Paris Bachelorette Party — Ideas & 3-Day Itinerary

Private bachelorette party in Paris on a luxury boat along the Seine River. Champagne, music, Eiffel Tower views, and a fully private experience for your girls’ trip.

Most Paris bachelorette weekends run Friday to Sunday, build around one anchor activity per day, and cost €1,100 to €1,700 per person before flights for groups of six to ten. Known locally as an EVJF (Enterrement de Vie de Jeune Fille), the format that consistently works for American groups is a morning photoshoot, a private Seine cruise into golden hour, a cabaret or restaurant-with-dancing for the big night, and a slow brunch on the way out.

This page covers the full playbook: when to go, where to stay, the 3-day itinerary, activities by category, cost by group size, and the planning logistics most editorial guides skip.

FieldQuick answer
Trip length3 days is standard. 2 days for compressed weekends. 4+ days for stretched groups.
Best group size6–10 is easiest. Groups of 5–15 work; 10+ usually need the yacht or split transport.
Best monthsApril–June and September–October — best balance of light, weather, and crowd levels.
Average cost per person€1,100–€1,700 before flights for a mid-range 3-day weekend.
Anchor activitiesPrivate Seine cruise, group photoshoot, cabaret or restaurant-with-dancing.
Book ahead by4–6 weeks for peak season. 2–3 weeks otherwise. Saturdays at golden hour go first.
Four women in white robes and heart sunglasses drinking champagne on hotel bed with silver BRIDE balloon letters and white balloons on ceiling, Paris
Robes, sunglasses, Grazia, champagne at 11am. The dress code is white. The agenda is none.

One anchor activity per day, one booked dinner per day, everything else loose. The structure below is what consistently works for American groups of six to ten — adjust activities, keep the pacing.


Friday — Arrival, settle, welcome dinner

Morning to early afternoon — arrivals. Most groups land at CDG between 7am and noon and need a few hours to drop bags, shower, and reset. Don’t schedule anything before 3pm.

Late afternoon — welcome café or rooftop. Meet at a café in the Marais or a rooftop bar with Eiffel views. Two-hour catch-up, light cocktails, no agenda. €25–€40 per person.

Evening — welcome dinner. A classic brasserie that takes groups: the Bouillon chain (Bouillon Pigalle, Bouillon République) is reliable, group-friendly, fixed prices around €25–€35 per person including wine. For a more visual dinner, the Big Mamma group restaurants (Pink Mamma, Libertino) photograph well and run €40–€70 per person.

Late evening (optional) — one drink stop. Light first night. Most groups regret going hard on Friday. A wine bar in the Marais or a hotel bar nightcap is enough. €15–€30 per person.

Bride in white sequin jumpsuit and hat laughing at hotel room door, surprised by BRIDE balloon letters, white balloons on bed and silver streamers, Paris
Bride in white sequin jumpsuit and hat laughing at hotel room door, surprised by BRIDE balloon letters, white balloons on bed and silver streamers, Paris

Saturday — Photos, cruise, big night

Morning (8:30–10:30am) — group photoshoot. Trocadéro, Pont Alexandre III, Bir-Hakeim, or the Louvre courtyard. Early light, fewer crowds, the bride at her freshest. A 90-minute session covering two locations runs €350–€600 for the group depending on photographer.

Optional add-on for Saturday afternoon — a 60–90-minute pink-limo or vintage-convertible loop. Pickup near the apartment, swing past Bir-Hakeim for Eiffel-view photos and a champagne pop, then the limo can either drop the group at the boat or stay with you across the rest of the day’s moves. Pink stretch or classic vintage convertible — both standard bachelorette picks in Paris.

Post-shoot — Carette or Angelina. Hot chocolate, pastries, coffee, decompress. €15–€30 per person.

Midday to early afternoon — light lunch and reset. Marais café or a quick salad. Save appetite for the cruise and dinner. €20–€35 per person.

Late afternoon into golden hour — private Seine cruise. The anchor activity of the weekend. Our Private Boat (90 minutes, from €1,600 for the group) or Champagne Yacht (1h45, Ruinart and an attendant included, from €3,500 for the group) — both come with a photographer on board, your playlist, and the boat to yourselves. See full cruise details

Evening — the big night. Two paths. Path A: a seated cabaret show (Crazy Horse, Moulin Rouge, Paradis Latin) — €115–€220 per person depending on the show and the champagne tier. Path B: a restaurant-with-dancing — dinner that turns into late-night drinks and a dance floor, typically €70–€150 per person depending on bottle service.

If your group is split between cabaret energy and dance-floor energy, the cabaret usually wins for a bachelorette. The seated show works for everyone, the dress-up factor is built in, and the bride gets a clear turn in the spotlight without having to negotiate the bouncer at a club.

Bride in white dress and veil leading large bachelorette party group walking through cobblestone Place du Tertre in Montmartre at night, Paris
Bride in white dress and veil leading large bachelorette party group walking through cobblestone Place du Tertre in Montmartre at night, Paris

Sunday — Recovery brunch, shopping, farewell

Late morning — recovery brunch. Holybelly, BigLove Caffè, or Hardware Société. Eggs, pancakes, strong coffee, optional mimosas. €30–€45 per person.

Afternoon — shopping in the Marais. Split into smaller groups by interest (boutiques, vintage, concept stores), regroup at a café two hours later. Spend ranges from €0 to whatever the group has left.

Late afternoon (optional) — champagne-bar crawl, Tuileries walk, or a final group photo near Pont Neuf. Quiet, photogenic, no agenda.

