Which Paris Museum Pass Is Best for First-Time Visitors? A Buyer’s Guide
For most first-timers, the 4-day pass (€109 in 2026) is the best buy — it covers the must-see icons at a comfortable pace and the best per-day value. Choose the 2-day (€90) for a weekend, or the 6-day (€139) for a longer first trip with day trips. Here’s a complete buyer’s guide to picking and using your first Paris Museum Pass.
Why the 4-day pass suits first-timers
A first visit usually means ticking off the big icons — the Louvre, Orsay, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, the Arc de Triomphe — and the 4-day pass gives you time to do exactly that without rushing. At about €27 a day it’s excellent value, and four consecutive days is enough for eight to ten sites plus a Versailles day trip.
Match the pass to your trip
- A weekend (2–3 days): the 2-day pass for a focused first taste.
- A typical first trip (4 days): the 4-day pass — the sweet spot.
- A longer first visit (5–6 days): the 6-day pass for day trips and a relaxed pace.
The must-see icons your pass covers
As a first-timer, you’ll want the headliners, and the pass covers most of them: the Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay, the Palace of Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, the Conciergerie, the Arc de Triomphe, the Panthéon and Les Invalides with Napoleon’s Tomb. That’s a first-trip wish list almost entirely bundled into one pass.
What’s not included — plan for it
Set expectations: the pass doesn’t cover the Eiffel Tower, the Catacombs, Seine cruises, the Centre Pompidou (closed until ~2030) or transport. These are common first-timer wants, so book the Eiffel Tower and a cruise separately for evenings and budget metro tickets — they complement, rather than compete with, your pass days.
Reservations are essential
First-timers are often caught out by reservations: the Louvre, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, the Orangerie and (from March 2026) the Orsay all require a free timed slot even with the pass. Book these the moment you buy, or you can be turned away. This single step is the key to a smooth first trip.
A first-timer’s 4-day plan
- Day 1: Louvre, Orangerie, Arc de Triomphe at sunset.
- Day 2: Versailles as a day trip.
- Day 3: Sainte-Chapelle, Conciergerie, Panthéon, Cluny.
- Day 4: Orsay, Rodin, Les Invalides.
Buy early and choose digital
Buy your pass online before you travel — it’s the same fixed price everywhere — and choose a digital pass for instant delivery and easy phone-scanning. Buying ahead lets you grab the all-important reservation slots early, which is especially important for first-timers visiting in peak season.
Activate early and pace yourself
Activate the pass at opening on your first day to get full days, and don’t over-pack: three or four sites a day, grouped by neighbourhood, with breaks. The pass’s flexibility means you can ease off when tired — a first trip should be enjoyable, not a race through every gallery.
First-timer mistakes to avoid
- Not reserving the required timed slots.
- Planning the Louvre on a Tuesday (closed).
- Expecting the Eiffel Tower to be included.
- Buying passes for free under-18s or EU under-26s.
- Over-packing each day and burning out.
A first-timer’s pre-trip checklist
- Pick your pass length to match your sightseeing days.
- Buy online in advance at the fixed price, ideally digital.
- Book the Louvre and Versailles slots first — they sell out.
- Reserve the Orsay, Sainte-Chapelle and Orangerie soon after.
- Book the Eiffel Tower and a cruise separately for evenings.
- Sort transport — a Navigo card or metro tickets.
- Save every confirmation offline on your phone.
Buy your first-timer Paris Museum Pass
For your first trip to Paris, buy the 4-day Paris Museum Pass online in advance (or the 2-day for a weekend), book your free timed slots, and plan by neighbourhood. Secure your pass and see the best of Paris the easy way.
Frequently asked questions
Which pass is best for first-timers?
The 4-day pass for a typical trip; the 2-day for a weekend; the 6-day for a longer first visit.
What icons does it cover?
The Louvre, Orsay, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, the Arc de Triomphe, the Panthéon and Les Invalides.
What’s not included?
The Eiffel Tower, Catacombs, cruises, the Pompidou and transport.
Do I need reservations?
Yes — for the Louvre, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, the Orangerie and the Orsay.
Should I buy early and digital?
Yes — buy ahead at the fixed price and choose digital to grab slots and skip shipping.
What’s the most common first-timer mistake?
Not booking the required free timed slots.