Hotel in Paris, France
Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa
825ptsResidential Hempel Luxury

About Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa
Anouska Hempel's Monsieur George occupies a Haussmannian building just off the Champs-Élysées, positioning itself against Paris's palace tier through design density rather than scale. The 46-room property earned a 2024 Michelin Key and a 2025 Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation, with rates from $494 per night. Its Michelin-starred restaurant Galanga brings Mediterranean cooking into a verdant interior that reads as an extension of the hotel's layered aesthetic.
A Haussmannian Shell, Transformed
The 8th arrondissement has long been Paris's premium address for hotels that trade on grandeur and proximity to the Champs-Élysées. Properties like the Four Seasons George V, Hotel Plaza Athénée, and Hôtel de Crillon have defined what prestige looks like in this arrondissement for decades. Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa, at 17 Rue Washington, occupies a quieter register within that tradition: a Haussmannian building just off the avenue, whose facade gives no indication of what waits inside. The gap between exterior restraint and interior density is deliberate. It is, in effect, the whole argument of the place.
Anouska Hempel, the designer credited with shaping the boutique hotel concept before the term became a marketing category, is responsible for the interiors here. Her hotels through the 1980s and 1990s established a template that much of what followed has borrowed from and diluted. Monsieur George functions as a reminder of what that approach looks like when applied without compromise: layered materials, residential scale, and a richness of decorative detail that most design hotels approach only in their photography. The atmosphere is simultaneously glamorous and liveable, which is a harder balance to achieve than either quality alone.
Forty-Six Rooms in the Tradition of Residential Hotels
With 46 rooms, Monsieur George sits in the small-to-mid boutique tier, larger than a maison d'hôtes and smaller than a palace. That size matters to how the hotel functions. Paris's palace category, which includes Le Bristol Paris and Le Meurice, runs to hundreds of rooms and a corresponding public-facing scale: grand lobbies, multiple restaurants, a formality that announces itself. At 46 rooms, Monsieur George can sustain a residential atmosphere that larger operations find structurally difficult to replicate. Guests are not managed through a property; they inhabit one.
The rate structure reflects the positioning. At approximately $494 per night, the hotel prices above standard 8th arrondissement four-star inventory but below the full palace bracket occupied by Cheval Blanc Paris or La Réserve Paris. That mid-tier of Parisian luxury — hyper-designed, intimate in scale, with serious amenities and restaurant credentials — has become its own competitive set, and Monsieur George is one of the more consistent performers within it. The Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation for 2025, awarded five points, and the Michelin 1 Key recognition from 2024, are the formal signals that align with this positioning.
Galanga: Mediterranean Cooking Inside a Green Interior
The in-house restaurant, Galanga, holds a Michelin star, which places it in a different conversation from most hotel dining in Paris. Hotel restaurants with genuine Michelin recognition occupy a specific position in the city's food culture: they attract non-resident diners, generate their own critical attention, and shift the hotel from accommodation-with-food to a destination where the restaurant and the rooms each have independent claims on a guest's attention.
Galanga's kitchen orients around Mediterranean flavors, a direction that connects it to a broader Parisian appetite for southern European cooking that has grown considerably over the past decade. The restaurant's interior design leans into verdant, plant-heavy references, which creates a visual language distinct from the gilt-and-marble register of older palace hotel dining rooms. For guests comparing options in the 8th, the combination of Michelin-starred Mediterranean cooking and a non-traditional interior puts Galanga outside the standard hotel dining comparison set. Paris's wider restaurant scene, covered in our full Paris restaurants guide, offers context for how this fits within the city's current dining patterns.
Spa, Wellness, and the 8th Arrondissement Standard
The spa at Monsieur George includes a sauna, hammam, and a small fitness room, with treatments available on request. In the context of Parisian wellness infrastructure, this is a focused offering rather than a comprehensive one: sufficient for guests who want access to thermal facilities and skilled treatment without the full-scale spa programming found at properties like the Airelles Château de Versailles. The format suits the scale of the building. A 46-room property with an expansive multi-floor spa would read as mismatched; what Monsieur George offers is calibrated to what the building can house well.
The combination of hammam and sauna is worth noting for guests accustomed to one or the other in isolation. The pairing is relatively common in Paris's better hotel spas, reflecting the city's mixed northern European and North African wellness references, and at Monsieur George it forms the core of a facility that serves its residential-scale hotel appropriately.
