The hotel that mastered warmth at palace scale. Three Michelin stars, five-metre floral arrangements, and Four Seasons precision on Avenue George V.
"Three Michelin stars under one roof, floral arrangements that stop guests mid-lobby, and Four Seasons service standards applied to the highest possible canvas. The warmest of Paris's palace hotels, and probably the most universally correct one."
Four Seasons Hotel George V occupies a 1928 Art Deco building on one of Paris's grandest avenues, a five-minute walk from the Champs-Élysées and the Arc de Triomphe. Four Seasons acquired and renovated it in 1999, applying the group's systematic approach to service quality to a palace-scale property. The result has been consistently ranked among the finest hotels in the world for over two decades — a distinction earned rather than assumed.
The floral arrangements in the lobby are the hotel's most frequently photographed element and its most characterful. Chef-Fleuriste Jeff Leatham creates five-metre tall arrangements that change weekly and have become genuine Parisian landmarks in their own right. The lobby gallery is regularly used as a backdrop by fashion photographers who understand that it photographs better than most purpose-built studios.
The dining programme is extraordinary by any standard. Le Cinq carries two Michelin stars under Chef Christian Le Squer, offering one of the most accomplished French haute cuisine menus in the city. L'Orangerie holds one Michelin star and serves lighter, contemporary French cuisine in an atrium-lit setting. La Galerie serves afternoon tea and casual meals under a vaulted ceiling. Three distinct restaurants, each exceptional, within one building.
The rooms and suites — 244 of them — are classically luxurious in the true French palace tradition: marble bathrooms, high ceilings, silk draperies, and Louis XVI-inspired furnishings. The suites facing the courtyard are the most prized for their quiet. The penthouse suites offer Eiffel Tower views of considerable impact. The spa, at 2,000 square metres, includes an indoor pool and a programme of treatments developed in partnership with La Prairie.
The service is the Four Seasons standard — genuinely warm, anticipatory, and consistent across every point of contact. It is perhaps the most family-friendly of the Paris palaces, with dedicated children's amenities, family suite configurations, and staff who treat children as guests rather than complications. The pool area is the hotel's most family-appropriate luxury offering.
The George V is the classic Paris anniversary hotel, and it earns the status. The returning guest programme is exceptional — the hotel genuinely remembers, and genuinely acts on what it knows. Book dinner at Le Cinq for a significant anniversary; request the chef's tasting menu with wine pairing, and tell the concierge in advance that it is an occasion. The response will be calibrated accordingly.
Among Paris's palaces, the George V offers the most emotionally warm honeymoon experience. The staff engagement is genuine, the floral arrangements set a romantic tone that requires no additional decoration, and the courtyard suites offer genuine quiet in the middle of the Golden Triangle. Request the suite upgrade path at booking — the penthouse suites with Eiffel Tower views are the honeymooner's correct choice.
The most family-accommodating of the Paris palace hotels. The interconnecting suite configurations handle families comfortably, the pool area is genuinely child-appropriate, and the staff approach children with the same warmth they apply to adult guests. The Champs-Élysées is a five-minute walk, with the Disney Store and the Grand Palais equally accessible. The George V is where Paris luxury and family practicality coexist without visible effort.
Rates shown are approximate. Verify at time of booking.
The King's Suite
Monthly. No noise.