Pantheon Paris Tours
Pantheon Paris Tours & Tickets
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Official tickets & experiences

Pantheon Paris Tours & Tickets

Beneath the crypt rest the immortals, above them swings the pendulum.

Hand-picked by our editors — only the best 6 experiences from 240 reviewed.

4.8 (2400) 142K+ travelers chose this
Open today 10:00 – 18:30
Attendance: Moderate — summer peak season
Panoramic dome closed for renovation; nave and crypt fully open. June crowds peak mid-morning.
Free cancellation Instant confirmation Mobile voucher Verified partner Skip-the-line
Tickets

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Verified partners for Pantheon Paris tours, free cancellation where available, and instant confirmation on every booking.

Panthéon Paris: Self-Guided Admission Ticket 1 hr
Standard Entry

Panthéon Paris: Self-Guided Admission Ticket

4.6 (6827)
€13
per person
Instant Mobile voucher Fixed date

Explore Soufflot's neoclassical masterpiece and the crypt of France's greatest figures at your own pace.

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Latin Quarter Highlights Walking Tour 1 hr 30 min
Guided Experience

Latin Quarter Highlights Walking Tour

4.4 (64)
€30
per person
Instant Mobile voucher Flexible — change up to 24h

Stroll Paris's Latin Quarter on a small-group walk from the Panthéon to Notre-Dame with a local guide.

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Paris: Panthéon & Luxembourg Gardens Audio Guide Tour 4 hr
Premium Combo

Paris: Panthéon & Luxembourg Gardens Audio Guide Tour

5 (1)
€223
per person
Instant Mobile voucher Flexible — change up to 24h

Audio-guided journey through the Panthéon and Luxembourg Gardens with private round-trip hotel transfers in Paris.

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Prices from verified partners. Availability updates in real time at checkout. Free cancellation policies apply where shown.

Duration
1-2 hours recommended
Languages
English, French, Spanish
Group size
Up to 20 guests
Cancellation
Free up to 24 hours
Visiting the Pantheon Paris Landmark
About

Visiting the Pantheon Paris Landmark

Soufflot's dome was engineered to rival St Paul's in London, yet cracks appeared before the building was finished in 1790. Conceived by Louis XV as a church for Sainte-Geneviève, pantheon paris was seized by the Revolution and reborn as a mausoleum for the nation's great minds.

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Voltaire, Rousseau, Marie Curie and Victor Hugo now lie in its crypt, while Foucault's pendulum swings beneath the cupola, proving the Earth's rotation as it has since 1851. Today the Panthéon de Paris anchors the Latin Quarter's intellectual map, drawing visitors who book pantheon paris skip the line access, pantheon fast track entry and pantheon paris priority entrance to reach the colonnade and its panorama. Among the city's neoclassical landmarks, this Paris monument keeps history and science under one ceiling.

"Beneath one dome rest the nation's immortals, and above them a pendulum quietly turns the Earth."
Your experience

What a Pantheon Paris tour day looks like

A step-by-step walkthrough of Pantheon Paris tickets — what you'll see, how long each stage takes, and the details that matter.

You arrive at Place du Panthéon between 10:00 and 12:00, the quiet first hours before the mid-morning tour groups fill the nave. You step through the portico's Corinthian columns and into a vast cross-shaped hall, your footsteps echoing across the marble.

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You pause at Foucault's pendulum, watching its slow arc, then descend to the crypt where Curie, Hugo and Zola rest in cool stone galleries. With a pantheon paris tour or a guided dome ticket, you climb 206 steps past the colonnade for a rooftop sweep over the Sorbonne, the Eiffel Tower and the Seine. You weigh pantheon paris tickets and skip-the-line options at the door, then linger over a view few of pantheon paris tours leave time to absorb.

Your experience at Pantheon Paris Tours & Tickets
What you'll do

Inside a Pantheon Paris tour, step by step

  1. Exterior & Portico
    01 15 min

    Exterior & Portico

    Examine the neoclassical colonnade and pediment inscription "Aux grands hommes la patrie reconnaissante" before entering. The six Corinthian columns echo the Pantheon in Rome.

