Emily in Paris Season 5 has premiered on Netflix as a 10-episode season, expanding the series beyond Paris and turning food into a narrative compass that tracks Emily Cooper’s emotional and professional shifts. Cafés and restaurants once again function as places of decision-making, confrontation and intimacy — but now across Paris, Rome and Venice. As The WP Times reports, the new season leans deliberately into “cinematic dining”, using real, recognisable addresses to anchor its European escapism in places viewers can actually visit.

Below is a complete restaurant and café guide, organised by city and episode, with what happens in each part of the story, full addresses with postcodes, opening hours, atmosphere and realistic prices.

Rome — episodes 1–5: reinvention and ambition

Rome frames Emily’s attempt to rebuild herself — professionally and emotionally — outside Paris.

Zuma Rome

Episode 1
Emily’s Roman chapter opens with a high-pressure business lunch where she presents herself not as a visitor, but as a leader. The scene establishes Rome as a place of ambition rather than romance.
Address: Palazzo Fendi, Via della Fontanella di Borghese 48, 00186 Rome, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 12:00–15:00, 19:00–23:00
Atmosphere: Modern, international, discreet luxury
Prices: Mains €35–€55

Osteria del Barbiere

Episode 2
Sylvie chooses this intimate bar for an evening drink, signalling control and distance from the corporate world. The conversation here reinforces power dynamics within Agence Grateau.
Address: Via della Purificazione 21, 00187 Rome, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 18:00–01:00
Atmosphere: Classic Roman, understated
Prices: Wine €8–€12

Hotel de Russie – Le Jardin de Russie

Episode 3
Emily meets colleagues in a lush garden setting that mirrors her temporary calm. The restaurant contrasts luxury with uncertainty about her future.
Address: Via del Babuino 9, 00187 Rome, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 12:30–15:00, 19:00–23:00
Atmosphere: Elegant, tranquil
Prices: Lunch menus from €45

Settimo – Sofitel Rome Villa Borghese

Episode 4
A rooftop dinner where Emily confronts the possibility of staying in Italy. The view becomes a metaphor for expanded horizons.
Address: Via Lombardia 47, 00187 Rome, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 18:30–23:00
Atmosphere: Panoramic, contemporary
Prices: Mains €35–€45

Gigi Rigolatto Roma

Episode 5
The farewell dinner to Rome closes Emily’s Italian chapter. It is celebratory, nostalgic and deliberately excessive.
Address: Piazza della Minerva 69, 00186 Rome, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 12:00–15:30, 19:00–23:30
Atmosphere: Glamorous Italian Riviera style
Prices: €30–€50

Paris — episodes 6–8: identity and unresolved ties

Paris returns as a city of memory rather than growth.

L’Esprit de Gigi (Terra Nera)

Episode 6
Emily revisits her former “safe place”, realising how much she has outgrown it. The scene quietly closes a long-running emotional loop.
Address: 21 Rue Valette, 75005 Paris, France
Opening hours: Daily 12:00–14:30, 19:00–22:30
Atmosphere: Intimate neighbourhood Italian
Prices: €18–€26

Boulangerie Moderne

Episode 6
A brief stop that echoes Season 1 routines. The moment underscores how Paris now feels familiar rather than exciting.
Address: 16 Place de l’Estrapade, 75005 Paris, France
Opening hours: Daily 07:00–19:30
Prices: €2–€4

Lafayette’s Paris

Episode 6
Emily, Mindy and Alfie meet for dinner, but emotional distance dominates the table.
Address: 8 Rue d’Anjou, 75008 Paris, France
Opening hours: Daily 12:00–14:30, 19:00–23:00
Prices: €28–€42

Le Train Bleu

Episode 7
A pivotal conversation unfolds beneath Belle Époque ceilings as Emily prepares to leave Paris again.
Address: Place Louis-Armand, Gare de Lyon, 75012 Paris, France
Opening hours: Daily 11:30–14:30, 19:00–22:30
Prices: Menus from €49

Maxim’s

Episode 8
An extravagant Agence Grateau event symbolises Parisian excess — and Emily’s readiness to move on.
Address: 3 Rue Royale, 75008 Paris, France
Opening hours: Evenings only
Prices: €70+

Venice — episodes 9–10: romance and resolution

Venice serves as a cinematic closing chapter.

Osteria Alla Frasca

Episode 9
A relaxed lunch scene that strips away glamour and focuses on sincerity.
Address: Corte de la Carità, 30123 Venice, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 12:00–14:30, 19:00–22:00
Prices: €20–€30

Bar Ai Miracoli

Episode 9
Emily and Mindy share gelato while discussing the future — light, fleeting and symbolic.
Address: Fondamenta dei Miracoli 5941, 30121 Venice, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 10:00–22:00
Prices: €3–€5

Gio’s – St. Regis Venice

Episodes 9–10
Evening Aperol Spritzes and breakfast the next day frame Emily’s emotional clarity.
Address: Campo Barozzi, 30124 Venice, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 07:00–23:00
Prices: Cocktails €18–€22

Moro

Episode 10 (finale)
Marcello’s favourite restaurant hosts the season’s decisive romantic moment.
Address: Cannaregio 1810, 30121 Venice, Italy
Opening hours: Daily 18:30–22:30
Prices: €35–€50

Emily in Paris Season 5: plot, episode count and why this Netflix season feels different

Emily in Paris Season 5 consists of 10 episodes and marks a clear narrative evolution for the Netflix series. The plot shifts from light-hearted cultural misunderstandings to more grounded questions of career authority, emotional maturity and long-term choice, as Emily Cooper takes responsibility for Agence Grateau’s Italian expansion while reassessing her relationships. Paris remains the emotional reference point, but Rome and Venice become active storytelling spaces, signalling movement rather than escape. A defining feature of the season is its deliberate use of real cafés and restaurants as narrative settings, where key decisions are made over meals rather than in offices or apartments. This structural choice gives Season 5 a more cinematic, travel-driven rhythm and positions the series as both a romantic drama and a practical European lifestyle guide for Netflix viewers.

Emily in Paris Season 5: plot, episode count and why this Netflix season feels different

Emily in Paris Season 5 consists of 10 episodes and marks a clear narrative evolution for the Netflix series. The plot shifts from light-hearted cultural misunderstandings to more grounded questions of career authority, emotional maturity and long-term choice, as Emily Cooper takes responsibility for Agence Grateau’s Italian expansion while reassessing her relationships. Paris remains the emotional reference point, but Rome and Venice become active storytelling spaces, signalling movement rather than escape. A defining feature of the season is its deliberate use of real cafés and restaurants as narrative settings, where key decisions are made over meals rather than in offices or apartments. This structural choice gives Season 5 a more cinematic, travel-driven rhythm and positions the series as both a romantic drama and a practical European lifestyle guide for Netflix viewers.

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