
Louvre Museum tickets and tours
Enhance your Louvre Museum visit with ease using a skip-the-line ticket, ensuring seamless access to iconic art and captivating history
en, fr
Highlights of the Louvre Group Tour
Get the most out of the Louvre Museum by booking this guided tour of its highlights in groups of 20 people or fewer.
en
Alone with Mona Lisa, Last Entry Louvre Tour
Book a guided tour of the Louvre's treasures, following an inverted itinerary so that you save the Mona Lisa for last, just as the museum is closing when most visitors have left.
en
Louvre Museum Private Guided Tour with Reserved Entry
Book a private tour of the Louvre Museum to discover the main highlights: Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, Victory of Samothrace, Michelangelo's Slaves, Louis XIV's Apollo Gallery..
en
Louvre Museum Greatest Masterpieces Exclusive Small Group Tour
Book an exclusive small-group tour of the Louvre Museum and discover the most iconic pieces of art of one of the largest art collections in the world!
en
Small group tour of top Paris attractions with a local
Come across the most wonderful sights of Paris with a local guide and get a feel of its unique culture.
en, fr
Private tour of the Louvre, Notre-Dame and Cité & Saint-Louis Islands
Book this 6-hour private tour to discover Paris iconic sites: the Louvre Museum, Notre-Dame Cathedral, and the Ile-de-la-Cité.
en
Murders and mysteries tour of the Louvre Museum
Uncover the secrets of the Louvre Museum with this 2-hour Murders and Mysteries tour.
en, fr
Top attractions in Paris
You might also like
The inside story
In August 1911, Leonardo’s masterpiece The Mona Lisa was stolen from the Louvre and was missing for two years. The criminal was Vincenzo Peruggia, a handyman with a police record for robbing a prostitute. After hiding in a closet until the museum closed, he then removed the painting from its frame, rolled it up and walked out with it inside his coat.
There were no security alarms at that time and it was 24 hours before anyone even noticed the painting was missing. Police searched Peruggia’s flat but didn’t find anything, despite it being hidden in the bottom of a trunk. Instead, they arrested the poet Guillame Apollinaire, who was soon released for lack of evidence. Picasso was also questioned.