Cat-Friendly Hotels Near CDG (Paris): Verified Pet Fees & Easy Transfers

Cat-friendly hotels near CDG with verified pet fees, clear rules and calm transfer routes via CDGVAL, shuttles or taxi. See our shortlist, room setup tips and email script before you book.

Cat-Friendly Hotels Near CDG (Paris): Verified Pet Fees & Easy Transfers
Photo by Anthony DELANOIX / Unsplash

Last updated: 3 December 2025

Travelling through Paris–Charles de Gaulle with a cat can feel like stepping into a maze at the end of a long day.

This guide is designed to take that one piece of the journey off your plate. In a few minutes you’ll have:

  • A shortlist of cat-friendly hotels near CDG
  • An idea of what their pet fees look like
  • Calm transfer options from the terminals
  • A copy-paste email you can use to confirm everything in writing before you book.

If you just want to see hotels scroll straight to the Quick Picks table below.

If you’re still deciding how to fly, it can help to zoom out once first. See Airlines That Allow Cats in Cabin 2025 — Updated Guide to check whether cabin is realistic for your route, and Airline-Approved Cat Carriers: Under-Seat Sizes & Top Picks if you need to confirm that your carrier will actually fit. For very big cats or complex, long-haul routes where cabin isn’t an option, there’s also IATA Cat Travel Crates for Cargo & Long-Haul.


Quick Picks — Cat-Friendly Hotels Near CDG

These hotels sit either in the Roissypôle / Terminal 3 cluster, or a short shuttle or taxi ride from CDG. They are chosen for clear pet policies, workable fees, and transfers that aren’t likely to tip a tired human and cat over the edge.

Pet fees change often, and wording around cats vs “pets” can be vague, so treat this table as a realistic map, not a contract. Use the booking email script a little further down to confirm the details for your exact dates.

Hotel Cats allowed Pet fee Max pets/room Deposit / cleaning Distance & transfer Hard floor? Source
ibis Styles Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (T3 / Roissypôle) Yes – pets welcome (confirm cats) Approx. €8 per pet, per night Not published None published At Roissypôle / T3 – CDGVAL to Roissypôle, then 2–3 min walk Mix of carpet and hard flooring – request a hard-floor room if important ibis Styles CDG listings (hotel site & major OTAs)
ibis Paris CDG Airport (Roissypôle cluster) Yes – pets welcome (confirm cats) Approx. €10 per pet, per night Not published None published In the Roissypôle hotel cluster – CDGVAL to Roissypôle, short signposted walk Many rooms carpeted; ask for a non-carpeted or easy-clean room if your cat is accident-prone ibis / Accor listing plus OTA pet information
INNSiDE by Meliá Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport Yes – small pets (confirm cats) €30 per pet, per day (usually up to ~7 kg) Typically 1 small pet – confirm for cats or multiple pets None published (standard card pre-authorisation only) Near main airport hotel zone – CDGVAL + short walk or hotel shuttle Modern rooms with many hard or easy-clean surfaces – still worth requesting a hard-floor room INNSiDE / Meliá pet policy pages and partner listings
Pullman Paris Roissy CDG Airport Yes – cats & dogs Approx. €50 per pet, per night Often 1 pet per room – confirm if travelling with two No separate pet deposit; fee usually covers extra cleaning Premium hotel by CDGVAL / Roissypôle – CDGVAL + short walk Mix of carpet and hard floors; ask for a quiet, higher-floor room and a hard floor if that helps your cat Pullman / Accor pet policy and booking-site fee details
Holiday Inn Paris CDG Airport (Roissy-en-France) Yes – cats & dogs explicitly allowed Approx. €20 per pet, per night Up to 2 pets per room on many rates – confirm on yours No separate pet deposit published (standard card hold only) 5–10 min by hotel shuttle or taxi from the terminals Most rooms carpeted; if you’re worried about accidents, ask for a room with more hard flooring or easy-clean surfaces IHG pet policy and pet-travel listings confirming cats
Mercure Paris CDG Airport & Convention Pets welcome (species not always specified – confirm cats) Pet fee usually charged per pet, per night; amount not always published Not published Not published 5–10 min by dedicated hotel shuttle – check current timetable Mix of carpet and hard flooring; ask ahead if you need a hard-floor room Mercure / Accor listings and airport-hotel descriptions
B&B HOTEL Paris Roissy CDG Aéroport Yes – pets welcome (usually including cats) Approx. €6 per pet, per night (typical B&B chain rate) Typically 1 pet per room – confirm with hotel None published In Roissy-en-France – hotel shuttle or 5–10 min taxi from CDG Many B&B rooms use hard or vinyl floors; still best to request a hard-floor room if that matters for litter or accidents B&B Hotels FAQ and property-specific pet details

Tip: if a hotel only says “small pets allowed” and doesn’t name cats, treat that as a yellow light. Use the email script below to get a clear “yes, cats are fine in our rooms” before you book.


