How Do You Plan a 3-Day Paris Itinerary with the Pass?

For three days, the 4-day pass (€109) gives the best fit and a buffer, though a 2-day pass works for a tighter plan. The key is to group sites by neighbourhood each day, anchor around your reservations, and mix big museums with quick monuments. Here’s a ready-made 3-day route to adapt.

Which pass for three days?

Three active days point to the 4-day pass, which covers all three with a spare day’s buffer for a slow start or a closure, at a good per-day rate. A 2-day pass can work if one of your three days is light on paid museums, topped up with a ticket or two.

The planning principles

Three rules make a 3-day plan flow: group each day’s sites into one neighbourhood to cut travel; anchor each day around the free timed slots you’ve booked; and alternate a big museum with quicker monuments so you don’t burn out. Build the route around these and the days fall into place.

Day 1 — the Seine and the Louvre

Start big: the Louvre on an early morning slot, then walk through the Tuileries to the Orangerie for Monet’s Water Lilies. In the afternoon, stroll up the Champs-Élysées to climb the Arc de Triomphe (no reservation needed) for sunset views over the city.

Day 2 — the Île de la Cité and Latin Quarter

Spend the morning on the Île de la Cité: Sainte-Chapelle for the stained glass and the Conciergerie next door (both need free slots). Then cross to the Latin Quarter for the Panthéon and the Musée de Cluny, with a relaxed lunch in between — a rich day of Gothic and medieval Paris.

Day 3 — the Left Bank or Versailles

Choose your finale. For more Paris, do the Orsay (book a slot) plus the Rodin Museum and Les Invalides on the Left Bank. For a grand day out, take the RER C to Versailles instead, on a Palace slot — just remember it’s most of a day, so keep it as its own day.

Mind the closures

Order your days around closures: don’t put the Louvre on a Tuesday, or the Orsay, Orangerie or Versailles on a Monday. A quick check lets you slot each site on a day it’s open, so your three days run smoothly without hitting a locked door.

Book your slots early

Reserve the free timed slots — the Louvre, Sainte-Chapelle, the Conciergerie, the Orangerie and (from March 2026) the Orsay, plus Versailles if you choose it — as soon as you have your pass. Spread them sensibly across the three days, and build each day’s walking route around them.

Keep it flexible

Leave room to breathe: three or four sites a day is plenty, with time for lunch and a sit-down. The pass lets you skip anything you’re not feeling and add a nearby site on a whim, so treat the itinerary as a flexible frame, not a rigid checklist.

Adapt it to your interests

Treat the three-day route as a starting frame, not a rule. Art lovers can swap in the Picasso Museum or the Cluny; history buffs can add Les Invalides or the Conciergerie; families can trade a gallery for the hands-on Cité des Sciences. Because the pass covers so many sites, you can reshape each day around what excites you, while keeping the neighbourhood-and-reservation structure that makes the plan flow.

Buy your Paris Museum Pass for three days

For a three-day trip, buy the 4-day Paris Museum Pass online in advance, book your free timed slots, and follow a neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood route. Secure your pass and turn three days into a well-paced tour of the best of Paris.

Frequently asked questions

Which pass is best for three days?

The 4-day pass, for the best fit and a buffer; a 2-day can work for a tighter plan.

How many sites per day?

Three or four is a comfortable pace.

How should I group each day?

By neighbourhood, to cut travel time.

Should I do Versailles?

Only as its own day — it takes most of a day with travel.

Which sites need reservations?

The Louvre, Sainte-Chapelle, the Conciergerie, the Orangerie, the Orsay and Versailles.

How do I handle closures?

Avoid the Louvre on Tuesdays and the Orsay or Versailles on Mondays.