  2. 02 10 min

    Security & Entrance Hall

    Pass through Vigipirate security screening, collect your ticket and any available family activity sheet, and orientate yourself with the floor plan.

  3. Foucault's Pendulum & Nave
    03 30 min

    Foucault's Pendulum & Nave

    The 67-metre pendulum suspended from the dome centre demonstrates Earth's rotation — the original experiment was performed here by Léon Foucault in 1851. Look up at the painted vaults depicting the life of Saint Geneviève.

  4. Mural Galleries
    04 20 min

    Mural Galleries

    Work clockwise around the nave to view the monumental fresco cycles by Puvis de Chavannes, covering episodes from French history including the life of Saint Geneviève and scenes from Joan of Arc.

  5. Crypt
    05 25 min

    Crypt

    Descend to the crypt where over 80 distinguished French figures are interred, including Voltaire, Rousseau, Victor Hugo, Émile Zola, Marie Curie and Pierre Curie.

Highlights

What you'll see inside Pantheon Paris

The landmarks, rooms, and views travelers on Pantheon Paris tours remember — all visible on a single visit.

Foucault's Pendulum

Foucault's Pendulum

A 67-metre brass-tipped cable suspended from the dome centre has been swinging continuously since Léon Foucault first demonstrated Earth's rotation here in 1851; the original experiment used a 28-kg bob.

Nave and Painted Vaults

Nave and Painted Vaults

The nave stretches 110 metres from entrance to apse and is covered with monumental fresco cycles by Puvis de Chavannes depicting the life of Saint Geneviève, patron saint of Paris, completed between 1874 and 1898.

The Crypt

The Crypt

Divided into a network of corridors beneath the nave, the crypt contains the tombs of more than 80 figures including Marie Curie — the first woman honoured in the Panthéon for her own achievements — and Victor Hugo, whose transfer in 1885 drew two million mourners.

Soufflot's Neoclassical Dome

Soufflot's Neoclassical Dome

Architect Jacques-Germain Soufflot engineered the triple-shell dome between 1758 and 1790, one of the first in Europe to rely on pendentives rather than heavy walls, reducing the structure's weight by removing most of the load-bearing masonry.

Pediment and Colonnade

Pediment and Colonnade

The 22-column Corinthian portico carries the inscription "Aux grands hommes la patrie reconnaissante" (To great men, the grateful homeland), added in 1791 when the building was converted from a church to a mausoleum during the French Revolution.

Compare

Pantheon Paris tickets & tours compared

Every Pantheon Paris tour side-by-side — duration, what's included, how you redeem.

Experience From Duration Transfers Pickup Lunch Tax inc. Free cancel. Price
Standard Entry
Panthéon Paris: Self-Guided Admission Ticket
1 hr €13 Book →
Guided Experience
Latin Quarter Highlights Walking Tour
1 hr 30 min €30 Book →
Premium Combo
Paris: Panthéon & Luxembourg Gardens Audio Guide Tour
4 hr ✓ AC van €223 Book →

All prices from verified partners. Availability and exact terms confirmed at checkout.

How your ticket works

Book Pantheon Paris tours in 3 steps

  1. 01

    Book online

    Choose your ticket, select your date, and reserve in under two minutes. Secure checkout handled by our verified partner.

  2. 02

    Receive your mobile voucher

    Instant confirmation by email, with a mobile voucher you can save offline. No printing, no queuing at a collection desk.

  3. 03

    Show & enter

    Arrive at the entrance, show your voucher on your phone, and walk in. Most tickets include priority or skip-the-line access.

Plan your visit

Plan your Pantheon Paris visit

Practical details for Pantheon Paris tickets straight from our verified partners — hours, access, rules, and how to get there.

