What the price says
Between April and June 2026, the database tracked 801 offers for London and 782 for Paris, both in intercontinental Business departing from Brazil. At the median, London costs 5% less. At the absolute floor, Paris holds the advantage by R$ 63. Buyers purchasing at the typical market price pay less for London. Those hunting the extreme bargain may find the lowest fare on the Paris side.
What each destination looks like
London is a financial and cultural capital of global scale, with millions of residents and a draw for business, government and the creative industry. Paris concentrates influence in culture, fashion, gastronomy and art, with an agenda that spans corporate to institutional. Both destinations serve distinct executive travel profiles, and the choice of destination should come before the price discussion.
Those seeking the typical price choose London. Those willing to wait for the minimum fare may find the floor in Paris, by a difference of R$ 63.
Where to depart from in Brazil
For London, GRU presents the lowest median among tracked airports: R$ 11.669, with a floor of R$ 4.248. For Paris, GRU also leads on price, with a median of R$ 9.764 and a floor of R$ 4.185. Travelers departing from Rio de Janeiro pay more in both cases: the GIG median to London is R$ 17.950 and to Paris is R$ 16.008. BSB and FOR appear on both routes, with considerably higher median fares.
Airlines operating each route
For London, TAP Air Portugal, British Airways and Lufthansa are among the tracked carriers. For Paris, LATAM, Avianca and Royal Air Maroc appear on the list. Carrier availability varies by origin airport and date, which directly affects the price range found in each search.
If the destination is London, the typical price works in your favor: R$ 805 less at the median is real money in Business. If the destination is Paris, the difference at the median is the cost of accessing a different market. If both destinations serve the trip's purpose equally, London has the advantage at the typical price. If you operate with date flexibility and a tolerance for waiting, the Paris floor may surface first. There is no universal winner: there is the right destination for each agenda.