Club spokesman Ian Borthwick - adviser to Racing 92's president, Jacky Lorenzetti - confirmed Carter would still attend. The star first-five is set to fly to France next week.
"He is going to be presented to our supporters," Borthwick told the Herald on Sunday.
"We have sent each other a few messages and there has been communication through his agents. We are in close contact."
In the wake of the terror attacks, soldiers and armed police are standing guard at tourist hotspots, sports venues, traffic networks and other public areas around France.
Borthwick said the heightened security would also feature at Yves-du-Manoir for Carter's unveiling.
Carter will join fellow New Zealanders Joe Rokocoko, Chris Masoe, Casey Laulala Ross Filipo and Ben Tameifuna at Racing 92.
Borthwick said the Kiwi contingent was among Racing 92's players who were this week "a bit rough around the edges" after the terror attacks and Jonah Lomu's death on Wednesday.
The New Zealanders, and the home rented by Carter for his wife and their two young sons, are not near the areas targeted by Isis extremists.
In a statement to fans on Racing 92's Facebook page, Lorenzetti said it was important the terror inflicted on Paris - including Wednesday's raid on a terror cell base in St Denis - did not stop everyday life in the 'City of Light'.
"I am in favour of the need to continue to live and show that we are above the crimes and abominations that have been committed," he wrote. "So we will be playing this game at the stadium Yves-du-Manoir."
Meanwhile, Auckland's ability to handle an extreme event, including a terrorist attack, will be subject to review from a world expert.
In the wake of the Paris attacks, extreme events specialist Dr Bridgette Sullivan-Taylor is heading a new research project on the country's biggest city to handle a similar crisis.
University of Auckland senior lecturer, Sullivan-Taylor - a Kiwi whose 20 years of work in Great Britain took her to Downing Street to review the UK's national security for then-Prime Minister Tony Blair - is turning her analysis to Auckland and "postcard targets", places where large numbers of the public gather.
Understanding what contingencies businesses have in place for immediate fallout will be a top priority.
"Our research is going to be looking into the practices in New Zealand," Sullivan-Taylor said.
"Tourism and leisure, soft targets and the whole question of preparedness are high on the radar. New Zealand and Australia don't have the same high-level events or the volume of people, but you'd be silly not to be prepared."
The Kiwi study, which is being conducted in conjunction with Aston and Warwick Business Schools in England, should be completed early next year.