Gay Paris

Emergency measures in the wake of Covid-19:

For current French entry restrictions see the France Diplomatie, Reopen-Europa/France, Travel Bans/France, and World Nomads/France, websites for details and updates in English.

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Paris wears a thousand faces. For one thing, its architecture includes a bit of everything: Roman ruins and medieval byways in the Latin Quarter, the grandiose halls of the Louvre (a former palace); the Eiffel Tower, that ambitious 19th-century monument to progress; and the Centre Pompidou, hinting at late-20th-century unease with its exposed ducts and wiring.
Its neighborhoods are just as diverse. The major gay neighborhood, and the one that never sleeps, is the Marais, a once primarily Jewish district that since the 1980s has been known for its many gay bars, lounges and sex clubs. It's the home of Paris's Gay Pride, held the fourth weekend in June. Les Halles, to the west of the Marais, is an even older gay part of town, but in truth you'll find a smattering of gay nightlife in most sections of of the central city. Paris was one of two major European cities to have elected openly gay mayors in recent years: Bertrand Delanoë, along with Klaus Wowereit in Berlin. Each was elected in 2001, and Delanoë was then reelected in 2008 for a new six-year-term. He retired in 2014, succeeded by his Deputy Mayor, the Andalusia-born Anne Hidalgo, who became the first woman to hold the office..


Getting here
Nearly every international airline has flights into Charles de Gaulle (also known as Roissy). The secondary, smaller option is Orly. Both airports are served by bus, taxi and train. The Le-Bus Direct service links the airports to one another (line 3, a 75 minute trip for 21 euros), and from each airport to destinations at city center: Orly to Étoile Champs-Élysées for 12€; CDG to Étoile Champs-Élysées or the Eiffel Tower for 17€ (also Gare de Lyon or Gare Montparnasse).

The RER B train provides frequent service every 10-20 minutes, between CDG Terminals 1, 2 and 3 and the Gare du Nord and Châtelet Les Halles stations for 10.30€ - a trip of about half an hour. There is also RATP RoissyBus service from CDG to Paris Opera station, a 60-75 minute trip with departures every 15 minutes, for 12€. At just 6€ each, the least expensive RATP options to the center are: bus 350, connecting CDG with Gare de L'Est (next to Gare du Nord), a trip of 60-80 minutes with departures every 15-35 minutes, for just 6€; and bus 351 from CDG to Paris-Nation, a trip of 70-90 minutes with departures every 15-30 minutes. For general CDG airport information see EasyCDG.

From Orly to Paris Étoile via Gare Montparnasse/ Tour Eiffel the Le-Bus Direct fare is 12€. To Châtelet Les Halles from Orly, on Orlyval light rail transit to Antony station for the RER B connection, the combined ticket costs 14€, a trip of roughly half an hour. From Orly to Pont de Rungis on the RER C train the fare is 6.30€. The least expensive Orly access is the RATP bus number 183, connecting with Porte de Choisy, a 40 minute trip for just 2€, with departures every 15-40 minutes. There is also a shuttle bus between Orly airport and central points via RER C - the Navette GO C Paris - a 30 minute trip for 6.35€. See the RATP Itinerary page, or Paris Aéroport for an interactive guide in eleven languages.

Eurostar cross-channel trains from London Pancras come into Gare du Nord, Europe's busiest train station, also on the RER B line, and with many Metro connections. SNCF, the French national railways, also has trains arriving here from northern France, Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands. At the nearby Gare de l'Est SNCF high speed TGV trains arrive from other regions of France, and Germany. Gare de Lyon, Gare d'Austerlitz, Gare Montparnasse, and Gare Saint-Lazare are the other major rail stations.

For more leisurely trips, the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express (VSOE) offers one to six day luxury rail excursions between Paris, London, Brussels, Budapest, Bucharest, Prague, Venice, Vienna and Istanbul; including sleeper cabins, and fine dining, on beautifully restored 1920s era cars.

For information about bus and coach connections to other French and European cities, see the AboutFrance pages on the subject. The Man in Seat 61 has a wealth of information concerning rail travel from Paris, across Europe, and everywhere else a train may go -- including how to save time and money, plus tips on where to eat.

Getting around
Central Paris is compact, which means walking is often the best way to get around. Another option for small distances is the citywide bike-rental system, Vélib Métropole with about 9,000 bikes and e-bikes at over a thousand stations. Buy one-day or seven-day tickets online or at any Vélib station, or sign-up for a long-term subscription. Bolt, Lime and Tier also offer e-scooter and/or e-bike rentals in Paris.

For guided tours check out Paris Bike Tour near Centre Pompidou, and Bike About Tours near Hotel de Ville. The latter shop also rents bikes to get you out onto the 440 km (270 miles) of cycle paths and routes around the city.

The Paris Metro is a highly practical and inexpensive way to get around, at 1.90€ within zone one. Buy a carnet of 10 for a discount. But with service ending around 2am on Friday and Saturday, and an hour earlier on weekdays and Sundays, you'll need a taxi if you don't want to make an early or very late night of it. Service re-starts at about 5:30am, which suits many club-goers just fine, but there is also the Noctilian Night Bus service that branches out from five major transfer hubs.

Adult Paris Visit Transport Passes (zones 1-3) for one day start at 12€. There are also two-day (19.50€), three-day (26.65€) and five-day (38.35€) options. Prices as of May 2018. Bus routes are a bit more complicated, but those that run along the river are easy enough to figure out, and offer more scenic views than you get underground. For city transit information in French or English see Ratp.fr

For scenic cruises on the Seine see Bateaux Parisiens or Bateaux Mouches, each offering lunch, dinner and sightseeing tours aboard one of their many river boats.

