The three-wheeled auto rickshaws, as well as human-powered pedicabs, first appeared in the French capital in 2011, and their numbers have since risen to around 50, lining up at landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, or the Place de la Concorde.
Like their Asian cousins, many are brightly painted, while others sport the iconic yellow with black-and-white trim of the New York cab.
The growth in numbers has been fuelled in part by the recent downturn in the French economy and the need to find work.
While tuk-tuks may be a cheap alternative to taxis in Asia, in central Paris, tourists are happy to pay an average of 20 euros per ride, easily more than regular cabs can charge.
"Unemployment is everywhere," one driver says. "We have found something that the tourists like."
The downside, he said, is that "the police hassle you" -- checking a laundry list of items including registration, medical clearance, insurance, brake lights and turn signals, as well as maintenance.
"Why shouldn't I take advantage of the Golden Triangle like others do?" asked the former hotel maitre d', referring to an upscale section of the Champs Elysees.
Benjamin Maarek, manager of the company Allo Tuk Tuk, said: "We want to be put on the same footing as the double-decker tourist buses that blight the landscape, the river boats, the little trains."
For the police, the latest addition to the city's already congested traffic is just another headache.
"These tuk-tuks are breaking the law because they haven't been booked" by telephone or online, one policeman tells AFP.
Under French law, only registered taxis are allowed to pick up passengers on the street.
"The monuments go by nice and slowly," says Ibrahim, from India. "It's great to visit Paris without getting tired," his girlfriend Nazneen chimes in before the pair get off at the Louvre.
