REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Emily Filming Locations Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by HandMedinaCo Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Emily in Paris gets real fast.
This walking tour through central Paris lets you see the streets and landmarks that power the Netflix fantasy, with photo stops built into the route and behind-the-scenes stories along the way. I love that it mixes show locations with proper Paris landmarks, not just a checklist, and I also love the small-group feel that makes it easy to ask questions. One possible drawback: you’ll be on your feet for the full 2 hours, and the schedule favors movement over long breaks.
The guide matters here, and the tour has a strong track record for personality and show fluency. People have specifically called out guides like Fanny, Fay, and Cecilia for knowing both the series and Paris itself, including thoughtful answers beyond the show. If you’re looking for a slow, sit-down sightseeing day, this may feel a bit brisk.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll feel on the walk
- Why Emily Filming Locations Makes Paris Click
- What You Get for the Price (and how to get value)
- Meeting your guide and starting on the right foot
- The route: how each stop turns into a moment
- Starting area: Explore Paris Tours and the show-ready vibe
- Pantheon (Paris): a big landmark that anchors the walk
- The Bombardier English Pub Paris: where show energy meets real street life
- Luxembourg Gardens: photo-friendly calm
- Odéon Theatre: classic Paris drama vibes
- Rue Cardinale: a more intimate street moment
- Pont Neuf: classic bridge views
- Pont des Arts: the romantic photo stop
- Place du Carrousel: a formal, open setting
- Rue de Rivoli: the street that ties everything together
- Place de Valois and Palais-Royal: palace courtyards without the museum pressure
- Palais Garnier: finishing at Paris grandeur
- Small-group + friendly guides: what actually makes the tour sing
- Photo strategy: get your selfies without turning the walk into chaos
- Who this tour is best for
- Quick reality check on the ending
- Should you book the Paris Emily Filming Locations walking tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris Emily Filming Locations walking tour?
- Is the tour guided in English?
- What price should I expect to pay?
- Is it a small-group tour or private tour?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- Where does the tour end?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key highlights you’ll feel on the walk

- Filming-location framing: iconic stops are explained through the series lens, so the city clicks faster.
- Best-selfie photo moments: you get clear photo opportunities built into the route.
- Small-group energy: easier conversation with a friendly English-speaking guide.
- Show-specific sights: you see the apartment, workplace, and favorite café featured in the series.
- Paris in layers: big monuments plus calmer streets, so it’s not all spectacle.
Why Emily Filming Locations Makes Paris Click

I like tours that help your brain organize a huge city fast, and that’s what this one does. Instead of treating Paris as an endless set of monuments, it turns the show into a map. When you stand in the real place—an avenue, a bridge, a theater—you’re not just looking at Paris. You’re matching what you’ve watched to what you see.
This is also a smart way to meet Paris culture. The series gives you a familiar reference point (an American in Paris), and the guide adds the reality check: how neighborhoods feel, why certain streets draw crowds, and what makes each landmark distinctive beyond the camera.
The “behind-the-scenes” angle is where the tour gets fun. Even if you’re not a die-hard fan, you’ll pick up how filming and location scouting shape what you notice—angles, street character, and why certain spots became repeat favorites.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Paris
What You Get for the Price (and how to get value)

The price is $31 per person for a 2-hour walking tour. At this length, the value comes from focus: you’re not paying for a slow, full-day “maybe we’ll see a few things” plan. You’re paying for a tight route plus guidance that tells you what to look for when you’re standing in front of the right backdrop.
You also get a couple of practical perks that make this easier for real life:
- Photo stops are built in, so you’re not guessing where the best shot is.
- You’re getting an English live guide, which matters in Paris when street details and landmarks have layers.
To maximize the value, come with two things ready:
- Your phone camera charged (seriously, the tour leans into selfies).
- A mindset of “small moments count.” The show locations include more than just grand monuments.
Meeting your guide and starting on the right foot

You won’t wander around hoping to find the group. The guide contacts you before the tour and meets you with an EXPLORE PARIS TOURS sign/logo. You’ll be beside a fountain at the start point.
That matters because the tour is short. If you lose time at the beginning, you can feel it quickly. So arrive a few minutes early, get the group location clear, and then you’re set for the full 2 hours.
The route: how each stop turns into a moment

