Hotel in Paris, France
Marignan Champs-Elysées
150Pearl PointsTriangle d'Or Precision Stay

About Marignan Champs-Elysées
On the rue de Marignan, a short walk from the Champs-Élysées, this Michelin Selected hotel occupies a quiet side street between the avenue's grand thoroughfare and the boutiques of the Triangle d'Or. The address positions guests within the 8th arrondissement's core luxury corridor, with the room experience and discreet scale setting it apart from the neighbourhood's larger palace hotels.
A Side Street Inside the Triangle d'Or
The 8th arrondissement's luxury hotel tier has two speeds: the grand palace properties facing the Seine or anchoring the avenue, and smaller, more contained addresses on the residential side streets between them. Rue de Marignan sits in that second category. The street runs parallel to the Champs-Élysées, one block south, framed by Haussmann facades and the kind of quiet that the avenue itself cannot offer. Hotels here compete on intimacy and address precision rather than on lobby scale or landmark frontage.
That positioning matters when comparing Paris's premium tier. Properties like Four Seasons George V, Hotel Plaza Athénée, and Hôtel de Crillon carry the full weight of the palace designation, with the multi-restaurant programs, sprawling spas, and guest volumes to match. The Marignan Champs-Élysées operates in a different register — selected by Michelin's hotel guide for 2025, which signals a consistent standard of welcome and accommodation without requiring the footprint of the palace tier. The distinction is less about scale and more about what the stay is organised around: here, it is the room itself and the neighbourhood, not the ancillary programming.
What the Michelin Selection Signals
Michelin's hotel programme, launched to complement its restaurant stars, evaluates properties against criteria of comfort, welcome, and the overall quality of the stay experience. A Michelin Selected designation in Paris in 2025 places the Marignan Champs-Élysées in a peer set defined by consistent delivery rather than a single outstanding feature. This is a different trust signal from the palace category — Le Bristol Paris or Le Meurice carry multiple Michelin stars across their restaurants alongside the hotel recognition , but it confirms that the property has cleared a threshold of quality that Michelin's inspectors consider worth directing travellers toward.
For the 8th arrondissement specifically, that threshold is set against stiff competition. The neighbourhood concentrates more Michelin-recognised hotel stays per square kilometre than almost any other district in France. Getting onto the selected list here is not incidental. It means the room product, the welcome, and the departure experience have been evaluated and found coherent.
The Room as the Point
Paris hotel stays in the Triangle d'Or tend to organise around one of two approaches. The palace tier wraps the room inside a larger experience: the restaurant, the bar, the spa, the lobby spectacle. The smaller selected properties invert that logic. At this scale, the overnight itself is the primary offer, which means the room needs to carry weight that might otherwise be distributed across amenities.
At the Marignan Champs-Élysées, that means the bed, the bathroom, and the window view do more editorial work than they would in a larger property. In Paris's premium side-street hotels, the standard expectation is Haussmann-era windows with good proportions, a bathroom finished to a level that references the address without requiring renovation commentary, and the kind of silence at night that the Champs-Élysées itself makes impossible. The street's residential character delivers on that last point , rue de Marignan sees the boutique and office foot traffic of the Triangle d'Or during the day, but settles after dark in a way the avenue cannot.
What distinguishes the room experience in this category of Paris hotel is often the calibration of detail: the quality of linens relative to the price tier, the soundproofing relative to the street, and the breakfast format, which in French independent hotels tends to be the most revealing signal of whether the property is genuinely hospitality-focused or simply well-located. The Michelin selection suggests these details hold.
The Address and What It Reaches
The Champs-Élysées corridor has undergone a significant repositioning over the past decade. The avenue itself remains one of the most trafficked retail streets in Europe, but the blocks immediately flanking it , especially to the south, toward the avenue Montaigne , now carry a higher-density concentration of heritage fashion houses, private galleries, and invitation-only showrooms than at any point in recent memory. Rue de Marignan sits at the edge of that zone. The Avenue Montaigne is walkable, as are the auction houses and dealer galleries of the nearby streets.
