The Hôtel Salé, home of the Musée Picasso, a 17th-century mansion in the Haut Marais, 3rd arrondissement of Paris
75003 · The 3rd arrondissement of Paris

The coolest corner
of the Marais

Picasso and Carnavalet, the Arts et Métiers, the oldest covered market in Paris and a tangle of grand mansions, cutting-edge galleries and boutiques. This is the Haut Marais — the most effortlessly stylish quarter in the city.

Photo: Hôtel Salé (Musée Picasso) · Wikimedia Commons
Things to do

Tickets & experiences in the 3rd

The best way into the Haut Marais is on foot — galleries, mansions, museums and a 400-year-old market, all within a few blocks. A hand-picked selection, most with free cancellation.

★ Most booked

Le Marais walking tour

A guided stroll through the Marais's hidden mansions, courtyards and boutiques across the 3rd and 4th — its aristocratic past and its hip present, told street by street.

from €29Book now
Food tour

Marais food tour

Taste your way through the quarter, including the Marché des Enfants Rouges — the oldest covered market in Paris — with cheese, charcuterie and pastries along the way.

from €99Book now
Skip the line

Museum tickets & passes

Timed entry and multi-day passes for the great collections nearby — from the Picasso Museum on your doorstep to the Louvre and Pompidou, all a short walk away.

from €32Book now
Tasting

Cheese & wine tasting

Settle in for a guided tasting of French cheeses and wines in the heart of the Marais — a delicious crash course in the regions, all on one board.

from €55Book now
Walking tour

Galleries & boutiques walk

The Haut Marais is the design heart of Paris. Explore its concept stores, contemporary galleries and the streets — Charlot, Poitou, de Bretagne — where the city shops.

from €25Book now
Seine cruise

Seine river cruise

Ten minutes south the river awaits. Glide past Notre-Dame, the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower on the cruise that gives you the classic Paris panorama from the water.

from €17Book now
Galleries & shopping

The design heart of Paris

The Haut Marais turned its old mansions and workshops into the most creative shopping in the city — concept stores, contemporary galleries, vintage dealers and independent designers, all packed into a few medieval streets.

Rue Charlot & Rue de Poitou

The spine of the Haut Marais — galleries, concept stores and the kind of small French labels that fashion editors fly in for. Endlessly browsable.

Rue de Bretagne

The quarter's village high street: cheesemongers, wine shops, cafés and the Marché des Enfants Rouges, all on one buzzing, café-lined stretch.

Carreau du Temple

A restored 19th-century iron-and-glass market hall, now a venue for design fairs, concerts and pop-ups — and a striking piece of architecture in its own right.

Hôtels particuliers

Behind discreet doors lie some of the grandest private mansions in Paris — Soubise, Rohan, Salé — many now museums and archives you can step inside.

Vintage & design

From mid-century furniture to rare books and concept perfumeries, the 3rd is where Paris hunts for the one-of-a-kind. Galleries open late on Thursdays.

The Temple quarter

Around the leafy Square du Temple, a calmer, residential Marais of leafy streets, neighbourhood bistros and the buzzing daily life of a real Paris village.

Where to eat

Iconic tables of the 3rd

From the oldest covered market in Paris to a couscous institution and the city's best Breton crêpes, the Haut Marais eats exceptionally well. A few addresses to plan around.

Food market · Since 1615

Marché des Enfants Rouges

39 Rue de Bretagne

The oldest covered market in Paris — a warren of food stalls serving Moroccan, Japanese, Italian and French plates. Come hungry at lunchtime, especially at weekends.

Crêperie · Breton

Breizh Café

109 Rue Vieille du Temple

Widely held to serve the best galettes and crêpes in Paris — organic buckwheat, Bordier butter and cult cider. Book ahead or expect a wait.

North African · Institution

Chez Omar

47 Rue de Bretagne

A legendary, no-reservations couscous house in a glorious old bistro room — a Marais rite of passage, as loved by locals as by visiting artists.

€€
French grill · Rustic

Robert et Louise

64 Rue Vieille du Temple

A tiny, wood-fired country bistro grilling côte de bœuf over open flames since the 1950s — candlelit, convivial and gloriously old-school.

€€
Moroccan · Iconic

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69 Rue des Gravilliers

A dim, lantern-lit former workshop serving tagines and couscous to a buzzing crowd — one of the most atmospheric dining rooms in the Marais.

€€€
Café · All day

Café Charlot

38 Rue de Bretagne

The quintessential corner café of the Haut Marais — a sunny terrace made for people-watching, brunch and a coffee between galleries.

€€
Tourist guide

Must-see places in the 3rd arrondissement

Great museums, grand mansions and a 400-year-old market — these are the landmarks worth building your day around.

Museum · Hôtel Salé

Musée Picasso

The world's greatest Picasso collection, in a magnificent 17th-century mansion. More than 5,000 works trace the artist's whole career across grand, light-filled rooms.

Museum · Free

Musée Carnavalet

The museum of the history of Paris, spread across two splendid mansions and beautifully restored. The permanent collection is free — a perfect rainy-afternoon visit.

