Paris, France

Norman Hôtel Paris

Price per night from$458.23

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR421.46), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Just our type

Setting

Sashay from the Champs-Élysées

Say yé-yé to your chic home from home in the 8th, Norman Hôtel Paris, which has all the swing of the city in the Sixties, but with more modern comforts, plus larger than usual lodgings, some with cocktail-ready terraces. If you’re thinking ‘qui est Norman?’, well he’s American mid-century graphic artist Norman Ives: his typographic prints hang throughout, patterns have been adopted as motifs, and his artworks have influenced the colourways. And you get two cultural figureheads here, with noted Parisian chef Thiou crafting her cult Thai dishes in the kitchen. All in all, a gaily era-hopping stay that’s not your average Norm’. 

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A welcome cocktail each

Facilities

Photos Norman Hôtel Paris facilities

Need to know

Rooms

37, including 12 suites.

Check–Out

Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm. And mobile check-in is available too.

More details

Rates are room-only; the Parisian breakfast is €18, Continental is €25, or buffet is €38.

Also

Some Superior rooms have been adapted for guests with reduced mobility and have grab bars, roll-in showers and other accessibility features. And reception can lend a phone with special features to guests with reduced vision.

At the hotel

Concierge, newspapers on request, charged laundry service, and free WiFi. In rooms: TV, Bluetooth speaker, air-conditioning, Nespresso machine, tea-making kit, minibar, free bottled water, bathrobes and slippers, and organic bath products.

Our favourite rooms

You don’t need to know the work of mid-century American graphic artist Norman Ives to appreciate the hotel’s aesthetic – indeed, his portfolio, from coolly clean logos to complex typographical abstracts, which he created for all manner of eminent art establishments, was criminally undersung in his lifetime. But, a little research adds cool context to the sage, mustard and burgundy colour palette, mid-century shaping and pattern motifs throughout. From the Corner Junior Suite upwards, there’s a balcony or terrace with views over the surrounding cobbled streets; but the two-bedroom penthouse Sky Suite has an extra flourish with a stargazing sky dome placed over the master bedroom’s king-size.

Spa

The hotel’s wellness area provides a variety of naturopathic treatments, including yoga massages and Japanese lifting treatments by the gentle skincare brand Omnisens. Additionally, guests can relax with plunge pool dips and sessions in the sauna.

Packing tips

Call on all the Sixties masters: Cardin, Courrèges, Pucci…

Also

The minibars have sweet treats from Maison Plisson (an épicerie owned by the Norman’s hotel group) and custom spirits made in collaboration with La Distillerie de Paris.

Pet‐friendly

Well-behaved chiens are welcome for €25. See more pet-friendly hotels in Paris.

Children

If your darling is a fan of the typographic arts of the Fifties and Sixties then they’ll have a ball here. Less precocious little ones may be less enthused.

Food and Drink

Photos Norman Hôtel Paris food and drink

Top Table

Take dinner on the petite terrasse.

Dress Code

Suave and Sixties: either suit up or wear something with some wiggle.

Hotel restaurant

Chef Thiou (nee Apiradee Thirakomen) has earnt a cult following for serving and popularising top-tier Thai cuisine in Paris, having served brimming-with-flavour plates for decades at Les Bains Douches and then at her self-named eatery. Her devotees will likely turn up in droves for her signature prawn ravioli, scampi and basil nem rán (spring rolls) and ‘crying tiger’ beef with carrot and papaya salad, but lucky guests of the Norman get first dibs on those, Eastern-inflected French dishes and tropical desserts. And Thiou might even join you for a drink and a chat. Breakfast is Continental with some cooked dishes (eggs Benedict, mixed-grill sausages, avo on toast), but you could start your day with Thai tea and crêpes in condensed milk. 

Hotel bar

There’s a gallic Mad Men (Hommes Fous?) feel to the retro bar, with its sage-velvet sofas, dark-marble counters and sleek woods. But drinks are more exotic, following in the restaurant’s adventurous footsteps with Thai flavourings. Try the Flower Champagne with Louis Roederer, a dash of vanilla-infused vodka, yuzu liqueur and lemon; or the sweet-savoury Pandan Smash (pandan leaf-infused gin, elderflower, coconut, coriander and Thai bitters). There’s also a selection of French wines, fragrant teas and fresh juices.

Last orders

Breakfast is from 7.30am to 10.30am, lunch from noon to 2.30pm and dinner from 7pm to 10.30pm. Drinks pour from 11am till midnight.

Room service

You can dine in-room around the clock.

Location

Photos Norman Hôtel Paris location
Address
Norman Hôtel Paris
9 Rue Balzac
Paris
75008
France

Norman Hôtel Paris sits on Rue Balzac, amid a salon of streets, with neighbouring Rues Châteaubriand and Lord Byron. But more noteworthy is its closeness to the Champs-Élysées, just steps away, with the Arc de Triomphe on your doorstep.

Planes

Both Orly and Charles de Gaulle airports are around an hour’s drive away. Return transfers can be arranged for €340.

Trains

For Eurostar arrivals, the Gare du Nord is around a 30-minute drive away. The nearest Métro stop is Charles de Gaulle – Étoile, a five-minute walk away, which sits on the A, 1, 2, and 6 lines.

Automobiles

Driving in Paris requires a certain savoir-faire that even most Parisians don’t possess. Literally sidestep the stress by choosing to go on foot. Otherwise, there’s a valet service and private parking for €50 a day.