How We Verify Pet Policies

For each hotel, we start with the official hotel website and major booking platforms that publish pet fees and conditions. We look for three things: whether pets are allowed in guest rooms, how the fee is structured (per pet vs per room; per night vs per stay), and whether there is any extra cleaning charge or deposit linked to bringing an animal.

Where a fee or rule isn’t clearly published, we mark it as such so you know exactly what to confirm with the hotel directly. Pet policies and prices do change, which is why we keep a “Last updated” date near the top and always recommend a quick policy check or confirmation email before you travel.


Booking Email Script (Copy & Paste)

Use this email with any CDG-area hotel to confirm that cats are allowed in your room type, what the pet fee will really look like on your bill, and whether you can get a room setup that works for one night with a cat.

Subject: Pet Policy Confirmation for Stay Near CDG

Bonjour,

I’m planning to stay at your hotel near Paris–Charles de Gaulle with my cat and would like to confirm your pet policy before I book.

Could you please confirm the following for my dates:That cats are allowed in standard guest rooms (not just dogs)The pet fee and whether it is charged per night or per stayWhether the fee is charged per pet or per roomAny additional cleaning fees or deposits related to having a cat in the roomThe maximum number of pets allowed per roomWhether it is possible to request a quiet room and, if available, a room with hard flooring or easy-clean surfacesWhether my cat may remain crated in the room for a short time while I go to reception or to eat within the hotel

Thank you very much for your help. A short reply confirming these points is perfect.

Kind regards,
[Your Name]

Copy, tweak, and paste this into your own email. Once you have a clear “yes” in writing, you can arrive at CDG knowing the hotel is expecting your cat and everyone shares the same understanding of fees and rules.


Getting to Your CDG Hotel with a Cat

The aim, once you’ve landed, is simple: get from your terminal to the hotel in a way that feels calm and predictable for both of you. At CDG that usually means:

  • CDGVAL
  • Hotel shuttles
  • Taxi/rideshare

CDGVAL & Roissypôle: The Core Route

CDGVAL is the small driverless train that links the terminals, car parks, and the Roissypôle area where several “on-airport” hotels live. With a cat in a closed carrier, it’s generally the cleanest route if your hotel is at Roissypôle or connected to it.

From most long-haul arrivals, you will:

  • Follow signs to CDGVAL from your terminal.
  • Ride to Roissypôle / Terminal 3.
  • Walk a short, signposted route to your hotel.

CDGVAL is built for luggage, so people expect bags and trolleys. With a carrier, aim for a spot away from the doors and keep the carrier on your lap or between your feet so bumps and sudden stops feel smaller to your cat.

Hotel Shuttles from CDG

Many CDG hotels outside the Roissypôle core use shared shuttles. These usually pick up from signed bus/shuttle areas at the terminals or from Roissypôle itself, and the exact stop name will be in your booking confirmation.

With a cat, it helps to:

  • Check shuttle times before you land, so you’re not waiting on the pavement with a carrier any longer than necessary.
  • Let a very crowded shuttle go past and take the next one if you can — standing in a crush with a soft carrier is nobody’s idea of a gentle start.
  • Wait slightly to the side of the main queue, then board once you’ve seen how busy it is and picked a corner where your carrier can stay stable.

If you prefer to avoid shared shuttles altogether, most of these hotels can also be reached by a short taxi or rideshare, especially outside rush hour.

On-Terminal & “Almost Walkable” Hotels

If your priority is “as few moving parts as possible”, staying at Roissypôle or in the immediate airport hotel cluster reduces decisions. Properties like the ibis cluster, ibis Styles, Pullman and similar hotels around Roissypôle are typically one CDGVAL ride plus a short, covered walk from arrivals.

These are often worth the extra cost if you:

  • Arrive very late or leave very early.
  • Are travelling solo with both luggage and a cat.
  • Have an anxious cat who doesn’t do well with multiple vehicle changes.

Taxis & Rideshares with a Cat at CDG

Official taxis and rideshares pick up from signed areas outside each terminal. If you’ve booked a hotel in Roissy-en-France or slightly further away, a 5–10 minute taxi is often the most direct, least complicated option.