What to see
Centre Pompidou. Richard Rogers' and Renzo Piano's erector set of an art museum wears its 1970s stylings proudly.
Pere Lachaise Cemetery. The final resting place of Oscar Wilde, Gertrude Stein and Proust is a must-see for anyone interested in queer history and literature.
Notre-Dame. Its 12th-century spires, bell towers and gargoyles can't be beat for over-the-top Gothic allure.
Louvre. It's the home of the Mona Lisa, but that's just the start -- plan your visit like a military operation to avoid masterpiece fatigue.
 

in focus
Living la vie en rose
For hundreds of years, Paris has served as a kind of pressure valve for the rest of Europe and North America, welcoming with open arms (and sometimes other body parts) various oddballs, outcasts and sexual outlaws.
It was in a rundown Latin Quarter hotel that Oscar Wilde lived (and finally died) after his exile from England. And it was on the stages of the Folies Bergere and other theaters that Josephine Baker, after leaving the racist US of the 1920s, found fame, first as an exotic dancer and then as an all-round diva.
After World War II, Paris became a much sought after place for American artists seeking to escape the stifling climate back home. It was here, for instance, that James Baldwin wrote Giovanni's Room, his tale of a white American boy who falls in love with an Italian waiter.
Even for artists who never actually took up residence, Paris sometimes served as a kind of surrogate birthplace for their work. The pioneering Olympia Press published mainly dirty books with titles like The Sexual Life of Robinson Crusoe and There's a Whip in My Valise, but its founder's tastes were broadminded enough to print immortal (but also dirty) classics like Naked Lunch and Lolita.
Of course, Paris wasn't just a place for highbrow art -- the city could (and still can) get down and dirty with the best of them. The last half of the 19th century through World War II was a boom time for Paris whorehouses, and during this time the city was sometimes called "Europe's brothel." Perhaps the most famous establishment was Le Chabanais, at #12 on the street of the same name, near the Louvre. The women here attracted artists (like Toulouse-Lautrec and Dali), heads of state and film actors -- including Humphrey Bogart, Mae West and Marlene Dietrich.
Gay brothels, though less common, were not unknown. Proust himself was rumored to have been devoted to the all-male Hotel Marigny and, in fact, may have been a silent investor. Bordellos were so numerous they even had their own Michelin-style guidebook, called the Guide Rose. Its listings detailed maisons closes and their specialties, some designed to appeal to kinky priests, others to fans of SM.
Legal brothels don't exist in Paris today -- the 1,400 still in operation in 1946 were banned in the post-war cleanup effort, and laws making the act of paying for sex illegal were passed in 2016. Neither is Paris any longer the land of would-be Hemingways and Gertrude Steins. Still, as you wander its storied streets, it's worth keeping in mind a time when the whole world seemed to be knocking on Paris's door, looking for a good time.

Marais -- the gay village
For gay visitors the quartier of narrow streets called Le Marais (the Marsh) epitomizes Old Paris. Lined with cafes, restaurants, bars, boulangeries, patisseries, boutiques, theaters, and museums, it's been tres gai for years. Many come to shop, cafe-sit, cruise or watch the parade. The central artery is la rue Sainte Croix de la Bretonnerie, where cars are restricted, making room for a calmer pedestrian pace.

Les Halles
From Le Marais, Les Halles is a two-minute walk beyond the Pompidou Center. Paris's central market in centuries past, Forum des Halles is now a teeming subterranean complex of shops and restaurants and even a public pool. The surrounding streets are filled with bars, boutiques, card shops, discount leather and shoe stores, porn arcades, internet cafes, and American, Italian, Asian and Middle-Eastern fast-food joints. Down the pedestrian streets of Rambuteau and St Denis are several popular gay establishments.

Above Les Halles, remarkable cafes and restaurants sit amid venders selling flowers, fresh bread and pastries, fish and fowl, and fruits and vegetables. Open-air market stalls are set up on Thursday afternoons and Sunday mornings on rue Montmartre just beyond the grand terraces of corner brasseries. On rue Montorgueil the epiceries, or grocers, resemble boutiques in quality and abundance. One shop has postcards of Queen Elizabeth browsing the place.

The 'real' Paris
Everyone knows of the Champs Elysees, or the Left Bank, but quintessential Paris is said to reside in the neighborhoods surrounding Sacre-Coeur, the iconic basilica atop one of the city's few hills. The historical marker celebrates the district's habitation since the time of Druids. Near the base of the funicular is a neighborhood of many bargain stores, bars and restaurants, and close by, the Pigalle red-light district.
Around the Place de la Bastille area are many more small shops, restaurants and bars. Les Passages are two dozen surviving 19th-century covered shopping arcades filled with quirky little boutiques.

Films
The French love films from everywhere around the world, in many languages, of many periods. The area around Centre Pompidou has several legendary cinemas.
Forum des Images, in Forum des Halles, showcases the best film directors in screenings at affordable prices.
Cinema UGC Cine Cite, also in Forum des Halles, has over 20 screens and shows many English-language films.
MK2 Beaubourg (50 rue Rambuteau), features films from many lands in a complex of small cinema rooms, on the pedestrian street beside the Pompidou Center.
Luminor Hôtel de Ville (20 rue du Temple), located just across from bar Raidd, features independent and world cinema in original version languages with French subtitles.
The grand decor & gigantic screens of Cinema Grand Rex (1 bd Poissonniere, Les Halles), and Gaumont Opera Premier (32 rue Louis Le Grand, Opera), hark back to an older Paris.

Theater
Theaters abound in Les Halles and Le Marais. Twenty of these are listed at Parismarais.com, including one that houses a permanent circus, the Cirque D'Hiver Bouglione (110 rue Amelot) with shows year-round.

Sights & Museums
Purchase tickets to monuments and museum ahead of time to avoid the lines. Try your hotel, tourist offices, Parismuseumpass.com (free access to 60 museums with no queues at 48€ for 2 days/ 62€ for 4 days/ 74€ for 6 days), or the website of each museum.

Home to the Mona Lisa, the Louvre is all you've heard multiplied a hundred fold. Wear comfortable shoes and consider visiting Wednesday or Friday evening, when it is less crowded and open until 10pm.
Pompidou Center has contemporary art, photography, film, and music. Definitely make time for the 6th-floor restaurant, with views out over the rooftops.
Musée Carnavalet (23 rue de Sévigné), has 17th- century rooms, an interior garden and a bookshop.
Other museums worth checking out include: Musée National Picasso (5 rue Thorigny), Le Grand Palais (3 av du General-Eisenhower), and Le Musée National d'Histoire Naturelle with botanical gardens, an arboretum and their Museum of Mankind (Musée de l'Homme).

