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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Ty Breiz Crêperie

    100pts

    The 15th's crêperie that earns repeat visits.

    Ty Breiz Crêperie, Restaurant in Paris

    About Ty Breiz Crêperie

    Ty Breiz Crêperie on Boulevard de Vaugirard is a reliable, affordable Breton crêperie in the local-feeling 15th arrondissement. The buckwheat galettes are gluten-free by default, and the Breton cider selection adds genuine regional depth at a price tier where most venues keep drinks generic. Best visited at weekday lunch for a quieter room and easy walk-in access.

    Verdict

    Ty Breiz Crêperie at 52 Boulevard de Vaugirard is the kind of address that rewards return visits more than first ones. If you have already eaten here once, you know the format works: Breton-style galettes and sweet crêpes in a relaxed 15th arrondissement setting that sits firmly at the affordable end of the Paris dining spectrum. For a second visit, the question is less whether to go and more when and what to order beyond the obvious. The short answer: go at lunch on a weekday, avoid the Friday-evening rush, and treat the cider selection as seriously as you would a wine list anywhere else.

    About Ty Breiz

    Ty Breiz is a crêperie operating out of the 15th arrondissement, a residential neighbourhood that does not attract much tourist traffic, which keeps the room feeling local rather than performative. The atmosphere skews quiet and unhurried at lunch; noise levels rise in the evening as the tables fill with neighbourhood regulars. If you are after a conversation-friendly meal, the lunch service is the better call. Evening visits are lively but not loud in a way that becomes a problem.

    The food format is galettes (buckwheat, savoury) and crêpes (wheat flour, sweet), the standard Breton pairing. Buckwheat galettes are naturally gluten-free, which makes this a more practical choice for gluten-avoiding diners than most Paris bistros, though you should verify directly with the restaurant given cross-contamination variables. The cider program is where Ty Breiz earns attention beyond the basic crêperie brief: traditional Breton ciders, served in ceramic bolées, are the correct pairing for savoury galettes and the house takes this seriously enough that the cider selection functions as the venue's answer to a wine list. At this price tier across Paris, you rarely get a drinks program with this much regional specificity.

    Booking is easy. Walk-ins are generally possible, especially at lunch, though a reservation for weekend evenings is sensible. Groups of four or more will want to call ahead. The venue is direct to reach from the Montparnasse area, sitting a short walk from Gare Montparnasse and the Pasteur and Montparnasse-Bienvenüe metro stops.

    How Ty Breiz Fits Into Your Paris Trip

    If your Paris restaurant list already includes a booking at Kei, L'Ambroisie, or Le Cinq, Ty Breiz serves the opposite function: a low-cost, high-comfort lunch that gives you the energy and budget headroom to spend properly at dinner. It is not a destination meal in the sense that Arpège or Alléno Paris are destination meals, but it earns its place on a well-planned Paris itinerary as a reliable, affordable anchor. For context on how French regional cooking plays out at the other end of the price range, see venues like Bras in Laguiole or Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, where the regional identity is the same driving force but the investment is considerably larger.

    For broader Paris planning, see our full Paris restaurants guide, our Paris bars guide, and our Paris hotels guide.

    Practical Details

    FactorTy Breiz CrêperieTypical Paris CrêperieParis Bistro (mid-range)
    Price tier€–€€€–€€€€–€€€
    Booking difficultyEasy (walk-ins often fine at lunch)EasyModerate
    Leading time to visitWeekday lunchVariesVaries
    Drinks programBreton cider, regional specificityBasic cider or wineWine list
    Dietary noteBuckwheat galettes are gluten-freeOften gluten-free optionLess reliably so
    Atmosphere (evening)Lively, neighbourhood crowdVariableVariable

