Notre-Dame de Paris seen across the Seine at golden hour, on the Île de la Cité, 4th arrondissement of Paris
75004 · The 4th arrondissement of Paris

Where Paris
began

Notre-Dame and the two river islands, Place des Vosges and the Hôtel de Ville, the lower Marais and its Jewish quarter. The 4th is the city's medieval heart — where almost every Paris story starts.

Photo: Notre-Dame de Paris · Pierre Blaché / Pexels
Things to do

Tickets & experiences in the 4th

The 4th packs more history into a few hundred metres than almost anywhere on earth. A hand-picked selection of guided walks, island tours and tastings, most with free cancellation.

★ Most booked

Île de la Cité & Sainte-Chapelle

A guided walk around the island where Paris was born — the exterior of Notre-Dame, the dazzling stained glass of Sainte-Chapelle and the Conciergerie — often paired with a Seine cruise.

from €49Book now
Skip the line

Sainte-Chapelle & Conciergerie

Pre-reserved tickets and a guide for two Gothic masterpieces a few steps west of Notre-Dame — the jewel-box chapel of Saint Louis and the medieval royal palace turned revolutionary prison.

from €39Book now
Food tour

Marais food tour

Eat your way through the lower Marais and Rue des Rosiers — falafel, cheese, pastries and the city's most famous Jewish quarter, with tastings as you go.

from €99Book now
Walking tour

Le Marais walking tour

Mansions, hidden courtyards and the grandeur of Place des Vosges — a guided stroll through the lower Marais, its history and its boutiques.

from €29Book now
Seine cruise

Seine river cruise

The islands are at their best from the water. Glide beneath the 4th's historic bridges past Notre-Dame, the Île Saint-Louis and the Louvre on a classic sightseeing cruise.

from €17Book now
Tickets & passes

Museum tickets & passes

Timed entries and multi-day passes for the great collections nearby — the Louvre, the Orsay and more, all an easy walk or short ride from the islands.

from €32Book now
Discover

Two islands & the lower Marais

No other corner of Paris feels quite like the 4th: two inhabited islands in the middle of the Seine, the grandest square in the city, and the medieval lanes of the Marais and its Jewish quarter.

Île Saint-Louis

A 17th-century island village frozen in time — one main street of ice-cream shops, galleries and hôtels particuliers, ringed by the most romantic quays in Paris.

Place des Vosges

The oldest planned square in Paris (1612), a perfect arcaded rectangle of rose-brick pavilions around a garden — with Victor Hugo's house in one corner.

Rue des Rosiers & the Pletzl

The heart of historic Jewish Paris — falafel counters, delis and bakeries threading the liveliest little street in the Marais.

The quays & bridges

Walk the UNESCO-listed riverbanks and the Pont Marie and Pont Louis-Philippe — booksellers, sunset views and the Seine at its most cinematic.

Shopping & the BHV

The great BHV Marais department store, the antique dealers of the Village Saint-Paul and the boutiques of Rue Saint-Antoine and Rue François Miron.

Beaubourg & the Pompidou

Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers's radical "inside-out" landmark presides over a sloping piazza. Note: the Centre Pompidou is closed for renovation until 2030 — admire it from outside for now.

Where to eat

Iconic tables of the 4th

From the most famous ice cream in France to a Michelin-starred Ducasse bistro and the best falafel in Paris, the islands and the Marais are a feast. A few addresses to plan around.

Ice cream · Since 1954

Berthillon

31 Rue Saint-Louis en l'Île

The most celebrated glacier in France, made on the Île Saint-Louis since 1954. Join the queue for intense fruit sorbets and rich, small-batch ice creams.

Falafel · Rue des Rosiers

L'As du Fallafel

34 Rue des Rosiers

The legendary green-fronted falafel counter of the Pletzl — generous, garlicky and worth the line. The benchmark by which all Marais falafel is judged.

French bistro · Michelin star

Benoit

20 Rue Saint-Martin

A jewel of a 1912 bistro, now under Alain Ducasse and Michelin-starred — classic dishes (cassoulet, soufflé) served in a gleaming Belle-Époque room.

€€€€
Brasserie · Alsatian

Bofinger

5-7 Rue de la Bastille

A glorious Belle-Époque brasserie under a stained-glass dome, serving choucroute, oysters and seafood platters since 1864 — pure old-Paris theatre.