Staying on budget
A reputation for sky-high prices and the fluctuations in exchange rates shouldn't discourage visitors. Good rooms can still be found off-season at reasonable rates, even at the city center. Short Metro or bus hops can introduce you to neighborhoods outside the tourist zones where you'll find real Parisians. But even at the center, a few euros will buy a seat at one of many splendid terrace sidewalk cafes for coffee, conversation, or merely watching Parisian street life.

Not counting a splurge or two for truly memorable meals, you can reduce daily costs by sampling the abundance of inexpensive street fare, from sidewalk crepes or pizza slices, to quiches and fresh sandwiches on crusty bread from any of the ubiquitous bakeries for 3-4 euros -- or delicious brasserie omelets for 6-8 euros. Also take advantage of Asian take-outs and Middle-Eastern fast food. These, along with bread, cheese, fresh fruit and pastries, to be found on almost any downtown street, can more than sustain you for amazingly little money. See some restaurants below, and more at our map & listings pages.

Media and Resources

QWeek / L'Agenda Gay is a magazine/website to keep up with the busy Paris gay scene, with an online reader to get a head start before you arrive. Comprehensive online daily events listings for Paris and other French cities may be found in their agenda/ OùDrageur pages.

Prends-Moi is a website for "sexualités gay" with essays and graphics. Tribu Move and Sensitif are two gay glossy lifestyle freebies. All three have online readers to see the latest issues and archive back-issues.

Tetu Magazine is France's national gay glossy, full of interesting essays, insightful reviews, dazzling photos, plus bar and party listings. Garçon Magazine, a 144-pge glossy, comes out six times a year, with national and international news of gay interest, features, events listings, and photo spreads.

Komitid is an international LGBT lifestyle website based in the Paris area. Friction Magazine queer arts and lifestyle zine covers clubbing, music, cinema, photography, politics and more.

The Paris-Gay.com guide has downsized to a facebook page format after budget cuts.

Agenda Q focuses on the fetish/leather/sex club scenes. Their calendar listings ("agendas") are open to all, but you have to sign up to access most content such as photos and videos, etc. The ParisFetish weekend takes place in late May each year.

PinkTV is "Le Chaîne de X Gay" with a focus on gay porn, gay video clips and sexy men in the media - throughout the world.

Bragi Pufferfish presents clubbing and concert events such as Gang Bambi, D.R.H, QueerMess, Beautiful Skin, and Hole Inclusive, bringing musicians, DJs, actors, choreographers, dancers, drag queens/ kings, costume designers, visual artists, video artists, graphic artists and VJs together around issues of racism, feminism, sexual identities, ecology, and sexual liberation.

ParisMarais has Marais information, apartment rentals and hotel bookings. Experience Paris/ Mantouch creates tailor-made Parisian adventures including cooking classes, and wine tastings. 

The Queer Paris website directory and events listings includes The Queersine - Queer space for everything possible, aiming to gather together all of the best articles of organisations and people involved in queer issues - in French and English.

The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence/ L'ordre des Sœurs de la Perpétuelle Indulgence, Couvent de Paris and Couvent de Paname are activists and fundraisers for causes concerning the local LGBTQIA community.

The Centre LGBT Paris is home to many local community groups, organizations and service providers - also with events.

The Convention and Visitors Bureau website covers accommodation, leisure, culture, nightlife, cruises, excursions and transport in six languages - with bookings too.

The websites InsiderParis, Like a Local, MyParisianLife, and The Local FR, feature guides to the many cafes throughout the city. The Paris Travel Guide is another mainstream tourist resource. The Paris City Hall (Mairie de Paris) website, a good and practical resource for what's happening around town, is in French only.

France-Voyage.com, a guide for tourists in 6 languages, has suggestions on interesting local sites and curiousities, plus side trips all over France; with "18,000 holiday ideas, and 42,000 establishments listed."

Understand France, an American expat website, has tips on getting around Paris, where to find odd items, or essential/ emergency services, plus hints for better cross-cultural communication. Expatica also offers advice on getting around the city, and AngloInfo covers the whole country, and beyond, from the expat perspective.

Internet access can be found at hotspots all over Paris, but most require personal registration. Shops with their own computers for getting online are located around Les Halles and the Pompideau Center, with several on boulevard de Sébastopol.

For discreet access to x-rated internet sites and Espace Jockstraps chat lines, see the guys at boxxman video boutique and sex club, 2 rue de la Cossonnerie, Les Halles.

For La Poste in the Les Halles area there are post offices at 259 rue Saint-Martin (at rue Saint-Denis), and 27 rue des Lavandières Sainte-Opportune (Châtelet), plus one at 16 rue Étienne Marcel. in the Marais there's an office at 10 rue de Moussy (off Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie). Besides mail services they offer phone cards and mobile phones. 

If your hotel can't do it, get boarding pass printouts, photocopies, or faxes sent or received with the helpful staff at Office Depot, at the corner of Sébastopol and Étienne Marcel, near Forum des Halles.

For a city map with locations and website links to gay businesses, entertainment venues, museums and other places of interest, see our gay Paris map & listings pages. For some photos from around the City of Light see our gallery pages.

 

Accommodations
The choices are countless, but book ahead online for better prices. We list over 50 hotels and guesthouses on our map pages. A sample of a few of these in central Paris follows:

Gay B&B (28 rue de la Fontaine au Roi), gay household apartment share near place de la République; private room/balcony/toilet, your own keys, WiFi connection, terrace city views, livingroom/ kitchen access, breakfast served on your schedule.

Hotel Louvre Richelieu (51 rue de Richelieu; 331-4297-4620), rooms near Opera, Palais Royal Gardens, Louvre, Galleries Lafayette; gay-friendly, multi-lingual staff, WiFi, breakfast.

Hotel Beaumarchais (3 rue Oberkampf; 331-5336-8686) 31), rooms and junior suites, quiet interior courtyard patio, extended hours buffet breakfast, WiFi.

Hotel du Cygne (3 rue du Cygne; 33-1-4260-1416), modern 20-room hotel in 17th century building, singles, doubles and one suite, moderate prices, central location near Forum Des Halles, breakfast room.

Hotel Jacques de Molay (94 Rue des Archives; 331-4272-6822), Marais gem by the park and shops of rue de Bretagne; light breakfast, WiFi.

Hotel Mondial (22 rue du Grand Prieure; 331-4700-9344), a classic near Place de la Republique; singles to four-person rooms, cable TV, WiFi.

