| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 September 2026, Tuesday | 7:07 AM | 8:33 PM | 13h 26m |
| 2 September 2026, Wednesday | 7:08 AM | 8:31 PM | 13h 22m |
| 3 September 2026, Thursday | 7:10 AM | 8:29 PM | 13h 19m |
| 4 September 2026, Friday | 7:11 AM | 8:27 PM | 13h 15m |
| 5 September 2026, Saturday | 7:13 AM | 8:25 PM | 13h 12m |
| 6 September 2026, Sunday | 7:14 AM | 8:23 PM | 13h 08m |
| 7 September 2026, Monday | 7:15 AM | 8:21 PM | 13h 05m |
| 8 September 2026, Tuesday | 7:17 AM | 8:19 PM | 13h 01m |
| 9 September 2026, Wednesday | 7:18 AM | 8:17 PM | 12h 58m |
| 10 September 2026, Thursday | 7:20 AM | 8:14 PM | 12h 54m |
| 11 September 2026, Friday | 7:21 AM | 8:12 PM | 12h 51m |
| 12 September 2026, Saturday | 7:23 AM | 8:10 PM | 12h 47m |
| 13 September 2026, Sunday | 7:24 AM | 8:08 PM | 12h 44m |
| 14 September 2026, Monday | 7:25 AM | 8:06 PM | 12h 40m |
| 15 September 2026, Tuesday | 7:27 AM | 8:04 PM | 12h 37m |
| 16 September 2026, Wednesday | 7:28 AM | 8:02 PM | 12h 33m |
| 17 September 2026, Thursday | 7:30 AM | 8:00 PM | 12h 29m |
| 18 September 2026, Friday | 7:31 AM | 7:57 PM | 12h 26m |
| 19 September 2026, Saturday | 7:32 AM | 7:55 PM | 12h 22m |
| 20 September 2026, Sunday | 7:34 AM | 7:53 PM | 12h 19m |
| 21 September 2026, Monday | 7:35 AM | 7:51 PM | 12h 15m |
| 22 September 2026, Tuesday | 7:37 AM | 7:49 PM | 12h 12m |
| 23 September 2026, Wednesday | 7:38 AM | 7:47 PM | 12h 08m |
| 24 September 2026, Thursday | 7:40 AM | 7:45 PM | 12h 05m |
| 25 September 2026, Friday | 7:41 AM | 7:42 PM | 12h 01m |
| 26 September 2026, Saturday | 7:42 AM | 7:40 PM | 11h 57m |
| 27 September 2026, Sunday | 7:44 AM | 7:38 PM | 11h 54m |
| 28 September 2026, Monday | 7:45 AM | 7:36 PM | 11h 50m |
| 29 September 2026, Tuesday | 7:47 AM | 7:34 PM | 11h 47m |
| 30 September 2026, Wednesday | 7:48 AM | 7:32 PM | 11h 43m |
Paris at 48°N sees sunrise and sunset times shift considerably throughout the year. Its combination of hilltop parks, open river bridges, and lakesides in both the eastern and western parts of the city provides varied options for unobstructed horizon views.
The parvis is accessible at any hour; the basilica itself opens at 6:30. At 130m on the Montmartre hill, the panorama extends east and north over the entire city skyline.
The two-level iron bridge frames the Eiffel Tower to the north against the morning sky. Free, open 24/7; Metro Bir-Hakeim (line 6) exits directly at the bridge.
The 12-hectare lake on the eastern edge of Paris (12th arrondissement) reflects the morning light and provides open views toward the east. Enter at Porte Dorée, a 5-minute walk from Metro Porte Dorée (line 8). Free, accessible from dawn.
The Temple de la Sibylle on the rocky island in the park's lake sits about 50m above the surrounding water and faces east and north. Open daily from 7:00; Metro Buttes-Chaumont (line 7bis). Free; the circular walk around the lake is about 2km.
The view south and west covers most of Paris from this height. The funicular (same price as a metro ticket) runs until 00:15, making late evening visits easy.
At 108m, this terraced park in the 20th arrondissement is the highest public green space in Paris. It faces southwest over the Haussmann roofscape with no tall buildings blocking the horizon. Open until 9:30pm in summer; Metro Pyrénées (line 11), 7-minute walk.
In the evening the tower is backlit from the west; the lower pedestrian level offers a sheltered angle with the steel superstructure as foreground.
The esplanade faces south toward the Eiffel Tower, and the western sky opens clearly to the right. Free, open around the clock; Metro Trocadéro (lines 6 and 9), about 300m from the tower base.
This small park at the western tip of Île de la Cité sits at river level with unobstructed views west along the Seine. Reached via stairs from Pont Neuf; Metro Pont Neuf (line 7). Free, open 24/7.