REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Emily TV Show Locations Guided Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by ExperienceFirst · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Netflix fans, lace up your shoes. This 100-minute guided Paris walk takes you through real streets tied to the Netflix series, from Emily’s home base ideas to the spots where you’ll want to stop, frame, and shoot. I love how it mixes show scenes with actual Paris landmarks like the Palais-Royal area and Pont des Arts, so it feels fun even if you care about the city more than the TV plot. I also like the optional add-on of a narrated Seine cruise, which gives you an easy payoff after the walking. One drawback: it’s about 2 miles of walking, and it’s not stroller- or wheelchair-friendly, so plan for steady walking time and comfortable footwear.
You start at Place de l’Estrapade in the Latin Quarter area, right by the spot tied to Emily’s house, and the energy is basically: look up, look around, then take your next selfie before you miss the light. I’ve seen different guides lead this tour—names like Tatiana, Henda, and Paula come up often—and the common thread is that they connect series details to what’s going on in the city. Still, if you’re late to the meeting point, you may not be able to catch up, so treat the start time like it’s part of the script.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Use
- A Paris Walk Built for Emily-Style Photos
- Starting at Place de l’Estrapade: Your First “Wait, I Know This!”
- Cour du Commerce and the Monnaie Story: Small Streets, Big Details
- Pont des Arts and the Seine View That Makes the Walk Worth It
- Place de Valois and Rue Stops: Fashion Streets with Real Atmosphere
- Palais-Royal Garden, Colonnes de Buren, and Emily’s Meet-Cute Energy
- Avenue de l’Opera and the Savoir-to-Workday Feel
- Optional Seine River Cruise: The Easy Win After 2 Miles
- Practical Tips for a Smooth Walk (and Better Photos)
- Who This Tour Fits Best
- Should You Book the Paris Emily TV Show Locations Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the walking tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- What language is the guide?
- Where does the tour start?
- How can I get to the meeting point?
- What key Emily in Paris locations are included?
- Is a Seine River cruise available?
- How much walking is involved?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible or stroller-friendly?
- What should I bring?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Use

- Emily-style filming spots and photo stops that make it easy to plan your own reels
- Palais-Royal Garden + Colonnes de Buren for modern art vibes in a classic setting
- Musée de la Monnaie stop built around the coins-and-treasures story tied to the show
- Pont des Arts views across the Seine, perfect for a breath-and-breathe moment
- Optional narrated Seine cruise to extend the experience with city views from the water
A Paris Walk Built for Emily-Style Photos

The magic of this tour is that it turns Paris into a set you can walk through. You’re not just seeing monuments. You’re spotting the corners, facades, courtyards, and viewpoints that the series made famous, then using them as backdrops for your photos.
What I like most is the balance: the guide keeps the show thread going, but the city context stays present too. That matters because Paris is always more interesting when you understand what you’re looking at—why a garden feels private, why a bridge view hits like a postcard, and why certain streets feel built for lingering.
You also get a practical rhythm. The pace is described as leisurely, and the walk covers about two miles total, so this works as a daytime activity without turning into a full legs-only punishment.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Paris
Starting at Place de l’Estrapade: Your First “Wait, I Know This!”

The tour meets at Place de l’Estrapade at the front of the Emily in Paris house location (your guide holds an orange ExperienceFirst sign). This is a very workable starting area because you can reach it by metro line 10 to Cardinal Lemoine, or bus 82 or 89.
Be on time. The tour starts promptly, and there’s no real way to sprint into a moving group and get the full experience. If you show up early, you’ll have time to orient yourself and start snapping photos without stress.
One more thing I appreciate: the tour ends back at the meeting area, so you’re not left guessing how to get yourself out of a random neighborhood.
Cour du Commerce and the Monnaie Story: Small Streets, Big Details

Right away, you move from “where is that from?” into “oh, this feels lived-in.” A stop at Cour du Commerce Saint-André sets up that Paris courtyard and passage vibe—those semi-hidden spaces that make the city feel charming and slightly cinematic even when you’re just walking.
Then comes Musée de la Monnaie. This is where the series connection gets very specific, with the museum’s 300,000 coins, tokens, and treasures forming part of the show storyline (including the fashion show and auction elements tied to the series). Even if you don’t go deep on numismatics at home, the idea is clear: this isn’t just a generic museum stop. It’s a setting with built-in plot energy.
If you enjoy city details that go beyond the obvious skyline, this part can be a highlight. You’ll get a guided explanation tied to what you’re seeing, rather than just standing in front of a big building and moving on.
Pont des Arts and the Seine View That Makes the Walk Worth It

After courtyards and museum time, you head to Pont des Arts. This is where the tour cashes in on one of Paris’s most reliable photo moments: the Seine view.
This stop is great for two reasons. First, it gives you a change of pace—open air, moving water, and that classic Paris framing. Second, it’s one of those “everyone takes a photo here” spots, so your pictures won’t feel random. They’ll look like you planned your day.
If you’re making reels, this is also where you can capture context clips: bridge-to-river angles, quick pans, and people-watching without needing a perfect street corner.
Place de Valois and Rue Stops: Fashion Streets with Real Atmosphere

