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Luxury apartments for sale in Paris, Île-de-France

luxury guide

Paris apartments draw buyers from every corner of the world, and 3,747 listings show just how deep this market runs. The logic here is straightforward: supply is fixed. No new floors get added to a Haussmann building. No tower goes up in the 7th arrondissement. That structural scarcity is why Parisian luxury apartments hold their value through every market cycle. What you get is specific to this city: herringbone parquet floors worn smooth over a century, marble fireplaces in every main room, wrought-iron balconies overlooking tree-lined boulevards, and the particular silence of a well-kept internal courtyard. American, British, Middle Eastern and Asian buyers compete for the same addresses. Neuilly-sur-Seine and Boulogne-Billancourt offer alternatives just outside the Périphérique, but the real demand stays inside it.

How much does an apartment cost in Paris

Luxury apartments in Paris start at €390,000 for well-located units in the less central arrondissements and reach €33,000,000 for high-floor properties with direct Seine views or panoramas over the rooftops toward the Eiffel Tower. The average price sits at €1,909,404. Floor area ranges from 9 to 800 sqm, with a typical size of 115 sqm and between 1 and 12 bedrooms. Floor level is a major driver: the same apartment on the fifth floor commands a significant premium over the second, especially when an elevator is present. A private outdoor space, even a small juliet balcony, adds value that buyers consistently underestimate until they try to find one. The short-term rental market is a relevant factor too. Paris remains one of the highest-yield cities in Europe for furnished rentals, which keeps investor demand strong year-round.

Where to buy an apartment in Paris

The 7th arrondissement sets the standard for prestige. Streets like Rue de Varenne and Rue Saint-Dominique hold apartments in 18th-century buildings with original boiseries, high ceilings, and the kind of address that needs no explanation. The 8th arrondissement concentrates international demand near Avenue George V and Avenue Montaigne, where buyers want a central location and hotel-grade services. The 16th arrondissement around the Trocadéro is the choice for families: large floor plans, discreet buildings, and some of the best views of the Eiffel Tower from a residential property. The Marais, split between the 3rd and 4th arrondissements, attracts buyers who want character over convention, with apartments inside converted hôtels particuliers, stone vaulted cellars and raw timber beams. And then there is the 6th arrondissement, between Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the Jardin du Luxembourg. This is the most refined address in Paris, and the prices reflect it without apology.