An independent report on living in Paris, scored across cost, safety, weather, jobs, healthcare, education, transport, culture, and remote work readiness. No tourism board input. No paid placement.
Paris scored 7.9 on the everycity index in 2026. A central one bedroom rents for 1,520 EUR ($1,670 a month). A single resident lives on $2,840 all in.
The other headline numbers: safety scores 6.4 on the same 10 point scale we apply to Singapore, Tokyo, and Dubai; internet speed runs a median 240 Mbps; the city has 240 coworking spaces; French income tax progresses 0 to 45 percent, with CSG and social charges adding 7.5 to 17.2 percent, and an exceptional contribution above 250,000 euros adding 3 to 4 percent; and the climate is oceanic, Cfb under Koppen, with summer highs at 77F and winter lows at 37F.
This report runs through twelve categories in order, each led with the number and followed by the why. For comparison view, start with one of the published pairs: Paris vs London, Paris vs Berlin, Paris vs Amsterdam. For the country level read see France; for the regional table see Europe.
The data feeding this report comes from our methodology page, with primary sources cited at the bottom. Numbers are May 2026 unless stated otherwise. Currency is local with USD conversion in parentheses where the original is not the dollar. The next refresh ships August 2026.
Twelve line items priced in May 2026 for a single resident in a central one bedroom. Family of four numbers run 2.4 times the single figure.
Total monthly all in for a single resident in a central one bedroom: $2,840. For the family of four equivalent, expect $6,520 before international school fees, which is the line item that changes the math.
For international transfers and multi currency accounts during the move, Wise remains the cleanest tool we have tested. The rate it gives on a USD to EUR conversion is consistently within 0.4 percent of the mid market rate, which on a $5,000 transfer is the difference between paying $18 and paying $110 at most banks. Booking the first month in a serviced apartment through Booking.com while you find a long term contract is the standard play. See the 2026 cost of living report for the city by city table.
Three quiet costs new residents underestimate: the deposit on the rental, which typically runs one to two months upfront upfront; the agent fee, which lands at one half month rent in most regulated zones; and the first time furniture round, which sits at $4,200 to $8,500 even when you cut hard. Budget the move at 1.4 times the headline rent, and pad another month of all in costs as a buffer for the first six weeks. The relocation checklist has the line by line.
Reader question we receive often: how do Paris costs compare on a purchasing power basis. The cost converter tool takes a salary in your home city and tells you what equivalent number you need in Paris to maintain the same standard of living, adjusted for tax and currency. Bookmark it before you accept the offer.
Paris scored 6.4 overall. The breakdown by axis matters more than the headline.
Paris records 1,860 index crimes per 100,000 residents in 2025 across all categories combined. The four numbers above split that figure by context, weighted by violent versus property and by time of day. Compared to the rest of the index, Paris sits in the moderate band across the four safety axes, with the after dark score the most variable.
The safest cities ranking places Paris alongside the cities at similar safety profile. For the cross check, London scores 7.4 and New York scores 6.8 on the same axes. The solo female safety ranking and family safety ranking drill into those specific axes.
Paris records crime rates above the European Union median and well above the cities at the top of the safety index. Pickpocketing is the dominant complaint, concentrated at Metro stations and tourist sites. The 7th, 8th, and 16th arrondissements run safety profiles closer to 7.8; the 18th, 19th, and 20th arrondissements run closer to 5.4 on the same axes. The 2024 Olympics reduced reported street crime for the calendar year by an estimated 22 percent through visible police presence, with rates partially reverting in 2025.
Practical notes for new residents: avoid the standard precaution failures, register with your embassy if you are a long stay holder, and carry an international policy from SafetyWing for the first six months while local cover gets sorted. The full safety methodology is on our methodology page.
The four categories that build the overall safety score are: violent crime, property crime, traffic safety, and emergency response time. Paris is strongest on violent crime against the person, which remains low by global capital standards and weakest on property crime in the Metro network and on tourist corridors, which mirrors most cities of similar density. The Paris safety deep dive walks the four categories with the underlying police statistics.
oceanic, Cfb under Koppen. Summer highs at 77F, winter lows at 37F. Rainy days average 109 a year, spread evenly across months.
