The Essential Guide to the 9th Arrondissement


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The 9th is a vibrant and dynamic arrondissement drawing a professional crowd during the workday and adventure seekers at night. From lesser-known museums to theaters, cabarets, and comedy clubs, there’s no shortage of entertainment on offer. The WeWorks and Googles of the world may have invaded the neighborhood, but even corporate culture can’t kill its seedy spirit — there’s a bit of extra grit in the air here, and an enigmatic atmosphere of the Parisian underbelly. Visit on a weekday to relish your freedom among the bankers and tech managers queuing for lunch. With nothing to do and nowhere to go, here’s a list of suggestions.
The grand staircase of the Palais Garnier. Image credit: Benh LIEU SONG/ Wikipedia Commons
WHERE TO EAT
Start the day with a Valrhona-filled pain au chocolat from Mamiche, one of the few boulangeries in Paris beloved by locals and tourists alike. Despite the hype, it’s more about the experience and the visuals than the product here, and you’ll have to brave the line out the door and clusters of live-streamed taste testings. If choux à la vanille and beignets don’t appeal to your sugar cravings, there’s an outpost of Babka Zana down the street, or head to KB Coffee Roasters for banana bread and Aussie-style coffee. Sit outside with a magazine from the press stand, or watch the merry-go-round and eavesdrop on digital nomads taking meetings on stopovers from Berlin. After breakfast, browse the outlet stores and secondhand shops along rue Condorcet and scope out the menu du jour at Cuisine to bookmark for later.
Next stop? The rue des Martyrs, one of the 9th’s central veins, and hog heaven for gourmands. The concentration of decadent offerings on every block is overwhelming, from Gerard Taurin, the MOF glacier, to Rose Bakery, an Anglo-inspired cafe and to go counter serving colorful salads, brunch items, and desserts. For some culinary theater, head a couple blocks down to Rose’s pastry kitchen on the rue Manuel to watch the bakers at work. Even the Carrefour City here is worth visiting, reminiscent of the notorious Marina Safeway in San Francisco for its primary customer base of eligible young professionals. As a bonus, most of the storefronts along the rue des Martyrs remain open on Sundays, so it’s a good street to hit while other parts of town take the day off.
For a casual lunch, hit up Riha Durum on the rue du Faubourg Montmartre. Riha offers vegetarian and vegan options, Kurdish lager, and an utterly divine Kurdish pastry for dessert. Take your order to go and catch the action at nearby skate park Leon Claudel. For a sit down meal, wait in line a couple of doors down at famed Bouillon Chartier. A stalwart of Parisian dining, Chartier is an experience everyone should have at least once, and I won’t spoil it for you here.
Alternatively, Japanese canteen Komorebi serves up lunch and gorgeous desserts seven days a week, including a black sesame flan and a chocolate moelleux with kinako crème. Owners Ryoko and Paolo worked at Yann Couvreur before opening Komorebi, loosely translated to mean sunlight filtering through trees.
Courtesy of Bouillon Chartier
For dinner, try Cuisine, a fabulous neighborhood spot with a Japanese-inspired menu and warm service. Beloved among locals, Cuisine also offers some of the nattiest wines in Paris. Order the fish, and don’t skip dessert. On a cold night with a group of friends, head to Abri Soba for refreshing beer, shared plates and bowls of warming soup. The atmosphere here is fabulous: convivial, friendly, and hip, without any pretension. Expect to wait in line as they don’t take reservations, but don’t be discouraged — it’s worth it.
Had too much fun and in need of an after-hours option? Dawa Street Crepes is unrivaled in both service and Nutella banana and open until 1:45 AM, while Dumbo Pigalle is a popular smashburger window serving up greasy delights until 10:30 PM. Sometimes that 30-minute grace period is everything.
WHERE TO SHOP, WANDER, ABSORB SOME CULTURE, AND GET ENLIGHTENED
Home to two of Paris’s grand magasins and a concentration of vintage, outlet, and secondhand shops, the 9th offers something for everyone. Indulge in some lèche vitrine at Galleries Lafayette and Printemps like any good Parisian, or brave the crowds inside. Do some people watching, hit the perfume counters, then head down the street to the Fragonard museum for a true education in all things olfactory.
Although not as impressive as the sister museum in Grasse, it’s still worth the visit to see the selection of old Schiaparelli fragrances with names like Shocking Scamp, Snuff, and Sleeping. Visitors can also attend perfumer workshops at the atelier, but be sure to book in advance. Exit through the gift shop and take two lefts to reach the flagship Fragonard boutique, where you’ll find gorgeous textiles and gypset-chic clothing sold alongside the full library of eponymous scents.