€€€
Burgundian · Bistro

Au Bourguignon du Marais

52 Rue François Miron

A warm Marais bistro devoted to Burgundy — beef bourguignon, escargots and a serious wine list, on a pretty medieval street near Saint-Gervais.

€€€
Tea room · All day

Le Loir dans la Théière

3 Rue des Rosiers

A beloved, mismatched-armchairs tea room famous for towering meringue tarts and weekend brunch — the cosiest stop in the Marais.

€€
Tourist guide

Must-see places in the 4th arrondissement

A cathedral, two islands and the grandest square in the city — the landmarks worth building your day around.

Cathedral · Free entry

Notre-Dame de Paris

The Gothic masterpiece on the Île de la Cité, magnificently reopened in December 2024. Entry is free; reserve a timed slot online to skip the longest queues. The bell towers are a separate paid visit.

Island · Free

Île Saint-Louis

A serene 17th-century island of elegant townhouses, artisan shops and Berthillon ice cream, wrapped by the loveliest quays in the city. Made for an aimless wander.

Square · Free

Place des Vosges

The oldest planned square in Paris, a symmetrical masterpiece of arcades and rose-brick pavilions around a leafy garden — and a perfect picnic spot.

Museum · Free

Maison de Victor Hugo

The apartment where the author of Les Misérables lived, in a corner of Place des Vosges. The permanent collection is free — a charming literary detour.

Monument · City hall

Hôtel de Ville

Paris's spectacular neo-Renaissance city hall, fronting a grand pedestrian square that hosts seasonal events. Free guided tours and exhibitions run regularly.

Memorial · Free

Mémorial de la Shoah

France's moving Holocaust memorial and museum in the Marais, with the Wall of Names and a permanent exhibition. Free entry; a place for quiet reflection.

Before you go

Weather in the 4th arrondissement

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Get your bearings

The 75004 (4th arrondissement) on the map

Every monument, island, museum and table of the 4th on one interactive map. Filter by category, or click a place to locate it and open its links.

Map © Leaflet · © OpenStreetMap contributors · © CARTO
Orientation

Understanding Paris & its transport

Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements that spiral outward clockwise from the centre, like a snail. The lower the number, the more central — and the 4th is as central as it gets, straddling the Seine on the Right Bank and the two islands at the very middle of the city.

It is compact and gloriously walkable: Notre-Dame, the islands, the Marais and Place des Vosges are all within twenty minutes of one another on foot. The Métro serves every edge, and the giant Châtelet–Les Halles RER hub sits on the western border.

Since 2025 the system has been simplified: paper tickets are gone, replaced by the contactless Navigo Easy card or your phone. A single Métro/RER ticket is now a flat fare, and a day pass quickly pays for itself if you ride often.

For door-to-door directions, the Bonjour RATP and Citymapper apps are the most reliable companions.

Métro / RER single€2.55
Bus / tram single€2.05
Day pass (unlimited)€12.30
Navigo Week pass~€31
Airport ticket (CDG/Orly)€14
Navigo Easy card€2 (reusable)
Getting around

How to reach the 4th arrondissement

At the very centre of Paris, the 75004 is one of the easiest places to reach — and a joy to explore on foot. Here are the essentials.

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By metro

  • 1 Right Bank Hôtel de Ville · Saint-Paul
  • 7 Riverside Pont Marie · Sully–Morland
  • 11 North Hôtel de Ville · Rambuteau
  • 4 On the island Cité
🚆

By RER & hub

  • 1471114 Châtelet
  • BC Across the river Saint-Michel–Notre-Dame
  • ABD Hub Châtelet–Les Halles
  • Gare de Lyon ~8 min by metro
✈️

From the airports

  • Orly ~45 min
  • Roissy–Charles de Gaulle 45–60 min
  • Le Bourget 30–40 min
  • Beauvais 1h15–1h30

