The Paris Museum Pass comes in three lengths, and in 2026 it costs €85 for two days, €105 for four, and €125 for six on the official site. Those are the base prices, and depending on where you buy, a small service fee can be added on top.
| Pass | Validity | Price | Per day | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 days | 48 hours | €85 | about €43 | a short, packed city break |
| 4 days | 96 hours | €105 | about €26 | most first visits |
| 6 days | 144 hours | €125 | about €21 | a full week of museums |
The longer the pass, the less each day costs. The 4-day is the best seller, and it is the one I point most people toward.
This site is reader-supported. When you book through some of my links I may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. I only point you to sellers I have booked through myself. Merci!
Last updated June 2026.
Two, four, or six days: which to buy
Match the length to your pace, and remember the pass runs in consecutive hours from your first scan rather than in whole calendar days.
The 2-day pass at €85 fits a short break built around the big names. Keep it central, cluster sights that sit near each other, and start late morning so the 48-hour window stretches into a third morning. On one packed central day I did the Cluny, then Sainte-Chapelle and the Conciergerie, then the Louvre, finishing at the Arc de Triomphe at dusk.
The 4-day pass at €105 is the sweet spot for most first visits. It carries the cost easily and leaves room for a day out at Versailles, which on its own eats most of a pass day once you add the train and the security line.
The 6-day pass at €125 is for the museum lover with a week in town. At about €21 a day, a single paid site each day already puts you ahead.
Which length is the best value
Per day, the longer passes win easily. The 6-day works out to about €21 a day, the 4-day about €26, and the 2-day about €43.
Whichever you pick, the pass starts saving you money once you see four or five paid sites, because single tickets run from about €15 to €32. You can price your exact trip and see the tipping point on our Paris Museum Pass worth-it calculator.
The trap is buying more days than you can fill. A 6-day pass left half-used costs more per visit than a well-packed 2-day. Plan the sites you actually want first, then buy the shortest length that covers them.
Where to buy it and what you pay
Buy it online before you fly and a digital pass reaches you in minutes. The price is the same whether you buy ahead or on the spot, but a pass bought in person cannot be refunded.
The smart move is a seller that adds free cancellation for a little more, which the pass does not offer on its own. You can book the pass here and cancel up to a day ahead if your plans change.
One caution. Look-alike sites resell the pass and dress themselves up to look official, sometimes at a markup. Book through a name you recognize and you avoid that.
FAQs
How much is the Paris Museum Pass in 2026?
It is €85 for 2 days, €105 for 4 days, and €125 for 6 days on the official site. Those are the base prices, and some sellers add a small service fee, so check your total at checkout.
What is the cheapest Paris Museum Pass?
The 2-day at €85 is the lowest total price, but the 6-day at €125 is the cheapest per day at about €21. The best value is whichever length you can fill without leaving days unused.
Do the prices include taxes and fees?
No. You need to pay for taxes when book through the official site.
For how the pass works, reservations and refunds, see the full Paris Museum Pass FAQ.