A woman who identified herself as Mrs Fan, a 40-year-old entrepreneur from Beijing, is shopping for fashion products in and around the streets of the 9th arrondissement. She has a budget of several thousand euros. "I am buying wedding rings for a couple I know very well. The couple has chosen the model and size, I just need to buy them in France, where they are much cheaper." She cites shopping as the main reason for visiting Europe, given that many retailers are holding their winter sales, and she goes abroad once or twice a year. "I buy luxury items abroad because they are cheaper, authentic and I am sure of the quality."
Zhang Chao is a 24-year-old student who lives in Marseilles. "I was passing by Paris and went to visit La Vallee. Most people want me to buy bags for them, especially now the euro has depreciated in value. They haven't given me the money upfront, but they will reimburse me when I take the goods back to China."
Zhang, like Fan, says price is his main reason for buying luxury items overseas. At La Vallee there are long queues at the tax refund center.
France benefits from being in the Schengen area, a bloc of 26 countries in Europe that needs only one visa. Under this agreement, Chinese travelers can move from one Schengen country to another without further formalities at border crossings. Italy and Switzerland, two other luxury brand powerhouses, are also part of the agreement. However, the UK is not. The United Nations World Tourism Organization says that, beyond the Asia-Pacific region, Europe is the biggest destination for Chinese travelers, attracting more than 3 million Chinese visitors in 2011.
Parisian efforts to entice Chinese shoppers - whether through dragon dance performances, photo opportunities with Miss France or extra discounts for Spring Festival - are working.
France outstrips its Mediterranean neighbors when it comes to the "Peking Pound". A Chinese tourist will spend up to 900 euros ($1,029) in Spain, but in Paris the amount jumps to 1,500 euros a visit. The capital is the top tourist destination in the world - with about 32.3 million visitors in 2013 - and the Chinese formed the fifth-largest group of visitors after the UK, the United States, Germany and Italy.
Paris is also the preferred shopping city in the world among the Chinese, according to Global Blue, a tourism shopping tax refund service provider. Rupert Hoogewerf, founder and compiler of the Hurun China Rich List and other research material regarding China's elite, says France consistently rates highly among the country's super rich. "The appeal of Paris is enormous: wine, luxury, art, food. There's an element of that high, extended lifestyle.
In Hurun's Best of the Best List 2015, France comes in second to Australia for top international luxury travel destination, beating the Maldives and Dubai, and Air France ranks higher than British Airways for its first and business class travel.
"French brands have built up a cachet and it's had a huge impact on China. Chanel is the queen of luxury for women. Hermes and LV (Louis Vuitton) are popular with Chinese men," Hoogewerf says.
"As the Chinese domestic luxury market has flattened out because of high prices and the anti-corruption drive, there has been this overseas shopping spree. It's putting pressure on the brands, and it's a real headache for them. They need to maintain that standard of service. Someone who buys a watch in Switzerland will expect that level of service in China. It's a challenge."