Perfume atelier. Photo: Maria Kern
After honing your nose, head to the Place d’Estienne d’Orves to visit Trinité, where the clergy take bells and smells to another level. Currently covered in scaffolding, it doesn’t look like much from outside, which only heightens the experience of discovery once through the doors. Other-worldly, the interior is moody and dimly lit — let your eye catch flashes of gold and apparitions of doves as you move about the pews. Trinité is a liminal haven that feels far removed from central Paris, and the perfect church to visit on a wintery afternoon.
Photo credit: Maria Kern
Continue your spiritual journey a block away on the rue Saint Lazare at La Cornaline, a metaphysical bookshop with fabulous window displays and the best selection of tarot and oracle decks in Paris. Cross the street to La Naturelle d’Eve for Koshi chimes, books on sacred geometry, and a wide selection of crystals.
Stop by Juju s’amuse next, to browse original designs by Judith Lacroix. The emphasis here is on bright colors and natural fabrics, especially cotton. For more bobo choses, check out Manuelle Guibal, a Parisienne creative who stocks billowy, oversized clothing and accessories by fellow artists, many from Italy. When your legs give out from all the walking, head to see Gisèle Peretti for a relaxing Tuina massage. If you’re local, she also teaches intensive weekend ateliers, so you can learn (and pass on) the technique.
Musée Gustave Moreau, interior of the artist’s home and studio. Public domain
The Musée Gustave Moreau is one of Paris’s best kept secrets, located within an unassuming residential building on the rue Catherine de la Rochefoucauld. Head upstairs to visit Moreau’s apartment, replicated in the first floor rooms as life-size dioramas. Continue upstairs to the second and third floors, and Moreau’s world expands, with high ceilings and wall to wall paintings on display. To fully immerse yourself in his mystical and opulent work, wander along the perimeter and draw back the curtains to reveal thousands of Moreau’s drawings, displayed in panels that fold out from the wall. The museum has provided stools for visitors to use while they while away the afternoon, transported back through time to Moreau’s perspective. One point of note — the museum is not accessible and requires confidence and agility to navigate the narrow spiral staircases. Nor is it a particularly kid-friendly place — in all my visits I have never seen a child there.
Passage Jouffroy. Photo credit: Jorge Royan/ Wikimedia Commons
The 9th is also home to the Passage Jouffroy and Passage Verdeau, two in a series of secret passageways throughout the city. Stop for tea among locals at Le Valentin and try the pavé de Gaillac, a prune, almond and armagnac confection I’ve yet to see anywhere else. Resembling a cube-shaped gâteau Basque, I inquired as to its origins. Monsieur declared it a totally unique in-house creation, though perhaps inspired by the southwest.
To call it a wrap, visit toy emporium Pain d’Épices to admire the Steiff collection, and browse the adjacent bookstores and print shops. Or go full camp at the Musée Grévin–critique dubious wax renditions of various celebrities while admiring your own more accurate reflection in the hall of mirrors.
9th arrondissement. Photo: Maria Kern
NIGHTLIFE
The 9th really comes alive at night. Theaters, comedy clubs, and bars all offer third spaces to decompress after a long day at a nearby desk or out and about exploring. Try the Art Deco cabaret Folies Bergère for a concert or dance performance. Current programming includes a concert of music from Miyazaki films, and choreographer Benjamin Millepied will be staging three original shows in 2026. If nothing else, come to bask in the esprit de Joséphine Baker, whose career took off here.
Other options include a host of comedy clubs and theaters, including the Théâtre Saint-Georges, which dates back to 1929. A group of Parisian theater-world enthusiasts bought it up in 2024 to revive the scene, with shows like the French adaptation of Isobel McArthur’s Pride and Prejudice* (*sort of).
Chez Moune. Photo: Maria Kern
After the show, head to Le Mansart for drinks. A busy, photogenic bar with its original design intact, Le Mansart is popular among 20-somethings and those on the prowl. Drink prices are low for Paris, and they serve steak frites, pasta, and charcuterie to soak up the alcohol. There’s even a foosball table available for the athletically inclined.
After drinks and some mock sport, dance the night away at Chez Moune, a former lesbian cabaret turned nightclub pounding out a mix of funk, rock, and disco house. Another option is the Pigalle Country Club, the pinnacle of Parisian dive bars. Open until 3 AM during the week and 5 AM on weekends, you could always lean into the louche and treat it like a kind of hotel, at least until the metro opens. But ditch the dress code: no dinner jacket required for entry here.
Le Mansart. Photo: Maria Kern
Lead photo credit : Rue des Bulles, rue des Martyrs. Photo: Chabe01 / Wikimedia commons

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