Open today · 10:00 – 18:30
Opening Hours
10:00 – 18:30 daily (last entry 45 min before close)
Address
Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris, France
Accessibility
Wheelchair access to nave and crypt; elevator available
Best Arrival
10:00 – 12:00 for fewest crowds before tour groups arrive mid-morning
Entrance Fee
€16 at door; €13 online; free for under-18s and EU residents under 26
Mon
10:00 – 18:30
Quietest weekday morning
Tue
10:00 – 18:30
Quietest midweek day
Wed
10:00 – 18:30
Thu
10:00 – 18:30
Fri
10:00 – 18:30
Slightly busier toward weekend
Sat
10:00 – 18:30
Arrive at opening to avoid queues
Sun
10:00 – 18:30
Free entry Nov–Mar first Sunday
Closed on: Jan 1 (New Year's Day — annual closure), May 1 (Labour Day — annual closure), Dec 25 (Christmas Day — annual closure), First working Mon each month (Opens at 12:00 noon instead of 10:00), Jun 15 – Jun 24 2026 (Special closure period (official notice)), Dec 24 (Early close at 17:00; last entry 16:15), Dec 31 (Early close at 17:00; last entry 16:15)
Main entrance

Main Entrance Portico

Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris

Meet under the central colonnade facing Rue Soufflot; the ticket queue forms to the right of the main doors.

Open in Google Maps
Address
Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris, France
Entrance Fee
€16 at door; €13 online; free for under-18s and EU residents under 26

How to get there

🚆
Public transport · 5–10 min from central Paris stations · Navigo pass or single t+ ticket ~€2.15

Metro line 10 to Cardinal Lemoine or RER B to Luxembourg; bus lines 21, 27, 38, 82, 84, 85, 89 stop at Place du Panthéon

🚶
Walk · 10–20 min depending on origin · Free

15 min walk from Notre-Dame de Paris; 10 min from Jardin du Luxembourg

🚴
Bike · 5–15 min from central Left Bank · €1–3 per trip

Vélib' docking station at Place du Panthéon and Rue Soufflot

🚗
Car · 10 min drive from Saint-Germain-des-Prés · Approx €4–5/hour

Parking Indigo Paris Soufflot-Panthéon at 22 rue Soufflot, open 24h

Dress code

There is no formal dress code at the Panthéon, but the monument is a solemn mausoleum and visitors are expected to behave respectfully. Modest clothing is appreciated out of consideration for the commemorative nature of the space.

Bags & security

All visitors pass through airport-style security screening at the entrance as part of the Vigipirate national security programme. Large luggage and oversized bags are not permitted inside; a left-luggage facility is not provided on site, so leave bulky baggage at your hotel or at a nearby consigne.

Photography

Personal photography and video for non-commercial use is permitted throughout the nave and crypt. Flash photography and tripods are not allowed. The Foucault's Pendulum and painted nave vaults are popular subjects; keep clear of other visitors when framing shots.

Accessibility

The nave and crypt are accessible by wheelchair via a dedicated entrance ramp. An elevator connects the ground floor to the crypt level. Tactile guides and audio guides in French and English are available for visitors with visual impairments. Note that the panoramic dome tour is currently suspended due to renovation works.

Mobile phones

Mobile phones may be used for photography and audio guides but should be kept on silent inside the monument. The Panthéon offers free Wi-Fi in the entrance hall. Video calls and loud speakerphone use are discouraged out of respect for other visitors.

What to bring

  • Printed or mobile ticket (QR code)
  • Valid photo ID (essential for free-entry eligibility)
  • Comfortable flat shoes for stone floors
  • Water bottle (sealed)
  • Portable phone charger
  • Light layer — the interior stays cool year-round

Not allowed

  • Tripods
  • Selfie sticks
  • Flash photography equipment
  • Large backpacks or suitcases
  • Food and open drinks
  • Pets (except assistance animals)
  • Weapons and sharp objects
  • Drones
  • Loud audio equipment
  • Spray cans or paint
  • Umbrellas with pointed metal tips
  • Political banners or flags

Families & strollers

Children under 18 enter free of charge regardless of nationality; EU residents aged 18–25 also enter free with valid ID. The Foucault's Pendulum — a 67-metre cable suspended from the dome — is a reliable crowd-pleaser for older children interested in physics. Free family activity sheets are available at the ticket desk during school holiday periods.