For travellers whose Paris itineraries are organised around the 8th's commercial and cultural axis , from the Grand Palais to the couture houses to the Seine riverbanks , this address positions a stay as operationally efficient in a way that outer-arrondissement hotels cannot match. Compared to La Réserve Paris or Cheval Blanc Paris, which anchor different sections of the Left and Right Bank premium tier, the Marignan sits within the specific geography that defines the 8th's identity most directly.
For broader France travel, the hotel functions as a Paris base for trips that extend to the wine regions, the Riviera, or the Alps. Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon is reachable from Paris in under two hours; the Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes and The Maybourne Riviera in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin represent the Riviera tier that a Paris-based itinerary might connect to. Provence options including La Bastide de Gordes, Villa La Coste, and Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence extend the itinerary south. For mountain stays, Le K2 Palace in Courchevel and Four Seasons Megeve in Megève complete the French alpine tier. Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux and Domaine Les Crayères in Reims anchor the wine country options, while the Mediterranean reaches as far as Le Negresco in Nice. Beyond France, Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo, and The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City represent peer-set comparisons in their respective cities. The Airelles Château de Versailles - Le Grand Contrôle offers a day-trip alternative for those drawn to the royal circuit outside Paris.
Planning a Stay
The hotel is at 12 rue de Marignan, in the 8th arrondissement. The nearest Metro access is via Franklin D. Roosevelt (lines 1 and 9) or George V (line 1), both within a five-minute walk. Charles de Gaulle airport connects via the RER B to Châtelet-Les Halles, then a transfer west, or directly by taxi at approximately 45 to 60 minutes depending on traffic. For dining beyond the hotel, our full Paris restaurants guide maps the neighbourhood's options by price tier and format. Booking the Marignan Champs-Élysées directly through the property's own channels is the standard approach for confirmed availability; as a Michelin Selected address in a high-demand district, the property fills around major Paris fashion weeks, the Christmas period, and the summer peak from late June through August.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the signature room experience at Marignan Champs-Élysées?
- The property is Michelin Selected for 2025, a designation that prioritises the quality of the overnight stay itself , comfort, welcome, and room finish , over ancillary amenities. The address on rue de Marignan, within the Triangle d'Or, means rooms benefit from the quiet of a side street while remaining steps from the Champs-Élysées and avenue Montaigne. The stay is organised around the room rather than around a restaurant or spa program of the kind found at the palace tier.
- What is Marignan Champs-Élysées recognised for?
- The hotel holds a Michelin Selected designation in the 2025 Michelin hotel guide, placing it among Paris properties that Michelin's inspectors consider reliably above the standard accommodation threshold. In the context of the 8th arrondissement, where the competition includes several of Europe's most decorated palace hotels, that selection confirms a consistent standard of welcome and room quality at a scale below the full palace tier.
- Should I book Marignan Champs-Élysées in advance?
- For stays during Paris fashion weeks (typically March and October for women's ready-to-wear, January and July for haute couture), the summer peak, and the December holiday period, advance booking is advisable. The 8th arrondissement's premium hotel supply is heavily competed during these windows. As a Michelin Selected property in a tight address, availability narrows earlier than at larger, higher-inventory palace hotels. Booking directly through the property's reservations channel is the most direct route to confirmed availability.
- How does Marignan Champs-Élysées compare to other Michelin-recognised hotels in Paris's 8th arrondissement?
- The 8th arrondissement concentrates several of Paris's most decorated hotels, including properties carrying both Michelin restaurant stars and hotel recognition at the palace level. The Marignan Champs-Élysées occupies a distinct tier within that neighbourhood: Michelin Selected signals a consistently high standard of hospitality without the multi-restaurant, multi-spa footprint of the palace category. For travellers whose priority is address and room quality in the Triangle d'Or rather than a full resort-style amenity package, it sits in a different competitive set from Four Seasons George V or Hotel Plaza Athénée, and closer to the smaller, curated end of 8th arrondissement hospitality.
Location
12 Rue de Marignan, 75008 Paris, France
Recognized By
Explore Paris
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