Best Walking Tours in Paris - Guided and Historical

Walking tours are a great way to get under the skin of a city and Paris, with its broad romantic boulevards, cute cobbled lanes and magnificent monuments galore, is no exception.

Published: July 17, 2024
Paris walking tours

Indeed, the City of Light is one of the world’s finest for exploring on foot, with guided tours providing the key to unlocking hidden gems and untold tales that the published guides often overlook. Read on to discover some of the best walking tours in Paris, from the quirky to the historical and downright spooky, taking in key districts like the Marais and Latin Quarter as well as iconic attractions including Père Lachaise Cemetery and the city’s 19th-century covered shopping arcades.

Planning to tick off a few walking tours and other bucket-list Paris attractions while you’re in town? Pick up a Paris Pass for access to dozens of Paris highlights, including Musée d’Orsay, the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower and many of the tours below, all for one money-saving price.

Guided Walking Tour of Montmartre

Montmartre café and the Sacre-Couer Basilica in Paris

It’s not difficult to see why the painterly hilltop enclave of Montmartre was so beloved of artists including Monet, Modigliani, Picasso, Renoir and van Gogh. And, although now heavily geared towards tourists, its epic Paris views, swoonsome maze of cobbled lanes and stunning Sacré-Cœur Basilica – a wedding-cake confection in gleaming travertine limestone – still have the power to enchant. Join your expert guide on a journey through Montmartre history that includes all of the above, plus the notorious Moulin Rouge (birthplace of the can-can, no less), the atmospheric Place du Tertre, where local artists prop their easels and caricaturists offer the chance of a unique souvenir, and the hangouts favored by the quirky heroine in 2000 movie Amelie.

Guided Walking Tour of the Marais

Place des Vosges in the Marais neighborhood of Paris

If Montmartre is Paris for tourists, then the Marais is the authentic Parisian 'hood where locals still love to hang out. Here’s where you can find dreamy garden squares, tempting pâtisseries and delightful café culture in spades. As well as pointing out where you can find some of the most delicate mille-feuilles in town, your guide will also take you to picture-perfect Place des Vosges, with its grand 17th-century townhouses, atmospheric arcades and manicured formal gardens. There’s also a guided stroll along the cobbles of Rue des Rosiers, with its colorful Jewish storefronts, a chance to admire the 'inside-out' architecture of the Pompidou Center, and a pause at the eye-popping Stravinsky Fountain.

Guided Walking Tour of the Covered Passages

Covered 19th-century shopping arcade in Paris

To step inside Paris’s magical 19th-century covered arcades is to transport yourself to a bygone era, all elegant Victorian iron-and-glass canopies, mosaiced floors, traditional sidewalk cafés, and ye olde wooden storefronts. Take a guided tour that includes some of the best of these. We’re talking the neoclassical glory of the Galerie Vivienne, Passage de Jouffroy with its ornate stucco clock, polished geometric tiles and 15-year-old wax museum, and Passage des Panoramas, which dates to 1799, making it the oldest arcade of its kind in Paris. As well as filling you in on the history of these architectural marvels, your guide will also point out the best antiquarian bookstores, vintage fashion boutiques, jewelry stores and, crucially, pâtisseries.

Guided Walking Tour of the Latin Quarter

The Pantheon monument in Paris's Latin Quarter

The storied streets of the bohemian Latin Quarter were once frequented by such literary kings and queens as Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce. Follow in their footsteps on a guided walking tour of this Left Bank enclave, home to hip café bars, sultry jazz bars, Art Deco cinemas and – natch – indie bookstores galore (the legendary Shakespeare and Company features on most Latin Quarter walking tours worth their salt). The Latin Quarter also happens to be great for discovering the history of some of Paris’s most important landmarks. Take a guided walk to hear all about the monumental Panthéon, where luminaries including Victor Hugo, Marie Curie, Voltaire are commemorated (and, in some cases, interred). You’ll also take in the iconic flying buttresses of Notre-Dame Cathedral and the tranquil surroundings of Luxembourg Gardens, one of the finest public parks in Paris.