Food & drink

No café or restaurant operates inside the Panthéon. Sealed water bottles may be carried in, but eating is not permitted in the monument. The surrounding Place du Panthéon and nearby Rue Soufflot have several brasseries and sandwich counters within a two-minute walk.

Pets

Pets are not permitted inside the Panthéon. Registered assistance and guide dogs with appropriate documentation are welcome throughout the monument.

Good to know

The panoramic dome is currently closed for renovation works as of June 2026; check the official site at paris-pantheon.fr/en before your visit for updates on reopening. Free entry is granted to all visitors on the first Sunday of each month from November through March, and on European Heritage Days (usually third weekend of September).

Meeting points

Pantheon Paris tour meeting points

Main Entrance Portico

Main Entrance Portico

Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris

Meet under the central colonnade facing Rue Soufflot; the ticket queue forms to the right of the main doors.

Get directions

Fountain at Place du Panthéon

Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris

The stone fountain at the centre of the square is a visible landmark visible from all approach streets.

Get directions
Around your visit

Pantheon Paris — everything else worth knowing

Best time to go, insider tips, nearby landmarks, and the cancellation fine print — flip through to skim what matters to you.

Best time to visit Pantheon Paris

How crowds, weather, and events shift across the year.

Spring (Apr–May)

Mild weather and moderate crowds; blossom in Jardin du Luxembourg nearby; dome renovation may still be ongoing.

Summer (Jun–Aug)

Longest opening hours at the Paris monument; heaviest tourist numbers June–August, especially midday.

Autumn (Sep–Oct)

Crowds thin from late September; European Heritage Days in September offer free entry to the Panthéon.

Winter (Nov–Mar)

Quietest season for this Paris landmark; free admission on first Sunday of each month; colder but shorter queues.

Helpful tips for your visit to Pantheon Paris

Small details that turn a good visit into a great one.

Book online to save €3

Online tickets cost €13 versus €16 at the door, and pre-booked tickets also let you bypass the main ticket-office queue — everyone still goes through security, but you skip the purchase wait.

Arrive between 10:00 and 12:00

The first two hours after opening have the fewest visitors at this Paris monument; tour groups typically arrive mid-morning, so the earlier you enter the better.

Check the first Monday rule

On the first working Monday of each month the Panthéon opens at 12:00 noon instead of 10:00 — arriving early that day means a wasted journey.

Dome access is currently suspended

The panoramic terrace is closed for renovation as of June 2026; confirm reopening dates at paris-pantheon.fr/en before planning your visit around the rooftop views.

Free entry dates to note

EU residents aged 18–25 enter free all year with ID; everyone enters free on the first Sunday of each month November through March, and on European Heritage Days in September.

Bring a light layer

The interior of the monument, particularly the crypt, stays noticeably cool even during Paris summer heat; a light jacket or scarf is useful year-round.

Landmarks near Pantheon Paris

Non-bookable sights within a short walk — free to visit, easy to pair.

Jardin du Luxembourg

Jardin du Luxembourg

5 min walk

Formal 17th-century garden with the Luxembourg Palace; popular with students and families year-round.

Saint-Étienne-du-Mont

Saint-Étienne-du-Mont

2 min walk

Gothic and Renaissance church housing the shrine of Saint Geneviève and the last surviving jubé screen in Paris.

Musée de Cluny (National Museum of the Middle Ages)

Musée de Cluny (National Museum of the Middle Ages)

10 min walk

Built over Roman thermal baths; home to the six-panel Lady and the Unicorn tapestry series dating to c.1500.

Arènes de Lutèce

Arènes de Lutèce

12 min walk

Remnants of a 1st–2nd century Roman amphitheatre, one of the oldest surviving structures in Paris, located in a quiet public garden.