Jules & Jim Hotel (11, rue des Gravilliers; 331-4454-1313), hotel, bar and courtyard, cocktails, music, photography exhibitions, art happenings, parties. 23 rooms overlooking the roofs of Paris, buffet breakfasts, WiFi.

Turenne Le Marais Hotel (6 rue de Turenne; 331-4278-4325), 41 comfortable 3-star rooms/suites in the Marais, breakfast buffet, WiFi, guest laundry, pets welcome.

W Paris Opera (4 rue Meyerbeer), great location, 91 rooms and suites combining the best traditional and modern features include the 'Extreme Wow' suite; Coquette Restaurant, NY-style cocktail bar, fitness center.

Apartment Rentals:

Since 1997, Parisian Home (9, rue Mandar; info@parisianhome.com) has offered short-term furnished apartments and studios in the Marais district, the Champs Elysées and other areas,with budget to deluxe, 2-6 person occupancy, kitchens, TV, and WiFi. Their LGBT- friendly and helpful staff take care of all the hassles when you make your reservation - you need only to show up at their office, near Les Halles Metro station.

 

Going Out:
Bars, Clubs, Cafés, Les Halles/Marais

3W Kafé (8 rue des Écouffes), lesbian-popular gay bar, all welcome, happy hours pizza, karaoke.

Le Banana Cafe (13 rue de la Ferronnerie), young gay and mixed crowd, mostly guys and friends; affable staff, energetic go-go dancers, Oriental Sessions Middle-East/Asian music nights, quieter chill-out piano bar downstairs.

La Boite (15 rue des Lombards), trendy new gay cocktail video bar/pub, tea dances, host divas, cheese/cold cuts, fries, snacks; L'apéro des garçons events.

Bears' Den (6 rue des Lombards), warm and welcoming bear crowd that spills out onto heated terrace, packed and cruisy basement dance floor, dark nooks for playing.

Café Voulez-Vous (18, rue du Temple), gay bar, Italian cafe, late service menu, weekend brunch, relaxed vibe at center of the Marais scene. Former Le Carré location.

Cox Cafe Bar (15 rue des Archives), mostly men's bar, DJ sets, popular happy hours until 10pm, crowd spills onto sidewalk in good weather.

CUD (12 rue des Haudriettes), neighborhood bar, mostly men, hot and shirtless dancing throng in basement.

Depot (10 rue aux Ours), dancing, basement cruise complex, diverse male crowd. Friday Total Beur Arab nights; Saturday House, Pop Electro RnD parties; Sunday 5-10pm T-dance, then dance/cruise until 6am; weeknights cruising, cabins and darkroom play.

Duplex (25 rue Michel le Comte), youngish crowd, nightly 8pm-2am, weekends until 4am; artwork expos, house and jazz music.

El Hombre (15 rue de la Reynie), gay tapas bar for bears, music, nightly happy hours, conversation-level music, dance nights, drag and special events; smokers' patio.

Gossip (16 rue des Lombards), cafe/ restaurant on busy pedestrian street, gay-popular covered terrace; men, women young and chic mix; breakfast, brunch and cocktails, WiFi access.

L'Enchanteur (15 rue Michel le Comte), comfortable pub on two levels, men/women mix, karaoke, drag cabaret, video jukebox; nightly except Wednesday until 6am.

L'Imprévu Cafe (9 rue Quincampoix), cozy ambience, mismatched decors, nightly Latino-California coffee shop, cocktail bar, and hip cosmopolitan bistro behind thick red curtains.

Free DJ (35 rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie), small bar, nightly DJ sets, weekend dancing downstairs until 4am, Sunday Mass until 3am.

Full Metal (40 rue des Blancs Manteaux), very crowded testosterone-charged men's leather/ fetish cruise bar; Monday Cockring Only nights, black-outs, sneaker and uniform nights, bear events.

Bar Mic-Man (24 rue Geoffroy l'Angevin), friendly men's bar opposite Pompidou Center, regular-guy cruising, steamy basement sex, cheap drinks.

Bar'Ouf Paris (182 rue Saint-Martin), tranquil women's cocktails beer and wine bar, pool games, former Snax Kfe near Pompidou Centre.

One Way (28 rue Charlot), long-time regular men's bar, fills up early, open late weekends, cruisy basement, smoking area, theme nights, 20-year cap collection.

Open Cafe (17 rue des Archives), always busy at the central crossroads of the Marais; cute servers, coffee and cocktails, light meals, sidewalk tables.

The Labo (37 rue des Lombards), day and night gay sports and karaoke men's bar, varied music, special parties, large terrace on pedestrian street, theme nights, former Wolf site. Weekend Maurice Bar in the basement.

Les Pietons (8, rue des Lombards), friendly little tapas/cocktail bar and restaurant on busy pedestrian street, Sunday brunch, Spanish spoken, walls nicely tiled.

Quetzal Bar (10 rue de la Verrerie) long-popular men's neighborhood bar, popular Friday/Saturday happy hours, DJs, cruisy in later hours.

Raidd (23 rue du Temple), nightly nude shower-dancer hunks, DJs, extra dancers on Wednesdays; packed most nights with handsome mostly male crowd, basement lounge, buff and shirtless staff.

Sly Bar (22 rue des Lombards), upscale gay men's cocktail lounge, DJs, dancing, go-go boys, drag shows, blackout nights, Mister Sly contests.

Les Souffleurs (7 Rue de la Verrerie), small gay bar, the "other side" of Marais; DJs set, live performances, film screenings.

Le Velvet (43 rue Saint-Honore), chic gay-friendly bar/cocktail lounge on two levels, DJs, snacks, 5pm happy hours, young mixed crowd.

Le Who's (14 rue Saint-Merri), gay-central restaurant and 5pm-6am cocktail bar; Saturday and Sunday brunch buffet fom 11am. Wednesday nights Woopiii by La Nuit des Follivores Crazyvores.

Ze Baar (41 rue des Blancs Manteaux), two-level bar and restaurant, convivial mixed crowd.

CLOSED: Feeling Bar (43 rue Ste-Croix-de-la-Bretonnerie), hole-in-the-wall gay neighborhood favorite; Spyce Bar (23 rue Ste-Croix-de-la-Bretonnerie), DJ cocktail lounge, mostly men, cabaret, go-go dancers.