Guided Walking Tour of Montparnasse

Tourists viewing the Eiffel Tower from Tour Montparnasse

Montparnasse might not top many sightseeing bucket lists, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth checking out. Far from it, in fact. A walking tour provides a fine introduction to the history of this lesser-spotted 14th arrondissement neighborhood, touching on the success of its speakeasies in the roaring twenties, its critical role in the French Resistance during the Second World War and its popularity as a grungy hangout for Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Man Ray and – yep, it’s that man again – Ernest Hemingway. Pause at the Tour Montparnasse (the only skyscraper in Paris) and check out Rue de la Gaîté, home of Paris's Little Theatre District. You’ll also get a chance to stroll Montparnasse Cemetery, final resting place of Sartre, Dega, Dumas and Irish writer Samuel Beckett.

Guided Walking Tour of Père Lachaise

Tomb at Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

And from one Paris cemetery to another…

It’s not that we’re morbid or anything like that; it’s just that Paris does headstones, tombs and catacombs so much better than anywhere else. It’s no wonder that, over the decades and centuries, so many of the great and the good (i.e. those who can afford it) have planned their interment in one of these great fields of monumental mausoleums. Père Lachaise is the daddy of them all. Paris’s largest and leafiest cemetery boasts dozens of household names among its permanent residents, among them (deep breath) Édith Piaf, Oscar Wilde, Molière, Chopin, Yves Montand and Jim Morrison. Take a walk on the cemetery’s wilder side on a gossip-filled ‘scandals and love affairs’ walking tour that weaves its way among splendid statuary, gothic gravestones and titanic tombs as your guide casts their spell with naughty tales of yore. Why do thousands of people kiss Oscar Wilde’s tomb every year? What connects Marilyn Monroe to Père Lachaise? Take the tour to find out…

You can book all of the tours listed above (and more!) with The Paris Pass.

Prefer to go it alone? Check out a selection of some of our favorite self-guided Paris walks here.

Women strolling the riverside in Paris

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Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
Freelance travel writer

Stu caught the travel bug at an early age, thanks to childhood road trips to the south of France squeezed into the back of a Ford Cortina with two brothers and a Sony Walkman. Now a freelance writer living on the Norfolk coast, Stu has produced content for travel giants including Frommer’s, British Airways, Expedia, Mr & Mrs Smith, and now Go City. His most memorable travel experiences include drinking kava with the locals in Fiji and pranging a taxi driver’s car in the Honduran capital.

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The Apollo fountain at the Palace of Versailles.
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The Louvre or Palace of Versailles - Which is Better?

