Hotel in Paris, France
George V
150ptsHigh-spend Paris stay that mostly delivers.

About George V
George V is the most reliable choice in Paris for a high-stakes stay — special occasions, business trips, or a return visit where you want consistency above all else. Book a courtyard-facing suite if budget allows; the visual upgrade over a standard room is the clearest reason to spend more. Availability is manageable, and the on-site dining is serious enough to anchor your evenings without leaving the property.
Should You Book George V?
If you have stayed at the Four Seasons George V before, the question on a return visit is not whether the experience holds up — it almost certainly does — but whether the room category you chose last time was the right call. The hotel's address in the 8th arrondissement, steps from the Champs-Élysées, does not change. What changes is what you get for the premium you pay as you move up the tier ladder, and that calculation deserves a clear answer before you book again.
The Four Seasons George V is one of the few Paris hotels where the gap between entry-level and mid-tier rooms genuinely matters. The classic rooms are generously sized by Paris standards and come with the full service infrastructure of the property, but the suites , particularly those facing the inner courtyard , deliver a materially different visual experience. The floral installations in the courtyard, changed seasonally and designed by Jeff Leatham, are visible from select upper-floor rooms and suites, and that view is one of the clearest tangible upgrades the hotel offers. If you are booking for a special occasion, the visual payoff of a courtyard-facing suite over a standard room is hard to argue against.
For business travel, a classic room is the practical choice: the desk configuration, connectivity, and concierge access are consistent across the property, and the address carries the weight needed for high-level client meetings. For a celebration or anniversary stay, the cost difference between a classic room and a junior suite is worth absorbing , the room itself becomes part of the experience rather than just a place to sleep.
Dining at the hotel anchors the stay in a way that few Paris luxury properties can match. The restaurant program has held serious culinary recognition over the years, and breakfast in particular is frequently cited as one of the better hotel breakfasts in the city. If you are planning a special-occasion dinner, book in advance , the restaurants fill independently of room reservations.
Booking is not difficult by Paris luxury standards. Availability at George V is more accessible than at smaller properties like La Réserve Paris, which has fewer rooms and books out faster. For broader context on where George V sits among Paris's leading hotels, see our full Paris hotels guide.
Practical Details
| Detail | George V | Le Bristol Paris | Hôtel de Crillon |
|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 8th arr., near Champs-Élysées | 8th arr., Faubourg Saint-Honoré | 8th arr., Place de la Concorde |
| Booking Difficulty | Easy–Moderate | Moderate | Moderate |
| Leading For | Special occasions, business | Long-stay, repeat guests | Design-focused travellers |
| Room Value Sweet Spot | Junior suite / courtyard view | Deluxe room | Superior room |
| Dining On-Site | Yes, multiple outlets | Yes, Epicure (3 Michelin stars) | Yes, Les Ambassadeurs |
Also worth considering for a France trip: Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes, Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon, and Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence. If you are extending to other continents, Aman New York and Amangiri in Canyon Point offer useful points of comparison for service-led luxury at a similar price tier.
Compare George V
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| George V | Easy | — | ||
| Cheval Blanc Paris | Michelin 3 Key, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — | |
| Le Meurice | Michelin 3 Key | Unknown | — | |
| Shangri-La Paris | Michelin 2 Key | Unknown | — | |
| The Peninsula Paris | Michelin 2 Key | Unknown | — | |
| Soho House Paris | Michelin 1 Key | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is check-in like at George V?
Arrival at George V is handled with the kind of unhurried efficiency you'd expect from a Paris palace hotel in the 8th arrondissement. Staff typically escort guests through the lobby rather than directing them to a desk, and the process leans heavily on recognition over paperwork. If you're a returning guest or arriving on a high-rate booking, expect the experience to feel personal rather than procedural. First-time visitors should note that the formality level is higher here than at, say, Soho House Paris — plan accordingly.
How is the dining at George V?
George V sits in Paris's 8th arrondissement, which is already competitive ground for serious dining, but the hotel's own restaurants have historically held their own against standalone alternatives in the neighbourhood. Without current menu specifics on file, the honest framing is this: hotel dining in a Paris palace of this tier tends to justify the premium if you're already a guest; as a destination meal on its own, you'd want to verify current chef and menu status before committing. The flower-filled courtyard setting is a practical draw for business lunches where atmosphere does some of the work.
When is the best time to book George V?
Paris hotel rates in the 8th arrondissement peak hard during fashion weeks (late February, late September to early October) and over major summer months. If your dates are flexible, late January and November offer the best combination of rate relief and manageable crowds. Book as far out as your schedule allows for peak periods; last-minute availability at a property of this size and demand profile is possible but carries rate and room-type risk.
How does George V compare to nearby hotels?
Against Le Meurice and Cheval Blanc Paris, George V competes on scale and name recognition but the newer entrants have a design edge for guests who prioritise contemporary interiors. The Peninsula Paris matches George V on formal service and exceeds it on tech integration. Shangri-La Paris offers a quieter, more residential feel on the Left Bank side. George V is the clearest choice if proximity to Avenue Montaigne shopping and the Champs-Élysées corridor is a practical priority rather than just a status signal.
Is George V good for business travel?
For business travel where the hotel itself is part of the signal you're sending to clients or counterparts, George V works well: the address in Paris's 8th arrondissement carries weight, and the public spaces are practical for meetings that benefit from a formal setting. That said, if your priority is fast connectivity, streamlined service, and a more neutral atmosphere, The Peninsula Paris or a well-placed business hotel would serve the functional side better. George V makes the most sense for business travel when client entertainment or impression management is a genuine part of the brief.
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