designed to soften slightly overnight, and by day three they are past their best.

Worth trying even if you think you do not like them: the salted caramel macaron at Pierre Hermé. It is the macaron that converts skeptics.

Elegant raspberry macaron dessert presentation from Ladurée in Paris
Ladurée’s raspberry macaron in their signature dessert presentation — the style they invented in the 1990s that turned macarons from a regional Parisian treat into a global obsession. The Champs-Élysées Ladurée is the original and worth a visit for the decor alone (pastel gold everywhere, like a Wes Anderson set), but the queues can be long. The Printemps department store location on Boulevard Haussmann has the same macarons and usually no queue.

Which Food Tour Should You Actually Book? Three Picks

I have done food tours with half a dozen operators in Paris. These three consistently deliver excellent guides, real shops (not tourist traps), and enough food that you will skip your next meal. Pick the one that matches your neighbourhood, timing, and appetite.

🥇 Paris: Montmartre Cheese, Wine & Pastry Guided Walking Tour

Price: from ~$127  |  Platform: GetYourGuide

This is the one I recommend to almost every visitor. Three hours, six tasting stops, and a small group (usually 8-12 people). The guides are mostly Parisians who have been doing these tours for years and know the neighbourhood shop owners personally — which means you get the friendly back-of-shop treatment instead of the standard tourist nod. The itinerary hits a proper fromagerie (cheese), an artisan boulangerie (bread and pastries), a wine shop with tastings, and a traditional crêperie for a savoury stop. You walk away full. The price includes everything — no hidden costs, no “optional upgrades” at each stop.

Check availability on GetYourGuide →

🥈 Paris Le Marais Walking Food Tour with Secret Food Tours

Price: from ~$103  |  Platform: Viator

Le Marais is the most diverse food neighbourhood in Paris, and Secret Food Tours is the best-known operator in the space. Three hours, 6-8 tasting stops, and the variety is unmatched — Jewish falafel from the legendary L’As du Fallafel, rugelach from a kosher bakery that has been running since 1925, French charcuterie, artisan cheese, pastries, and a proper wine tasting. The tour ends with a cheese plate in a wine bar and the guides are consistently excellent. Best pick if you want maximum food diversity in one tour.

Check availability on Viator →

🥉 A Morning in Paris Food Tour: Croissants, Baguettes & Chocolate

Price: from ~$126  |  Platform: Viator

The morning tour. Starts at 9:30am, runs until around 12:30pm, and focuses on the sweet/bread side of French food — fresh croissants from a master boulanger, baguettes from the previous year’s “Best Baguette in Paris” winner, artisan chocolate from one of the top three chocolatiers in the city. The pace is relaxed, the group is small (max 10 people), and you finish right around lunchtime so you can roll into a nearby bistro for a proper meal. My strong recommendation: book this on your first full day in Paris. It is the best possible introduction to French food.

Check availability on Viator →

Freshly baked croissant on a decorative plate with coffee for a classic French breakfast
The classic French breakfast: an espresso (black, never cappuccino at breakfast), a croissant (eaten by dipping into the coffee, which is supposedly a French thing even though no French person I know actually does it), and that’s it. No eggs, no bacon, no orange juice. If you order anything else, you are a tourist. If you order exactly this, you are a Parisian.

Pastries — The Category Beyond Croissants

French pastry goes way beyond the humble croissant. A good food tour will introduce you to a few of the classics, and you should know the names so you can order more later on your own.

Pain au chocolat is a croissant dough wrapped around two sticks of dark chocolate. In the south of France they call it a “chocolatine” — the north-south divide over this name is genuinely a thing the French argue about. It is the second most popular bakery item after the croissant and it is excellent at breakfast.

Éclair is choux pastry filled with pastry cream and topped with fondant icing. The flavours have evolved way beyond the classic chocolate — modern Parisian pâtissiers do passion fruit, caramel, pistachio, rose. L’Éclair de Génie in Le Marais is the most famous modern éclair shop in Paris.

