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Study abroad in Paris

Housing, Erasmus groups, universities, costs and student life for exchange students in Paris.

Country

France

Student Budget

EUR 900 – 1,600/month

Transport Card

Pass Navigo Mois (all zones, ~€90/month) or Pass Imagine R for students under 26 (~€32/month annualised at €392/year)

Population

2.1M city / 12.3M metro (Île-de-France, INSEE 2024)

City Vibe

The most iconic student city in the world: world-class universities, unbeatable culture, subsidised meals, and a metro that goes everywhere — if you can afford the rent.

Who loves this city?

Students passionate about culture, fashion, gastronomy, arts, or social sciences. Paris rewards intellectual curiosity and cafe culture. Those who love walking, discovering hidden bookshops, debating ideas, and waking up to a croissant every morning will feel completely at home.

What makes it special

Paris is the only city where you can eat a €3.30 CROUS lunch across the street from the Louvre, hop on a metro to a free concert in the evening, and walk home through streets that look like a film set. The density of culture, history, and student life is unmatched anywhere in the world.

Newcomer shocks

  • The housing market is brutal — start your search 3 months before arrival and expect multiple rejections before securing a room.
  • Parisians can seem cold at first, but a genuine 'bonjour' and a few words of French open doors surprisingly fast.
  • The RATP metro is incredibly efficient but crowded at rush hour (8-9h and 18-19h) — plan accordingly.
  • Bureaucracy is real: opening a bank account, applying for CAF, validating your OFII — each requires specific documents and patience.

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Weather & Packing

Season High / Low Conditions Note
January 7°C / 3°C Frequent drizzle, occasional frost ~9h daylight — grey and short days
February 9°C / 3°C Light rain, cold wind ~10.5h daylight — slowly brightening
March 13°C / 6°C Moderate rain, mild ~12h daylight — spring arriving
April 17°C / 9°C Moderate rain, fresh ~13.5h daylight — pleasant walking weather
May 21°C / 13°C Light rain, warm ~15h daylight — outdoor terrace season begins
June 24°C / 16°C Occasional afternoon storms ~16h daylight — peak city energy
July 26°C / 18°C Mostly dry, hot spells ~15.5h daylight — Paris Plages open
August 26°C / 18°C Dry, occasional heatwave ~14h daylight — many Parisians on holiday, quieter city
September 22°C / 15°C Light rain returning ~12.5h daylight — la rentrée, city buzzes again
October 16°C / 11°C Moderate rain, cooling fast ~11h daylight — golden autumn in the parks
November 10°C / 6°C Frequent rain, grey ~9.5h daylight — pack a good raincoat
December 7°C / 4°C Cold rain, fog, rare snow ~8.5h daylight — Christmas markets compensate

Paris winters are mild but grey and damp (rarely below freezing). The metro runs 24/7 on weekends (Noctilien bus otherwise). No snow disruption expected; rain gear is more important than winter boots.

Packing checklist

  • A quality waterproof jacket is more useful than a heavy winter coat — Paris winters are wet, not Arctic.
  • Smart-casual clothes matter more here than in most student cities: Parisians dress with intention even for supermarket runs.
  • Comfortable walking shoes are essential — expect 10-15km/day exploring the city.
  • An umbrella you can pocket is essential from October to April.
  • Bring adaptors for Type E French sockets if your devices use Type A/B or UK plugs.
  • A reusable shopping bag — French supermarkets charge for plastic bags and sustainable habits are very normal here.