The best months to live in Paris, in our reader survey, are May, June, September. The worst are August for closures, January for grey skies. For a city that matches your home weather, see the climate match tool. For seasonal travel within the same climate band, the warm winter ranking and the mild summer ranking are the standard cross references.
Paris apartments built before 1960 typically lack functional air conditioning, which is the variable that matters in the June 2022 onward heat wave pattern. Summer temperatures have exceeded 95F in five of the last seven years. Confirm AC or window orientation before signing a Haussmann era flat. The Paris housing stock guide tracks the age cohorts and what each requires.
Air quality has become a separate variable that residents read seasonally. The Paris air quality report tracks PM2.5 and ozone month by month with the relevant comparison cities on the same chart. If you have asthma or a young child, that report is the one to read before signing.
Climate adaptation is a longer conversation. The 2024 to 2026 trend lines for Paris match the regional pattern: hotter summers, wetter winters, more frequent extreme events. The climate resilient cities article ranks the 50 cities we track on flood, fire, and heat dome exposure. Residents planning a decade or longer should read the relevant chapter before buying.
Salary medians are May 2026, sourced from Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, and OECD wage data. Tax figures are from the official revenue authority.
Note on tax: French income tax progresses from 0 percent up to 45 percent above 168,994 euros, plus 7.5 to 17.2 percent CSG and social charges on most income, with an additional 3 to 4 percent surtax above 250,000 euros. The combined effective rate on a 100,000 euro salary runs 35 to 38 percent. The published top rate is rarely the effective rate paid. Run your number against your actual income, not the headline. The tax calculator tool is the cleanest way to model the take home on a real offer. For benchmarking against other cities, the highest paying cities ranking covers the major destinations on one chart.
Working culture in Paris is its own variable. Hours, the role of unions, the working language, and the weight given to international experience all shift the day to day inside the same salary band. The Paris working culture guide covers the specifics. The shorter version: tech roles run 38 to 42 hours under the 35 hour week framework, finance runs 50 to 60 hours, the legal protections including the right to disconnect are real and enforced, working language is French with English functional in finance and tech but a deeper requirement in any government adjacent role. The legal protections vary as widely. Negotiating the contract before signing, the boring kind of advice that pays for itself within a year, applies more in some cities than others.
Career mobility for the relocated worker, particularly the foreign passport holder, is worth pricing in before signing. Some cities reward foreign experience and treat the working language as a soft currency. Others penalize the foreign passport holder at every promotion gate. The career growth ranking tracks the pattern across cities in this issue. The visa to citizenship guide covers the multi year naturalization timeline most worker visa holders eventually consider.
One more lens: the dual income household. The spouse work permit story shapes the whole relocation. Check whether the visa class you are entering grants automatic work rights to the partner, or whether the partner needs separate sponsorship. The spouse visa guide covers the 30 most common destination cities. Two thirds of the families we surveyed in 2026 underestimated this variable and lost three to nine months of dual income because of it.
Eight neighborhoods, each with the rent figure and a one line verdict.
The neighborhood scores feed our neighborhood matcher tool, which takes your lifestyle inputs and returns the right area within Paris on a 1 to 10 fit. For comparable neighborhood guides in other cities see London neighborhoods, Tokyo neighborhoods, and Paris neighborhoods.
For long term rentals beyond the first month, the local equivalent of Idealista or PropertyFinder is what residents use. The agent fee and deposit conventions vary, the relocation checklist covers the documentation you will need.
Two neighborhood rules of thumb the data supports. First, the second ring out from the geographic center is almost always the best value: cheap enough to feel like a discount, central enough to feel central. Second, the neighborhood directly adjacent to the most expensive tends to gentrify next. Apply those two rules across the eight Paris neighborhoods above and you can usually pick the right one in fifteen minutes.
Healthcare scored 8.7 on a 10 point scale. The methodology weights access, cost, and outcomes equally.
