France's capital Paris does something to expat families that almost no other city manages: it makes them want to go local.
In Dubai or Singapore, the question is "which international school?" and the answer involves choosing between self-contained English-speaking worlds. In Paris, a surprising number of expat parents actively want their children inside the French system — or at least touching it. The allure is real. The French national curriculum is rigorous, respected worldwide, and comes with something money cannot buy elsewhere: genuine integration into French society, the language, the cultural references, the way an educated French person thinks and argues. A child who completes the French Baccalaureate in Paris has a credential that opens doors at Sciences Po, the Grandes Ecoles, and every serious European university. That's not a brochure claim. It's a structural advantage.
This changes the calculus entirely. Where other cities pit "international" against "local," Paris blurs the line. Many of the best schools here are bilingual French-English institutions that follow the French curriculum with substantial English instruction — not international schools in the traditional sense, but not purely French either. They occupy a middle ground that exists almost nowhere else, and understanding that middle ground is the key to choosing well.
With 43 international and bilingual schools spanning French, British, IB, American, Montessori, and German curricula, Paris has depth in every direction. Here's what matters.
Explore all 43 Paris international schools on Scholae to filter by curriculum, fee range, and age group.
The Curriculum Landscape: French First, Everything Else Second
Paris offers 20 different curricular programmes across its 43 schools. But the real story is simpler than that number suggests. The French national system dominates — not because alternatives don't exist, but because the French system is genuinely excellent and Paris is the one city where expats seriously consider it. Twenty-seven schools offer French curriculum in some form, whether as the sole programme or combined with British, American, or IB tracks. That ratio tells you something important about what families here actually want.
French System and Bilingual Programmes
The French national curriculum runs from maternelle (age 3) through the Baccalaureate (age 18), and it's a different animal from the British or American systems. It's centralised, content-heavy, and philosophically driven — French secondary students study philosophy as a core subject, not an elective. The Baccalaureate is a genuine high-stakes exam, not a portfolio of coursework. It demands intellectual maturity that some teenagers find exhilarating and others find crushing.
For anglophone families, the pure French system presents an obvious barrier: your six-year-old needs functional French on day one. This is where Paris's bilingual schools become transformative.
Ecole Jeannine Manuel is the gold standard. Located in the 15th arrondissement (Rue du Theatre), it enrols 3,330 students representing 80 nationalities — making it one of the largest bilingual schools in Europe. The curriculum is French, the instruction is bilingual French-English, and the results speak: the 2025 IB Diploma average was 38.1 points across 58 candidates, a score that puts it in elite global company. The school has held a contract with the French state for over 60 years, meaning it's recognised by the Ministry of Education while operating with the freedom to innovate. Average class size is 25 — larger than most international schools, in line with French norms. If you can get in, this is the school that gives your child the French system without sacrificing English.
Bilingual International School of Paris (BISP) in the 15th arrondissement takes a structurally different approach: the school day splits in half, with students spending mornings in English instruction and afternoons in French (or vice versa). British and French curricula run in parallel. Annual fees range from EUR 13,800 for early years to EUR 21,800 for secondary (roughly USD 15,200-24,000). For families who want genuine 50/50 bilingualism with neither language subordinate to the other, BISP's model is one of the most honest implementations in Paris.
Lycee International - British Section in Saint-Germain-en-Laye operates within France's most prestigious state international school — the Lycee International itself, a public institution where national sections (British, American, German, Japanese, and others) deliver supplementary instruction alongside the French curriculum. The British Section enrols roughly 800 students and provides "a first-class British educational programme as part of a genuine bilingual and bicultural curriculum." Your child follows the French system, takes the French Baccalaureate, but receives substantial British-curriculum instruction through the section. The catch: you need to live in or near Saint-Germain-en-Laye, 20 kilometres west of central Paris. Many families consider this a feature, not a bug — Saint-Germain is a beautiful, walkable town with a chateau, a forest, and a pace of life that central Paris cannot offer.
Cours Moliere, founded in 1926 in the 3rd arrondissement (Rue de Montmorency), enrols 300 students from 35+ nationalities in classes averaging 15. It offers British, American, and French curricula — an unusual triple-track that lets families choose their pathway within a single school. Annual fees run EUR 12,350-13,500 (USD 13,600-14,850). Nearly a century of operation in central Paris is not nothing. The small class sizes and intimate scale appeal to families who find the mega-schools overwhelming.
