Charming Paris street scene with Haussmann buildings, a lamppost, bicycles, and the Eiffel Tower in the background.

TRAVELNine Paris Hostels That Make Budget Travel Worth the Trip5 min read

Charming Paris street scene with Haussmann buildings, a lamppost, bicycles, and the Eiffel Tower in the background.

Latin Quarter Nights, Ensuite Mornings

Oops Hostel sits right beside the Latin Quarter—minutes from some of the city’s best eating, drinking, and aimless evening wandering. The dorms are small but feel thought-through: ensuite bathrooms, reading lamps at each bunk, free Wi-Fi. The on-site bar skews social without being aggressively loud about it.

Colorful hostel dorm with Paris-themed mural, bunk bed, spiral staircase, and storage lockers.

It’s one of the most affordable hostels in Paris, which helps when the neighborhood around it is constantly pulling money from your pocket.

Small private hostel room with a single bed, floral wallpaper, and ensuite bathroom visible.

Montmartre Without the Noise

Caulaincourt is a design-forward hostel in the middle of Montmartre, focused more on private rooms than dorms—most sleep three at most. The kitchen and common spaces are well-designed, the kind that make you want to sit rather than just pass through. No bar, no organized social events, which keeps it quieter than most.

Bright modern hostel common area with rattan chairs, plants, hexagonal tiles, and kitchen counter.

If meeting strangers is your primary mission, look elsewhere. If a calm, well-designed base in one of Paris’s best neighborhoods sounds right, Caulaincourt earns every euro.

Jo&Joe Has Two Very Different Personalities

Jo&Joe runs two Paris locations—Gentilly and Nation—and they serve different moods. Gentilly is the louder one: big outdoor yard, a stage for live performances, organized weekly events, a full bar and restaurant with a cocktail list that goes deeper than expected. Nation has a rooftop terrace and a slightly more settled energy. Both are modern, clean, and social. Both will get you a good night’s sleep.

Gentilly is the choice if you want to wake up having already made three friends. Nation is the choice if you want the same infrastructure with room to breathe. Either way, the staff actually tries—and in Paris, that counts for more than it sounds.

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