To keep this part calm:

  • Agree on the destination with the driver while the carrier is still closed and on the ground or your lap.
  • If the pick-up area is very noisy or crowded, ask the driver — if it feels safe — to pull a little further down the lane before you open the car door and settle the carrier on the seat.
  • Keep the carrier closed until all car doors are shut; only open it again once you are inside your room.

Taxis and rideshares will usually accept a small pet in a carrier without fuss, but if you’re concerned, you can mention “un chat dans une caisse fermée” when you book or when the driver arrives.


Setting Up the Room for One Night Near CDG

Once you reach the hotel, your goal is to turn a standard airport room into a small, safe den where your cat can eat, use a tray, and rest without disappearing under the bed or behind the fridge.

Think in three zones: litter corner, base camp, and human space.

  • Litter corner: Use a bathroom corner if you can. Lay down a towel or travel mat, put your collapsible tray or disposable baking tray on top, and add a shallow layer of your cat’s usual litter. This keeps any spills contained and makes clean-up simple in the morning.
  • Base camp: Choose one place (often near the bed or a chair) where the carrier will live with the door open. Put a familiar towel or blanket from home there so it smells “right”, and keep food and water bowls in the same area so your cat doesn’t have to cross the whole room to find them.
  • Human space: Protect one surface — usually part of the bed or a chair — with your travel sheet or blanket. That gives your cat an approved spot to sleep near you without you worrying about fur or the odd muddy paw print.

Before you let your cat explore, quickly check for escape routes and hiding spots. Block deep gaps under the bed, behind heavy furniture, or around the bathroom vanity with rolled towels or bags, and make sure windows and balcony doors are properly closed and latched.

Then follow a simple routine: carrier down → litter corner set up → water down → open the carrier and let them come out at their own pace. Keeping exploration to one or two “safe zones” rather than the whole room helps most cats settle faster and makes bedtime easier for both of you.


Pet Fees, Deposits & Fine Print (CDG & France)

Around CDG, the question usually isn’t “are pets allowed?” but “how much will this actually cost, and what are the strings attached?” Most airport hotels near Paris Charles de Gaulle welcome animals, yet the details can change a lot once you look past the pet icon.

A simple way to read any policy is to walk through four things in order: Is the fee per pet or per room? Is it per night or per stay? Are there extra cleaning fees or deposits? Does “small pets” clearly include cats?

Per pet vs per room

Many CDG-area hotels charge per pet, not per room. That means a basic €10–€15 fee can double if you’re travelling with two cats. Some budget and mid-range hotels sit in the lower band, while business and premium properties, especially those closest to the terminals, move into the higher ranges.

When you write to the hotel, it helps to ask the question exactly as you need the answer:

“Is the pet fee charged per pet or per room?”

Per night vs per stay

The check lever is time. A few hotels charge a flat amount “per stay” (for example, €15–€20 once, no matter how many nights). Many more charge per night, especially in the business and chain hotels around the airport.

In your email, you can keep it plain:

“Is the pet fee per night or per stay?”

Cleaning fees, deposits and “just in case” charges

On top of the main pet fee, you may see mention of a cleaning supplement or a damage deposit / card pre-authorisation, more common in aparthotels and residence-style properties.

A single line in your email covers this:

“Are there any additional cleaning fees or deposits specific to having a cat in the room?”

“Small pets only” and whether that really means cats

French and EU hotel sites often use broad phrases like “small pets allowed” or “domestic animals accepted”. In reality, that usually includes cats, but reception staff often picture dogs by default. To avoid assumptions, use the word “cat” clearly, not just “pet”, when you write. If the site mentions “small dogs only”, treat that as uncertain until someone confirms cats are also welcome.

Something as simple as:

“We are travelling with a cat (not a dog) — is that acceptable in your standard rooms?”

closes that gap without making things complicated.

When a hotel simply isn’t worth it

Every now and then, you’ll find a hotel that looks perfect on paper but the pet conditions make it a poor fit for a single overnight with a cat. Typical red flags are: a very high pet fee (for example, €50–€60+ per pet, per night), strict rules about never leaving the animal alone in the room, and no option to request a quieter room.

In those cases, it’s completely reasonable to step back and say: “This is a great hotel for humans, but not the best stop for my cat.” A short CDGVAL ride or shuttle to a slightly further, more relaxed hotel with fairer fees will often give both of you a calmer night for less money.


Packing Micro-Checklist for an Overnight Near CDG

For a single night near CDG, you don’t need your whole home setup, just a small kit that makes the room feel familiar and keeps the morning simple. Pack for three things: toilet, comfort, and control.