Cost of Living

Cost of Living Index

77.5 / 100

Expensive · World avg ≈ 44

Numbeo
Category Range Notes
Shared Room Rent EUR 450 – 800/month Shared flat in student arrondissements (13th, 18th, 19th–20th). Inner arrondissements (5th, 6th) push towards €700-950.
Studio Rent EUR 800 – 1,400/month Studio (typically 15-25m²) in Paris. Under-market options require long wait lists or personal connections.
University Residence EUR 250 – 550/month CROUS résidences universitaires — very limited places, apply 6+ months ahead through your home university or Paris university's international office.
Groceries EUR 120 – 200/month Lidl, Aldi, Ed, Franprix are the student-budget chains. Monoprix and Carrefour City are convenient but 20-30% more expensive.
Transport Monthly EUR 33 – 90/month Pass Imagine R (student under 26, annualised ~€33/month at €392/year) or full Navigo Mois (all zones, €88.80/month from Jan 2025).
Eating Out EUR 3 – 13/meal CROUS RU: €3.30 standard (€1 for boursiers and students in financial difficulty via CAF request). Brasserie plat du jour: €10-13.

Going out & dining

☕ Coffee (espresso, café) EUR 2.00-2.80
🍺 Beer (demi, bar) EUR 4.50-7.00
🍽️ CROUS lunch (standard) EUR 3.30
🍽️ CROUS lunch (boursier / financial aid) EUR 1.00
Baguette EUR 1.10-1.40
Monthly Navigo pass (all zones) EUR 88.80
Pass Imagine R (student under 26, annual) EUR 392/year (~33/month)
🎬 Cinema ticket (MK2, UGC student) EUR 8.00-11.00
🏋️ Gym membership (budget chains) EUR 20-30/month
🍽️ Supermarket lunch (sandwich + drink) EUR 5.00-7.00

Supermarket basket

🥛 Milk (1L) EUR 1.20–1.50
🥚 Eggs (12) EUR 2.60–3.40
🍗 Chicken breast (1kg) EUR 8–12
🍞 Bread (500g loaf) EUR 1.20–2.00
🍚 Rice (1kg) EUR 1.50–2.50

Source: Numbeo · Prices approximate, updated periodically.

Housing

Latin Quarter (5th arr.)

Varies by street, room type, and season.

Students at Sorbonne, Paris Cité, or Sciences Po. The historic student neighbourhood of Paris — bookshops, cafes, ancient streets.. Commute: Central — walking distance to most Left Bank universities.

Prioritise direct routes to your campus and test the trip at class times. Very safe, tourist-heavy. Watch for pickpockets near Place Saint-Michel and Rue Mouffetard market.

Montmartre (18th arr.)

Varies by street, room type, and season.

Artists, creative students, and those wanting the iconic Paris feel at a lower price point. Bohemian atmosphere, great bars.. Commute: Metro line 2 and 4 → 15-20 min to Latin Quarter or Châtelet.

Prioritise direct routes to your campus and test the trip at class times. Generally safe; avoid the immediate surroundings of Barbès metro station late at night.

Bastille / Nation (11th–12th arr.)

Varies by street, room type, and season.

Students who want nightlife, restaurants, bars, and a young crowd. The beating heart of Paris nightlife without the tourist prices.. Commute: Metro lines 1, 5, 8, 9 → excellent connectivity citywide.

Prioritise direct routes to your campus and test the trip at class times. Safe. Standard awareness at night around major bars and the périphérique edge.

13th arr. (Paris Rive Gauche)

Varies by street, room type, and season.

Students at Paris Cité university (Grands Moulins campus). Diverse, quiet residential area with Asia Town nearby — cheap restaurants.. Commute: Metro line 14 and RER C → fast access to centre and Orly airport.

Prioritise direct routes to your campus and test the trip at class times. Safe, residential. Avoid the immediate area around Porte de Choisy late at night.

Belleville / Ménilmontant (19th–20th arr.)

Varies by street, room type, and season.

Budget students who want authenticity and a mix of cultures. Best value rent within the périphérique. Growing arts scene.. Commute: Metro lines 2, 11 → 15-20 min to République or Châtelet.

Prioritise direct routes to your campus and test the trip at class times. Generally safe. Some busy corners near Belleville metro at night; standard urban precautions.