International Baccalaureate (IB)
Eight schools offer IB programmes, and Paris's IB landscape skews toward schools that layer the IB onto a French or bilingual foundation rather than offering it as a standalone curriculum. This is characteristic of the Paris market: even the IB schools here acknowledge the gravitational pull of the French system.
International School of Paris (ISP) is the purest IB option. Located in the 16th arrondissement (Rue Cortambert), it's a full IB Continuum school — PYP, MYP, and Diploma Programme — with 700 students from over 60 nationalities. The 2025 IB Diploma average was 32.0, above the global benchmark of 30.5. Class sizes average 20. English is the primary language of instruction with French integrated throughout. If you want IB without the complexity of the French system, ISP is your school. The 16th arrondissement location — quiet, residential, excellent metro access — is prime Paris territory for families.
ICS Paris International School in the 15th arrondissement (Rue de Cronstadt) offers the full IB suite — PYP, MYP, Diploma, plus IGCSE — to 400 students across 70+ nationalities. IB Diploma average 32.7 in 2025. Class sizes of 18. The school adds French immersion, meaning students get serious French instruction alongside the English-medium IB programme. At 400 students, ICS is large enough to have proper community but small enough that every teacher knows every child.
Ermitage International School in Maisons-Laffitte takes the IB in a different direction entirely: 1,500 students in a leafy town 20 minutes northwest of Paris, offering both the IB (PYP, MYP, Diploma) and the French Baccalaureate. Founded in 1941, class sizes of 15, bilingual French-English instruction. The campus has equestrian facilities — yes, your child can ride horses between IB classes. The Maisons-Laffitte setting gives families green space that central Paris cannot, at the cost of a commute. For families who want IB academic rigour wrapped in a distinctly French cultural experience, Ermitage is unique.
British Curriculum
Seventeen schools offer British curriculum, making it the second-largest category after French. The British presence in Paris is long-established, serving both the sizeable British expat community and francophone families who want English-medium education with globally portable qualifications.
The British School of Paris is the flagship. Founded in 1954, it's the oldest and largest British-system school in France. Located in Croissy-sur-Seine (Quai de l'Ecluse) in the western suburbs, it offers the full British pathway through IGCSE and A-Levels. Class sizes average 18, ISI-inspected with "excellent" ratings, affiliated with HMC, IAPS, and COBIS. English is the language of instruction. iPads are provided from Reception through Year 13. The Croissy location is leafy and calm — a 25-minute drive from central Paris, or accessible via the RER A. For families who want a thoroughly British education in the Paris region, this is the institution that sets the standard.
Open Sky International in Boulogne-Billancourt (just outside the Paris peripherique) offers something unusual: British, Australian, and Singaporean curricula alongside French, with IGCSE and A-Levels as the examination pathway. Two hundred students from 40+ countries, class sizes of just 14. The school claims to be the only establishment in the Paris region offering continuous bilingual education through lycee — meaning students can pursue both British and French qualifications simultaneously. The small class sizes and multi-system approach make it worth investigating for families who want flexibility.
Montessori
Twelve schools offer Montessori pedagogy, a surprisingly strong showing that reflects Paris's intellectual appetite for alternative education. These range from tiny neighbourhood schools to substantial bilingual operations.
Ellipse Montessori Academy in the 7th arrondissement (Rue Amelie) stands out for combining Montessori methodology with IB and IGCSE qualifications — solving the perennial Montessori problem of "what happens at age 14?" Founded in 2017, it enrols students aged 2-18 with AMI-trained guides throughout. Annual fees run EUR 11,500-28,500 (USD 12,650-31,350), scaling significantly with age. Class sizes average 17. The 7th arrondissement location — steps from the Eiffel Tower, within the most quietly affluent part of Paris — positions this as a premium option for families who believe in Montessori but need their child to emerge with internationally recognised qualifications.
Montessori 21 Bilingual Schools takes the opposite approach: a network of approximately ten schools across the Paris region, with a mission to "democratise access to Montessori pedagogy in France." Bilingual French-English, ages 2-15, with annual fees ranging from EUR 9,000-19,900 (USD 9,900-21,900). Class sizes of 24 — larger than typical Montessori, reflecting the network's commitment to accessibility over exclusivity. The main campus is in Pantin, just northeast of Paris. If you want Montessori values at a less eye-watering price point, the Montessori 21 network is where to look.