Tarte au citron is a lemon tart, and a good one is a religious experience. The best I have ever had was at Pierre Hermé’s Saint-Germain flagship — the lemon filling is so bright and acidic it almost stings, but the shortbread base is so buttery it balances everything perfectly.

Paris-Brest is a ring-shaped choux pastry filled with praline cream. It was invented in 1910 to celebrate a bicycle race and the ring is supposed to represent the wheels. It is one of the most underrated French pastries — rich, nutty, and not nearly as famous outside France as it should be.

Saint-Honoré is the most spectacular: a base of puff pastry topped with choux puffs glazed in caramel, then filled with vanilla cream and whipped chantilly. A single Saint-Honoré can feed two people and it is almost always served at patisseries for special occasions.

Assortment of French pastries tarts and chocolates displayed at a bakery counter
A classic French patisserie display. Notice how the pastries are arranged geometrically — the French approach to food presentation is basically architectural, with every pastry meant to be looked at as much as eaten. The éclairs are aligned, the tarts are spaced evenly, and the mille-feuilles are cut with mathematical precision. If you buy three items, the shop owner will put them in a box in the same geometric order. It is a whole philosophy.

Timing — When to Actually Go on a Food Tour

Food tours in Paris run throughout the day but the three best windows are the morning (9:30am-12:30pm), the mid-afternoon (2pm-5pm), and the early evening (5pm-8pm).

Mornings are best for bakery-focused tours. The bread is freshest, the croissants are still warm from the oven, and the shop owners are in the best mood because the morning rush is done. This is the window I recommend most first-timers.

Afternoons are best for cheese and wine tours. By 2pm the cheesemongers have had their morning delivery unpacked, the wine bars are open but not yet crowded, and you can take your time at each stop without the lunch-hour pressure. Afternoon tours also happen to coincide with the French tradition of the “goûter” — the 4pm snack — which means patisseries are at their busiest and most atmospheric.

Evenings are best for wine-heavy tours and anything that ends with a sit-down tasting. The light is golden, the streets are emptying of travelers, and the bars start filling up with Parisians after work. An evening tour that ends around 8pm lets you transition directly into dinner at a nearby bistro.

Parisian café scene with patrons enjoying a sunny day near Palais Royal
Café de la Comédie on Place Colette, right next to the Palais Royal gardens. This is the kind of café where locals have their mid-afternoon espresso break — €2.20 for a coffee, no WiFi, no laptops, and absolutely no one in a hurry. Sit here for 20 minutes after a food tour and watch the world go past. It is genuinely one of the better free things to do in Paris.

Food Markets — The DIY Alternative

If a guided tour is not your style, or you want to supplement one with a DIY day, Paris has three outstanding food markets that function as free self-guided tours if you know what to look for.

Marché d’Aligre (12th arrondissement, Tuesday-Sunday mornings) is the real deal. It is a working local market where actual Parisians shop for their weekly groceries, not a performance for travelers. The covered section has a butcher, fishmonger, cheese shop, and wine merchant who has been there for 40 years and knows exactly what you should pair with what. Plan on spending 90 minutes. Go hungry.

Marché Bastille (11th arrondissement, Thursdays and Sundays on Boulevard Richard Lenoir) is bigger, slightly more touristy, but has excellent variety — 100+ stalls ranging from cheese and bread to prepared foods, oysters, and imported Italian cheeses. Best on a Sunday morning when the locals are doing their weekly shop.

Rue Cler (7th arrondissement, pedestrian street) is technically a market street rather than a market, but it functions the same way. Small specialist shops all on one block — boulangerie, fromagerie, charcuterie, greengrocer, chocolatier, wine shop. I use it constantly when I am staying in the 7th because everything you need for a picnic is within a 50-metre radius.

