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Hi,
I have to spend a week in London for business in July, and am bringing the spouse and two young kids (3 and 7) for an additional week split between London and Paris. We have the UK accommodations set, but I'm looking for hotel rooms in Paris. For a variety of reasons, I need to do a hotel and not an airbnb. It looks like most hotel rooms have a max occupancy of 3 (2 adults + 1 child) unless I go up to suites costing thousands of Euros per night. How strict are hotels about this? I'm thinking about just booking a room with two beds or a bed and a pullout, and checking in by myself, then bringing the rest of the family in later. If I got two rooms, the adults would obviously have to sleep apart given the ages of the kids. |
| I wouldn't do this, esp if you are staying more than one night. Booking.com had a bunch of options, although some of them are less central. |
| PS another option is to email the hotel directly to ask |
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Novotel Les Halles http://www.novotelparis.com They have family suites and regular rooms which will sleep a family of four. If you are on a real tight budget you may also want to checkout the Citadines Les Halles https://www.citadines.com/en/france/paris/citadines-les-halles-paris/index.html Which is an apartment/hotel. There are other Citadines in Paris, but this is more centrally located. Checkout the reviews on Trip Advisor to get a feel of what you like. |
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They are very strict. They must adhere to occupancy laws. And they will want to see all passports upon checkin. That’s standard procedure, though I’ve neen to Paris where they were lazy about that.
There is a Happyculture brand of hotel in Montmartre that is great, and it has pretty cheap 4-person rooms. |
| We just stayed at a Novotel in Amsterdam and their rooms are set up for this number of people - the small trundle bed setup for the kids has one for each kid, and the room info states that the rooms accommodate up to two kids. It was perfect for us, even had a little side rail-type buffer for one of the kid trundle beds. Also there was a great breakfast buffet included, and the restaurant had a large kids play house inside the main foyer area. It was new and inexpensive. If you can find a Novotel in Paris with these amenities, you should be all set. The Les Halles one PP posted may have them. Good luck! |
https://www.booking.com/hotel/fr/comfort-paris-18eme-sacre-coeur.en-gb.html?aid=356940&label=metagha-link-localuniversalGB-hotel-220962_dev-mobile_los-1_bw-7_dow-Sunday_defdate-1_room-0_lang-en_curr-GBP_gstadt-2_rateid-0_cid-68&sid=c83e88860963f3e67e5ad1cc9690f523&checkin=2018-06-28&checkout=2018-06-29&room1=A%2CA%2C3%2C9&dest_type=city&dest_id=-1456928&cdist=2.1%20miles&ucfs=1&hapos=1&highlighted_blocks=22096204_99513539_0_2_0&srpvid=4e3b5e3ac9f400d4&srepoch=1528032245&srhp=1&activeTab=room_22096204_4&selected_rate=22096204_99513539_0_2_0 I love this location personally. |
^^hotêl basss |
| We stayed at Hotel du Cadran in a "family room" that was just two adjoining rooms. It was perfect. |
| Hotel Majestic has a family room with 2 twin beds plus a pullout in one room and a king in the adjoining room. Pool also. |
| Family of four who just got back from a trip to Paris. Stayed in the Hotel Chambiges in the 8th -- it was lovely. |
| Have you looked for an American chain? They tend to have two doubles. |
| Hotel rooms in Paris are often very small, so even if you had a lax attending checking you in, you could find yourself with literally not enough space in the room for 4. |
| Vrbo! |
| There are multiple Marriotts that won't blink at 4 kids in a room. Choose an American chain. We have stayed at Marriotts at most major European cities with four people and had no trouble. We have probably been at 5 Hiltons with no problem either. We just booked Copenhagen in Marriotts and Hiltons in Stockholm for 4 people without difficulty. |