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RMF in Paris

A French radio.
For Parisians who look at the world

From Marais to Saint-Germain, from the 7th to the 16th, from the Champs-Élysées to Montmartre — the radio for upper-middle-class Parisians who travel often, dream of elsewhere, have returned from expatriation, or are about to leave. A France open to the world, to listen to at the very heart of the capital.

Why RMF in Paris

Paris, a world-city by nature

One might think a radio for the French of the world has nothing to say to Parisians. The opposite is true. Paris is one of the most international cities in the world, and its inhabitants — particularly upper-middle-class profiles — are in permanent contact with the international. They travel often, have friends worldwide, children in exchange programs, colleagues in London, New York, Singapore, Dubai.

Three major Parisian communities particularly find themselves in RMF. Future expats — those preparing a professional move and already wanting to build landmarks to stay connected to France. Returned ex-expats — those who lived abroad and keep an international sensibility, even back in Paris. Regular travelers — those who leave, return, leave again, and want a French radio that speaks to them when they're on a layover, traveling for work, or remote-working from Bali.

That's where RMF makes full sense. For Parisians who own an international identity, RMF is the radio that doesn't reduce France to its borders — an open, contemporary France, without provincial clichés.

Listening neighborhoods

RMF in Paris

RMF is listened to in all Parisian neighborhoods. The main RMF audience communities are found in the following arrondissements:

Marais (3rd–4th) Saint-Germain (6th) Latin Quarter (5th) 7th arrondissement 8th arrondissement 16th arrondissement 17th arrondissement Montmartre (18th) Central Paris (1st–2nd) Opéra (9th)
Listening moments

RMF accompanies Parisians

Paris has its own rhythm. RMF accompanies Parisians at the key moments of their day — from the metro to the office, from lunch to evening, from daily life to the weekend escape.

7am – 9am

The morning metro

Line 1, RER A, line 14 — the Parisian morning starts in transit. RMF accompanies with morning programming: éphéméride, horoscope, first tracks to start the day right. For metro noise-canceling headphones and bike earbuds.

12pm – 2pm

The lunch break

At the office, in a café, working from home — the Parisian lunch break is short but precious. RMF offers cultural accompaniment during this time: Un jour dans l'histoire, the éphéméride, daily columns.

6pm – 10pm

Family evenings

After work, the return home. RMF accompanies — Les reprises qu'on aime at 6pm, Branchouille at 9pm. For drinks with friends, family evenings, dinners that stretch on. Without imposing its rhythm.

Friday night

The weekend kickoff

From 8pm, 70's-80's takes the air. For evenings starting at République or Saint-Germain, Fridays at home, weekend departures to the countryside or the provinces.

Weekend

Driving getaways

On weekends, sometimes it's Deauville, Honfleur, Normandy. Sometimes Reims, Champagne. Sometimes Provence or the Alps. RMF keeps you company during car trips — A6, A13, A4 — where radio takes on its full meaning.

24/7

A constant presence

At the office, in meetings, working from home, on business trips — RMF is available live all day. And for regular travelers, RMF remains accessible everywhere in the world via the site, the app, CarPlay, Android Auto.

Living in Paris

Living, working, traveling from Paris

Do you live in Marais, Saint-Germain, the 16th? Do you work on the Champs-Élysées, at La Défense, at Station F? Do you live Paris daily but with an eye on the world? Here are the main Parisian neighborhoods where RMF accompanies its listeners.

Living in Le Marais: the 3rd and 4th arrondissements

Le Marais is one of the liveliest neighborhoods in Paris. Between Centre Pompidou, Place des Vosges, rue de Bretagne and rue des Francs-Bourgeois, this neighborhood mixes creatives, professionals, entrepreneurs, and international profiles. Designer boutiques, art galleries, independent cafés, neighborhood restaurants — Le Marais cultivates a Parisian art de vivre both demanding and cosmopolitan.

For Parisians in Le Marais, RMF accompanies daily life — between the terraces of Marché des Enfants Rouges and visits to the Picasso or Carnavalet museums.

Marais page coming soon

Living in Saint-Germain-des-Prés: the 6th arrondissement

Saint-Germain remains one of the most emblematic neighborhoods in Paris. The 6th attracts editorial, intellectual, and artistic profiles, as well as affluent families attached to the Left Bank's art de vivre. Between Le Bon Marché, the Gallimard and Le Seuil publishing houses, Café de Flore, the Luxembourg Garden — Saint-Germain remains an intact Parisian reference.