American Curriculum
The American presence in Paris is small but anchored by one institution that punches far above its size.
American School of Paris (ASP), founded in 1946, sits in Saint-Cloud — a prestigious suburb immediately west of Paris with views over the city. It enrols 796 students from 65+ countries, with class sizes averaging 18. The curriculum is American with IB and AP options. The 2025 IB Diploma average was 34.6 across 37 candidates — a strong result. ASP is the school that American diplomatic, corporate, and military families have sent their children to for 80 years. The Saint-Cloud campus is compact but well-equipped, and the town itself — elegant, quiet, with the Parc de Saint-Cloud at its doorstep — offers a quality of life that working parents appreciate. English is the primary language of instruction.
Fees: What You'll Actually Pay
Paris international school fees are higher than most French families expect but moderate by global standards. If you're arriving from London, Hong Kong, or Zurich, you'll find them reasonable. If you're arriving from a country where public education is excellent and free, prepare for sticker shock.
Budget Tier: EUR 9,000-13,000/year (USD 9,900-14,300)
Small Montessori schools and some bilingual primary programmes fall here. Montessori 21 starts at EUR 9,000. Cours Moliere ranges from EUR 12,350-13,500. You won't get sprawling campuses or Olympic swimming pools, but you'll get dedicated teachers, small classes, and a bilingual education that would cost two to three times more in London. For primary-age children, this tier represents strong value.
Mid-Range: EUR 13,000-22,000/year (USD 14,300-24,200)
Where most established bilingual and international schools sit. Bilingual International School of Paris ranges from EUR 13,800 (early years) to EUR 21,800 (secondary). Ellipse Montessori Academy starts at EUR 11,500 for early years and climbs to EUR 24,500 at secondary. Lab School Paris in the 11th arrondissement charges EUR 14,780-23,500 depending on age. This bracket covers most British-curriculum schools, the smaller IB options, and the bilingual programmes. Expect class sizes of 15-20, proper extracurricular programmes, and schools accustomed to managing internationally mobile families.
Premium: EUR 22,000-30,000+/year (USD 24,200-33,000+)
The top tier for schools like Ellipse Montessori Academy at senior level (EUR 28,500) and the larger IB and American institutions where published fees don't always tell the whole story. American School of Paris and Ecole Jeannine Manuel don't publicise tuition on aggregator sites, which in Paris usually signals fees north of EUR 25,000. Contact them directly.
The French System Advantage
Here's the financial argument for going French: many bilingual schools that follow the French national curriculum operate under a contrat d'association with the French state, meaning the government subsidises teacher salaries. This keeps fees dramatically lower than purely private international schools offering the same quality of education. Ecole Jeannine Manuel is the prime example — a world-class bilingual school with IB Diploma averages of 38.1, operating within the French state system. The subsidy doesn't eliminate fees, but it caps them below what a fully private school of equivalent quality would charge.
Hidden Costs
Paris adds costs that other cities don't. The cantine (school lunch) is typically EUR 1,500-2,500/year — and in France, lunch is not optional; it's a 90-minute affair with a proper meal, and most schools expect children to eat on-site. Transport: if your school is in Saint-Cloud, Croissy, or Maisons-Laffitte while you live in the 6th arrondissement, the school bus costs EUR 2,000-4,000/year. After-school care (garderie or etude) adds EUR 500-1,500. Budget 15-20% above published tuition for total cost.
Schools Worth a Closer Look
Ten schools spanning different curricula, price points, and locations. Not a ranking — the best school is the one that fits your family.
Ecole Jeannine Manuel
French + IB (Bilingual) | 3,330 students | Ages 3-18 | 15th arrondissement
The school every Paris expat has heard of, and for good reason. Bilingual French-English instruction within the French national curriculum, 80 nationalities, IB Diploma average of 38.1 — one of the highest in France. The school holds a state contract, which keeps it anchored in the French system while allowing pedagogical freedom. Average class size of 25 is large by international standards but standard for France. The 15th arrondissement location is residential and well-connected by metro. The admissions process is competitive; apply early and prepare your child for an assessment. If your goal is giving your child the French system with English fluency, this is the school that defines the category.