Documents to prepare

Passport or national ID

Admission or exchange confirmation

Proof of funds or guarantor details if requested

Deposit funds and signed lease

Health insurance or local registration documents if required

Timing

Start with university housing as soon as the host opens applications.

Keep temporary accommodation for arrival if the private market is tight.

For one-semester stays, confirm minimum term and cancellation rules before signing.

Red flags

Never transfer money or deposits before signing a written rental contract and verifying the landlord's identity.

Always request a live video tour or physical viewing of the property to confirm it exists and matches the description.

Be extremely suspicious of listings priced significantly lower than the local market average for that neighborhood.

Safety

Safety Index

42.1 / 100

Moderate — stay alert

Crime Index

57.9 / 100

High crime — be cautious

Source: Numbeo · Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

Paris is generally safe for students in campus and residential areas. Petty theft (pickpocketing) is the primary risk, especially on the RER B (CDG line), at major tourist sites (Eiffel Tower, Sacré-Cœur), and on crowded metro lines (Line 1, 4). Student neighbourhoods are calm; standard urban precautions apply at night.

Top risks

  • Pickpocketing — particularly on RER B (CDG airport line), metro Line 1 (tourist corridor), and near the Eiffel Tower and Sacré-Cœur.
  • Distraction scams — 'petition' scams and friendship bracelet sellers near tourist landmarks (Montmartre steps, Pont de l'Alma).
  • Housing scams — fake rental listings using real photos; never wire money without a signed contract and verified landlord.

On the RER B (especially early morning to CDG airport), keep your bag in front of you on your lap or chest. At Châtelet-Les-Halles (the largest metro interchange), stay aware of your surroundings and avoid displaying expensive electronics.

Emergency: 112 (EU universal) 17 (Police nationale) 15 (SAMU medical emergency) 3117 (National rail security hotline — use on RER/SNCF trains)

Transport

🚊 RATP (Métro, RER, bus, tram)

Imagine R card €38/month for under 26

Imagine R covers all 5 zones (Paris + suburbs + airports). Apply at imagine-r.com with student certificate and ID. Adults pay €88/mo Navigo for comparison.

Imagine R for under 26 — major saving

🚲 Vélib bike share

€3.10/day or €10.40/month subscription

V-Plus electric bikes save you in summer humidity and hills (Montmartre). Watch for broken bikes — always test before riding.

No specific student rate

🚶 Walking

Free

Paris is genuinely walkable — most central arrondissements connect in 30 min on foot. Many Erasmus students discover they walk more than they expected.

Events & Activities

Fête de la Musique in Paris

Fête de la Musique

June 21 (annual fixed date)

Free

Every street corner in Paris becomes a free concert. Hundreds of stages, all genres, all night long — one of the best nights of the year for exchange students.

Nuit Blanche Paris in Paris

Nuit Blanche Paris

First Saturday of October

Free

All-night free art installations in museums, streets, and unexpected spaces. A surreal and totally free cultural marathon.

Bastille Day Fireworks (Fête Nationale) in Paris

Bastille Day Fireworks (Fête Nationale)

July 14 (annual fixed date)

Free

Best fireworks in Europe, launched from the Eiffel Tower. Watch from Trocadéro, Champ-de-Mars, or the Seine riverbanks. The Bal des Pompiers (free dance parties at fire stations) starts the night before.

Paris Jazz Festival in Paris

Paris Jazz Festival

June–July

Free with park entry (~€6 on concert days)

Outdoor jazz concerts in a beautiful park — bring a picnic, lie on the grass, and discover world-class musicians in a totally relaxed setting.

Paris Plages in Paris

Paris Plages

Mid-July to mid-August

Free

The Seine riverbanks transform into urban beaches with sand, deckchairs, free sports, and open-air cinema. The city at its most relaxed.

Salon des Grandes Écoles / University open days in Paris

Salon des Grandes Écoles / University open days

October–November

Free or €5-10

Great for networking with French students and understanding the French higher education system — interesting even as an exchange student.