For Parisians of the 6th, RMF is a daily thread with a living cultural France — between two bookstores on rue Saint-Sulpice and a café on boulevard Saint-Germain.

Saint-Germain page coming soon

Living in the Latin Quarter: the 5th arrondissement

The Latin Quarter is Paris's historic intellectual epicenter. Between the Sorbonne, the Panthéon, the Jardin des Plantes, the Paris Mosque, and the École Normale Supérieure, the 5th hosts academic, scientific, intellectual, and cultural profiles. A transition neighborhood between student life and established residents, it keeps a unique Parisian atmosphere.

For Parisians of the Latin Quarter, RMF accompanies days between antique bookstores, independent cinemas, and the terraces of Contrescarpe.

Latin Quarter page coming soon

Living in the 7th arrondissement: Invalides, Eiffel Tower

The 7th is an upscale residential neighborhood, anchored around Les Invalides, Champ-de-Mars, the Musée d'Orsay, and the Eiffel Tower. It hosts embassies, ministries, grandes écoles (Sciences Po), and diplomatic profiles, senior civil servants, and professionals. The art de vivre here is discreet but polished.

For Parisians of the 7th, RMF accompanies daily life near institutions and monuments — between the bakeries of rue Cler and the terraces facing the Eiffel Tower.

7th arrondissement page coming soon

Living in the 8th arrondissement: Champs-Élysées, Faubourg Saint-Honoré

The 8th arrondissement concentrates luxury, power, and the international. From the Champs-Élysées to Parc Monceau, from Faubourg Saint-Honoré to La Madeleine — it's the neighborhood of headquarters, grand hotels, luxury houses, and embassies. Executive profiles, international managers, financial and legal professionals cross paths there.

For Parisians of the 8th, RMF is a French landmark at the heart of an ultra-international neighborhood — between the corporate headquarters of avenue Hoche and the terraces of Le Bristol.

8th arrondissement page coming soon

Living in the 16th arrondissement: Passy, Auteuil, Trocadéro

The 16th is the great residential arrondissement of western Paris. Passy, Auteuil, Trocadéro, Boulogne-Jasmin — as many micro-neighborhoods hosting affluent families, professionals, senior executives, and established upper-middle-class profiles. Lycée Janson-de-Sailly, Lycée La Fontaine, Lycée Molière — the 16th is also an arrondissement of bicultural families, with a strong international presence.

For Parisians of the 16th, RMF accompanies a residential and family daily life — between the Bois de Boulogne, the Trocadéro, and the terraces of rue de la Pompe.

16th arrondissement page coming soon

Living in the 17th arrondissement: Ternes, Batignolles, Monceau

The 17th is the arrondissement of Parisian residential diversity. Between Haussmannian Ternes, bohemian-bourgeois Batignolles, plush Monceau and family-friendly Plaine Monceau, the 17th attracts varied but often upper-middle-class profiles. Particularly prized by young Parisian families seeking both calm and quality of life.

For Parisians of the 17th, RMF accompanies a balanced daily life — between the shops of Batignolles and walks in Parc Monceau.

17th arrondissement page coming soon

Living in Montmartre: the 18th arrondissement

Montmartre keeps a singular Parisian identity. Between the butte, the Sacré-Cœur, Abbesses, and rue des Martyrs, this neighborhood attracts artists, creatives, young professionals, and bohemian families. A transition neighborhood between Haussmannian Paris and working-class Paris, Montmartre cultivates a unique atmosphere — touristy on the surface, deeply Parisian in its narrow streets.

For Parisians of Montmartre, RMF accompanies a creative daily life — between artists' studios and the terraces of rue Lepic.

Montmartre page coming soon

Working in central Paris: 1st, 2nd, 9th arrondissements

Central Paris concentrates a large part of tertiary activities. From the Louvre to the Opéra, from the Bourse to République, these arrondissements host headquarters, banks, media, communications agencies, consulting firms. Executive profiles, managers, professionals — central Paris is the business epicenter of the capital.

For Parisians who work or live in the center, RMF accompanies days between two meetings at the Drouot district, lunch near Palais Royal, or an evening at the Opéra.

1st, 2nd and 9th pages coming soon
RMF in other cities

Continue the journey

Do you travel often? Do you have family or friends in other francophone cities around the world? Discover how RMF fits into the daily lives of its listeners elsewhere.

Saint-Tropez Discover → Megève Discover → Montreal Discover → Toronto Discover → Marrakech Discover →
Bruxelles Coming soon
Londres Coming soon
Genève Coming soon
New York Coming soon
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