 

Bars & Clubs, Beyond

Artishow (3 cite Souzy; Place de la Nation), drag cabaret dinner shows, 20 original musical numbers per show, seven artist/ performers.

Bataclan (20 bd Voltaire; Bastille), 1864 theater building, dance and concert club, international acts, large crowds; special show nights.

L'Insolite (33 rue des Petits Champs; Pyramides), drag cabaret dinner club, Wednesday-Sunday disco dancing, 11pm-5 or 7am.

Cabaret Chez Micho ( 80, rue des Martyr, Pigalle), long-time drag cabaret showbar, nightly dinner spectaculars, by reservation; un spectacle inoubliable!

Cafe Moustache (138 rue du Faubourg St Martin; Gare de l'Est), local guys' cruise pub, backroom with cabins, porn videos; leather and sports nights, Sunday buffet from 7pm.

Twice monthly, La Nuit des Follivores and Crazyvores (40 rue des Blancs Manteaux) queer pop parties are set to move yet again, after spending time at Gibus and Bataclan.

M'sieurs Dames (30 ave Parmentier), neighborhood LGBT bar, DJ sets, games, drag, theme party nights; QueerMess, DRH, Karaogay, Bragi Pufferfish crew and Hole Inclusive events.

Rex (5 bd Poissonniere; Quartier de la Place Vendôme), young, mostly straight crowd, trendy music and performances in old cinema building.

 

Backrooms, Sex Clubs & Cruise Bars
The French enjoy sex as much as they do discussions of politics or religion over good food and wine. Sex in public, or in private clubs, has a long Parisian history. The many dark nooks and subterranean crannies have provided discreet areas for sex play far into the past. Outdoor cruising, in places like Bois de Boulogne, are a long-standing tradition, but can be risky.
Besides the many saunas, a variety of bars porn stores and sex clubs provide sexual opportunities not only at the center, but in outlying neighborhoods too. It's worth the trip to Metro Anvers to visit MecZone, one of the friendliest places in Paris, a bar proud to stand a little apart from the throng. Others like MicMan are right at the center. Shops, including boxxman in Les Halles, are alternative places for sexual encounters. Some outright sex clubs, with naked-always policies, can be less impersonal than the zombies in the hall vibe of some saunas or porn shops.
Many bars around the Marais feature ancient stone arched-ceiling cellars, with low lighting and flickering videos -- and men in heavy sex play. Slings, glory holes, cabins and piss benches may also be provided.
Each place has its own ambience. Some are always naked, or have fisting events or nights for piss aficionados or sneaker sniffers, and some have showers, (but most don't). Condoms and lubes are usually at hand, sometimes even gloves and enema kits. Weekend afternoon parties can be as popular as the late night events.

Backrooms: Marais/Les Halles

Depot (10 rue aux Ours), city's largest sex club, basement black-out areas, cabins, younger crowd than usual; weekend dance club, big Sunday tea dance.

Full Metal (40 rue des Blancs Manteaux), cellar with military theme, slings, jail, cabins, and piss bench. Parties include sneaker sex, uniform or leather nights, and cockring-only attire.

L'Impact (18 rue Greneta), all-nude bar and sex clud mixes both tourists and locals at the center of everything; orgy bed, sling rooms, open cabins, glory holes; Sunday Tea Sex naked nights with 9pm buffet.

Krash (12 rue Simon Le Franc), Marais gay fetish, cruise and sex club; total-black-out, rubber, leather, sports, naked and underwear party nights - the former QG bar.

Le Mensch Sex Pub (34 rue Charlot), nightly sex club at old Glove site, S/M-bondage, fisting, g-showers, slings, leather, latex nights.

Mic-Man (24 rue Geoffroy l'Angevin), small local's bar right across from Pompidou center, hot cellar playroom with hard-core videos; busy all afternoon and into the night -noon-2am.

La Mine (20 Rue du Plâtre), Marais men's cruise/fetish bar; leather, latex, uniform, and sneaker fetish events.

Next (87 rue St. Honore), sex complex, labyrinths, cabins, slings, showers and video salon seven days a week, non-stop on weekends.

SecteurX (49 Clos des Blancs-Manteaux), men's sex club, adult fantasy role-playing, cruise bar; leather/ fetish and piss nights.

Backrooms: beyond center

Bunker (150 rue Saint Maur; Place Republique), sex club with naked, leather, sports, rubber, underwear nights; private cabins, darkroom, slings, glory holes, prison cells, and extreme action.

Entre Deux Eaux (45 rue de las Folie Mericourt, Oberkampf), pleasant, snug, welcoming bar and sex club where being naked feels comfortable, natural and playful; regulars are newcomer-friendly.

Keller (14 Keller), long-time Bastille bar reopened, men-only sex club; naked, bondage, leather and fetish nights/sex parties.

MecZone (27 rue Turgot, Anvers), nightly neighborhood men's pub in the Butte Montmartre, sociable encounters, friendly bar staff; dark cellar playroom with slings, and naked weekends that get down to basics. Celebrating 25 years in 2016.

 

Dancing: smaller clubs
The city's dance clubs generally operate from midnight to dawn. Some are in les boites de nuit -- tightly packed basement rooms. Others take place in large venues drawing massive weekend crowds. Local gay magazines, websites and flyers keep you posted on special events.

CUD (12 rue des Haudriettes), mostly men, then mixed when dancing begins after midnight; hot, sweaty, shirtless.

Free DJ (35 rue Ste Croix de la Bretonnerie; Marais), small bar, weekend dancing downstairs until 4am.

Trou aux Biches at La Java (105 rue du Faubourg du Temple; Marais), first Saturday monthly queer dance nights, men and women mix.

Dancing: larger clubs

Bataclan (20 boulevard Voltaire; Bastille), dance club and concert hall, huge mixed crowd, sing-alongs; special show nights.

BBB – Black Blanc Beur, back at Gibus (18 rue du Faubourg du Temple, Marais) after time at Folies Pigalle (11 Place Pigalle). Sundays 11pm-6am African/Arab/Middle-Eastern dance parties, erotic male dancers. For more info on the gay Black/ Arab scene in Paris in English see their Kelma.org website.

