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Where to Find the Best Croissants in Paris

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The croissant is the ultimate test of a Parisian bakery. Those buttery, crescent-shaped pastries with their shatteringly crisp exteriors and tender, honeycomb interiors separate the exceptional boulangeries from the merely adequate. Here’s where to find the croissants that locals line up for, along with what else to try once you’re there.

The Left Bank: Tradition Meets Perfection

In the 7th arrondissement, Boulangerie Utopie on rue Jean Nicot has earned a devoted following for its organic, naturally leavened croissants. Baker Sébastien Mauvieux uses a 48-hour fermentation process that creates incredible depth of flavor. Arrive before 9 a.m. on weekends—they sell out fast.

Cross into the 6th and head to Boulangerie Poilâne on rue du Cherche-Midi. While famous for their sourdough bread, their croissants are equally outstanding. The dough is rich with Charentes butter, and the lamination creates dozens of paper-thin layers. Pair yours with a café crème at the small counter in back.

For a true neighborhood gem, walk to Liberté Pâtisserie Boulangerie on rue des Martyrs in the 9th. Pastry chef Benoît Castel trained at some of Paris‘s most prestigious establishments, and his croissants show it—deeply caramelized on the outside, impossibly light within.

The Right Bank: Innovation and Craft

In the 11th arrondissement, Ten Belles Bread on rue Bréguet brings a modern approach to traditional French baking. Their croissants have a cult following among expats and Parisians alike, with a slight tanginess from long fermentation and a satisfying weight that comes from premium butter. Try the pain au chocolat too—the chocolate is from Bonnat, one of France’s finest chocolatiers.

Head north to the 18th and Méert near the base of Montmartre. This Belgian-French patisserie has been perfecting pastries since 1761. Their croissants are slightly sweeter than most, with a vanilla-scented dough that’s absolutely addictive. The shop’s Belle Époque interior makes the experience even more memorable.

Don’t overlook Du Pain et Des Idées on rue Yves Toudic in the 10th, near Canal Saint-Martin. While their pain des amis sourdough and escargots (pistachio or chocolate pastry spirals) get most of the attention, their croissants are pristine examples of the form. The bakery occupies a beautifully restored 19th-century space worth seeing in itself.

What Makes a Great Croissant

A proper croissant should never be uniform in color—look for dark caramelization on the tips and ridges, fading to golden on the flatter surfaces. When you tear it open, you should see distinct layers pulling apart, not a uniform crumb. The smell should be intensely buttery, almost nutty from caramelization.

Most bakeries offer two types: croissant au beurre (made with butter, usually curved) and croissant ordinaire (made with margarine, typically straight). Always choose au beurre. The difference in flavor and texture is worth the extra euro.

Timing matters. Croissants are best within two hours of baking. Most bakeries have two production runs—early morning (around 7 a.m.) and late morning (around 10 a.m.). If you arrive at 2 p.m., you’re getting yesterday’s news, literally.

Beyond the Croissant

Once you’ve found your favorite croissant spot, branch out. Try a pain aux raisins, the spiral pastry filled with crème pâtissière and rum-soaked raisins. Or a chausson aux pommes, the half-moon apple turnover that’s less sweet than its American cousin.

The kouign-amann, a Breton specialty that’s become a Parisian staple, offers even more butter and caramelized sugar than a croissant. Liberté and Du Pain et Des Idées both make exceptional versions.

For something savory, order a croissant jambon-fromage—ham and Gruyère tucked into a croissant that’s been briefly reheated until the cheese melts. It’s the perfect mid-morning snack.

Most of these bakeries are in residential neighborhoods rather than tourist zones. Take the metro: Utopie is near École Militaire, Ten Belles Bread is at Bréguet-Sabin, Du Pain et Des Idées is between République and Jacques Bonsergent. You’ll see how Parisians actually live, croissant in hand, on their way to wherever the day takes them.

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