France runs Securite sociale, the universal public system, covering 70 to 80 percent of standard costs; private mutuelles cover the rest. Outcome metrics place France in the top tier globally for cardiology, oncology, and overall life expectancy. The catch: waiting times for non urgent specialist care can run 4 to 12 weeks in the public stream, with private routes available at $80 to $220 per consultation.
For new arrivals: pick up an interim international policy from SafetyWing or Cigna Global while residency papers process. Once you are on the local system, switch. The double cover is the most common mistake new residents make, and it costs an extra $600 to $1,400 a year. The expat insurance guide covers the trade off in detail.
Dental and vision typically sit outside the main coverage. Dental cleaning runs $80 to $160, a filling $180 to $320, an annual eye exam $90 to $140. Cross check the Paris dental care guide before booking. For prescription medication, the local pharmacy network beats anything you can import: bring two months of supply and switch to the local equivalent on arrival.
Mental health services are typically the slowest stream in the public system. Expect three to nine month waits for a non urgent appointment with a psychiatrist; private cover collapses that to two to four weeks at $130 to $280 per session. The expat mental health guide covers what private and public look like across our top 50 cities, and which insurance plans cover therapy without a 50 percent copay.
The international school option, the local school option, and the cost of each.
Paris hosts the American School of Paris, the British School of Paris, Ecole Jeannine Manuel, the International School of Paris, plus 12 IB schools. Local schools, public bilingual, and the lycee international system offer strong alternatives at no cost Fees run $24,000 to $42,000 a year for the top international schools. Local schools, where they accept foreign children, are typically free or nominal in cost, with quality varying by district. The international school route is the standard for families planning to leave again within a five year window.
The family rating for Paris weights school quality, park access, safety, healthcare, and the cost of a three bedroom flat. See the best cities for families ranking for the full table. The relocating with kids guide covers the school admissions calendar, which in most cities outside the United States runs February through April for September entry.
Beyond school, the family experience in Paris is shaped by what is free. Public parks, public libraries, public swimming pools, and free museum admission are the four amenities that change a family budget the most. Top tier cities offer all four. Lower tier cities charge for two of them. Track the city you are considering against this checklist before you sign a school contract. The family budget guide models the realistic monthly all in figure for a family of four across 30 destination cities, and Babbel remains the cleanest entry point for the parent who wants a working level of the local language inside six months.
For the working couple, on site daycare runs another $1,200 to $2,400 a month before any government subsidy is applied. The Paris childcare guide works through the application timeline and the wait list lottery, which in some cities arrives as a literal lottery.
University, for the family with teenagers, opens a separate calculation. Tuition for non residents at top public universities ranges from $2,000 a year to $38,000 in the cities with the most aggressive premium tier. The cities for university students ranking walks the trade off between cost, prestige, and post graduation work permits. Plan two to three years out: most application cycles open eighteen months before enrollment.
Walkability 9.5, transit 9.7, bike 7.8. Car needed: No. The Metro covers 308 stations across 16 lines plus RER suburban rail.
The transit pass costs $95 a month for unlimited rides on the public network. The bike network has expanded by 15 to 40 percent in Paris across the last three years depending on the segment, with a continued push toward separated lanes in the central districts. For relocation scouting trips and the first two weeks before your local card arrives, a rental from Discover Cars covers most needs at $35 to $60 a day.
Airport access is the variable most travelers underweight. From a central one bedroom to the main international airport, expect 45 to 75 minutes by RER B to Charles de Gaulle by transit and 35 to 90 minutes depending on traffic by taxi depending on the time of day. The Paris airport access guide walks the routes with the actual costs and times. For frequent flyers, the best airport cities ranking tracks connectivity and lounge density across the 100 cities that matter for the global business traveler.
One transport note specific to Paris: the long commute is the variable most relocations get wrong. The pay rise from a job in the most expensive neighborhood is often eaten by the time and cost of getting there from the affordable one. Run the math on door to door minutes, not headline rent. The commute calculator takes a neighborhood pair and returns the actual daily minutes plus monthly cost.
The food signatures, the nightlife rating, the cultural calendar.
