Paris never really leaves the travel conversation, but this spring gives the city an especially easy way back into the spotlight.

The French Open runs May 18 through June 7, bringing tennis fans, fashion watchers, and Paris dreamers back to Roland-Garros, one of the sport’s four Grand Slam stages. Opening Week runs May 18 to 22 before the main draw brings the world’s top players to the clay courts in western Paris. For anyone watching from the U.S., the French Open is a simple reminder of how easily Paris pulls people in.

One minute you are following a match on clay, and the next you are thinking about cafés, long walks, good bread, summer dresses, and whether this is the year you finally book the trip. The French capital remains one of Europe’s most in-demand city destinations, and its appeal stretches far beyond monuments. Travelers want the food, the fashion, the museums, the neighborhoods, the terrace culture, and the everyday rituals. During French Open season, that interest only gets sharper. The good news is that you can sample parts of that energy in the U.S. before booking the real trip.

Why Everyone Wants To Go To Paris Right Now

The Cultural Pull

Paris holds several fantasies at once, which is part of its power. It can be the fashion capital with sharp tailoring, couture houses, and street style that looks easy even when it clearly took effort. The city can also be a food destination with bakeries, wine bars, markets, long lunches, and desserts people plan entire afternoons around.

Moreover, it can be the art city, where travelers move from the Louvre to smaller galleries, then into neighborhoods that have inspired writers, painters, performers, and designers for generations. That range keeps Paris high on travel wish lists. Many travelers start with the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, or a café table, but the stronger pull often comes from how the day feels. You step out for a pastry and end up lingering in the neighborhood. A quick museum visit turns into lunch, shopping, and a long walk with no real agenda. Paris makes beauty feel folded into daily life.

What’s Driving Demand Right Now

The French Open gives that interest a timely spring hook. Tennis brings a different kind of Paris into view, one with red clay, crisp style, sunlit stands, and a city moving toward summer. It also gives U.S. travelers a reason to tap into Paris energy before the actual trip happens.

Paris moves through 2026 with its global appeal firmly intact. Paris je t’aime, the city’s official tourism office, expected 37.4 million tourists in Greater Paris in 2025, after stronger projected demand than both 2023 and 2024. That interest reaches far beyond monuments.

What Makes Paris Feel Like Paris

Eiffel tower and streets of Paris in spring.
Elena Zolotova / Getty Images

The Food Culture

A Paris-inspired day needs more than one croissant and a cute table. Food in Paris connects to the rest of the day. Morning coffee, a bakery run, a market stop, a long lunch, a glass of wine, and dessert all become part of the same experience. That is the standard for the U.S. version too. The best Paris-at-home day should give travelers food with context. A bakery works better when it sits near bookstores, galleries, parks, shops, or a neighborhood worth walking through. The point is to build a day that moves, lingers, and tastes good.

The Neighborhoods And Street Life

Paris gets much of its feeling from the way it invites people to wander. People read in parks, walk along the Seine, shop in small boutiques, sit outside cafés, and turn ordinary errands into small moments of style and pleasure. The neighborhoods shift as you move, from grand avenues to narrow streets, from museum corridors to market blocks. That same feeling can translate in the U.S. when a place has enough density to carry the day. A single stop rarely does the work. A stronger preview gives travelers food, art, walking, people-watching, and somewhere to sit long enough to let the mood settle.

The Design, Aesthetics, And Atmosphere

Paris is deeply visual. Its appeal lives in storefronts, sidewalks, perfume counters, pastry cases, hotel lobbies, apartment balconies, museum rooms, and café terraces. Impressionism originated in and around Paris in the late 19th century, which helps explain why the city still feels tied to light, atmosphere, and the art of noticing daily life. That visual identity matters for the at-home version. A Paris-inspired experience should have texture: old buildings, art, good food, thoughtful design, and room to slow down. The goal is a day that feels considered.

The Rituals And Experiences

Paris runs on rituals that travelers love to borrow. Morning coffee, a bakery stop, museum time, a long lunch, a bookstore browse, an apéritif, and dinner that stretches. During French Open season, tennis can join that list, especially for travelers watching Roland-Garros from home. The best U.S. version turns those rituals into a full day. Watch a match, visit a museum, take a French class, book dinner, or find a film screening. The more the pieces connect, the closer the day gets to the feeling people want from Paris.

Where To Experience Paris Culture In The U.S.

The Dakota building overlooking Central Park, New York City, NY.
Sergio Amiti / Getty Images

New York, New York — French Culture, Film, And Bastille Day Energy

Start with the city that can keep up with Paris’ pace. L’Alliance New York gives the day a strong French cultural backbone through language classes, film screenings, talks, and public events. In July, its Bastille Day celebration brings French food, music, and street energy to Madison Avenue, turning the city into one of the country’s most visible places to celebrate French culture.

From there, the rest of the day almost writes itself. Pick up a pastry, catch an arthouse film, browse a bookstore, sit too long over lunch, and let the city do what it does best. New York has the density this kind of preview needs. You can move from food to art to fashion to wine with ease.

