Side-by-side
The Peninsula Paris vs Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris
A direct comparison across five dimensions: Service, Design, Location, Dining, and Wellness. Scored from signals across luxury travel communities, editorial publications, and verified guests.
Scoreboard
| Dimension | The Peninsula Paris | Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Fat Score | 8.1 | 8.7Wins |
| Service | 7.8 | 9.1 |
| Design | 8.7 | 9.0 |
| Location | 8.4 | 8.8 |
| Dining | 7.9 | 9.2 |
| Wellness | 8.0 | 7.8 |
The Verdicts
The Peninsula Paris
The Peninsula Paris delivers refined Asian hospitality within a classically French envelope, occupying a discreet 16th arrondissement perch that feels both central and residential. The hotel's strength lies in its seamless blend of Peninsula's signature technology and service precision with Parisian elegance — rooms feature tablet-controlled everything, marble bathrooms with nail dryers, and some of the largest accommodations in the city. While service generally impresses with thoughtful touches like remembering preferences and personalized welcomes, it occasionally stumbles on basics like breakfast orders. The rooftop L'Oiseau Blanc offers genuine fine dining with panoramic views, though ground-floor dining feels overpriced for what's delivered.
Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris
Four Seasons Hotel George V remains the gilded standard of Parisian luxury, earning its Palace designation through an almost supernatural attention to detail. The legendary flower arrangements alone—changed twice weekly by Jeff Leatham—transform the marble lobby into living theater. Pierre-Yves Rochon's recent renovations have brightened the rooms while preserving their Louis XVI grandeur, and the terrace suites offer coveted Eiffel Tower glimpses. What truly separates George V is service that borders on clairvoyance: staff anticipate needs before guests voice them, whether securing impossible restaurant reservations or simply remembering your preferred champagne. With three Michelin-starred restaurants under one roof—including Le Cinq's two stars—this isn't just accommodation, it's culinary pilgrimage. The trade-off? Expect tourist foot traffic in the lobby and rates that reflect its status as one of Europe's most coveted addresses.
Strengths & trade-offs
The Peninsula Paris
Strengths
- Sophisticated Asian-French design aesthetic
- Spacious rooms with advanced technology integration
- Prime location near Champs-Élysées and Arc de Triomphe
- Exceptional rooftop restaurant L'Oiseau Blanc
- Personalized service that remembers guest preferences
Trade-offs
- Inconsistent service execution at breakfast
- Ground-floor dining overpriced for quality delivered
- Some policies feel revenue-focused rather than guest-centric
Four Seasons Hotel George V, Paris
Strengths
- Jeff Leatham's legendary floral arrangements
- Three Michelin-starred restaurants
- Intuitive, anticipatory service
- Prime Golden Triangle location
- Pierre-Yves Rochon's elegant renovations
Trade-offs
- Tourist crowds in public spaces
- Premium pricing even by Palace standards
- Spa lacks distinctive identity
- Some rooms face courtyard not street