Worth getting out of bed for

You can hardly get more Parisian than Norman Hôtel’s enviable address on Rue Balzac. Well, we could try by telling you that the Arc de Triomphe is almost a baguette poke away from your doorstep (well maybe if you have quite a long reach). The big-name boutiques and Ladurée temptations of the Champs-Élysées are laid out in front of you; follow it down and you’ll reach the Grand and Petit palais, Place de Concorde, the Tuileries and Louvre. And from there you can cross the Seine to Musée d'Orsay or the Île de la Cité and Notre Dame. Due south of the hotel, down Grand Avenue George V, you’ll hit the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, Musée du quai Branly - Jacques Chirac (for indigenous art from around the world), and a little-known landmark called the Eiffel Tower… And other nearby musées to muse over focus on Yves Saint Laurent, historic wearables and accessories (in the Palais Galliera) and the sea (at Palais de Chaillot). For an evening culture fix, try arthouse Cinema Balzac or Lido 2’s camp cabaret revues.

Local restaurants

It’s more of a book months in advance kinda place, but you’re within drop-in distance of Pierre Gagnaire’s famous three-Michelin-star-awarded eatery. Cheap eats these are not, but with a deep respect for local fishers, gardeners, butchers and winemakers on display, a sense of reverent ceremony to proceedings and staunchly excellent cooking, the price tag is as easy to swallow as the buttery Brittany lobster or duck with peach sorbet. Elegant sister stay Château des Fleurs is home to chic Korean eatery Oma, where the chef Ji-Hye Park’s re-works her childhood favourites into signatures: a comforting rice bowl of beef, egg, seaweed and sesame; and mulhué, a chilled spicy broth with fish. And enjoy ethical seafood – lobster and caviar, platters of langoustine and pink shrimp, spider crab, squid fricassée – at La Lorraine, preferably on its sizable terrace.  

Local cafés

Hot chocolate and a Mont Blanc feels all the more refined when you’re taking them at Belle Époque tea room Angelina, while Café le Jardin in Le Petit Palais is more modern yet equally refined, and Monsieur Dior in the Galerie Dior is a fittingly stylish lunch spot in between shopping hauls.

Local bars

Gentlemen 1919 emulates a Prohibition-era speakeasy, also incorporating a barbers and shoe-shiner so you can look your sharpest before cocktail-sipping in the bar and (optional) Cuban cigar-puffing sessions in the fumoir. And, maybe you came to Paris to escape British boozers, but Sir Winston is a svelter take on one. Although you can still get a pint of Guinness and a shawarma if you really must.

Reviews

Photos Norman Hôtel Paris reviews
Audrey Ward

Anonymous review

By Audrey Ward, Hotel-loving editor

For a Londoner like me, one of the joys of visiting Paris is how quickly you can get in and out of the city, thanks to the Eurostar. And to add to that joy, the Norman Hotel is just a half hour from Gare du Nord on the Metro. I know what you’re thinking – Norman. The name doesn’t exactly exude Parisian sexiness, but this hideaway is most definitely sleek, chic and ideally located just minutes from the Champs-Élysées. 

And there’s more to the story here – the name nods to the American artist and graphic designer, Norman Ives. His influence, reflected in the abstract artworks (some original) and geometric patterned carpets, gives the place a modern feel. Rooms are sumptuous – my spacious Junior Suite Corner has a balcony and lots of clever touches, including a brilliantly compact open storage wardrobe and strategically placed flower-boxes outside the windows, to offer some privacy from the neighbours. There are also dark-chocolate-coated orange florentines from French tea room Angelina, waiting for me.  

The first thing you’ll see on entering the hotel is the bar. A word of warning, you will be diverted by the clinking of glasses or a cocktail being shaken en route to your room. Soon after I heard the pop of a cork, I was curled up on a sofa sipping a glass of champagne and munching on wasabi peas.

However, one can not live on wasabi peas alone, so helpfully the hotel also has a tasty menu of bar snacks, such as chicken skewers and tuna maki; and there’s also restaurant Thiou serving up Thai cuisine made with fine French ingredients. Had I not found myself worn out from shopping and far from the hotel come dinnertime on my first day, I’d have given the langoustine spring rolls and shrimp dumplings a whirl at Thiou. Instead, I stopped off in a bistro and had shakshuka, with nothing but my Sézane purchases for company. Did I mention that Mr Smith had to bail on the trip at the last minute? Sadly, work duty called – zut alors

Breakfast each morning is taken in the restaurant or on the pretty outdoor terrace. Kudos if you can resist the basket of pastries and opt for the healthier offerings on the menu: fruit, yoghurt, eggs… On my second morning I had pre-arranged to have breakfast in my room. The city’s rubbish-collection lorries had woken me up with the larks the day before, but my second night was so deliciously restful that I didn’t stir until the knock on the door announcing the arrival of my food.

Later that morning I heard the sound of drilling coming from the basement, a reminder that the hotel would open a spa in the coming weeks. I asked for a tour of what turned out to be a dusty cavern. In one corner there was a miniature rectangle of blocks with aspirations to be a dip pool and in another section, a space waiting to be portioned off into treatment rooms. By the time you read this, I imagine pan pipes will be filling the air and guests will be lounging about in fluffy robes. 

In the absence of a spa, I took myself off to the Grande Mosquée de Paris, which is in the fifth arrondissement and has a decent hammam. The last time I was there, over 20 years ago, I made the mistake of wearing a bikini; everyone else was naked. This time round, lesson learned, I didn’t pack swimwear – except everything had reversed again. Thanks Covid. 

Standing awkwardly in the changing room I spotted the only other naked woman. We instantly bonded over our predicament. She suggested we put our pants back on and by the time I was misremembering my locker code for the third time, she had segued into a teary monologue about how her husband, ‘ze shit’, had recently asked her for a divorce and was sleeping with someone half her age. Only in Paris. If I hadn’t been in such a rush to go for my massage I’d have told her that a surefire way to cheer herself up was with a stay at the Norman. Oh well, c’est la vie.

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Price per night from $434.90