
Paris was not built for 38°C. Most apartments, shops and older museums have no air conditioning, the limestone holds the heat, and a packed monument in full sun is the fastest route to a melted child. But the city has dealt with hot summers forever, and once you stop fighting the heat and start planning around it, a heatwave day can be one of the best — and wettest — days of the trip.
The one rule: flip your day
This is the whole game, and it matters even more with children, who overheat faster than we do. Get up and out early, while the air is still soft, and do your one lovely thing before about 11. Come back to the hotel or apartment by early afternoon — the stretch from roughly 1 to 6pm is brutal — for lunch, a cool shower, screens, a nap, whatever buys everyone a rest. Then head back out after the sun eases, around 9, into a long, golden Paris evening: dinner outdoors, a carousel, a walk by the river. In a heatwave, the evening is the day.
Where children can actually cool off in the water
Paris has leaned hard into summer swimming, and it's the single best answer to a heatwave with kids.
- Free supervised swimming — Paris Plages (≈ July 4–Aug 30). The city opens around a dozen free, lifeguarded bathing sites with daily water-quality checks. The Bassin de la Villette (19th) is the family champion: four free pools, plus pedal boats, a trampoline, a carousel and slides right there. There are also three swimming spots on the Seine — Bercy (12th), Bras Marie / Louis-Philippe in historic central Paris (4th), and the Bras de Grenelle (15th), opposite the Statue of Liberty replica and especially family-friendly.
- Canal Saint-Martin opens for swimming specifically during heat waves — a lovely, central place to cool off when the city declares one.
- Splash pads & misting (free, all summer): the splash games in the Jardin Nelson Mandela at Les Halles, the misting and water features at Parc André Citroën (15th), and the spray points dotted along the riverbanks during Paris Plages.
Escape the city entirely: the forest
If the heat settles in for days, leave town for the trees. Fontainebleau — a vast, shady royal forest about 40 minutes by train — is the easiest cool day out there is: dappled woodland, giant boulders for children to clamber on, and degrees cooler than the pavement. Pack water and a picnic and make a whole day of it.
The reliably cool indoor spots
When you need walls and (sometimes) air conditioning, these are the dependable ones:
- Air-conditioned museums kids like: the Musée du quai Branly (7th — cool, and full of masks, instruments and faraway worlds) and the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature (Marais — small, air-conditioned, animals at child height).
- Churches. Always cool, always free, always open — the stone never warms up. Saint-Sulpice, Saint-Eustache, any big church near you. Slip in for ten quiet minutes; carry a hand fan.
- A mall you reach without going outside. The big Westfield Les Quatre Temps at La Défense is always cool and connects straight from the métro — you never step into the sun. A genuine heat-day escape hatch with food courts and space to roam.
- The cinema — but choose carefully. Not every Paris cinema has strong air conditioning; aim for a modern multiplex rather than a charming old screen, and check it's a version with subtitles (VOST) if you want the original language.
The heat kit (and the rules that prevent a bad afternoon)
- Water, constantly. Refill bottles free at the green cast-iron Wallace fountains all over the city — they run clean drinking water all summer. Make everyone drink more than feels necessary.
- Cover heads. A hat or cap on every child, every adult — sunstroke creeps up fast on little ones.
- Carry a fan (the folding kind, sold on every corner) and a small misting spray bottle — both buy real relief in a queue or on the métro.
- Light, loose clothes, sunscreen reapplied, and a swimsuit + towel packed every day so you can say yes to water the second you find it.
A heatwave day, hour by hour tap to open
A loose shape — meals, naps and the goûter still set the clock, not these times.
Morning (cool): out early, one lovely thing — a garden, a market, a quiet monument — before ~11.
Midday → late afternoon (brutal, ~1–6): swim or splash-pad, or retreat indoors — AC museum, a church, the mall, the hotel for lunch, a cool shower and a nap.
Evening (golden, after ~8–9): back out for dinner outdoors, the river, a carousel, an ice cream — the best part of a hot Paris day.
Keep exploring
A heat day and a rainy day are the same skill — building around the weather instead of against it. See the rainy-day plan, the toddler guide for the slowest version, and where to eat for the cool-evening dinner.

Want your days built around the weather?
Heatwave, rain or perfect blue — we build your Paris days around the forecast, your child's age and your pace, with the cool-off spots and backups already in. Start with our free sample day to see how it works.
See the free Sample Edit