International School of Paris
IB (Full Continuum) | 700 students | Ages 3-18 | 16th arrondissement
The cleanest IB option in Paris. PYP, MYP, and Diploma Programme with English as the primary language of instruction. Sixty nationalities, class sizes of 20, centrally located in the 16th on Rue Cortambert. IB Diploma average of 32.0. ISP is the school for families who want an internationally portable education without navigating the French system. The 16th arrondissement is quiet, safe, and affluent — one of the most family-friendly parts of Paris. Founded in 1982, ISP has four decades of experience managing internationally mobile families, which means they know how to onboard a child who arrived last week from Jakarta or Johannesburg.
The British School of Paris
British (IGCSE + A-Levels) | Ages 3-18 | Croissy-sur-Seine
Founded 1954, the oldest British school in France. ISI-inspected "excellent," COBIS affiliated, class sizes of 18. The full British pathway through to A-Levels, with English as the sole language of instruction. The Croissy-sur-Seine location in the western suburbs is a trade-off: beautiful, green, and family-friendly, but a genuine commute from central Paris. For families who know they want British curriculum and are willing to live in or near the western suburbs, BSP delivers the authentic article. The school provides iPads from Reception through Year 13 and has a dedicated SEN support programme.
American School of Paris
American + IB + AP | 796 students | Ages 3-18 | Saint-Cloud
Eighty years of serving the American and international community in Paris. Located in Saint-Cloud, immediately west of the city, with 65+ nationalities and class sizes of 18. IB Diploma average 34.6, AP courses available, American high school diploma pathway. ASP is where corporate-transfer families tend to land, and for good reason: the school understands the specific needs of families who may stay three years or thirteen. The Saint-Cloud setting — the Parc de Saint-Cloud is one of the finest green spaces in the Paris region — offers weekend quality of life that compensates for the weekday commute.
Bilingual International School of Paris
British + French (50/50 Bilingual) | Ages 3-17 | 15th arrondissement
The split-day model — half in English, half in French — is BISP's defining feature and it's more radical than it sounds. Your child doesn't just learn two languages; they learn two ways of thinking, two educational cultures, two sets of expectations. British curriculum in the morning, French in the afternoon. Fees of EUR 13,800-21,800 are published and transparent. The 15th arrondissement location (Rue Letellier) is residential and family-oriented. For families who want true bilingualism as an outcome rather than an aspiration, BISP's structural commitment to equal English-French time is hard to beat.
Ellipse Montessori Academy
Montessori + IB + IGCSE | Ages 2-18 | 7th arrondissement
The Montessori school that doesn't dead-end at age 12. AMI-trained guides throughout, Montessori methodology as the pedagogical foundation, but with IB and IGCSE qualifications available at secondary level. Founded 2017, class sizes of 17, bilingual French-English. Annual fees range from EUR 11,500 to EUR 28,500 depending on age. The 7th arrondissement address (Rue Amelie) is as prestigious as Paris gets — your school run passes the Eiffel Tower. Young school, high ambitions, strong Montessori credentials. Worth a visit if you believe Montessori philosophy should extend beyond primary years.
Ermitage International School
IB + French Bac | 1,500 students | Ages 3-18 | Maisons-Laffitte
Founded 1941, this is Paris's countryside IB school. Maisons-Laffitte — a charming town built around a racecourse and chateau, 20 minutes northwest of La Defense by train — offers something no Parisian arrondissement can: space, greenery, and equestrian facilities on campus. The dual-track IB and French Baccalaureate option means your child can choose their pathway at 16. Fifteen-hundred students, class sizes of 15, bilingual instruction. The commute from central Paris is the honest trade-off, but many families relocate to Maisons-Laffitte itself and never look back.
ICS Paris International School
IB (PYP, MYP, DP) + IGCSE | 400 students | Ages 3-18 | 15th arrondissement
A full IB school with French immersion and IGCSE qualifications — a combination that gives students multiple exit routes. Seventy nationalities in 400 students means genuine diversity at an intimate scale. IB Diploma average 32.7. Class sizes of 18. The 15th arrondissement location keeps you central. ICS is the right school for families who want IB structure but also want their child to develop real French, not tourist French.