The walk continues through the heart of the city’s old-meets-fashion energy, including Place de Valois and 8 Rue de Montpensier. These stops work because they’re the kind of places where the series style makes sense. You get that sense of Paris as a set, but it’s still the real city: stone, signage, small facades, and street life.
This is also where the guide’s job matters. You’ll want someone pointing out what connects to the show so you don’t waste your time guessing. Strong guides (I’ve seen this repeatedly with names like Tatiana and Henda) tend to keep the pace lively and the explanations clear, so the show references don’t turn into a blur.
If you like walking tours that tell you what you’re actually looking at, this is the stretch where you feel the payoff.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Paris
Palais-Royal Garden, Colonnes de Buren, and Emily’s Meet-Cute Energy

The tour then lands at the Domaine National du Palais-Royal and the Palais-Royal Garden—a combination that’s basically built for pausing. This is where you’ll follow Emily-themed scenes and take photos with that polished Paris garden look.
You’ll also see the striped Colonnes de Buren, one of the more striking modern art installations in the area. It’s a fun contrast: elegant palace grounds with a bold, graphic twist. The guide helps you notice the details so it feels like more than just a quirky photo spot.
This is one of the best sections for photos and social content because the setting gives you multiple angles within a small area. If you like your shots to look intentional, plan for a little time here to step back, check the background, and then take the version you’ll actually keep.
Avenue de l’Opera and the Savoir-to-Workday Feel

Next you move toward Avenue de l’Opera and keep weaving through show-linked areas. This is where the tour leans into the daily rhythm idea—Emily’s workplace vibe and the city’s fashion-food atmosphere.
The description highlights that you’ll discover Emily’s workplace, plus the tranquil garden where she met Mindy, and the bakery tied to her first pain au chocolat. Even when a specific storefront or interior isn’t the exact focus, the guide’s path connects those dots so you leave with a mental map, not just a memory of pretty streets.
One practical tip here: if you want bakery shots, treat them as exterior photos unless your group is explicitly stopping inside. The tour is paced as a walking experience, so don’t let one snack mission break the flow.
Optional Seine River Cruise: The Easy Win After 2 Miles

If you choose the add-on, you’ll get a narrated Seine River cruise after the walking portion. This is a smart pairing because it solves the main downside of any city walking tour: you can’t see everything from the ground.
From the water, Paris stretches out in a different way. Bridges, landmarks, and the overall geometry of the city feel more connected. The narration helps too, since it turns passive sightseeing into a guided flow you can enjoy without constantly checking your phone for directions.
Think of it as the tour’s second act: you spend the first half walking like you’re living inside the series, then you switch to a more relaxed mode and let the views do the work.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Walk (and Better Photos)

A tour like this succeeds or fails on small choices you make before you even leave the apartment.
- Wear comfortable shoes. The walking is described as about 2 miles at a leisurely pace, but cobblestones, stairs, and photo stops add up fast.
- Keep your phone charged. You’ll want it for photos and video clips, especially around Palais-Royal and the Seine bridge area.
- Arrive a bit early at Place de l’Estrapade. You’ll settle your nerves, find the guide holding the orange ExperienceFirst sign, and avoid the scramble that cuts into your picture time.
- Expect show references plus city context. The guide explains French culture, fashion, and food along the way, so it’s not only about catching the exact filming angle.
On the guide front, the pattern from past groups is reassuring. People often call out guides like Paula, Katie, Elizabeth, Fanny, and Rim Tamara for being friendly and mixing series details with real Paris facts. That kind of guidance is what turns a walking tour into a story you can repeat later.
Who This Tour Fits Best
This is a great fit if you:
- Love Emily in Paris and want a guided way to spot series locations without getting lost
- Like photo-forward walking tours where there are built-in pauses for pictures
- Want a mix of show fun and city explanations tied to what you’re seeing
It may be less ideal if:
- You need wheelchair access or stroller support, since the tour is not wheelchair accessible nor stroller-friendly
- You don’t handle walking well, because the tour includes about 2 miles on foot
Should You Book the Paris Emily TV Show Locations Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a low-stress, high-joy Paris morning or afternoon that feels playful but still gives you real context. The price point is modest for a guided experience, and the optional Seine cruise is a strong value add if you want the city from another angle.
I’d skip it only if walking distance is a big issue for you or if you don’t care about the show at all. In that case, you might prefer a broader classic highlights tour without the Emily thread.
If you’re deciding, here’s the simplest rule: if you plan to take photos for more than five minutes, you’ll get your money’s worth fast.
FAQ
How long is the walking tour?
It lasts 100 minutes at a leisurely pace.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $33 per person.
What language is the guide?
The tour is guided in English.
Where does the tour start?
It starts at Place de l’Estrapade in front of the Emily in Paris house, with your guide holding an orange ExperienceFirst sign.
How can I get to the meeting point?
You can take metro line 10 to Cardinal Lemoine station, or bus 82 or 89.
What key Emily in Paris locations are included?
The tour includes Emily-themed stops tied to her residence, workplace, Gabriel’s restaurant, and the bakery for her first pain au chocolat, plus the garden tied to when she met Mindy and other filming spots.
Is a Seine River cruise available?
Yes. You can upgrade with an optional narrated Seine River cruise.
How much walking is involved?
The tour includes about 2 miles of walking.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible or stroller-friendly?
No. It is not wheelchair accessible and is not stroller-friendly.
What should I bring?
Bring comfortable shoes for walking.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Yes. There is free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.




