Sorbonne University

Sorbonne University

5 min walk

Founded in 1257, the Sorbonne's neoclassical façade and courtyard can be viewed from Rue de la Sorbonne.

Cancellation policy

Flexible, no hidden fees.

Tickets purchased online through the official monuments-nationaux booking portal may be exchanged or refunded up to 24 hours before the chosen visit date. The €13 online ticket fee is refunded in full within that window; tickets bought at the door for €16 are non-refundable.

Where to stay

Hotels & districts near Pantheon Paris

Hand-picked options within walking distance — pick a district for vibe, or a specific hotel for convenience.

Hôtel des Grands Hommes

Hôtel des Grands Hommes

2 min walk
boutique

19th-century building directly facing the Panthéon; 31 rooms with monument views.

Hôtel les Dames du Panthéon

Hôtel les Dames du Panthéon

1 min walk
boutique

Contemporary boutique hotel on Place du Panthéon with direct views of the monument's portico.

Villa Panthéon

Villa Panthéon

4 min walk
mid-range

Quietly situated on Rue des Écoles; well-connected to Latin Quarter sites.

Hôtel Monge

Hôtel Monge

8 min walk
mid-range

Highly rated Latin Quarter hotel on Rue Monge; two metro stops nearby.

Latin Quarter district hotels

Latin Quarter district hotels

varies
district

The 5th arrondissement offers a wide range of budget to mid-range options within walking distance of the monument.

Traveler reviews

Pantheon Paris tour reviews

4.8
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
2400 reviews
142K+ travelers chose this
  • "We arrived mid morning when the light through the upper windows hit the Foucault pendulum just right. The dome colonnade walk was the highlight, with rooftops stretching toward the Eiffel Tower. Buy your dome ticket on arrival because the timed slots fill up fast."
    Marie L. · France · 2026-05-22
  • "Visiting the pantheon paris felt calmer than the Louvre crowds, even on a Saturday afternoon. The crypt is cool and dim, and standing between the tombs of Voltaire and Rousseau is genuinely moving. We spent about ninety minutes total and never felt rushed."
    James T. · United States · 2026-04-15
  • "Descending into the crypt was the part I keep thinking about, the vaulted corridors are silent and the air is noticeably cooler. The marble floor under the pendulum reflects the daylight beautifully around noon. Among Paris landmarks this one rewards slowing down."
    Sofia R. · Spain · 2026-03-30
  • "In February the interior was cold, so bring a jacket even on a sunny day. The pantheon paris tour signage explains the building's shift from church to national mausoleum clearly. The dome access was closed that morning for weather, which was the only letdown."
    Lukas M. · Germany · 2026-02-11
  • "We booked pantheon paris tickets for the dome climb and the spiral staircase is steep but manageable. From the colonnade you see the whole Latin Quarter and the Seine in the distance under the late afternoon sun. The Foucault pendulum demonstration downstairs was a nice surprise."
    Yuki N. · Japan · 2026-05-08
  • "The scale of the portico hits you before you even step inside, those columns are enormous. Inside, the murals tracing Sainte-Geneviève and French history line the nave beautifully. Le Panthéon was less busy than I expected on a weekday morning."
    Beatriz S. · Brazil · 2026-01-19
  • "Late December meant low golden light pouring across the Place du Panthéon as we walked up. The pantheon paris tours through the crypt gave good context on who is buried there and why. Comfortable shoes help for the dome stairs."
    Oliver H. · United Kingdom · 2025-12-28
  • "The dome colonnade closes earlier than the main building, so check the last entry before you go. The interior acoustics under the dome are remarkable when a guide speaks. It pairs well with a stroll through the nearby Luxembourg Gardens after."
    Chiara V. · Italy · 2025-11-14
  • "Watching the pendulum slowly trace its path on the floor was mesmerizing for the kids. The Paris landmarks around here, from the Sorbonne to the gardens, make the whole afternoon easy to fill. Entry was quick once we had our pantheon paris tour booked online."
    Anna K. · Poland · 2025-09-23
  • "On a hot July day the thick stone interior was a welcome break from the heat outside. The rooftop dome views over the city were the standout for me, with the Eiffel Tower visible through the haze. Skip-the-line Panthéon access saved us a long wait at the entrance."
    David C. · Canada · 2025-07-30
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Frequently asked

Frequently asked questions about pantheon paris tickets and tours

What are the opening hours for pantheon paris?