    FAQ

    • What are alternatives to Ty Breiz Crêperie in Paris? For Breton crêpes in Paris, Crêperie Josselin on Rue du Montparnasse is the most direct like-for-like alternative, sitting in the city's established crêperie corridor. If you want to step up in formality and price, the restaurant options at that level shift entirely: Kei and L'Ambroisie are the right references for serious French dining, but they are a different category entirely.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Ty Breiz Crêperie? Seating configuration details are not confirmed in our data. Contact the restaurant directly to ask about counter or bar seating options, particularly if you are dining solo.
    • Is Ty Breiz Crêperie good for a special occasion? Not in the conventional sense. The price point and format make it a comfortable, casual meal rather than a celebratory one. For a special occasion in Paris, you would be better served by Le Cinq or Alléno Paris. Where Ty Breiz works for occasions is as a relaxed, no-pressure lunch before an evening event.
    • What should a first-timer know about Ty Breiz Crêperie? The Breton model means two separate menus: savoury buckwheat galettes first, sweet crêpes after. Do not skip the cider. The 15th arrondissement location means the crowd is mostly local, which is a feature rather than a drawback. Arrive at lunch if you want a quieter room and an easier table.
    • What should I order at Ty Breiz Crêperie? Specific current menu items are not confirmed in our data, so we cannot name dishes. The format is galettes (savoury, buckwheat) followed by sweet crêpes, with Breton cider as the recommended pairing. Ask the staff what is working well that day.
    • Does Ty Breiz Crêperie handle dietary restrictions? Buckwheat galettes are naturally gluten-free, making this a more accommodating option than most Paris restaurants for gluten-avoiding diners. For specific allergen information or cross-contamination concerns, contact the restaurant directly, as our data does not include confirmed protocols.
    • Can Ty Breiz Crêperie accommodate groups? Groups of four or more should call ahead rather than walking in. Specific capacity data is not in our records, but crêperies at this address and price tier in Paris typically seat groups with advance notice more reliably than on spec.
    • What should I wear to Ty Breiz Crêperie? Casual. This is a neighbourhood crêperie, not a formal dining room. Smart casual is more than sufficient; there is no dress code.

    Compare Ty Breiz Crêperie

    Getting a Table: Ty Breiz Crêperie and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Ty Breiz CrêperieEasy
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreative€€€€Unknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    L'AmbroisieFrench, Classic Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, Creative€€€€Unknown

    A quick look at how Ty Breiz Crêperie measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Ty Breiz Crêperie?

    Bar seating isn't confirmed in available venue details, so don't plan around it. The dining room is the reliable option — walk-ins at lunch on weekdays are realistic, so if you're solo or a pair, arriving at opening is the simplest approach.

    What should a first-timer know about Ty Breiz Crêperie?

    Ty Breiz is a neighbourhood crêperie on Boulevard de Vaugirard in the 15th arrondissement — not a tourist-facing operation, which is part of the appeal. Expect a calm, unhurried room, straightforward Breton-rooted food, and no need to dress up or plan far ahead. Lunch mid-week is the easiest visit; weekend evenings are worth a reservation.

    What should I order at Ty Breiz Crêperie?

    Specific menu details aren't available here, but Breton crêperies of this type typically anchor around savoury galettes — buckwheat crêpes with fillings like ham, egg, and cheese — followed by sweet crêpes. Go for the galette first, then a sweet crêpe to finish; that's the format the kitchen is built around.

    Does Ty Breiz Crêperie handle dietary restrictions?

    Buckwheat galettes are naturally gluten-free, which makes Breton crêperies a practical option for gluten-intolerant diners — though cross-contamination policies aren't confirmed here. Vegetarian options are standard in this format. check the venue's official channels to confirm specifics before visiting.

    Can Ty Breiz Crêperie accommodate groups?

    Ty Breiz is a neighbourhood crêperie, not a large-format dining room, so groups of more than four should call ahead to confirm availability. For parties of two or three, walk-ins at lunch work well. Larger groups will want to book and arrive together.

    What should I wear to Ty Breiz Crêperie?

    Come as you are. Ty Breiz is a casual neighbourhood crêperie in the 15th — there's no dress expectation beyond being reasonably put-together. Jeans and a jacket are entirely appropriate; anything smarter is surplus.

    Is Ty Breiz Crêperie good for solo dining?

    Yes. The calm, unhurried atmosphere and neighbourhood-staple format make it one of the more comfortable solo lunch spots in the 15th. Arriving at lunch mid-week means you're unlikely to wait, and the single-dish format — one galette, one sweet crêpe — keeps the meal efficient without pressure to linger.

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