Beardrop at Club Yoyo (13 Avenue du Président Wilson; Palais de Tokyo), periodic House, Progressive, and Electro bear dance parties. Summer months in Montpellier.

Flash Cocotte at Cabaret Sauvage (59-61 boulevard Macdonald), Cocotte Summer at Wanderlust / Nuits Fauves (32, Quai d'Austerlitz), queer, anti-fashionista electro dance parties.

Gibus (18 rue du Faubourg du Temple, Marais), Tuesday + Thursday-Saturday gay House and Pop dance club near place de la Republique; weekends until 7am with sexy performers, theme nights and special events, including BBB, Decadence, It's B* Party, MECX, Menergy, ORGY, Utopia, and more.

La Boite a Frissons at Tango Ballroom (13 rue au Maire) Friday/ Saturday all-ages gay dance nights, tangos, waltzes, cha-chas until 1am, then '70s, '80s pop hits. Sunday Tea-dances.

La Nuit Des Follivores / Crazyvores, once or twice monthly Saturday night dance parties at various venues; pop and retro dance parties, mixed crowd, special performances/ show nights.

La Java (105, rue du Faubourg du Temple), live music concerts, DJ sets; monthly Trou Aux Biches gay dance party nights, mostly men, women welcome.

Le Depot (10 rue aux Ours) Friday and Saturday dancing from 11pm until 8am, mostly young crowd, men-only, on two floors, cabins and labyrinth. North African Saturdays, Sunday tea dances from 5pm.

Le Queen (22 rue Quentin Bauchard, off av des Champs Elysees), mixed crowd, gay-friendly, large dance club, open nightly; Sundays ADN Deep House & Hip-Hop music. Constantly changing theme nights include burlesque shows and performances.

Love is Mylène (LIM) at Les Planches Club (40 rue du Colisée), monthly Sunday gay Tea-Dances, vintage music, Pop classics.

Mix (24 rue de l'Arrivee), monthly venue for gay Happy-Pulse soirées, usually last Saturdays, huge dance club beneath the station at Montparnasse.

Redwolf at YoYo/Palais de Tokyo (13 Avenue du Président Wilson), Big, Forever, WE Party, WEEK Safado, After Scandal and other circuit party nights.

Scream/ Matinée at Wagram (39 avenue Wagram) periodic special edition gay dance party events in Paris and on tour include LaLeche.

For more dance parties see Bizarre Love Triangle, Excite Paris, Fluid Party and Doctor Love/ LIM. Most big dance parties in Paris close down for the summer from July to mid-September. August is the traditional vacation month when almost everyone leaves town except tourists and those who host them.

CLOSED: After Rouge (77 rue JB Pigalle), Sunday 6am-1pm weekly afterhours dance party; Club 18 (18 rue de Beaujolais), energetic young guys' dance scene; Club 79 (22 rue Quentin Bauchart), mainstream dance crowd.

 

Saunas: Day
Paris saunas with competition from the many backrooms, must offer something more. Many have hammams, the Turkish ritual baths mixing dry sauna, steam, massage, and time-out relaxation. Sexual adventures are provided for with dark rooms, mazes, and cabins. Bars, cafes, internet lounges, and work-out areas are also common. Most here are day saunas, busiest in the late afternoon to early evenings.

Bains Montansier (7 rue de Montreuil, Vincennes), gay men's sauna well out of the center, 30-foot pool, popular with bears.

Bains d'Odessa (5 rue d'Odessa, Montparnasse), 1895 classic facade, sauna/bar, cabins, maze, darkroom, massage, WiFi, no-attitude all-male patrons include bears.

Gym Louvre (7 rue du Louvre; Les Halles), full sauna facilities, full gym with trainers, cafe, lots of toned bodies running around an immaculately clean and modern facility; massages, sex zone cabins, video cinema, glory holes, sling.

Euro Men's Club (8-10 rue Saint-Marc; Bourse), three levels, mostly older guys crowd, pool, Jacuzzi, hammam and sauna, cabins, cinema; tea bar/lounge, theater, smoking room.

IDM Sauna (4 rue du Faubourg Montmartre; Opera), busy, popular hamman/sauna club just beyond Les Halles; varied mix of guys, gym/workout area, theater, small pool, naked nights, Sunday food and drinks.

Key West Sauna Club (141 rue Lafayette; Gare du Nord), among the biggest and best endowed of gay men's facilities, on four floors. Huge spa, saunas and pool, bar, TV lounge, cabins, darkroom, naked parties, smoking zone.

Les Bains Thai (5 rue Dr Clemenceau), noon to 10pm gay sauna/ hammam on the Left Bank; massage, naked events, cabins, internet, video room, bar. The former Steamer location, but completely renovated.

Riad (184 rue des Pyrenees), sauna, hamman, pool, bar, exotic ambience, varied clientele, several massage techniques. A bit out from the center, but worth the trip.

Sauna Atlantide (13 rue Parrot; Gare de Lyon), mixing all genders and sexual orientations, for those who like to experiment across the great divides.

Sauna Mykonos (71 rue des Martyrs), cozy homo enclave in otherwise mostly hetero Pigalle, patrons always naked; sauna, hammam, cabins, sling, glory holes, videos, juice bar.

Saunas: Night
Three night saunas are open overnight until dawn or later.

King Sauna (21 rue Bridaine), open daily 1pm-6am near Place de Clichy, men-only steam/sauna facilities, cabins, darkroom, gang showers, glory holes, snack bar, shop; mellow clientele loves to sprawl in the popular TV lounge.

Sun City (62 Boulevard de Sebastopol), vast Marais facility open daily noon to 6am, three levels attached to Le Depot sex club. India-inspired decor/giant Ganesh, full sauna facilities, dark rooms, cabins, beautiful pool, and bar; monthly bear events and Bollywood parties. Good for voyeurs if pretty patrons get picky.

Tilt Sauna (41 rue Sainte Anne), France's first gay sauna since 1974, open daily noon to 7am, near Palais Royal amid the many Japanese shops and restaurants, open all day and all night; steam, sauna, cubicles, sling, backroom, glory holes and porn videos.