Open Sky International
British + French + A-Levels + IGCSE | 200 students | Ages 2-18 | Boulogne-Billancourt
The multi-curriculum school for families who can't decide — and who shouldn't have to. British, Australian, French, and Singaporean curricula under one roof, with class sizes of just 14. Two hundred students from 40 countries. The Boulogne-Billancourt location (Rue de Paris) puts you just outside the Paris ring road, with metro access into the city centre. The small size means genuinely personalised education, but it also means smaller peer groups and fewer extracurricular options. For families who value flexibility and individual attention over scale, Open Sky is a compelling outlier.
Cours Moliere
British + American + French | 300 students | Ages 2-18 | 3rd arrondissement
Founded 1926 in the Marais — one of Paris's most vibrant and walkable neighbourhoods. A hundred years of operation is not a marketing line; it's institutional memory. Three hundred students, 35 nationalities, class sizes of 15, fees of EUR 12,350-13,500. The triple-curriculum offering (British, American, French) is unusual and means families can pivot without changing schools. The Marais location (Rue de Montmorency) puts your child in the heart of historic Paris. For families who want a small, centrally located, affordable school with a century of experience, Cours Moliere deserves a visit.
Arrondissements and Suburbs: Where You Live Shapes Everything
Paris school geography is uniquely constrained. The city proper — the 20 arrondissements within the peripherique — is compact but dense, and most international schools are either in the western arrondissements or in the suburbs beyond the ring road. Your address determines your commute, and your commute determines your quality of life.
15th and 16th Arrondissements (City West)
The heart of expat family Paris. The 16th — quiet, bourgeois, tree-lined avenues — hosts International School of Paris on Rue Cortambert. The 15th, slightly more accessible and diverse, has Ecole Jeannine Manuel, Bilingual International School of Paris, and ICS Paris. These two arrondissements account for the highest concentration of international schools within Paris itself. Rents run EUR 2,000-4,000/month for a family-sized apartment. Metro lines 6, 9, and 10 provide strong connectivity. If you want to walk your child to school and still feel like you live in Paris, start here.
7th Arrondissement
Home to Ellipse Montessori Academy on Rue Amelie and some of the city's most beautiful streetscapes — the Champ de Mars, Rue Cler's food market, the Invalides. It's the most expensive arrondissement in Paris and among the quietest. Families here tend to be well-established, affluent, and international. The 7th is not lively in the way the Marais or Montmartre are — it's measured and elegant. If that's your style, the school options are limited but premium.
3rd Arrondissement (Le Marais)
Cours Moliere on Rue de Montmorency gives families an international school in the heart of the Marais — one of Paris's most characterful neighbourhoods. Narrow medieval streets, galleries, markets, the Place des Vosges ten minutes on foot. Living in the Marais is living in the Paris of imagination. The trade-off: apartments are small and expensive, parking is essentially nonexistent, and if your child needs to transfer to a school in Saint-Cloud or Croissy, you're looking at a 40-minute commute each way.
Saint-Cloud and Boulogne-Billancourt (Immediate Western Suburbs)
Just beyond the peripherique, these suburbs combine proximity to central Paris with more space and greenery. American School of Paris is in Saint-Cloud; Open Sky International is in Boulogne-Billancourt. Saint-Cloud is affluent and residential, with the enormous Parc de Saint-Cloud for weekend life. Boulogne-Billancourt is more urban, with good restaurants and metro access (Line 9 and 10). Rents are lower than the 16th — EUR 1,800-3,000/month for a family apartment. For families attending ASP or Open Sky, living in these suburbs keeps the commute under 15 minutes.
Croissy-sur-Seine and Saint-Germain-en-Laye (Western Suburbs)
Further west, along the Seine. The British School of Paris is in Croissy; Lycee International - British Section is in Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Saint-Germain is a proper town — a chateau, a forest, a weekly market, excellent restaurants, a community that functions independently of Paris. The RER A connects you to central Paris in 25-35 minutes, but many Saint-Germain families find they rarely need to make the trip. Rents drop significantly: EUR 1,500-2,500/month for apartments that would cost double in the 16th. For families attending BSP or the Lycee International, this is the natural home base — and the quality of life is outstanding.
Maisons-Laffitte and Versailles (Northwest and Southwest)
Ermitage International School is in Maisons-Laffitte, a town with an equestrian tradition and a leafy, semi-rural feel just 20 minutes from La Defense by train. Versailles — yes, that Versailles — has a growing international school presence and is closer to central Paris than many people assume (RER C, 30 minutes to Saint-Michel). Both offer the kind of spacious, green living that's impossible inside Paris. If your school is in either location, live nearby and enjoy the commute savings. The quality of life in these towns, particularly for families with younger children who need gardens and quiet streets, is exceptional.