Here’s a clash of the titans if ever we saw one! Limbering up in le bleu corner is the world’s largest and most popular art museum, home to some of the most iconic images in Western art, and former royal palace of some 900 years' standing... it is of course the mighty Louvre Museum! It’s opponent in this battle of the bucket-list biggies is no shrinking violet either: in le corner rouge (please pardon our French) is the picture-perfect palace of Versailles, a fairytale edifice of quite magical beauty, and perhaps the planet’s most celebrated château. But which is better? Check out our comparison of the Louvre and Palace of Versailles to discover which is bigger, which contains the finest art, which has the better grounds, and which the, er, most windows. The Louvre Name: Napoléon made significantly more of an impression on the Louvre than he did on the Palace of Versailles, grandly renaming the beloved art museum ‘Musée Napoléon’ during his reign from 1804-1815. The world’s most comically extravagant château on the other hand he treated as a mere summer residence to be used casually then unceremoniously abandoned. Lifestyles of the rich and famous, eh? Age: Built in the late 12th Century during the long reign of King Philip II, the Louvre Palace ceased to be used as a royal residence around 600 years later, paving the way for its rebirth as the Louvre Museum, which opened with its debut exhibition of 537 paintings in August 1793. The Louvre in Brief: It isn’t the world’s most popular museum for nothing, you know. Inside the Louvre is where you’ll find some of the planet’s most recognizable works of art: the Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo and Winged Victory of Samothrace, to name but three. The ‘big three’ are complemented by another 40,000-ish pieces, ranging from Ancient Egyptian sculpture to medieval Islamic silverware, Roman statuary, Greek pottery and masterpieces by the likes of Caravaggio, Picasso, Michelangelo and Raphael. It’s basically the entire history of human endeavor in one handy location. The Louvre in Numbers Size: it’s only the largest museum on Earth, covering 652,300 square feet (60,600 square meters). The combined length of the museum’s many labyrinthine levels is around eight miles. Artworks: there are around 35,000-40,000 pieces on display at any one time, taken from a collection of in excess of 600,000 works of art from across the ages. Panes of glass: conspiracy theorists will tell you there are 666 panes in the courtyard’s central pyramid, but it simply isn’t true: in fact there are 673. Visitors: 7.8 million art-lovers flock here every year, making the Louvre the world’s most-visited art museum. The Louvre: What to Expect To say the Louvre can be a tad overwhelming would be an understatement: it’s big, it’s busy, and it would take you more than half a year to see all the beautiful art on display here. With that in mind, we recommend you grab a map and plan your must-sees in advance to maximize enjoyment and avoid wandering this cavernous palace in aimless frustration for hours on end. So yes, come for a glimpse of da Vinci’s enigmatic Mona Lisa and the museum’s’ unparalleled collection of Hellenistic masterpieces, but be aware that you’ll likely be viewing these over an ocean of heads. You might find it easier to get a good look at marginally less popular (but no less impressive) attractions like Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa, Vermeer’s Lacemaker, Caravaggio’s Death of the Virgin, and the monumental Great Sphinx of Tanis. It’s also worth taking a peep at how the other half live while you’re here: Napoleon III’s personal apartments come complete with lavish state dining rooms and a gilded drawing room in the 18th-century rococo style. It’s almost as decadent as the Louvre café’s sumptuous Mont Blanc, an unmissable culinary masterpiece that combines meringue, whipped cream and chocolate shavings. Next up... The Palace of Versailles Name: The Palace of Versailles, or Château de Versailles, should you wish to practice your French on unsuspecting locals. Age: Construction of Louis XIV’s grand vision began in 1661 and was deemed complete by 1682, though subsequent French monarchs have made extensive revisions and remodelings to the château’s original look down the centuries. The Palace of Versailles in Brief: One of the most extravagant former royal residences on the planet, the Palace of Versailles lies a short distance west of Paris and is easy (and cheap) to reach by direct train. You could easily spend a day here, wandering the palace’s vast interior and multitude of impossibly opulent rooms, pausing to admire the King’s sumptuous private apartments and enjoy a moment of quiet reflection in the famous Hall of Mirrors. Across 2,000 epic acres, this grand royal estate also features manicured gardens peppered with precious statues (many of them hundreds of years old), plus ornate fountains, royal stables and tennis courts, and more masterpieces of 16th-19th century painting and sculpture than you could shake a heavily jewel-encrusted royal mace at. The Palace of Versailles in Numbers Size: the palace covers over 700,000 square feet and sits on an estate of over 2,000 acres – well over twice the size of Central Park! Artworks: There are over 60,000 works in the Palace’s collections, spanning the history of France from the Middle Ages to the present day, with a particular focus on 16th-19th century painting and sculpture. Panes of glass: there are 2,143 windows in the Palace of Versailles, a significant job for even the most industrious window cleaner. Visitors: A regal 15 million annually. The Palace of Versailles: What to Expect Sure, there’s art here – and great art, too – but where the Louvre focuses almost exclusively on its collection, the Palace of Versailles provides a more rounded experience thanks to its lavish halls and splendid gardens. But let’s begin with the art. There are around 100 rooms filled with the stuff, drawn from a collection of some 60,000 pieces founded by Louis-Philippe in 1837 and comprising paintings from the 16th-19th centuries. But there’s more, so much more to see here! We’re talking the likes of the Hall of Mirrors, a 73-meter corridor containing 357 mirrors where Louis XIV received guests and courtiers; the Grand Trianon – a flamboyant colonnaded 17th-century confection in pink marble; and Marie Antoinette’s rustic model village and theater, the latter of which remains almost entirely unaltered since its inauguration in 1780. Designed by Louis XIV’s gardener André Le Nôtre, the epic landscaped gardens are a museum in their own right. Here’s where you can stroll paths and parterres that weave among the planet’s largest collection of outdoor sculptures (over 220 to find, fact fans!), including the awe-inspiring Dragon Pool and its 27-meter-high fountain. Save on entry to the Louvre, the Palace of Versailles and more In town for a few days? Buy a 4- or 6-day Paris Pass and you won’t have to decide which of these bucket-list titans to visit. The Paris Pass gets you entry to dozens of Paris attractions – including both the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles – for one money-saving price.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
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