 

Restaurants
French cuisine stands atop the world and Paris sits at the center. Locals crave not only their native foods in the bistros, brasseries and fine restaurants, but also those of other cultures, from every nation and tradition. These include familiar American, Italian, Asian, Mexican, Middle Eastern and South Asian fast foods, and Spanish tapas, as well as their own crusty bagette sandwiches and a rich variety of quiches and brioches on offer in any boulangerie. Brunch.fr lists over 500 Parisian options for the favorite meal of late night party people. You'll never have time to try them all. We list a few below, and 80 on our restaurant map page - but it's a joy to find others as you explore.

Restaurants, traditional
After cocktails, Parisians head out to eat. In the continental style there are often two designated seatings, at 9pm and 11:30pm.

Au Chien Qui Fume (33, rue du Pont Neuf, Les Halles), since 1740, traditional brasserie seafood and shellfish, fresh oysters, foi gras maison.

Aux Trois Petits Cochons (28, rue La Vieuville, Abbesses), superb classic French cuisine and fine wines, excellent service, solid reputation. A longtime popular gay favorite, they recently moved to Montmartre from Les Halles.

Les Affranchis (5 rue Henri Monnier, Anvers), relaxed ambience, traditional French neighborhood bistro, near Place Pigalle.

L'Alivi (27 rue du Roi de Sicile), known for traditional Corsican cuisine and wines; well reviewed but moderate prices, indoor or patio seating.

Le Gai Moulin (10 rue Saint-Merri, Marais), traditional 3-course menu French cuisine; engaging host sometimes plays the piano and sings.

La Gaufrerie (5 rue Marie Stuart), creative sweet or savory waffles and crepes; Sunday brunch.

Restaurants, other

4pat Restaurant (4 rue Saint-Merri, Marais), gay cafe, lunch, brunch and dinner, "pasta phenomenale."

Amazonial (3 Rue Ste-Opportune, Les Halles), French traditional bistro, simple brasserie fare, large terrace, 8:30 morning coffee, evening cocktails until 1:30am.

Arena Cafe (29 rue Saint Denis, Les Halles), gay-friendly brasserie bar and cafe, people-watching central terrace; late food service, even later drinks.

L'Ange 20 (8 rue Geoffroy l'Angevin; Marais), gay-friendly bistro, open daily except Monday for dinner, French wine at good prices; Sunday brunch.

Au Diable des Lombards (64 rue des Lombards, Châtelet-les-Halles), Franco-American restaurant, perfect for late sleepers, American-style brunch served until 6pm every day; also tapas, sandwiches, burgers, steak frites, full bar.

Au Rocher de Cancale (78 rue Montorgueil, Les Halles), 1846 bistro, plat du jour, salads, burgers, dinner, daily brunch, drinks, heated terrace, WiFi.

Aux 3 Escales (12 rue Quincampoix, Les Halles), casual cocktail bar, whiskey, rum, beer and 25 tapas menu; open weekends until 2am.

Benedict (19 rue Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie, Marais), eight varieties of eggs benedict, pancakes, burgers, steaks, beef tartare, sandwiches, fish & chips, salads, desserts.

Brasserie Bofinger (5-7 rue de la Bastille), famous landmark by Place de la Bastille, founded in 1864 and considered "the most beautiful brasserie in Paris." Traditional Alsatian meals, also with seafood stand and take-away.

Breakfast in America (4 rue Malher, Marais; and 17, rue des Ecoles, Rive Gauche), American breakfast eggs, pancakes, bagels; burgers, wraps, club sandwiches, chili con carne, cheesecake, and real milkshakes.

Café Beaubourg (43 rue St Marri, Beaubourg), well-situated terrace overlooking the Pompidou throng, good food and service, brunch; a bit pricey but a pleasant place for coffee or drinks.

Café Voulez-Vous (18 rue du Temple), Le Marais gay café/bar, Italian menu, food service until midnight, weekend brunch, laid-back mostly male crowd.

La Cevicheria (14 rue Bachaumont), raw seafood cut into small pieces in marinade of lemon juice or sour orange, onion, salt, pepper and cilantro; typical South American dish, especially Peru.

Dans le Noir? ( 51, rue Quincampoix, Les Halles), lunch and dinner, 2-3 course surprise menus or a gastronomic 5-course menu, served in total darkness; lighted bar area hot beverages.

Dr Feelgood Rock Bar (37 rue Quincampoix, Les Halles), bistro américain with rock-n-roll ambience; cajun chicken, BBQ ribs, crab cakes, Mexican rice/chorizo, soups, crispy cod, steaks/burgers, pecan pie and cheese cake.

El Papi Chulo (48 rue Condorcet, Anvers), intimate setting, Spanish Jambon Serrano, tortillas, paellas, poulpes.

Gentle Gourmet Café (24 boulevard de La Bastille, Bastille), breakfast, lunch, brunch, dinner, and take-out; entirely vegan, mostly organic seasonal gourmet creations, home-made ice-cream, pastries.

Grand Coeur (41 rue du Temple, Marais), restaurant/brasserie, five-plate amuses-bouches tasting menu, daring/creative veggie/vegan, meat/fish seasonal foods, garden and terrace seating; cocktails and fine wines.

Happy Days Diner (6 Sq Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie), American 50's style burgers, hot dogs, shakes, Sunday brunch until 5pm; jukebox.

Jaja (37, rue Quincampoix), gay-favoured chic bistro, secluded garden patio, seasonal organic menu, generous and creative artisan plates, extensive wine list.

Le Petit Prince de Paris (12, rue de Lanneau, Marais), warm and cozy, gay-friendly 1450 tavern, fine traditional French cuisine and wines.

Le Quid (12, rue de la Grande Truanderie), gay-popular terrace cafe/bar, tapas, burgers, soups, salads, bruschettas, beer, wine and cocktails.

Lezard Café (32 rue Etienne Marcel) big sprawling gay-friendly cafe and bistro, with large heated sidewalk terrace.

Ma Bourgogne (19 place Vosges; Marais), famous, traditional bistro breakfast, lunch, dinner, 8am-1am; Aveyron cuisine, regional wines.

Monjul (28 clos des Blancs Manteaux, Marais), creative and innovative French gourmet cuisine, celebrity chef.

Pink Flamingo Pizza Marais (105 rue Vielle du Temple, Marais), unusual artisan pizzas named after interesting people; Parisian flair, fresh perspectives.