Early evening — farewell. Most groups have late-Sunday or Monday-morning flights. A goodbye drink on the Seine steps or at a wine bar in the 6th wraps the weekend without dragging it out.

Outdoor terrace of Au Cadet de Gascogne restaurant on Place du Tertre in Montmartre, Paris, decorated with sunflowers and flowers, busy lunch crowd on sunny day
Outdoor terrace of Au Cadet de Gascogne restaurant on Place du Tertre in Montmartre, Paris, decorated with sunflowers and flowers, busy lunch crowd on sunny day

Between €700 and €2,500 per person for three days, before flights, depending on group size and tier. The cruise is the line item that scales fastest with group size — splitting €1,600 across eight people is very different from splitting €3,500 across six.

Per-person cost by group size (mid-range tier, including private Seine cruise, photoshoot, 2 dinners + 1 brunch, cabaret, lodging shared, local transport):

Group sizeCruise optionCruise per personTotal per person (mid-range)
5 peoplePrivate Boat (€1,600)€320€1,250–€1,650
6 peoplePrivate Boat (€1,600)€267€1,150–€1,550
8 peoplePrivate Boat (€1,600) or Champagne Yacht (€3,500)€200 / €438€1,000–€1,650
10 peopleChampagne Yacht (€3,500)€350€1,000–€1,500
12 peopleChampagne Yacht (€3,500)€292€950–€1,400

Three budget tiers across all group sizes:

TierPer person, before flightsTypical inclusions
Budget€700–€1,100Airbnb apartment, brasserie dinners, shared Seine cruise, perfume workshop, hammam, café brunch.
Mid-range (recommended)€1,100–€1,700Mid-tier Marais apartment, private Seine cruise (boat for 8), 90-minute group photoshoot, Moulin Rouge or Crazy Horse, 3 dinners with wine.
Splurge€1,700–€2,500+Boutique hotel suites or higher-tier apartment, Champagne Yacht cruise, longer photoshoot covering 2 locations, hotel spa treatments, premium dinners with bottle service.

Where the budget usually breaks: bottle service at clubs, last-minute flight changes, and dinner-and-drinks for nights you didn’t plan a structured activity. The cleanest way to control cost is to plan one anchor activity per day — when groups improvise, they over-spend.

WhatsApp for coordination, deposits via international card or bank transfer, restaurants booked 2–4 weeks ahead, and one named planner per group who owns the spreadsheet. Most of the friction is time-zone management, not logistics.


WhatsApp is the default channel in France for vendor coordination. Email works but expect slower turnaround. Schedule any video calls between 2pm and 5pm Paris time, which is 8am–11am Eastern.


Most Paris bachelorette services take a 30–50% deposit on booking with the balance due 1–2 weeks before the date. International cards work, but international transfer (SEPA from the US is slow but viable) is sometimes preferred by smaller vendors. PayPal and Wise are common backup options. Build in at least 5 business days for the deposit to clear before counting the date as confirmed.


Saturday-night dinner reservations for groups of six or more need 3–6 weeks of lead time during peak season, 2 weeks otherwise. Cabaret shows (Moulin Rouge in particular) book up 4–8 weeks in advance for Saturday slots. The Seine cruise is usually the most flexible — 2 weeks of lead time is workable, 4–6 weeks is safer for golden-hour Saturdays in May to September.


Splitwise is the standard tool. One person fronts deposits, the group settles after the bigger bookings clear, and the maid of honor reconciles the final balance after the trip. Most groups exclude the bride from the bachelorette-specific costs (cruise, cabaret, photoshoot) and split everything else evenly.


Pre-book a G7 van (or two) for the cabaret night — Uber struggles with 8+ people at peak times in central Paris, and walking back in heels from the 18th arrondissement at 1am is not the move. Day moves between hotels, photo locations, and the boat are usually fine by taxi or short Metro rides.


For the maid of honor planning from the US, the cleanest system is one spreadsheet, one WhatsApp thread, one deposit owner, and one anchor booking per day. Trying to crowdsource all decisions across 8 bridesmaids in three time zones is the consistent failure mode. Decide early, communicate often, hold the line on the schedule, and assume 30% of the group won’t read the WhatsApp thread carefully.


Paris is generally safe for bachelorette groups in central arrondissements with normal urban precautions: share live locations in WhatsApp, pre-book transport after midnight, keep bags zipped near Metro stations (pickpocketing around Châtelet, Saint-Lazare, and Eiffel Tower esplanades is the most common issue groups run into), and keep one person sober enough to navigate.

Group harmony starts with expectations. Not everyone needs to love clubs or cabaret; the bride gets first call on the big-night activity and the daytime anchor. Build in one free block per day for shopping, naps, or solo wandering so the introverts don’t burn out and the extroverts don’t feel stuck. Splitting the group for one evening (cabaret vs. wine bar) is fine — it usually makes the rest of the weekend smoother.

Yes — this is one of the most-requested combinations we handle. Usually it’s the bride’s partner flying in mid-weekend with a planned proposal setup, sometimes it’s a vow renewal disguised as a bachelorette event.

We handle the logistics so the bride doesn’t see the planning. Our proposal packages cover rooftop, boat, hotel room, and public-location setups from €1,400. See proposal packages

Ready to plan it?

Send your dates, group size, and which Saturday activity you want as the anchor — cruise, cabaret, or photoshoot. We come back with pricing, availability, and the things we’d add or change. Most of our inquiries come from maids of honor planning from the US — we work in English, on WhatsApp, and around your time zone.