Hotel in Paris, France
Miss fuller
150Pearl PointsResidential Étoile Address

About Miss fuller
Miss Fuller occupies a measured address on Avenue Mac Mahon, steps from the Arc de Triomphe, and carries a 2025 MICHELIN Selected distinction that places it in a specific tier of Paris hospitality: design-conscious, independently minded, and removed from the grand-palace circuit. The 17th arrondissement setting gives it a residential calm that the 8th's hotel corridor cannot replicate.
Avenue Mac Mahon and the Grammar of the 17th
The hotels that cluster around the Arc de Triomphe tend to sort themselves into two broad categories: the grand-palace tier of the 8th arrondissement, where Cheval Blanc Paris, Four Seasons George V, and Hotel Plaza Athénée command the benchmark, and a quieter residential layer that spills into the 17th along the avenues radiating northward from the Étoile. Miss Fuller sits in that second register. Avenue Mac Mahon is one of those spokes: wide, Haussmann-proportioned, lined with cream stone facades that read as solidly Parisian without performing it. The address at number 11 carries none of the marquee signage or doorman theatre of the palace strip, which is precisely the point.
Paris has seen meaningful growth in this category over the past decade. As the palace tier has consolidated around a handful of operators and price points well above €1,000 per night, a separate market has emerged for properties that trade on design sensibility, neighbourhood authenticity, and a lower-friction guest experience. MICHELIN's hotel selection programme, which added Miss Fuller to its 2025 cohort, has become one of the more reliable signals for locating this tier: the guide applies editorial criteria around quality and consistency rather than simply rewarding scale or history.
The Physical Space as Editorial Argument
The design approach of small Parisian hotels on Haussmann-era streets operates within a set of inherited constraints that make architectural decisions more legible than in purpose-built properties. The shell is fixed: high ceilings, tall windows, carved stone exteriors. What the interior does with that inheritance is the actual editorial statement. Properties in this bracket tend to choose between two strategies: period restoration, which leans into the building's original ornament, or contrast intervention, which uses contemporary material and palette to create tension with the envelope.
Miss Fuller's position on that spectrum is consistent with a broader move among Paris boutique properties toward spaces that feel resolved rather than theatrical. The neighbourhood itself reinforces this: the 17th around the Étoile is not Marais-eclectic or Saint-Germain-literary; it is composed, residential, and accustomed to a certain discretion. Hotels that work here tend to match that register. Where Hôtel de Crillon and Le Bristol Paris anchor the palace argument on the other side of the Étoile, Miss Fuller makes a quieter case for a different kind of Paris stay.
Where It Sits in the Paris Hotel Market
The 2025 MICHELIN Selected designation places Miss Fuller alongside a selective group of Paris addresses that the guide considers worth seeking out on quality grounds. MICHELIN's hotel programme does not operate on the same star-count logic as its restaurant guide; Selected status signals a baseline of editorial endorsement without ranking against a hierarchy. In the context of the wider Paris market, that places Miss Fuller in a peer set that includes design-led independents and small-group properties rather than the international flagships.
For comparison: La Réserve Paris and Le Meurice operate at the apex of the city's hotel offering in terms of price, service depth, and historical prestige. Miss Fuller does not compete in that bracket. Its competitive set is the growing segment of Paris properties that attract guests who have done the palace circuit and are looking for something with a lighter footprint: fewer staff-to-guest rituals, more immediate neighbourhood connection, design that reflects a considered point of view rather than inherited grandeur.
This pattern is not unique to Paris. Across France, properties from Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes to La Bastide de Gordes in Gordes demonstrate that the French luxury hospitality market has long supported distinct tiers. The shift now is that the middle tier, once defined mainly by price, is increasingly defined by design coherence and editorial recognition. Miss Fuller's MICHELIN placement is evidence of that shift at the Paris city level.
The 17th Arrondissement as Context
Guests who stay on Avenue Mac Mahon are not in the Paris of postcard shorthand. The Eiffel Tower is a 25-minute walk southwest; the Louvre is further still. What the location offers instead is operational convenience, a Metro connection at Ternes or Charles de Gaulle-Étoile within easy reach, and the quieter Paris of covered markets, neighbourhood brasseries, and morning streets that belong to residents rather than visitors.