The Panthéon is open daily from 10:00 to 18:30 (last entry 45 minutes before closing). On the first working Monday of each month, opening is delayed to 12:00 noon. The monument is closed on 1 January, 1 May, and 25 December, and has a special partial closure period from 15 to 24 June 2026.

How much do pantheon paris tickets cost?

Pantheon paris tickets cost €16 at the door and €13 when booked in advance online at the official monuments-nationaux portal. Entry is free for visitors under 18 years of age and for EU residents aged 18–25 who present a valid ID at the ticket desk.

Is the dome open at the Panthéon de Paris right now?

The panoramic dome is currently closed for renovation works as of June 2026. The nave and crypt remain fully open. Check paris-pantheon.fr/en for updates on when dome access will resume.

What is the best time to visit pantheon paris to avoid crowds?

The best window for a skip-the-line pantheon paris tour experience is arriving right at opening between 10:00 and 12:00. Tour groups typically arrive mid-morning, so the very first hours of the day see the fewest visitors. Weekdays — particularly Tuesday through Thursday — are consistently quieter than weekends.

Are children admitted free to pantheon paris?

Children under 18 are admitted free of charge regardless of nationality. EU residents aged 18–25 also receive free entry upon presentation of valid photo ID at the ticket desk. Free tickets must be collected at the entrance desk and are not issued online.

How do I get to the Panthéon in Paris by public transport?

Take Metro line 10 to Cardinal Lemoine station (5 min walk) or RER B to Luxembourg station (8 min walk). Several bus lines — 21, 27, 38, 84, and 85 — stop directly at Place du Panthéon. Vélib' bike-share docking stations are located on Place du Panthéon and Rue Soufflot.

Is pantheon paris accessible for wheelchair users?

The nave and crypt of skip-the-line pantheon paris entry routes are fully wheelchair accessible via a dedicated entrance ramp and an elevator to the crypt level. Audio guides for visitors with visual impairments are available at the entrance. The dome tour, currently closed for renovation, had restricted accessibility.

Can I take photos inside the Paris Panthéon?

Personal photography and non-commercial video are permitted throughout the monument. Flash photography and tripods are not allowed. Selfie sticks are also prohibited. The painted vaults, Foucault's Pendulum, and the crypt are the most photographed areas.

What is Foucault's Pendulum and can I see it on a pantheon paris tour?

Foucault's Pendulum is a 67-metre cable suspended from the interior of the dome that demonstrates the rotation of the Earth through the slow drift of its swing. Léon Foucault first performed this experiment at the Panthéon in 1851. The pendulum is visible at the centre of the nave on every standard pantheon paris tour and is included in the general admission ticket.

Are bags and large luggage allowed inside the Panthéon?

As part of the Vigipirate national security programme, all visitors pass through security screening at the entrance. Large suitcases, oversized backpacks, and luggage are not permitted inside. There is no left-luggage facility on site, so leave bulky bags at your hotel or a nearby consigne before visiting.

Is there a café or restaurant inside pantheon paris?

There is no café or restaurant inside the monument. Sealed water bottles may be brought in. Numerous brasseries and cafés are located immediately around Place du Panthéon and along Rue Soufflot, within one to two minutes' walk of the entrance.

What famous people are buried in the Panthéon Paris crypt?

The crypt houses over 80 notable figures from French history, including philosophers Voltaire and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, author Victor Hugo, novelist Émile Zola, and scientists Marie Curie and Pierre Curie — the only woman interred in the Panthéon on the merit of her own achievements. New pantheon paris burials are authorised by decree of the French Council of Ministers.

Keep exploring

More Pantheon Paris tours & experiences

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