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Paris, France

Relais Christine

Michelin
Relais Chateaux
Gault & Millau

A 13th-century abbey converted into a 48-room boutique hotel on a quiet cobbled courtyard in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Relais Christine earns a Michelin 1 Key (2024) and a Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation (2025, 5pts), with a 4.8/5 Google rating across 474 reviews. Rates from US$746 per night position it in the upper tier of Left Bank independents, with a Guerlain Spa added to its historic interiors.

Relais Christine hotel in Paris, France
About

There is a particular category of Paris hotel that resists the grand-boulevard logic of most luxury accommodation in the city. Where properties like Cheval Blanc Paris, Hotel Plaza Athénée, and Hôtel de Crillon command their streets with calculated visibility, a smaller cohort of Left Bank properties operates on courtyard logic: invisible from the pavement, legible only to those who know what door to push. Relais Christine, at 3 Rue Christine in the 6th arrondissement, belongs entirely to the second tradition. The entrance is a stone archway off a narrow street. Beyond it, a cobbled forecourt muffled from the surrounding noise of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. The building itself dates to the 13th century, built as an Augustinian abbey and carrying that structural weight — thick walls, vaulted ceilings, low arches in the lower floors — into its current form as a 48-room boutique hotel.

This is not a new conversion dressed in period detail for effect. The architectural bones here predate the hotel category by several centuries, and the interiors acknowledge that without becoming a museum. Beamed ceilings, stone floors in the public areas, and individually decorated rooms with lush upholstery and period detailing create an interior coherence that more aggressively renovated Paris hotels often lose. The effect is that the property reads as a place that has accumulated its character over time, rather than assembled it for a launch.

What Saint-Germain Does to a Stay

The Left Bank has been fragmenting as a hospitality district for decades. The opening of major palace hotels concentrated premium demand on the Right Bank and the 8th arrondissement in particular, pulling a certain segment of the market toward Four Seasons George V, Le Meurice, and Le Bristol Paris. What remained on the Left Bank, and what has quietly strengthened, is a case for neighbourhood density as a luxury amenity in its own right.

Saint-Germain-des-Prés delivers on that case better than almost anywhere in Paris. The Louvre sits within walking distance to the north. Notre Dame and the Île de la Cité are a short walk east along the Seine. The 6th arrondissement's side streets carry an independent restaurant, gallery, and wine bar concentration that is difficult to replicate from a Right Bank address. A guest at Relais Christine does not need the hotel to provide a dining room because the street outside functions as one , varied, walkable, and dense enough that any evening can begin without a reservation booked weeks in advance.

This matters for how to read the hotel's deliberate decision not to operate an on-site restaurant. In a Left Bank context with this level of surrounding provision, a hotel dining room would be redundant. The absence is a position, not a gap. For detailed guidance on the dining options within reach, our full Paris restaurants guide maps the neighbourhood's range in more depth.

The Rooms and What Distinguishes Them

Forty-eight rooms is a number that places Relais Christine squarely in the small-hotel tier for Paris, where the premium independents tend to run between 40 and 70 keys before scale begins to dilute the residential quality that defines the category. The rooms vary in size and configuration, with suites in the upper range offering private garden terraces , a feature that carries significant weight in a city where outdoor private space is structurally scarce. Views across the property orient toward gardens, interior courtyards, or the quiet private street, removing the ambient traffic noise that compromises sleep quality at many Paris addresses.

The decorative approach uses heavy fabrics and traditional upholstery without the over-dressed quality that tips some classic Parisian interiors into density. Period architectural detail , exposed beams, stone work, ceiling heights that reflect the original abbey construction , provides the framework, and the rooms stay disciplined within it. Individual decoration across the 48 rooms means no two are identical, which in practice affects decisions around room selection: guests with specific priorities around ceiling height, floor level, or access to outdoor space benefit from communicating those preferences at the time of booking rather than at check-in.

The Guerlain Spa in a Medieval Vault

The wellness offer at Relais Christine is anchored by a Spa Guerlain installed in the lower floor of the building, in spaces that retain their original vaulted stone architecture. The spa includes a Finnish sauna, a mosaic jacuzzi, and a fitness centre. As a branded Guerlain partnership, it sits within the network of Guerlain spa installations that appear across the upper tier of French hotel properties, providing a consistent treatment protocol and product range while the physical environment here is specific to this building.

Combination of a medieval vaulted setting and a contemporary branded spa is unusual enough to be worth noting as a distinct feature of the property rather than a standard amenity. Most Paris hotel spas occupy purpose-built basement spaces. The abbey's lower floors give the Relais Christine spa a spatial character that functions as part of the stay's overall architectural experience.

Recognition and Where It Sits

Property holds a Michelin 1 Key designation awarded in 2024, placing it in Michelin's first tier for hotels , a category that Michelin introduced relatively recently as a parallel to its restaurant star system, covering quality of accommodation, service, and experience rather than food. The Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel designation with 5 points, awarded for 2025, provides a second independent recognition from a French critical institution with a long history of assessment in hospitality as well as gastronomy. A 4.8/5 Google rating across 474 reviews adds a volume-based signal that aligns with the critical assessments.

Together, these place Relais Christine inside a recognised tier of Left Bank boutique properties rather than among the palace hotels that hold Michelin's highest designations. The peer comparison is with independent boutique addresses of similar scale and heritage rather than with the La Réserve Paris or Airelles Château de Versailles tier. For travellers calibrating against French properties elsewhere , whether the Guerlain-spa-focused Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux, the Provençal scale of La Bastide de Gordes in Gordes, or the coastal positioning of Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d'Antibes , Relais Christine operates at a different register: dense urban heritage rather than landscape and space.

Other French independents worth mapping against for different trip types include Domaine Les Crayères in Reims, Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon, Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence in Les Baux, Villa La Coste in Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade, and Hôtel & Spa du Castellet in Le Castellet. For mountain alternatives, Cheval Blanc Courchevel in Courchevel and Four Seasons Megeve in Megève occupy a different season and setting entirely. On the Riviera, The Maybourne Riviera in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, La Réserve Ramatuelle in Ramatuelle, and Airelles Saint-Tropez Château de la Messardière in Saint-Tropez serve a coastal summer demand that Relais Christine's urban model does not compete with.

For international comparison, the boutique-within-a-historic-building model has parallels at Aman Venice in Venice, while the New York independent tier , represented by properties like The Fifth Avenue Hotel and Aman New York , offers a useful counterpoint in terms of how historic-building conversions price against chain properties in their respective cities.

Know Before You Go

DetailInformation
Address3 Rue Christine, 75006 Paris
RatesFrom US$746 per night (rates from US$866 at time of listing)
Rooms48 rooms, individually decorated
AwardsMichelin 1 Key (2024); Gault & Millau Exceptional Hotel, 5pts (2025)
Guest Rating4.8/5 (474 Google reviews)
SpaGuerlain Spa with Finnish sauna, mosaic jacuzzi, fitness centre
RestaurantNone on-site; Saint-Germain-des-Prés dining within walking distance
Getting ThereParis-Orly airport approximately 19 km; Paris Montparnasse station approximately 2 km
Coordinates48.8544, 2.3403
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