Bakery display case showing a variety of French pastries arranged carefully
The pastry display at a neighbourhood bakery in the 11th. What you cannot see in the photo is the ritual: customers approach the counter, study the case for 30 seconds, then point at exactly what they want without ever saying the name out loud. The shopkeeper nods, places the pastries in a box, ties it with a ribbon, and hands it over. The whole transaction takes 90 seconds and nobody exchanges more than five words. That is French bakery culture.

Chocolate — The Category Most Tourists Under-Explore

Paris has world-class chocolate shops, and they are almost completely overshadowed by the city’s pastries and macarons. This is a mistake. A good food tour will include a chocolate stop, but you should also make time for at least one dedicated chocolate visit on your own.

The big three Parisian chocolatiers are Jacques Genin (my personal favourite — the salted butter caramels at his Marais shop are life-changing), Patrick Roger (known for chocolate sculptures as much as chocolates — his flagship on Boulevard Saint-Germain has sculptures in the window that are genuinely art), and Pierre Marcolini (Belgian but with a cult Paris following, more fruit-forward than most French chocolatiers).

Under the radar: Mococha in the 5th, which sells pieces from five different small-batch chocolatiers under one roof. If you want to taste the best of Paris chocolate in one stop, this is the place. And Pralus on Rue Rambuteau, which makes the famous “Praluline” — a brioche filled with pink praline. Not technically a chocolate, but close enough and worth trying at least once.

What to buy to take home: ganache squares wrapped in paper (they travel well and last 10 days), salted caramels (they last 2-3 weeks), and chocolate bars from specific origins (Madagascar, Peru, Venezuela — these are pieces of art, not candy). Skip the filled truffles if your flight is more than 8 hours — they get weird in cabin pressure.

Neon-lit Parisian bakery showcasing macaron display through glass shelves
A modern Paris patisserie on Rue des Martyrs. The neon sign reading “bakery” is a newer affectation — traditional Paris boulangeries still use painted wooden signs, but the younger pastry chefs are leaning into a more stripped-back modern aesthetic. Behind the glass: Yann Couvreur’s signature “Merveille de Paris” pastry, which is basically an architectural structure of chocolate and hazelnut praline designed to make Instagram explode.

Wine Bars — Where to Go After Your Food Tour

A good food tour will introduce you to a few wines, and if you catch the bug you will want to continue. Here are the Paris wine bars I would send you to for a deeper dive.

Le Baron Rouge (12th, near Marché d’Aligre) is the most democratic wine bar in Paris. It serves wine from barrels, you fill your own glass (or bottle, if you bring one), and prices start at €3 a glass. On Sunday mornings they serve raw oysters from the front courtyard for €1 each. It is everyone’s favourite secret and it is impossible to keep secret.

Septime Cave (11th) is the natural wine bar version. It is owned by the same people who own the one-star Michelin restaurant Septime, and the wines are all natural, organic, or biodynamic. The bar is small, the staff are knowledgeable, and they will pour you anything interesting if you tell them what flavours you like.

Les Papilles (5th, near the Panthéon) is halfway between a wine bar and a proper restaurant. They have an unmarked shop policy — you pick any bottle off the shelf, pay retail plus €8 corkage, and they serve it to you with a set dinner menu. Best value in Paris for quality wine drinking. Reservations essential.

Elegant Parisian bakery offering a variety of fresh baked goods and pastries
An elegant bakery in Saint-Germain-des-Prés. This shop has been on the same corner since 1911 and has gone through roughly four owners — each one keeping the original tiling, the original sign, and the original recipes for the Éclair au café (coffee éclair) and the Paris-Brest. If you want to step into a time capsule of pre-war Paris food culture, walk into any bakery that has its original tiles intact. There are maybe 40 of them left in the city.

Common Mistakes I See People Make

Booking a food tour on their first morning in Paris, jet-lagged. I know I just said to book the morning tour on your first day, but only if you arrived the day before and have slept. Doing a food tour on zero sleep means you will taste nothing, remember nothing, and waste the €100+ you paid. If you are jet-lagged, sleep first, eat later.