Washington, D.C. — French Art, Embassy Culture, And A Polished Paris Mood

For a more refined Paris preview, follow the art and embassy culture. The National Gallery of Art gives visitors a strong Impressionist thread, while Villa Albertine connects the U.S. to French arts, education, language, and cultural exchange through offices in ten cities across the country.

Make it a slow, beautiful day. Start with paintings, take a proper lunch, then look for a French film screening, lecture, or cultural event in the evening. This version suits travelers who want Paris with more museum light than street buzz. It gives you the thoughtful side of the city: art, ideas, diplomacy, and the pleasure of looking closely.

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania — Rodin, Gardens, And A Parisian Museum Pause

For travelers who want one strong French art anchor, the Rodin Museum does the work beautifully. The museum describes itself as the only dedicated Rodin Museum outside France and houses one of the world’s great collections of works by Auguste Rodin in a Beaux-Arts-style building and garden on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. Go for the sculpture, walk the Parkway, find a long lunch, and let the day stay unhurried. It captures a very specific Paris pleasure: entering a beautiful space, slowing down, and letting art set the pace.

Chicago, Illinois — Impressionism, Language, And A Big-City Café Day

A strong Paris-at-home day needs scale, culture, and enough neighborhood life to keep things moving. The Art Institute of Chicago brings the French art connection through its Impressionist collection, while the Alliance Française de Chicago keeps language classes, events, and French cultural programming active beyond the museum walls.

The fun here is in building contrast. Spend the morning with paintings, then step back into a city with its own architecture, restaurants, lakefront walks, and neighborhood energy. Add a French lunch, a pastry stop, or an evening event, and Chicago becomes a strong Midwest answer to Paris at home. It gives you art and urban energy while staying entirely itself.

New Orleans, Louisiana — French Influence With Its Own Soul

This one belongs in the story for a different reason. New Orleans carries French influence through Louisiana history, Creole culture, architecture, food, music, and public celebration. Its French Quarter gives travelers a U.S. entry point into a French-rooted culture that became something unmistakably local.

A Paris-inspired traveler should come here for the French connection, then let New Orleans be New Orleans. Walk the French Quarter, notice the balconies and courtyards, eat slowly, listen to music, and pay attention to how culture moves through the streets. It gives travelers another branch of the French cultural story, full of heat, memory, and its own kind of elegance.

Build Your Paris Day — Passport-Free

Morning: Start With A Neighborhood Walk

Begin with a French bakery, but make it a real pause. Order the croissant, the pain au chocolat, or the tart. Sit down. Let the coffee last longer than five minutes. After that, walk through a neighborhood with bookstores, galleries, boutiques, parks, or older architecture. Paris-inspired energy needs a little wandering.

Afternoon: Add Food And Culture

By afternoon, add the cultural piece. Visit an Impressionist gallery, take a French class, browse a museum shop, or watch a French Open match with friends. During Roland-Garros season, tennis gives the day a timely spark. Pair it with a café lunch, a casual court session, or a little clay-court style, and the Paris connection starts to feel natural.

Evening: Let It Stretch Into Night

End the day with dinner and a little movement after dark. Book a French restaurant, watch a French or French-language film, attend a cultural event, or stay out for wine and dessert. A Paris-inspired day works best when it unfolds in chapters. Give it a beginning, a long middle, and an evening that lingers.

What You’ll Only Get By Going To Paris

Arc de Triomphe in Paris at sunset.
querbeet / Getty Images

The Scale And Immersion

A U.S. preview can give travelers the flavors, references, and spark. Paris gives the full immersion. The Seine, the arrondissements, the museum density, the markets, the Métro, the café terraces, and the sound of French around you all day create something that belongs to the city itself.

The Cultural Nuances You Can’t Replicate

The small details hit differently on the ground. The way people order, the way they sit, the way neighborhoods change from morning to night, and the way style appears in daily life all feel different in Paris. Roland-Garros carries that same local texture. Watching from the U.S. can make you want the trip. Being there gives you the clay, the crowd, the city, and the feeling behind the fantasy.

When It’s Time To Book The Actual Trip

A domestic preview can help you understand what actually pulls you toward Paris. Maybe it is food. Maybe it is art. Maybe it is tennis, fashion, language, Black Paris history, café life, or the simple pleasure of walking through a beautiful city with nowhere urgent to be.

Start Here, Then Go There

How To Use This As A Preview Trip

Think of the U.S. version as the first taste. It can show you which part of Paris you want more of before you plan the real itinerary. A bakery day, a museum day, a French film night, or a Roland-Garros watch party can all point you toward a more personal trip later.

Planning Your Future Visit To Paris

Once the real trip is on the calendar, build around the experience that excites you most. French Open travelers should plan around tournament dates and tickets. Art lovers should leave room for major museums and smaller galleries. Food travelers should look at markets, wine bars, neighborhood restaurants, and bakeries beyond the famous names. The at-home version gives you the first taste. Paris gives you the full story.