This tour strings together a sequence of landmarks and neighborhood streets that feel very “Paris.” It also sprinkles in show-specific stops—like the apartment, workplace, and favorite café—so you’re not only doing classic sightseeing.
Here’s what to expect as you move stop to stop, and what each place is good for.
Starting area: Explore Paris Tours and the show-ready vibe
You start at the Explore Paris Tours meeting point, with your guide posted beside the fountain. This is your warm-up phase. Expect the guide to frame how the series connects to what you’re about to see, and you’ll get those first selfie/angle moments that set the tone.
Quick practical note: because it’s a walking tour, start with comfortable shoes and keep your phone accessible. You’ll want it frequently.
Pantheon (Paris): a big landmark that anchors the walk
The tour makes a photo stop at the Pantheon. This is one of those places that instantly upgrades your mental map of central Paris. It also works well as a storytelling anchor: big-scale architecture that feels “official,” even when you’re just looking for series cues.
Drawback to keep in mind: the Pantheon area can be busy. If you’re aiming for a clean selfie, you may need a quick patience window while the guide nudges you toward the best angle.
The Bombardier English Pub Paris: where show energy meets real street life
Next up is The Bombardier English Pub Paris, another photo stop. This is a strong fit for Emily-in-Paris fans because it shifts the tour from monuments to the lived-in side of the city. A pub stop also makes the series world feel more grounded—less postcard, more conversation.
If you’re the type who likes to compare how a place looks on screen versus in person, this stop is a good one to pay attention to street layout and the surrounding flow of pedestrians.
Luxembourg Gardens: photo-friendly calm
You then reach Luxembourg Gardens for another photo stop. This is where the walk likely shifts gears slightly: from grand architecture and streets to a more scenic, relaxed setting. Even if you don’t spend much time sitting, the garden look gives you variety, and it’s great for quick posed photos.
The practical point: gardens look lovely from several angles, so follow the guide’s direction for the best selfie setup.
Odéon Theatre: classic Paris drama vibes
At Odéon Theatre, you’re back into the grand performance-world feel. It’s a visually dramatic stop, and it’s the kind of place where background details matter—facades, street perspective, and the way the square frames people.
For your camera: turn slowly. The theater area can look different as you change position, and the guide’s photo spot usually helps you find the “right” street geometry faster.
Rue Cardinale: a more intimate street moment
Rue Cardinale is a photo stop that feels more neighborhood than landmark. This is the kind of street that helps you understand Paris beyond the famous sights. It’s often at smaller streets like this that the show’s “Paris vibe” lands, because the scale matches everyday walking life.
Here’s the tradeoff: smaller streets can be harder for wide shots, but they’re perfect for tight selfies and atmosphere photos.
Pont Neuf: classic bridge views
Then you cross into Pont Neuf for a photo stop. Bridges give you instant “Paris in motion” energy: water, long sightlines, and architecture in one view. It’s also an easy landmark to understand visually, even if you’re still processing the show connections.
If you’re chasing a clean shot, be ready for timing. Bridge areas can have foot traffic, and the guide will typically steer you toward a spot that balances view and space.
Pont des Arts: the romantic photo stop
At Pont des Arts, you get another bridge moment—often the kind of setting people recognize immediately. This is prime selfie territory because you’ll likely have strong lines and a clear background.
Practical advice: keep an eye on your surroundings while posing. Bridge photos are fun, but the safest approach is to step where the guide signals and avoid crowding others.
Place du Carrousel: a formal, open setting
The tour moves to Place du Carrousel for a photo stop. This type of open square is great because it lets you capture more of the architecture and sky in one frame. It also gives your legs a tiny “visual breather,” because squares are easier to photograph than narrow streets.
If you like composition, this is one of the stops where you can experiment a little with angles while still staying close to the group.
Rue de Rivoli: the street that ties everything together
Next is Rue de Rivoli, another photo stop. Streets like this help you connect the city’s “big sights” to the everyday walking grid. It’s also the kind of road where the show-world texture—cafés, street life, storefront rhythm—can feel especially believable.
This stop works best if you look up as well as around. Paris streets reward attention to building lines and signage, not just head-on snapshots.
Place de Valois and Palais-Royal: palace courtyards without the museum pressure
At Place de Valois and then Palais-Royal, the tour shifts into a more elegant zone of Paris. These spaces feel like a bridge between “big Paris” and “human-scale Paris,” with courtyards and surroundings that look great in photos.
The value here is variety. After the bridges and long street views, this gives you architecture with softer, more intimate energy. It’s also a good moment to slow your breathing and take steadier shots.
Palais Garnier: finishing at Paris grandeur
The itinerary finishes at Palais Garnier, a fitting wrap-up. If you’ve ever wanted to see where Paris goes full theatrical, this is it. The stop is perfect for a final set of photos because the building reads strongly from the right angles, and it’s instantly memorable.
One more practical thing: since this is a walking tour, your legs will be tired by the end. Keep your phone steady, and let the guide place you rather than chasing perfection.
Small-group + friendly guides: what actually makes the tour sing
This is where the experience earns its high enthusiasm. People have praised guides such as Fanny, Fay, and Cecilia for knowing the landmarks and the series context, plus being ready to answer general Paris questions. That blend matters. A show-location tour can become either:
- too fan-only, or
- too sightseeing-only.
Here, the guide’s strength is connecting the two. You’re not just standing somewhere because it appeared on screen. You’re understanding what the place feels like and why the series chose it.
And because it’s described as small-group or private, you’re less likely to get lost in a crowd. You can ask, point, clarify, and keep the momentum.
Photo strategy: get your selfies without turning the walk into chaos