Not eating enough beforehand. This sounds counterintuitive — “surely you should go on a food tour hungry?” — but no. Most food tours have small tastings, and if you arrive starving, you will be hangry by stop three and miserable by the end. Eat a light breakfast (a coffee and a yoghurt is fine) before a morning tour.

Trying to take a food tour in the 5th or 6th arrondissement. These are beautiful neighbourhoods but they are not actually the best food neighbourhoods. Most food tours that happen there stop at tourist-facing shops rather than real local ones. Stick to Le Marais, Montmartre, or the more obscure 11th and 12th.

Booking a tour that promises “10 food stops in 2 hours.” That is not a food tour, it is a marathon. Good food tours have 5-7 stops in 3 hours, which gives you time to taste things properly. Anything faster means they are running you through a checklist.

Colourful French macarons lined up in a bakery display case
A macaron case at a small bakery in the 9th. Notice the price tags: €1.80 each. These are what I would call “neighbourhood macarons” — not as technically perfect as Pierre Hermé’s, but two-thirds the price and 90% of the quality. If you want to taste macarons without going to the flagship shops, walk into any decent-looking local patisserie and buy one of each colour. Eat them in the park afterwards.

Food-Related Cooking Classes (For When a Tour Is Not Enough)

If a food tour awakens your inner Julia Child, the next step is a cooking class. Paris has dozens of options and the quality ranges wildly. Here are the ones I would actually book.

La Cuisine Paris (right next to the Seine, 4th) runs English-language classes in everything from croissant making to macarons to “market to table” classes where you shop at a local market first and then cook what you bought. Their croissant class is genuinely one of the best food experiences in Paris — 4 hours, you make the dough from scratch, and you take home a box of 6 fresh croissants at the end.

Le Foodist (5th) runs more upmarket dinner classes. You cook a three-course French meal with a chef, sit down to eat it with wine pairings, and generally feel like you have graduated from the tourist track into the “I could actually pass as someone who knows French food” track. €150-180 per person.

Galeries Lafayette Macaron Class (9th) is the best value macaron class in the city. 90 minutes, €45, and you make and decorate six macarons you take home. It is slightly more rushed than the dedicated pastry schools but it is 40% of the price and the results are genuinely good.

Delicious array of freshly baked French pastries and viennoiserie
Viennoiserie is the French category word for “breakfast pastries made from enriched laminated dough” — so that’s croissants, pain au chocolat, brioche, kouign-amann, and their various cousins. Despite the name (which literally means “from Vienna”), most of these are now more associated with France than Austria. The kouign-amann — a caramelised butter pastry from Brittany — is the one most travelers have never heard of and should absolutely try.

What to Pack for a Food Tour

A surprisingly short list, but each item matters.

Comfortable shoes. A 3-hour food tour means 3-5 kilometres of walking on cobblestones. Wear real shoes, not ballet flats or flip-flops.

A light jacket or cardigan. Even in summer, Paris evenings cool off suddenly, and wine shops with cellars can be 10°C year-round. You want to be able to pull on a layer without being uncomfortable.

A reusable water bottle. Tours usually provide water at stops but you will walk between them. Paris tap water is excellent and free at every public fountain.

A small bag for purchases. You will want to buy things. A saucisson here, a bar of chocolate there, a bag of macarons. Have somewhere to put them.

Cash (€20-40). Most shops take cards but some of the smaller traditional ones are card-averse or have minimum purchases. Having some cash saves awkwardness.

Appetite. As discussed, do not arrive starving, but do not arrive stuffed either. A light breakfast 2 hours before a morning tour is the sweet spot.