The Marché Poncelet, a ten-minute walk north along Rue des Ternes, operates Tuesday through Sunday and represents one of the better covered markets on the Right Bank. The 17th's restaurant offer, while less internationally profiled than the 6th or 8th, includes serious addresses across price points. For guests treating a Paris hotel as a base rather than a destination in itself, the neighbourhood works effectively.
Those planning a broader France itinerary from this base will find that Paris connects efficiently to contrasting property types: the alpine intensity of Le K2 Palace in Courchevel, the vineyard setting of Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon, or the Provençal properties including Villa La Coste in Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade and Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence in Les Baux are all reachable by TGV within three to four hours.
Planning a Stay
Miss Fuller's address on Avenue Mac Mahon puts it a short walk from Charles de Gaulle-Étoile, served by Metro lines 1, 2, and 6, and by the RER A connecting directly to both CDG and Orly airports via Châtelet-Les-Halles. The 17th location places guests outside the peak tourist-density zones, which has practical advantages during high season: streets are navigable, restaurant reservations are easier to secure, and the rhythm of the neighbourhood does not shift dramatically between July and September the way it does in the Marais or Saint-Germain. For booking contact and current rates, direct engagement with the property via its MICHELIN listing is the most reliable route given the absence of a publicly available web address in current directories. Our full Paris guide covers the wider hotel and restaurant picture across all arrondissements.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the general vibe of Miss Fuller?
Miss Fuller sits in the quieter, residential register of the Paris hotel market. The Avenue Mac Mahon address, in the 17th arrondissement just north of the Étoile, is composed rather than tourist-facing, and the property's 2025 MICHELIN Selected status signals editorial quality rather than grand-palace scale. Guests who want immediate neighbourhood immersion and a lower-friction experience tend to find this corner of Paris suits that preference. It positions itself well away from the high-ceremony circuit of properties like Airelles Château de Versailles - Le Grand Contrôle.
What's the most popular room type at Miss Fuller?
Room-type breakdown data is not available in current records, so no specific category can be confirmed. What the MICHELIN Selected 2025 designation does indicate is that the property meets a consistent quality threshold across its offer. For properties in this bracket on Haussmann-era streets, rooms on upper floors with boulevard-facing windows typically represent the stronger spatial proposition given ceiling height and natural light, though this should be confirmed directly with the property at booking.
What's the defining thing about Miss Fuller?
The defining characteristic is location combined with editorial recognition. Avenue Mac Mahon sits inside the Étoile spoke system, giving walking access to the Arc de Triomphe and Metro connectivity to the rest of Paris, while remaining outside the immediate grand-hotel corridor. The 2025 MICHELIN Selected status provides a verifiable quality anchor in a city where the hotel market ranges from palace-tier flagships like Hôtel de Crillon to undifferentiated mid-market product. Miss Fuller occupies a legible position between those poles.
Do they take walk-ins at Miss Fuller?
Hotel walk-ins in Paris vary significantly by season and occupancy. Given the absence of a publicly confirmed website or phone number in current directories, advance booking through the property's MICHELIN listing or a recognized booking platform is the prudent approach. Paris high season, roughly April through October, compresses availability across all price tiers, and properties with MICHELIN recognition in the boutique segment tend to run higher occupancy than their size might suggest.
Is Miss Fuller a good base for visiting Paris beyond the central tourist circuit?
The 17th arrondissement location makes it a practical base for guests interested in the less-visited quarters of the Right Bank. The covered Marché Poncelet is nearby, the Parc Monceau is within a 15-minute walk east, and the address avoids the congestion patterns of the central tourist zones. For guests using Paris as a gateway to wider France, Charles de Gaulle-Étoile station's RER A connection links directly to Gare de Lyon for TGV services toward Provence, Burgundy, and the Rhône Valley, with properties like Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux and Domaine Les Crayères in Reims within comfortable reach by rail.
Location
11 Av. Mac-Mahon, 75017 Paris, France
Recognized By
Explore Paris
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