On a Tuesday afternoon, while refreshing a flight search for the fourth time, something truly unexpected showed up: a $288 one-way ticket from Newark to Paris. It’s not a mistake. Not a seat that was resold at the incorrect price after being canceled. Just a standard Icelandair ticket, landing at Charles de Gaulle the next morning after a short layover in Reykjavik. For comparison, a dinner for two at a reasonably priced Manhattan restaurant will cost you between $200 and $350. This isn’t a tasting menu, it’s not a place for special occasions, it’s just a good meal with a bottle of wine and a tip. The cost of the flight was lower.
The figure of $288 is not a unicorn. When the conditions are right, KAYAK’s data for the NYC-Paris corridor regularly displays one-way fares in that range. January and, to a lesser extent, February and November are the least expensive months. Tuesday and Wednesday are the least expensive days to travel; Saturdays are consistently the most costly. Additionally, the route itself is important: flights from Newark to Paris On average, Orly is 15% less expensive than the more widely used JFK-to-CDG pairing, which is where most people naturally look. On a transatlantic ticket, that 15% difference is real money.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Route | New York (NYC) to Paris (PAR) |
| Cheapest One-Way Fare Found | $288 (Newark EWR to Paris CDG, Icelandair) |
| Cheapest Round-Trip Found | $513–$546 (EWR to ORY or CDG, Icelandair/French Bee) |
| Cheapest Month to Fly | January (avg. round-trip ~$513) |
| Most Expensive Months | December (~$804) and June (~$770) |
| Cheapest Days to Fly (Outbound) | Tuesday and Wednesday |
| Best Day to Return | Thursday |
| Cheapest Route | Newark (EWR) to Paris Orly (ORY) — ~15% cheaper than JFK-CDG |
| Most Popular Route | JFK to CDG |
| Budget Airlines to Watch | Norse Atlantic Airways, French Bee, Icelandair |
| Best-Reviewed Airline on Route | Delta (7.9/10 on KAYAK) |
| Most Punctual Airline | Air France (90% on-time) |
| Booking Advance Recommendation | At least 2 weeks out (saves ~17%); ideally 19 weeks out |
| Nonstop Flight Options | Air France, American Airlines, Delta, French Bee |
| Average Flight Duration (Nonstop) | ~7 hours 33 minutes |
| French Bee EWR–ORY Nonstop | 7h 15m |
| Comparison: Manhattan Dinner for Two | Easily $200–$400+ at a mid-to-upscale restaurant |
| Direct Flight Tip | Direct flights currently cheaper than one-stop options on this route |

The two airlines operating regular transatlantic service at prices that would have seemed unthinkable prior to low-cost long-haul becoming a viable business model are Norse Atlantic Airways and French Bee, which are currently doing the most intriguing things on this route. Five years ago, most Americans could not have named these carriers. In roughly seven hours and fifteen minutes, French Bee operates a nonstop service from Newark to Orly. For an overnight Atlantic flight, Norse Atlantic offers seatback screens in economy and a Premium cabin with a 43-inch seat pitch, which is functional but not luxurious. The honest trade-off is that neither receives as high of a rating as Delta or Air France in terms of comfort and crew reviews. However, many people are willing to make that trade-off when the fare difference is between $200 and $300.
It is worthwhile to give the booking timing question careful consideration. According to KAYAK’s data, the lowest average fares on this route are obtained when reservations are made 19 weeks in advance. When compared to last-minute purchases, purchases made two weeks in advance still save roughly 17%, which is significant if you are unable to make long-term plans. On transatlantic routes, airlines price these seats so precisely that the difference between “early enough” and “too late” is usually harsh, so the instinct to wait and see if prices drop rarely works in the traveler’s favor.
When discussing travel to Paris, the cost-of-trip calculation is frequently misrepresented. The flights are the main attraction, but Paris itself, including dining at local bistros instead of tourist traps near Saint Michel, taking the RER from CDG into the city instead of a taxi, and using a weekly Navigo transit pass instead of individual Metro tickets, can be done at a price that would surprise anyone assuming that Europe equals expensive. In a Parisian café, a quick lunch costs about ten euros. About twenty-five dollars for dinner at a non-tourist bistro. The city’s reputation for extravagance mostly doesn’t apply to how real Parisians spend a Tuesday, but it does apply to certain neighborhoods and experiences.
Fuel prices, airline consolidation, and demand cycles all have the potential to cause the floor on transatlantic fares to eventually rise. For the time being, however, the data presents a fairly convincing argument: if you’re willing to be flexible about which airport you depart from, which airline you put up with for eight hours, and which month you travel, Paris from New York can be had for less than a Manhattan dinner. In January, Paris is chilly, peaceful, and nearly completely devoid of the summertime crowds that turn some neighborhoods into theme parks. That is also something to consider.