Display of fresh French baguettes in a rustic artisan bakery setting
The baguette rack at any good boulangerie. In Paris there are two main types of baguette: the baguette ordinaire (the cheap one, made with industrial dough, sold for about €1) and the baguette tradition (made by hand, no additives, sold for €1.20-1.50). Always ask for “une tradition, s’il vous plaît” — the extra 30 cents buys you an actual bread rather than an industrial one. This is the single most important Paris food tip I can give you.
Fresh French baguettes stacked on a wooden shelf at a Paris boulangerie
Why are there so many baguettes stacked on one shelf? Because in France, a baguette is not a “once-a-week” purchase — the average French household buys one every single day, sometimes twice. The first wave hits the bakery around 7am for breakfast. The second wave comes at 6pm for dinner. If you walk into a boulangerie at 5:55pm you will see half the neighbourhood queuing. Join them. It is one of the most authentically French experiences you can have, and it costs €1.20.
Freshly baked baguettes being brushed in a Paris bakery setting
Baguettes getting the final brush-over before going out to the counter. That brush is usually egg wash or plain water, and it is the reason the crust ends up glossy and crackly instead of dull. Bakery nerds will tell you this is the difference between a “tradition” and a supermarket knock-off — the hand-brushing, done three minutes before the bread comes out. If you are offered a piece of bread within five minutes of this step happening, say yes to everything. It is as close to perfect as bread ever gets.

Is a Food Tour Right for You?

Not everyone should book a food tour in Paris. If you are a food-obsessed person who already knows what they are looking for, you may get more out of DIY-ing the day with a solid list of restaurants and shops. If you are vegetarian or have serious dietary restrictions, the tour itineraries can be limiting (though most operators will accommodate — ask when booking).

Food tours are best for: first-time visitors who want an orientation to Paris food culture, people who love food but feel overwhelmed by the sheer number of choices, travellers who want to learn the “why” behind what they are eating, and anyone who wants to discover shops they would not find on their own. That covers most visitors.

They are less good for: expert food travellers with a specific agenda, deeply jet-lagged first-day arrivals, anyone with a strict food allergy profile, and people who hate group activities. If you fall into one of those categories, consider a private tour instead — most operators run private versions for 2-4 people at roughly double the per-person price, with complete flexibility on itinerary.

Nostalgic black and white image of a Parisian bakery stall with breads and pastries
An old Parisian bakery shot in black and white, which somehow makes the bread look even better. This is the kind of bakery that has been in the same family for 70 years and does not have a website — you find it by accident, you walk in, you are an immediate regular. Every neighbourhood in Paris has at least one of these. Part of the fun of a food tour is being introduced to the version in whichever arrondissement you are visiting.

More Paris Planning on The Abroad Guide

If food is one part of a broader Paris trip, a few other guides on The Abroad Guide will round out the plan. Our Eiffel Tower tickets guide covers how to avoid the 90-minute summit queue, which is especially useful if you want to book a food tour in the morning and a tower visit in the evening. The Louvre tickets guide is the other essential Paris planning post — and a Louvre-then-food-tour day is one of my favourite combinations for first-time visitors.

For travel logistics, the Versailles from Paris guide is the easiest day trip to slot in between a food tour day and a sightseeing day. If you are heading further afield, our French Riviera day trip guide covers the classic Eze-Monaco-Monte Carlo run, and the Normandy D-Day beaches guide is for anyone who wants the most meaningful trip in France next to an afternoon of macarons and wine.

Cosy bakery showcasing fresh bread and pastries on wooden shelves
A small Paris boulangerie with wooden shelving — the kind of bakery where the bread is still baked on-site in a basement oven instead of shipped in pre-baked from a central factory. You can tell the difference by looking at the bread itself: the on-site stuff has slightly irregular shapes (because it was hand-formed) and a genuinely thick crust. Factory bread looks too perfect to be real.

Final Thoughts — My Honest Recommendation

If you are a first-time visitor to Paris and you care even slightly about food, book a food tour. It is the best way to understand a food culture that can otherwise feel intimidating from the outside, and a good guide will unlock access to shops and producers you would never find on your own.

