
Charlotte Hayes
I help parents plan Paris days that work in real life, from playground stops and métro lifts to picnic spots by the Seine.
I moved to Paris in my early thirties after my partner was offered a role here, and what began as a two-year plan slowly turned into a settled family life. We started out in the 15e, close to familiar bakeries, broad pavements, and the kind of daily rhythm that makes a city feel manageable with a pram. Once our first child arrived, I learned Paris again at ground level: which stations had lifts, which parks had toilets, where rainy afternoons could be rescued. I stayed because the city rewards routine as much as sightseeing, and because raising children here taught me how much family life depends on the details visitors often miss.
For the site, I focus on the parts of Paris that matter when you are travelling with children and still want to feel connected to the city itself. I cover playground-heavy afternoons in the Jardin du Luxembourg, stroller-friendly stretches of Canal Saint-Martin, aquarium visits near Trocadéro, and practical escapes to the Bois de Vincennes or the beaches and boating options you can reach without hiring a car. I write about family logistics in the Marais, Batignolles, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, and along the Seine, always with one eye on transport: bus routes over stairs, RER links for day trips, step-free stations, and where to pause for snacks, toilets, shade, or a calm reset.
My reporting is built around repeat visits, current checks, and the kind of note-taking I rely on as a parent myself. I confirm opening hours on official venue pages, compare ticket prices across direct booking sites and trusted resellers, and check whether temporary closures, school-holiday timetables, or strike disruption might affect a plan. If I mention a café, museum, pool, or family pass, I verify the details close to publication and again during updates. When a page includes a partner link, I make that clear in plain language. If I cannot confirm access, baby-changing facilities, or booking rules from a reliable source, I say so rather than guessing.
I write for English-speaking readers who want more than a checklist of attractions and need help translating Paris into a family routine they can actually use. That means I explain what a local parent would instinctively know: when lunch service may slow your day, how long a cross-city transfer really feels with a tired child, why one entrance is easier than another, and which neighborhoods suit a half-day rather than a rushed circuit. My angle is useful because I live these choices week by week, and I can filter Paris through the questions visiting families genuinely ask before they leave the hotel.
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