Route Briefing: Singapore to Paris
There are few journeys that feel as genuinely rewarding as the long haul from Singapore to Paris, and the moment you step off the plane into that particular grey-gold Parisian light, every hour in the air feels completely justified. This is a route that connects two of the world's most celebrated cities, and flying it well is simply a matter of knowing a few things in advance.
Singapore Airlines operates this route and consistently ranks among the finest carriers in the world for long-haul comfort, making those 13-plus hours considerably more bearable than they might sound. Air France and Lufthansa are solid alternatives, with Lufthansa typically routing through Frankfurt — a clean, efficient hub that rarely causes headaches during connections. Expect your total travel time to land somewhere between 18 and 22 hours when you factor in the layover, so pack accordingly and treat the connection city as a brief intermission rather than an inconvenience.
On fares, a roundtrip under $700 is genuinely excellent value for this distance and should be snapped up without hesitation. Standard pricing tends to settle between $1,000 and $1,400, so the savings on a good deal are real and meaningful. Book three to five months ahead, particularly if you're targeting summer travel between June and August when Paris is at its most electric — and its most crowded. Flying mid-week and selecting a single-stop itinerary rather than a more convoluted routing can shave a meaningful amount off the fare compared to weekend departures during peak season.
Paris itself rewards the effort of getting there in ways that are genuinely hard to overstate. The Eiffel Tower remains one of those rare landmarks that exceeds expectations in person, especially at dusk when the city spreads out below it in every direction. The Louvre is a full day's commitment at minimum, and the collections inside justify every minute. Beyond the icons, Paris is a city best experienced at street level — wandering between arrondissements, sitting in a café with no particular agenda, eating well without necessarily spending a fortune. French cuisine here ranges from casual neighbourhood bistros to some of the most technically accomplished cooking on earth, and both ends of that spectrum are worth exploring.
If you're arriving at Charles de Gaulle, the RER B train connects the airport directly to central Paris and is by far the most practical and affordable way to reach the city. It's straightforward to navigate and drops you at major central stations, saving you the cost and unpredictability of a taxi during busy periods.
Paris in spring and early autumn offers a beautiful balance — comfortable temperatures, fewer crowds than summer, and that soft, cinematic quality to the light that makes the city feel like it was designed specifically to be looked at.