Location: The Strategic Logic of Rue Washington
Champs-Élysées is two minutes on foot. The 8th arrondissement's concentration of high-end retail, galleries, and established restaurants is immediate. But Rue Washington itself is a side street, which means the hotel occupies a position of proximity without the corresponding noise, foot traffic, and transient energy of the main avenue. This is a calculated location for a hotel whose interior atmosphere depends on a degree of separation from the street.
For guests whose itinerary centres on the 8th and 16th , the Triangle d'Or, the Palais de Tokyo, the high-end shopping corridors , the address is straightforwardly useful. Guests whose priority is the Left Bank or Marais will cover more ground, though the city's metro network makes the hotel accessible relative to either. The neighbourhood's permanent character, shaped by the concentration of embassies, private clubs, and institutional buildings nearby, reinforces the residential-glamorous register that Hempel's interiors establish inside.
Where It Sits in the Broader French Luxury Picture
France's hotel market beyond Paris includes properties that draw different profiles of guest, from wine-region escapes like Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux and Domaine Les Crayères in Reims, to Mediterranean-facing addresses like Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes, La Réserve Ramatuelle in Ramatuelle, and The Maybourne Riviera in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin. Alpine options like Cheval Blanc Courchevel and Four Seasons Megève define a separate seasonal proposition. Monsieur George operates in none of those categories; it is a Paris hotel of a particular type, one whose reference points are design authority and the credentials of a specific designer rather than brand scale or landscape setting. Guests evaluating it alongside Provence options like La Bastide de Gordes, Villa La Coste, or Hôtel & Spa du Castellet are making a different trip entirely; against Aman Venice or Aman New York, the comparison is closer in spirit, if not geography.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 17 Rue Washington, 75008 Paris
- Rate from: approximately $494 per night
- Rooms: 46
- Restaurant: Galanga (Michelin 1 Star, Mediterranean focus)
- Spa: Sauna, hammam, fitness room, treatments on request
- Awards: Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel 2025 (5pts); Michelin 1 Key 2024
- Google rating: 4.7 from 306 reviews
- Nearest avenue: Champs-Élysées (approx. 2 minutes on foot)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the standout thing about Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa?
The interior design by Anouska Hempel, one of the founding figures of boutique hotel culture, is the defining feature. At 46 rooms and with a Michelin-starred restaurant (Galanga) and Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel recognition for 2025, the property holds its own credentialling across design, gastronomy, and hospitality quality within Paris's 8th arrondissement. The rate of approximately $494 per night places it deliberately between mid-market four-star options and the full palace bracket.
What is the leading room type at Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa?
With 46 rooms total, the property operates at boutique scale, and the Gault & Millau five-point Exceptional Hotel designation and Michelin 1 Key recognition both point to a consistently high standard across the inventory. Given the residential character and layered interiors that define the hotel, rooms positioned for quieter Rue Washington views rather than busier adjacent streets will deliver the most coherent experience of what the property offers. Specific room-type configuration is leading confirmed directly with the hotel at booking.
Is Monsieur George Hôtel & Spa reservation-only?
As a hotel with 46 rooms in a high-demand arrondissement, booking in advance is advisable, particularly for stays that include a table at Galanga, the Michelin-starred restaurant within the property. Paris's premium hotel stock in the 8th fills quickly around major events and fashion weeks. Given the property's dual recognition from Gault & Millau and Michelin, last-minute availability at the approximately $494 rate point should not be assumed. Specific booking procedures are leading confirmed through the hotel directly.
Does the Michelin star at Galanga mean guests need a separate restaurant reservation?
In Paris, Michelin-starred hotel restaurants routinely require independent reservations and attract non-resident diners alongside hotel guests. Galanga, holding one Michelin star with a Mediterranean-focused menu, follows this pattern: guests staying at Monsieur George should not assume automatic access to the restaurant without confirming a table separately. The star was awarded in 2024, and demand at that recognition level in the 8th arrondissement typically means booking ahead is necessary, especially for peak evenings.
Recognized By
More hotels in Paris
- 42 Av. Gabriel42 Av. Gabriel sits in one of Paris's most competitive hotel corridors, steps from the Champs-Élysées gardens in the 8th arrondissement. Full pricing and awards data are not yet confirmed, so book direct and verify upgrade eligibility at reservation. For verified alternatives nearby, see Le Bristol Paris, Hôtel de Crillon, or La Réserve Paris.
- Auberge FloraAuberge Flora is a boutique hotel in Paris's 11th arrondissement, offering a neighbourhood-embedded alternative to the palace-district properties at a lower price point. It books easily, sits close to the Marais and Bastille, and suits travellers who want a design-forward base rather than full concierge service. A practical choice if location flexibility and value matter more than brand prestige.
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