Le Who's (14 rue Saint Merri), bar/restaurant open daily/nightly noon to 6am, Saturday and Sunday brunch, gay-central between Les Halles and Le Marais, old Curieux Spaghetti site.

CLOSED: Riad Nejma (141, rue St Martin, Beaubourg), exotic decor, cuisine and ambience of Morocco; private dining salons, beautiful interior palm conservatory. Sadly, replaced by a sterile, corporate-style brasserie tourist trap.

Take-outs

Al Boustan (21 Rue Montorgueil), Lebannese mezze, shwarma or fallafel plates/sandwiches, hummus, pastries; eat in or take out.

Caldo Fredo (34/36 rue Montorgueil, Les Halles), variety of pizza squares, paninis, bruschettas, focaccias for take-out; beer.

Frenchie To Go (9, rue due Nil, Bonne-Nouvelle), hot dogs, Reuben and pulled pork sandwiches, pastrami on rye, lobster roll, fish & chips; sides and deserts.

Legay Choc (45 rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie, Marais) handmade breads, irresistible quiches, cakes and tarts of many flavors; penis-shaped bagettes, brioches, and meringues sell out fast.

Le Pain Quotidien (17, rue des Archives, Marais), tasty, generous portion, nicely priced made-to-order sandwiches to go.

Pizza Rustica (24 rue St-Andre des Arts, Rive Gauche), pizza squares with many toppings, bruschettas, salads, deserts; open until 12:30am.

 

Shopping: Sex Leather and Fetish Boutiques
Les Halles and Le Marais are famous for sex shops and peep shows, particulary along rue Saint Denis. Look for rainbow decals, but check the following shops first.

Boxxman (2 rue de la Cossonnerie), gay magazines and comics, sex toys and accessories, wide selections of video DVDs; cruise club video booths, unfiltered internet.

BMC Video (21 rue des Lombards), sex toys an accessories, a wide range of gay DVDs, large selection of preview options in private booths.

IEM (16 rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie; 43 rue de l'Arbre-Sec), big gay DVD section, sex magazines, books, comics, guides, toys, accessories, underwear, plus latex and rubber attire and gear.

Menstore Boutique (8 square Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie), at RoB's, online DVD sex videos store, wide range of sexual accessories, BDSM gear, books, magazines, lubes, etc.

New Millenium (37 rue Jean Pierre Timbaud; place de la Republique), sex shop, DVD videos, books, fetish toys, gear, clothing. May be closed.

Rex Fetish (42 rue de Poitou), serious fetish, leather and latex gear, body enhancements, accessories; DVD videos.

RoB Paris (8 square Sainte-Croix de la Bretonnerie), leather/fetish rubber, gear/attire, BDSM boots and accessories, toys, DVD videos; the famous Amsterdam retailer.

Shopping: other

ArtMenParis (64 rue Notre-Dame de Nazareth) regular exhibitions of the male figure in art, in all its forms; gallery open daily by appointment only. Browse or buy online: Artmenparis.free.fr

Gelati d'Alberto (12 rue des Lombards; Beaubourg), artisan Italian sorbets & crèmes glacées.

Jean-Paul Hevin Chocolatier (41 rue de Bretagne; Marais), cocoa aficionado heaven, excellent bitterness, unexpected flavors; chocolate bars, macaroons, sampler boxes.

La Fermette (86 rue Montorgueil; Les Halles), charcuterie/fromagerie, épicerie fine; amazing cheeses since 1895, wide selections, helpful staff.

Le Repaire de Bacchus (88 rue de Montorgueil, Les Halles), retail wines from France, Spain, Italiy, Portugal and elsewhere.

Lucky Records (66 rue de la Verrerie; Marais), new CD music releases, perfect condition used and collectors' items.

Patisserie Traiteur Stohrer (51 Rue Montorgueil; Les Halles), good stuff since 1730, sandwiches, pastries, confections, meals to go.

PierreTalamon (15 rue du Temple), one of many local shops with the latest fashions for Parisian males.

Space'Hair (10 rue Rambuteau), fashionable gay-friendly hair salon for men and women; plays great music too.

Sunlimited (3 bd. de Sebastopol), to banish wet gray days from your mind, tanning facilities and special events.

Shopping: Bookstores

Berkeley Books of Paris (8 rue Casimir Delavigne, place de l'Odéon), American bookshop, high quality secondhand books in English; US and British publishers.

Gallerie Au Bonheur du Jour (1 rue Chabanais), classic male erotic photo books, antique nudes, prints and drawings gallery. Not far from Jardin du Palais-Royal. By appointment.

Les Mots a la Bouche (6 rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie), overflowing with gay literature, graphics, and photo books on two levels. Their windows alone provide an education for passers-by. Browse online at Motsbouche.com. Store expected to close in March 2020, now looking for a new location.

Ofr. (20, rue Dupetit-Thouars; Carreau du Temple), bookshop and art gallery, exhibitions, events, guest authors and artists.

The Red Wheelbarrow Bookstore (22, rue St Paul; Marais), English-language bookstore, literature and serious reading.

San Francisco Book Company (17 rue Monsieur le Prince; Rive Gauche), new and used English-language books.

Shakespeare & Company (37 Rue de la Bûcherie; Rive Gauche), bookstore, reading library, English-language literature.

Violette and Co Bookstore (102, rue de Charonne; Charonne), gay-friendly women's bookstore and gallery.

Shopping Centers & Department Stores

Le Bon Marché (24 rue de Sèvres, Rive Gauche), très chic department store, large épicerie grocery with wide selection of international foods.

BHV Marais (36 rue de la Verrerie), large department store off rue de Rivoli, Hotel de Ville; men's and women's fashions, cosmetics, home furnishings, grocery store, bakery and restaurant.

Carrousel du Louvre (99 Rue de Rivoli), underground shopping mall beneath the Louvre; Apple store, men's and women's fashion, jewelry, books, music, gifts; cafes and Restaurant du Monde cuisines of the world.

Galleries Lafayette large indoor shopping center not far from Jardin du Palais-Royal; shops, restaurants, services.

Forum des Halles, multi-level underground complex of shops, restaurants and services; fashions, Fnac imaging and electronics, art-house cinemas.

- Staff 2020