Route Briefing: Las Vegas to Paris
There's something almost poetic about trading the neon glow of the Las Vegas Strip for the golden light spilling off Parisian boulevards — two cities that know exactly how to dazzle, just in very different ways. This route runs year-round, and with a little planning, you can make the roughly ten-and-a-half-hour journey (with one stop) feel like a worthwhile investment rather than an ordeal.
On the fare front, anything under $600 roundtrip is genuinely worth jumping on — that's the sweet spot where budget-conscious travelers should act fast. Standard pricing tends to land between $900 and $1,200 or more, so the savings are real. Air France, Delta, and United are your main carriers on this route, and it pays to compare connections through Atlanta, New York JFK, or Washington Dulles, as routing through these major hubs can sometimes unlock lower fares than other options. Book three to six months ahead if you're eyeing summer travel — June through August is peak season, and Paris in July is both magnificent and very, very popular.
If you can travel in shoulder season — think April, May, or September — you'll find the city breathing a little easier. The weather is still lovely, the café terraces are full, and the queues at the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower are at least slightly more forgiving. Paris rewards the unhurried visitor, and a little extra elbow room goes a long way.
Once you land at Charles de Gaulle, the RER B train connects directly to central Paris and is one of the most straightforward airport-to-city rail links in Europe — reliable, affordable, and far less stressful than navigating traffic in a taxi during busy periods. If you arrive at Orly, the Orlyval shuttle connects to the RER network as well.
As for the city itself, don't let the iconic checklist crowd out the quieter pleasures. Yes, climb the Eiffel Tower, yes, lose an afternoon in the Louvre — but also wander the Marais neighborhood, linger over a café crème at a sidewalk table, and let yourself get a little lost on the Left Bank. French cuisine at every level — from a simple boulangerie croissant to a proper bistro dinner — tends to be the kind of thing travelers talk about for years afterward.
The one tip worth underlining: a Paris Museum Pass can save you significant time and money if you plan to visit multiple major attractions, as it allows skip-the-ticket-line entry at many of the city's most visited sites. In a city this rich, that extra time is worth more than you'd think.