Museum · Science & design

Musée des Arts et Métiers

Europe's oldest science and industry museum — Foucault's pendulum, early flying machines and Lavoisier's lab, set partly inside a medieval priory church.

Market · Since 1615

Marché des Enfants Rouges

The oldest covered market in Paris, hidden off Rue de Bretagne — a beloved food hall of world cuisines and one of the best casual lunches in town.

Monument · National Archives

Hôtel de Soubise

A dazzling Rococo palace housing France's National Archives, with gilded salons and a grand horseshoe courtyard — a free and often-empty marvel.

Garden · Free

Square du Temple

A romantic English-style garden on the site of the medieval Templar fortress — a leafy local refuge with a pond, a waterfall and old trees.

Before you go

Weather in the 3rd arrondissement

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Get your bearings

The 75003 (3rd arrondissement) on the map

Every museum, mansion, market and table of the 3rd 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 the district — the 3rd sits just north-east of the very centre, on the Right Bank, forming the upper half of the historic Marais.

It is one of the smallest and most walkable arrondissements, best explored slowly on foot. The Métro rings it on every side — lines 3, 8 and 11 — and the giant Châtelet–Les Halles RER hub is a short walk to the south-west.

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 now costs a flat fare regardless of distance, 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 3rd arrondissement

Central and ringed by metro lines, the 75003 is easy to reach and even easier to explore on foot. Here are the essentials.

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By metro

  • 311 Centre Arts et Métiers · Temple
  • 8 East Filles du Calvaire
  • 34 West edge Réaumur-Sébastopol
  • 11 South edge Rambuteau
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By RER & hub

  • 358911 République
  • ABD Hub Châtelet–Les Halles
  • Gare de l'Est / Nord ~10 min by metro
  • Eurostar (Gare du Nord) ~12 min
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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.
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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).
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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.
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Walkable. The 3rd is tiny — most of its museums and markets are within a 10-minute walk of one another, so you'll often skip the metro entirely.
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For the 3rd: lines 3 and 11 meet at Arts et Métiers in the middle of the arrondissement, with line 8 to the east and the République hub on the northern corner.
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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 in crowds and on busier lines; keep bags in front of you.
Good to know

Frequently asked questions

What is there to see in the 3rd arrondissement (75003)?
The 3rd is the upper half of the Marais (Haut Marais). It holds the Picasso Museum in the Hôtel Salé, the Carnavalet Museum of the history of Paris, the Musée des Arts et Métiers, the National Archives in the Hôtel de Soubise, the Cognacq-Jay museum, and the Marché des Enfants Rouges — the oldest covered market in Paris (1615) — surrounded by the city's trendiest galleries and boutiques.
How do I get to the 3rd arrondissement?
It is served by metro lines 3 and 11 (Arts et Métiers, Temple), line 8 (Filles du Calvaire, Saint-Sébastien-Froissart), and lines 3 and 4 at Réaumur-Sébastopol on its western edge. The Place de la République hub (lines 3, 5, 8, 9, 11) is on its northern corner, and the Châtelet–Les Halles RER hub is a short walk south-west. From CDG allow 45–60 minutes; Orly is about 45 minutes.
Where should I stay in the 75003?
The 3rd is one of the most fashionable bases in Paris — boutique hotels, galleries and restaurants on every street, and walking distance from the Pompidou, the Louvre and the Bastille. Hotels cluster around Rue de Bretagne, the Temple and République. Use the booking engine above to compare options for your dates.
Is the Marché des Enfants Rouges worth visiting?
Very much. Opened in 1615, it is the oldest covered market in Paris, tucked off Rue de Bretagne. Today it is a beloved food hall where Moroccan, Japanese, Italian and French stalls serve some of the best casual lunches in the city — busiest, and best, at weekends.
Are the museums in the 3rd free?
Several are. The permanent collections of the Carnavalet (history of Paris) and the Cognacq-Jay museums are free to all. The Picasso Museum and the Arts et Métiers charge admission but are free on the first Sunday of each month, and timed tickets can be booked online to skip the queue.
Before you go

Plan your stay

A few practical essentials to make your visit to the 3rd arrondissement smooth and stress-free.

🗓️

Best time to visit

Spring and early autumn are loveliest. Galleries and boutiques open late morning and stay open Thursday evenings; the Marché des Enfants Rouges is at its liveliest at weekend lunchtimes.

🎫

Book ahead

Reserve timed tickets for the Picasso Museum and tables at Breizh Café. The Carnavalet and Cognacq-Jay permanent collections are free and need no booking.

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Money & tipping

Cards are accepted almost everywhere (bring a little cash for market stalls). Service is included by law; rounding up for great service is appreciated but never expected.

🥐

Eat like a local

Brunch on Rue de Bretagne, lunch at the Enfants Rouges market, and book a Marais bistro for dinner. Sundays are surprisingly lively here when much of Paris is closed.

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Opening hours

Most museums close on Mondays; shops often open 11 am–7 pm and some close Sunday mornings. Lunch is 12–2:30 pm, dinner from 7:30 pm.

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Useful to know

Tap water is safe and free in restaurants (une carafe d'eau). Emergency number is 112. A simple "Bonjour" on entering shops and cafés is the key to warm service.

Plan your trip

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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 3rd.

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