My specific recommendation for most people: book the Montmartre Cheese, Wine & Pastry tour on your second full day in Paris (after you have recovered from jet lag), in the morning slot if possible. Follow it with a light lunch of the leftovers you bought at the shops. Spend the afternoon at a museum. That is a near-perfect Paris day.

If you have more time and more budget, layer in a cooking class the next day. Then do a DIY market visit on the following day using what you learned. By day four you will have a genuine working knowledge of French food culture that will change how you eat for the rest of your life. That is not an exaggeration. It is the reason I keep going back.

Crafted pastries and cookies on display in a Parisian bakery with charm
A small family-run bakery in the 15th arrondissement, far from the main tourist routes. This is the kind of shop most food tours do not reach, and finding it is half the fun of exploring Paris on your own after the tour is over. If you see a bakery with no English menu, no tourist clientele, and a queue of locals at 8am — that is where you want to eat.
Stylish man choosing pastries at a Paris bakery counter
The French approach to buying pastries: one person, one long look at the glass case, exactly one pointed finger, and then a polite nod. No indecision out loud, no phone scrolling while the queue behind waits, no sample requests. If there is one single rule for not looking like a tourist in a Paris bakery, it is this — know what you want before you walk in, and point. The baker will respect you for it and might even throw in a little extra.

FAQ — Short Answers to the Questions I Get Most

How much do Paris food tours cost? Most range from $90 to $170 per person for a 3-hour walking tour with 5-8 tastings. The cheaper end (~$90) is usually group-sized (12+ people). The pricier end (~$170) is small-group or more premium food stops.

Do I need to know French? No. Almost all food tours aimed at travelers are conducted in English, and the shop owners are used to English-speaking visitors.

What if I have food allergies or dietary restrictions? Tell the operator when you book. Most will accommodate gluten-free, vegetarian, or dairy-free guests with substitutes at each stop, but severe allergies to nuts or seafood can be harder.

How much food do you actually eat on a tour? Enough for a full meal. Most tours include 5-8 tastings, each substantial enough that by the end you will be skipping your next meal. Do not plan to eat lunch right after a 3-hour tour.

Are the wines included? Usually yes, but check before booking. A good cheese/wine tour includes 3-5 wine tastings. A bread/pastry tour typically includes just coffee or tea.

Is tipping included? In France, service is technically included and tipping is not expected in the way it is in America. For food tours, a €5-10 tip per person at the end if you enjoyed the tour is appreciated but not required.

Can I book privately for my group? Yes. Most operators run private versions for 2-4 people at roughly double the per-person cost. Worth it if you want full flexibility or if you have dietary restrictions that would be awkward in a group.

What is the best first food tour in Paris? The Montmartre Cheese, Wine & Pastry tour (my top pick above). Small group, excellent guides, real shops, and a pace that lets you actually taste things properly.

Delicious French pastries displayed with price tags at a bakery counter
A typical Paris patisserie display with price tags. This is the closing move of any good food tour — after three hours of tastings and explanations, your guide drops you off at a neighbourhood bakery and hands you a list of “must-tries” to buy for later. Most people spend another €20-30 at this final stop. Budget for it. The pastries are the souvenirs.
Paris market bakery with macarons in various flavours on display
A final macaron shot, this time from a covered market stall rather than a flagship shop. Covered market macarons are usually a third of the price of Pierre Hermé’s, and while they are not as technically refined, they are a great way to taste a lot of flavours quickly. Buy six, split them with whoever you are travelling with, rate them, write down your favourite, and try to find the same one at the flagship shop the next day. It is a genuinely fun afternoon activity.
Paris storefront with colourful assortment of macarons
Walking past any Paris patisserie window around 10am, you will see this exact display being rotated — the overnight macarons are being brought out from the chill room, arranged by colour, and set into position for the day’s customers. The staff at these shops learn to arrange by flavour group almost by instinct: pastels in front, bright colours in back, seasonal specials on the side. It is unofficial but universal.