Social Life

What Students Usually Get Wrong

  • Students underestimate how early they need to start housing. In Paris, 'I will sort it out after exams' is often already too late for the better rooms.
  • Many newcomers assume living in the exact center is always worth it. In practice, a calmer area with a direct metro line often gives you a better semester.
  • People arrive expecting Paris to work smoothly in English. Basic French makes admin, landlords, and day-to-day life noticeably easier.
Student Associations
  • ESN Paris (Erasmus Student Network) — organises welcome parties, city tours, weekend trips, and international student events. Most active ESN chapter in France.
  • CROUS Paris cultural events — subsidised concerts, cinema, and theatre tickets for enrolled students.
  • Sciences Po clubs (over 200 student associations covering everything from debate to humanitarian projects).
  • BDE (Bureau Des Étudiants) at each Paris university — organise integration events, parties, and student life.
Meeting Places 4
  • Canal Saint-Martin (10th arr.) — the go-to student hangout on warm evenings; picnics along the canal are a Paris tradition.
  • Place de la Contrescarpe (5th arr.) — historic student square surrounded by cafés, perfect for afternoon drinks after class.
  • Parc des Buttes-Chaumont (19th arr.) — favourite for student picnics and Sunday afternoon gatherings.
  • La Péniche (floating bars on the Seine) — unique Paris bar culture along the riverbanks near Bercy and Quai d'Austerlitz.
Public Groups 4

ESN Paris WhatsApp

Official ESN Paris onboarding page for the current student WhatsApp community and welcome-year updates.

Open

Study in France: ESN Paris checklist

Official Campus France page pointing incoming students to ESN Paris and the practical first-step checklist.

Open

International & Erasmus Students in Paris

Open Meetup community for language exchange, newcomer meetups, and mixed international events.

Open

Paris Erasmus Life links hub

Link hub used by Paris Erasmus organizers for community channels, housing groups, and the active group chat.

Open
Forums & Advice 2

Erasmus+ Community

Official network for exchange students — forums, contacts, and city guides.

Visit

Reddit: Trying to find housing in Paris is impossible!!

Useful reality check on how hard Paris housing is and why students recommend starting early and leaning on university or ESN help.

Open

Reddit: Paris erasmus housing

Student discussion focused on where to live, commuter tradeoffs, and what changes when your campus is outside the center.

Open

Student Perks

Museums & Culture

Louvre

Free for EU residents under 26. All other students: reduced rate. Free on first Friday of each month after 18:00.

Visit

Musée d'Orsay

Free for EU residents under 26. Reduced rate for all students.

Visit

Centre Pompidou

Free for EU residents under 26. Reduced rate for all students. Regular free access days.

Visit

Food Savings

CROUS University Restaurants

Restaurants Universitaires (RU) run by CROUS Paris: €3.30 standard meal, €1.00 for scholarship holders (boursiers) and students in proven financial difficulty. Apply at epa.lescrous.fr for the €1 rate if eligible. Over 50 CROUS canteens in the Paris region.

Get app

Too Good To Go

Popular app to buy surplus food and pastries from local bakeries, cafes, and supermarkets at a huge discount.

Get app

University Canteens (Mensa)

Check your local university campus for the student cafeteria which offers subsidized hot meals to students.

Get app

Pass Imagine R (students and apprentices under 26) — €392/year, all zones, buy at any RATP station or navigo.fr Fares & passes

Universities

Sciences Po Paris

Sciences Po Paris

Flagship Paris option for exchange students focused on social sciences, policy, economics, and international affairs in a highly international academic environment.

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Sorbonne University

Sorbonne University

Historic central-Paris option for exchange students who want strong humanities, serious academics, and a classic university-in-Paris experience.

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Universite Paris Cite

Universite Paris Cite

Large public university option for exchange students who want broad academic coverage, strong research credibility, and a practical Paris onboarding structure.

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