Food in Paris: the deepest restaurant culture in Europe with 119 Michelin starred establishments across the metro, $12 lunch menus at neighborhood bistros, $260 multi course tasting at the top tier, and the boulangerie network that produces fresh bread at 6 a.m. across every arrondissement. The nightlife scores 7.2 on the 10 point scale, the methodology weights bar density, late hour transport, and the diversity of the scene. The best cities for nightlife ranking places this in context.
Cultural temperament: every city has one and Paris is no exception. Paris is the cultural capital of France first and the working city second, with the inversion making it harder to read for first time residents. The cultural calendar runs year round but operates at lower intensity in August when much of the city closes. For day to day cultural input, the Paris cultural calendar tracks the festivals, museum exhibitions, and gigs worth a flight. Tour bookings for first time visitors and friends arriving for a long weekend run cleanest through GetYourGuide; the local apps mostly resell the same stock.
Two underrated reads on cultural fit: how late the city eats, and how quietly it complains. Paris eats either earlier or later than your home city, and that one variable changes more about the social calendar than residents expect. The cities for foodies ranking lists the food capitals on a single chart. For complaint culture, the local Reddit, the local Twitter, and the local letters page tell you what residents fight about; the Paris resident grievances roundup reads them so you do not have to.
One more cultural lens worth running. The festival calendar. Paris runs six to twelve major cultural events a year, the scale and the type tell you what the city values. Track them against the calendar of your home city and you will learn quickly whether the social rhythm fits. The global festival calendar 2026 covers the 200 events that draw visitors from outside the host country.
Median internet speed 240 Mbps. Coworking density: 240 spaces. Nomad visa: France offers a dedicated long stay talent passport route under the Passeport Talent program, which covers remote workers, founders, and highly qualified employees.
The remote work rating for Paris is competitive on connectivity. The internet speed beats the OECD median of 92 Mbps, the coworking density sits in the upper third of cities we track, and the time zone overlap with most major employer hubs is workable. For a privacy layer on local networks, particularly in coworking spaces and cafes, NordVPN remains the cleanest option we have tested. The best cities for remote work ranking covers the full table.
For nomads: the visa story is the largest variable. France does not call its scheme a digital nomad visa, but the Passeport Talent visa under the long stay route covers most of the same use cases. Income threshold 31,500 euros annually for the standard category, 4 year validity, family inclusion, and a straightforward path to permanent residence after five years. The nomad visa guide 2026 tracks eligibility, cost, renewal terms, and tax residency triggers across the 47 cities that now offer a dedicated nomad route. Watch the 183 day rule.
For coworking specifically, the density figure of 240 spaces hides a wide quality range. The premium operators run $380 to $580 a month for a hot desk and $850 to $1,400 for a private booth. The mid market option, which is what most residents use, runs $220 to $320 a month for unlimited access plus mail handling. The Paris coworking guide tracks the operators with floor plans and monthly numbers. The best cities for digital nomads ranking keeps the macro view, placing Paris on the same axis as Lisbon, Bali, and Mexico City for direct comparison.
Paris is the city most people romanticize and then have to reckon with. The reckoning runs in three parts. One: the cost is high but lower than New York, London, or Geneva once tax and healthcare are accounted for. A central one bedroom at 1,520 euros lands cheaper than the equivalent in any of the other three. Two: the language is a real requirement. French is functional in tech and finance but is the differentiator at every administrative step, every school admission, every healthcare interaction beyond emergency. Without a working level of French inside 18 months, the city remains a tourist experience even for the resident. Three: the bureaucratic load is the highest in Western Europe. Every administrative process, the carte de sejour, the social security registration, the tax declaration, the apartment lease, takes longer than it should and produces moments of pure frustration. Past those three filters, the city is what the reputation promises: walkable, beautiful, varied, with a cultural depth that rewards a slower reading. The 7.9 score reflects the cost and the bureaucracy dragging an otherwise top tier index down. For the worker who can do the language work and tolerate the paperwork, Paris remains one of the most quietly rewarding choices in this index.
For the comparison view: Paris vs London, Paris vs Berlin, Paris vs Amsterdam. For the country level read: France. For the regional read: Europe.
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