Eiffel Tower, Paris — oyster season guide

The Best Time to Eat Oysters in Paris

Paris is not on the coast, yet it is one of the best cities in Europe to eat oysters, thanks to daily deliveries from Brittany, Normandy and the Atlantic coast. The question is less "where" than "when" — and how to order them like a local.

This guide covers the oyster season, the main types you will see on a menu, and the brasseries and bars that take their plateaux de fruits de mer seriously.

When oysters are at their best

The old rule is to eat oysters in months containing the letter "r" — September through April — which lines up with cooler water and firmer, less milky oysters. This window also covers the festive season, when seafood platters peak.

Modern triploid oysters are available year-round, but for the classic flavour and texture, the autumn-to-spring season remains the sweet spot.

How to read the menu

French menus grade oysters by size with numbers (lower numbers are larger). You will choose between creuses (the common cupped Pacific oyster) and the rarer, more mineral plates (flat Belon oysters). Provenance such as Cancale, Marennes-Oléron or Normandy is often listed.

Order them simply — with lemon, a mignonette of shallot and vinegar, and rye bread with butter — and pair with a crisp Muscadet or Chablis.

Ready to choose a restaurant? See our full directory of seafood restaurants in Paris with photos, ratings and opening hours.

FAQ — Paris seafood

Can you eat oysters in Paris in summer?
Yes. Year-round triploid oysters are widely available, but many enthusiasts prefer the September–April season for firmer texture and more pronounced flavour.
What is the difference between creuses and plates?
Creuses are the common cupped oysters with a milder, brinier taste; plates (flat oysters such as Belon) are rarer and have a stronger, more metallic flavour.