The Paris Métro at a glance

One of the world's densest networks — 16 lines, over 300 stations, a train every 2–4 minutes. You're never far from a station.
1 2 3 3b 4 5 6 7 7b 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
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Colour & number coded. Each line has a unique number and colour. Follow the line colour and the name of the terminus in your direction — that's how platforms are signposted.
⏱️
Frequent. Trains run roughly every 2 minutes at peak and 4–8 minutes off-peak, from ~5:30 am to ~1:15 am (2:15 am Fri–Sat).
🔄
Free transfers. Change lines as often as you like within the métro/RER on a single ticket, valid up to 2 hours, as long as you don't exit the gates.
🚶
Walkable. From the islands you can reach the Louvre, the Latin Quarter and the Bastille on foot in 10–15 minutes — often faster than the metro.
📍
For the 4th: Hôtel de Ville (lines 1 & 11) and Saint-Paul (line 1) are the handiest stops; Cité (line 4) puts you on the Île de la Cité by Notre-Dame.
📱
Apps. Bonjour RATP and Citymapper give live routes, platform exits and disruptions — far easier than paper maps.
Tickets: the paper ticket is gone — load journeys onto a contactless Navigo Easy card (€2) or your phone.
Watch your belongings around Notre-Dame, Châtelet and on busier lines; keep bags in front of you.
Good to know

Frequently asked questions

What is there to see in the 4th arrondissement (75004)?
The 4th is the historic heart of Paris: the eastern Île de la Cité with Notre-Dame, the whole Île Saint-Louis, the Hôtel de Ville, the Tour Saint-Jacques, Place des Vosges with the Maison de Victor Hugo, the church of Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis and the lower Marais with its Jewish quarter around Rue des Rosiers. The Centre Pompidou stands here too, though it is closed for renovation until 2030.
Is Notre-Dame open, and do I need a ticket?
Yes — Notre-Dame reopened in December 2024 and entry is free, in line with French policy for cathedrals. There is no admission ticket; a free timed reservation on the official site (notredamedeparis.fr) is optional but strongly recommended in peak season. Beware third-party sites selling "skip-the-line tickets" for entry — only the bell towers are a separate paid visit.
Is the Centre Pompidou open?
No. The Centre Pompidou closed on 22 September 2025 for a five-year renovation and is due to reopen around 2030. You can still admire the famous "inside-out" building and its piazza from outside, but there are no interior visits during the works; parts of the collection tour partner venues through the "Constellation" programme.
How do I get to the 4th arrondissement?
Metro line 1 stops at Hôtel de Ville and Saint-Paul, line 7 at Pont Marie and Sully–Morland, and line 11 at Hôtel de Ville and Rambuteau. Cité (line 4) is on the island itself. The Châtelet–Les Halles hub (metro 1, 4, 7, 11, 14 and RER A, B, D) is on the western edge, and RER B and C stop at Saint-Michel–Notre-Dame just across the river.
Where should I stay in the 75004?
The 4th is one of the most romantic, central bases in Paris — on or beside the river islands, steps from Notre-Dame, the Marais and the Latin Quarter. Boutique hotels cluster on the Île Saint-Louis and around Saint-Paul and the Hôtel de Ville. Use the booking engine above to compare options for your dates.
Before you go

Plan your stay

A few practical essentials to make your visit to the 4th arrondissement smooth and stress-free.

🗓️

Best time to visit

Spring and early autumn are loveliest. For Notre-Dame, early morning or evening sees the shortest waits; the islands are magical at dusk when the day-trippers leave.

🎫

Book ahead

Reserve a free timed slot for Notre-Dame and pre-book Sainte-Chapelle and Conciergerie tickets in season. Place des Vosges, the Maison de Victor Hugo and the Shoah memorial are free.

💶

Money & tipping

Cards are accepted almost everywhere (a little cash helps at Berthillon and falafel counters). Service is included by law; rounding up for great service is appreciated, never expected.

🥐

Eat like a local

Falafel on Rue des Rosiers for lunch, a Berthillon cone on the island, and a classic brasserie or Marais bistro for dinner. Many Marais spots stay open on Sundays.

🕒

Opening hours

Notre-Dame opens early; most museums close on Mondays (some on Tuesdays). Lunch is 12–2:30 pm, dinner from 7:30 pm. The Jewish quarter is quieter on Saturdays.

🛟

Useful to know

Tap water is safe and free in restaurants (une carafe d'eau). Emergency number is 112. Dress modestly (shoulders and knees covered) to enter Notre-Dame.

Plan your trip

Book with trusted partners

Compare stays, tours and experiences across the platforms travellers know best.

The Visit75 network

Explore the 20 arrondissements of Paris

Each Paris arrondissement has its own guide. Hover the map to reveal a district's name, then click to open its dedicated site — you are currently in the 4th.

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