Toilet & clean-up

  • Collapsible litter tray or disposable baking tray – something shallow that fits in a bathroom corner.
  • Small bag of your cat’s usual litter – enough for one good layer, not a full sack.
  • A few small trash bags – for used litter and wipes before you leave.
  • Unscented wipes or paper towels – for cleaning around the tray or minor accidents.

Comfort & bedding

  • One travel sheet or light blanket – to protect part of the bed or a chair and give your cat a “claimed” spot.
  • A familiar towel or small blanket from home – ideally something that already smells like your cat or their favourite sleeping place.
  • Spare carrier pad or folded towel – in case the original gets dirty on the journey.

Control & safety

  • Door wedge or strong tape – for propping self-closing doors or reducing gaps you don’t want them slipping through.
  • A compact torch or phone with enough battery – useful if you need to check under furniture without turning all the lights on at 3 a.m.
  • Screenshots or a PDF of the hotel pet policy and your email confirmation – handy if staff change shifts or aren’t aware of the details you agreed.

You can keep most of this in a single small packing cube. On the night, that cube simply becomes your “cat corner kit”: bathroom tray, base camp around the carrier, and one protected human surface. Everything else in the room can stay as it is.


FAQs — Cats & Hotels Near CDG

Do CDG hotels usually charge per cat or per room?
Most CDG-area hotels charge per pet, not per room, especially in the budget and mid-range chains. That means two cats often mean paying the fee twice. A few places charge a flat amount “per stay” or “per room”, but you can’t assume it. When you email the hotel, ask it exactly like this: “Is the pet fee per pet or per room?”

Can I leave my cat alone in the room while I go to eat or to reception?
Policies vary. Some hotels are relaxed as long as your cat stays inside the room and inside the carrier, others state that pets must not be left alone at all. As a safety baseline, only leave your cat briefly, crated, and while you stay on the property. Use the email script to ask: “Can my cat remain crated in the room for a short time while I get food in the hotel?” If the answer is no, assume you’ll be taking your cat with you or ordering in.

Are cats allowed on CDGVAL and hotel shuttles?
CDGVAL is designed for passengers with luggage, and small animals in enclosed carriers are generally accepted. Hotel shuttles usually follow the same logic: they’re fine with pets as long as they’re fully contained and under control. What you can’t do is carry a loose cat or open the carrier in transit. If you’re unsure, a quick line in your hotel email (“Is your shuttle okay with a cat in a closed carrier?”) removes doubt.

Is it better to stay at an on-airport hotel or a cheaper one a bit further away?
It depends where your stress sits. On-airport and Roissypôle hotels usually mean short, simple transfers (CDGVAL, short walk, or one shuttle), but a higher room price and often higher pet fees per night. Hotels a little further away can give you better room rates and lower pet fees, but a longer shuttle or taxi ride after a long day. If you’re travelling solo, arriving very late, or have a very anxious cat, paying extra for a simple, on-airport route is often worth it. If your timing is gentler and budget matters more, a slightly further but genuinely pet-welcoming hotel can be the calmer choice.

How early should I book a CDG hotel if I’m travelling with a cat?
For most of the year, 1–2 weeks ahead is enough to find a pet-friendly room near CDG. During busy periods (school holidays, major events, summer), it’s smarter to book 3–4 weeks in advance, especially if you need an on-airport or Roissypôle location, or are travelling with two cats or an unusually large cat. Whenever you book, follow up with the email confirmation of pet policy. That way, even if staff change or the hotel gets busy, you have something clear to refer back to at check-in.


Before You Book — Quick Recap

By this point, you know the hotels on the CDVAL / Roissypôle spine and how to best get there. You understand how pet fees can be interpreted, you’ve got a room setup routine and a short packing list that turn a generic airport room into a safe, predictable space for your cat.

From here, the next steps are simple:

  1. Pick one or two hotels from your shortlist that fit your timing, budget, and your cat’s temperament.
  2. Email them using the script to confirm cats, fees, and basic rules in writing.
  3. Book the room once you have a clear “yes, that’s fine”.

You don’t need the perfect hotel. You need one that is predictable, fairly priced, and easy to reach.

Still choosing your airline? Start with Airlines That Allow Cats in Cabin 2025.

Anxious about the carrier itself? Our carrier fit guide can help you double-check under-seat sizes.

Travelling with a very big cat or planning a long route? Our IATA crate guide walks you through doing cargo as safely and kindly as possible.

Flying via other hubs as well? You can also see LHR: Cat-Friendly Hotels Near Heathrow (LHR), and JFK: Cat-Friendly Hotels Near JFK (New York) for the same style of verified, cat-first overnight options.


Sources

Policies and fees can change; always confirm current pet terms with your hotel before you travel.