Pasdeloup

Cocktail Bar $$$

A small, opinionated cocktail room on the Rue Amelot, named for the 19e composer.

Pasdeloup sits on the Rue Amelot a short walk from the Cirque d’Hiver, in a room narrow enough that two people abreast is a polite negotiation. The bar opened in 2016 under bartender Sebastien Merle and is named for Jules Pasdeloup, the 19e Paris concert promoter who ran the orchestral series that played at the Cirque. The room is the point: low light, a single brass-rail bar, six tables, no music loud enough to interrupt the order.

It works for the drinker who wants to say “bartender’s choice” and trust the answer. Avoid if the plan is a long group dinner where the cocktails are background. Le Fooding called it “the right size for a serious drink, the wrong size for a party,” which is exactly how regulars on r/paris frame it.

One long narrow room, banquettes on the right, the bar on the left, terracotta walls, low brass pendants. Time Out called the lighting “low enough that the menu print is a kindness, not a marketing decision.”

Order Bartender’s Choice (14 EUR) and answer the two questions honestly: what do you like, what do you not. The rum and mezcal selection is unusually deep for Paris — Class Magazine has flagged Pasdeloup as one of the bars to ask for an actual mezcal flight. Skip the gin-and-tonic shortcut order; it is not the kitchen’s strength and one Google Maps reviewer calling it “the laziest pour in the room” lines up with what the bartenders will tell you if pressed.

Mostly couples and small groups of two or three; a slightly older crowd than Le Mary Celeste two streets over. Time Out described the energy as “a quiet, attentive room,” and a Thursday at 10pm confirms it — nobody is shouting.

Pasdeloup only opens five nights a week and the room is small enough that the booking page matters. Tuesday and Wednesday after 8pm are quiet; the bar will pour a proper Bartender’s Choice and explain the rum list without the table behind interrupting. Thursday and Friday by 9pm the bar is full and a reservation is the only way to be sure of a seat — Time Out Paris specifically recommends booking 48 hours ahead for those nights. The first hour from 7pm to 8pm is the slowest of the evening and is the right window for an aperitivo before dinner across the street at Le Servan or Septime. Sunday and Monday closures are non-negotiable; locals on r/paris repeat this often enough that it deserves a third mention.

Pasdeloup’s official Instagram (2026-05); Time Out Paris; Le Fooding; r/paris; Google Maps reviews (n=44).

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