Admissions: The French System Adds Complexity
Timing
The French academic year runs September to early July, with a rhythm of roughly six weeks on, two weeks off — including the famous Toussaint (November), Noel, Fevrier (February skiing), and Printemps (Easter) holidays. Most international schools accept applications from November onwards for the following September. Competitive schools like Ecole Jeannine Manuel and the Lycee International sections have earlier deadlines — some close in January. Apply in autumn of the year before entry.
Entrance Assessments
French-system schools typically require an assessment of your child's French language level, even for bilingual programmes. This can range from an informal conversation for young children to a written test at secondary level. IB and British schools assess in English. American School of Paris follows American-style admissions with teacher recommendations, previous school records, and student interviews. Most schools request two years of school reports, a passport copy, and a personal statement explaining why you've chosen Paris and what you're looking for in a school.
The Visa Factor
Non-EU families need a valid visa before schools will finalise enrolment. France's education system is intertwined with its administrative apparatus, and schools — particularly those with state contracts — require proof of legal residency. Start your visa process before your school applications. Families on intra-company transfers or diplomatic postings will find this straightforward. Freelancers and remote workers may face more complexity; the French talent visa (Passeport Talent) covers many situations.
Language Preparation
If you're considering a bilingual or French-system school and your child has no French, invest in intensive French tutoring before arrival. Even three months of daily lessons will give a young child enough foundation to follow simple classroom instructions. Schools know this: most bilingual programmes have FLE (Francais Langue Etrangere) support for non-francophone students. But arriving with zero French at age 10 or 12 is qualitatively harder than arriving with zero French at age 5. Plan accordingly.
Mid-Year Entry
Many Paris schools accept mid-year enrolments, particularly in January (after the winter break). But popular year groups — CP (age 6, the start of primary), 6eme (age 11, the start of college), and Seconde (age 15, the start of lycee) — often have waiting lists by October. If you're moving mid-year, contact schools as far in advance as possible.
Making the Decision
Paris forces a choice that other expat cities don't. Do you want your child to become French — culturally, linguistically, intellectually? Or do you want them to pass through Paris with an internationally portable education and pleasant memories?
Neither answer is wrong, but they lead to very different schools. The bilingual French-English programmes at Ecole Jeannine Manuel, BISP, or the Lycee International sections produce children who think in two languages, who can write a dissertation in the French style and a creative essay in the English style, who understand Descartes and Shakespeare as native cultural references. That's a profound gift, but it requires commitment — and it makes leaving France harder, because your child's education becomes rooted in a system that doesn't exist elsewhere.
The IB and British schools — ISP, The British School of Paris, ASP — produce children with qualifications that transfer seamlessly to any country. If your posting is three years and your next stop is Dubai or Singapore, these schools minimise disruption. Your child will learn some French — enough for the boulangerie, maybe enough for a conversation — but won't emerge bilingual.
Visit three schools, not ten. Take the metro to the 15th and walk between Ecole Jeannine Manuel, BISP, and ICS Paris — they're within a few blocks of each other. Spend a morning at The British School of Paris in Croissy and have lunch in Saint-Germain-en-Laye to feel the western suburbs. Visit during a normal school day, not an open house. Watch the children at break time. In Paris, the cour de recreation tells you more than the brochure: are the children playing in French, in English, or fluidly switching between both? That tells you exactly what kind of bilingualism the school actually produces, as opposed to what it advertises.
One more thing. Paris is expensive, bureaucratic, and occasionally maddening. The administration will lose your paperwork. The school cantine will serve your vegetarian child cassoulet. Your landlord will explain, with Gallic patience, that the heating cannot be fixed until April. But Paris is also the city where your eight-year-old will stand in front of a Monet at the Musee d'Orsay and understand it, because her teacher spent a week on Impressionism and then walked the class to the museum. It's the city where your teenager will argue about existentialism at a cafe and mean it. The education extends well beyond the school gate, and that's Paris's greatest competitive advantage as a place to raise internationally minded children.
Explore all 43 Paris schools on Scholae to filter by curriculum, fees, and age group. Use the compare tool to put your shortlist side by side.
Bonne chance avec le demenagement. Your children are going to love it here.