Since the tour emphasizes photo stops, I’d treat it like a planned shooting session, not random sightseeing. Here’s how to do it smoothly:
- Watch what the guide does first, then copy the angle.
- Keep your camera in hand, but don’t stop in the middle of foot traffic.
- Take one quick close selfie, then one wider “place in context” shot.
- If a stop is crowded, accept the first good frame rather than waiting for perfection. The route moves on, and it’s only 2 hours.
The best photos on this kind of tour usually come from following the guide’s positioning, not from wandering for the perfect spot.
Who this tour is best for
This tour is ideal if:
- You’re an Emily in Paris fan who wants the series to feel real.
- You like guided walking with clear photo moments.
- You want a tight introduction to central Paris landmarks without planning buses, tickets, or museum time.
It’s also a solid choice if you’re traveling with someone who loves the show. The series connection gives you a shared starting point for conversation.
If you prefer long museum hours or slow neighborhood wandering, you might find the pace too direct. But if you want a smart, show-inspired orientation walk, it fits nicely.
Quick reality check on the ending

One detail to confirm: the itinerary indicates a finish at Palais Garnier, while the activity info also says it ends back at the meeting point. Don’t ignore it. If this matters for your next plan, ask the operator before you go so you know exactly where the group will wrap up.
Should you book the Paris Emily Filming Locations walking tour?
I think this tour is a good buy if your goal is “see the show world and learn Paris at the same time.” The price-to-time ratio is fair for a structured, English-guided walk packed with recognizable landmarks and show-linked photo moments.
Book it if you want:
- an efficient 2-hour route,
- photo stops plus behind-the-scenes context,
- and the chance to ask questions from a guide who’s strong on both series and city details.
Skip it only if you hate walking, dislike structured photo stops, or you’re looking for a deep, museum-style day. For a quick, fun, Paris-literate outing, this one earns its place.
FAQ
How long is the Paris Emily Filming Locations walking tour?
The tour duration is 2 hours.
Is the tour guided in English?
Yes, the tour includes a live guide who speaks English.
What price should I expect to pay?
The price is $31 per person.
Is it a small-group tour or private tour?
The tour offers private or small groups.
Where do I meet the guide?
The guide will contact you before the tour. You’ll meet them beside a fountain with an EXPLORE PARIS TOURS sign/logo.
Where does the tour end?
The itinerary says the tour finishes at Palais Garnier, while the activity info also states it ends back at the meeting point. It’s smart to confirm which applies for your specific departure.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.



































