Fares on the Sarajevo to Paris route vary noticeably by season and demand. Right now the lowest available price is €44. Non-stop flights are available, making it a convenient option if you want to skip layovers. Booking further in advance typically unlocks lower prices, especially around school holidays and peak travel months. The calendar below maps out the cheapest and most expensive months so you can plan before committing to dates.
Price patterns on the Sarajevo to Paris route tend to spike during school holidays and public holiday weekends. Booking 4-6 weeks out generally balances availability and price well on this route. If your travel dates are flexible, check the price calendar for the lowest-priced months before searching for specific flights. See all flights from Sarajevo to France→
Based on tracked fares, August is the cheapest month to fly this route at around €44.
Prices last updated: July 2026
Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements, each with its own character — from the grand boulevards of the 8th to the canal-side cafe culture of the 10th and Montmartre's village atmosphere in the 18th. The core tourist circuit connects the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre (world's most visited museum), the Musee d'Orsay's Impressionist collection, and Notre-Dame, which reopened in 2024 after the 2019 fire. The Marais district combines medieval street plan with the Place des Vosges — the city's oldest planned square — and a dense concentration of independent galleries and concept stores where Parisians actually shop. Versailles is 40 minutes by RER and worth the half-day for the gardens alone; the palace interior is best seen on a weekday morning before group tours arrive. Three airports serve Paris: CDG to the northeast handles most long-haul and European traffic; Orly (ORY) to the south covers domestic, North African, and some European routes at often sharper prices than CDG. For short-haul to Spain, Portugal, or North Africa, Orly consistently undercuts CDG by €20-40 on overlapping routes — always worth comparing both before booking. Spring (April-May) and early autumn (September-October) give the most comfortable temperatures and manageable crowds.
How the main neighbourhoods compare, based on trip type.
Central, walkable, and close to the major museums without being as relentless as the 1st arrondissement around the Louvre. The Place des Vosges is five minutes from most addresses in the Marais, and the Pompidou Centre is at the western edge. Strong metro coverage means the Eiffel Tower, Montmartre, and Musée d'Orsay are each under 20 minutes away. Works well for 2-3 night stays where you want most things on foot.
Metro: Lines 1, 8 (Saint-Paul, Chemin Vert) · Airport: CDG ~45 min via RER B to Châtelet · Lively evenings, historic architecture, central
The Left Bank's most established literary and café district. Quieter than central Paris in the evenings, but with excellent access to the Luxembourg Gardens (5 minutes), the Musée d'Orsay (15 minutes on foot), and the Latin Quarter. The neighbourhood is expensive but consistently comfortable - most streets are calm at night, and the covered market Rue de Buci provides a reliable morning routine. Best for stays of 4 or more nights when neighbourhood texture matters as much as sightseeing.
Metro: Line 4 (Saint-Germain-des-Prés) · Airport: CDG ~50 min via RER B to Châtelet, then Line 4 · Calm, upscale, literary
The most active bar and restaurant neighbourhood in Paris, centred on the Rue Oberkampf and the Rue de la Roquette. More accessible than Pigalle and less tourist-facing than the Marais. The Opéra Bastille is the anchor landmark. From here you can walk to the Marais in 15 minutes or reach Canal Saint-Martin in 20. Good value compared to central arrondissements.
Metro: Lines 1, 5, 8 (Bastille) · Bars, live music, unpretentious, local crowd
The hill neighbourhood above the city has a village character that works well for families - the Sacré-Cœur, the funicular, the Place du Tertre, and the small vineyards give children more to look at than a standard city centre. The Moulin Rouge is on the lower slopes but the neighbourhood itself is calmer higher up. Worth noting that the streets are steep in places - a pushchair is workable but requires planning.
Metro: Line 12 (Abbesses, Lamarck-Caulaincourt) · Airport: CDG ~40 min via RER B to Gare du Nord, then metro · Village feel, hilly, photogenic
The area around the Canal Saint-Martin has become one of Paris's best neighbourhoods for longer working stays - a high density of independent coffee shops, co-working spaces, and affordable lunch options along the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis. The canal itself is pleasant for a morning walk. Central enough (15 min to Le Marais, 10 min to République) but with a noticeably calmer pace than tourist-heavy areas.
Metro: Lines 5, 7 (Gare de l'Est, République) · Airport: CDG ~30 min via RER B to Gare du Nord · Creative, local, good cafes
Neighbourhood notes are editorial and not sponsored. SkyHopp does not accept payment for neighbourhood recommendations.