The Louvre to your left. The Tuileries at your feet. Dalí held court here for decades. The intellectuals' palace, now with Alain Ducasse at the table.
"The Dorchester Collection's other Paris Palace, the 1835 Tuileries-facing rooms, Restaurant Le Meurice Alain Ducasse, Salvador Dalí's preferred suite."
Why this rank, Le Meurice has held the 228 Rue de Rivoli address since 1835, the property faces the Tuileries Garden directly, with the Louvre two blocks east. Dorchester Collection has operated Le Meurice since 1996 (acquired alongside the Plaza Athénée). The 2007 renovation by Philippe Starck reset the Restaurant Le Meurice dining room; subsequent refinements by Sybille de Margerie restored the rooms to current Palace specification. 160 rooms and suites across the heritage building. Restaurant Le Meurice Alain Ducasse holds two Michelin stars (downgraded from three in 2019, retained two). Le Dalí, the brasserie named for Salvador Dalí (who took the Le Meurice Suite annually for 30 years), runs the all-day program. The Bar 228 is the cocktail room. The Belle Étoile Royal Suite on the seventh floor commands 360-degree views across central Paris. Best for stays where Tuileries proximity and Louvre access matter most. The Salvador Dalí Suite, the suite the surrealist took annually for three decades, remains the most-requested historic suite at the property.
Best room: Belle Étoile Royal Suite, top-floor 360-degree Paris views.
"Salvador Dalí held court here for thirty years. The Louvre is at your left elbow, the Tuileries at your feet, Place de la Concorde fifteen minutes away on foot. The intellectuals' palace, with the best location of any hotel in Paris."
Le Meurice has occupied 228 Rue de Rivoli since 1835, facing the Tuileries Gardens with the Louvre visible from its upper floors. It is part of the Dorchester Collection and holds the official French Palace designation, one of only ten hotels in the country to do so. The location is the hotel's defining attribute: no other Parisian palace sits within five minutes' walk of both the Louvre and the Orangerie, with the Seine a further ten minutes beyond.
Salvador Dalí chose Le Meurice as his Parisian residence for much of his career, using the hotel as headquarters for his artistic and social operations from the 1930s through the 1980s. The Dalí connection is not a marketing construct, the hotel's Salon Proust still contains period furnishings from that era, and the surrealist energy of the place, however quietly held, is genuine.
The dining programme is anchored by Restaurant Le Meurice Alain Ducasse, which holds two Michelin stars and serves contemporary French haute cuisine in the hotel's most ornate room, a Versailles-inspired salon with a painted ceiling, mirrored walls, and gilded mouldings that somehow manage to feel like backdrop rather than distraction. The Dalí Bar serves cocktails and lighter meals in a more relaxed setting.
One hundred and sixty rooms and suites across six floors, ranging from entry-level Belle Étage rooms to the 900-square-metre Royal Suite overlooking the Tuileries. The interiors reference the Palace of Versailles throughout, ornate mouldings, Aubusson tapestries, marble floors, but executed at a scale appropriate to a hotel rather than a royal palace. The rooms feel grand without feeling overwhelming.
The spa is smaller than those at George V or the Bristol but well-equipped. What Le Meurice offers that the others cannot is the morning walk through the Tuileries, coffee on the terrace watching the gardeners work, and the Louvre at opening time before the crowds arrive. The hotel's location is a genuine amenity for those who care about art and culture as much as room thread counts.
The Tuileries-facing suites at Le Meurice are among the most romantically situated hotel rooms in Europe. The gardens below are one of Paris's great public spaces, beautifully lit at night, and the combination of the gilded room interior and the garden view creates something genuinely extraordinary. Book the Royal Suite if budget permits. The Tuileries Suite is the more attainable version of the same experience.
Le Meurice is the Paris headquarters for the European intellectual and cultural establishment, publishers, museum directors, architects, and academics who want an address that signals cultural literacy rather than mere affluence. The business centre is well-equipped, the meeting rooms are appropriately grand, and the Louvre is the most impressive possible venue for a client walk between meetings.
For anniversaries with a cultural dimension, couples who met at a museum, who travel for art, who appreciate the Dalí connection, Le Meurice is the Paris palace that speaks directly to them. The hotel coordinates private Louvre visits, guided Tuileries walks, and in-room dinners from the Alain Ducasse kitchen. The combination of great art, great food, and the most beautiful garden view in Paris is hard to surpass.
Rates shown are approximate. Verify at time of booking.
The King's Suite
Monthly. No noise.
Editorial · #7 on the Top 20 Paris Hotels 2026 list
Le Meurice's Paris position is anchored by the Tuileries Garden directly across Rue de Rivoli. The 1835 building faces the garden's eastern entrance; the Louvre is two blocks east; the Place Vendôme is three blocks north. Among Paris Palaces, no other property has equivalent garden-and-museum-corridor adjacency. The 2007 Philippe Starck renovation reset the Restaurant Le Meurice dining room as one of Paris's most-photographed hotel restaurants.
For Paris visitors, Le Meurice is the address calibrated for cultural-circuit stays, visitors who plan the trip around the Louvre, the Musée d'Orsay (across the Seine), and the Tuileries. The property's heritage is genuine, Salvador Dalí took the Le Meurice Suite annually for three decades, and Pablo Picasso lived in an adjacent suite for several months in 1965. The Belle Étoile Royal Suite at the top of the building commands 360-degree views across central Paris that no competing Palace suite matches.