AURA Invalides tickets & tours | Price comparison

AURA Invalides

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
AURA Invalides turns the gilded Dôme des Invalides into one of Paris' most atmospheric night experiences, with video mapping, orchestral music, and a slow walking route through the dome and its six chapels. Under the 60 m (197 ft) cupola above Napoleon I's tomb, the monument feels less like a museum and more like a live piece of architecture.

Start with a standard evening entry ticket on this page, because all current mapped products focus on direct admission and give you the simplest way to lock in the slot that fits your dinner, museum, or Left Bank plan.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Evening entry tickets

Choose this if you want the cleanest way into AURA Invalides: one evening ticket, a 50-minute multimedia walk under the gold dome, and a slot you can fit around Musée de l'Armée, dinner, or a Left Bank stroll.
Paris: Aura Invalides Immersive Experience Entry Ticket
4.7(3753)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
Invalides: Aura Immersive Experience Entry Ticket
4.6(363)
 
headout.com
Go to offer
AURA Invalides: Entry ticket
4.6(1767)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer
Paris Entrance Ticket to the Aura Invalides Immersive Show
4.2(185)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the AURA Invalides

1
Choose the slot by evening style
When the live calendar shows an earlier and later session, use the earlier one if you want Musée de l'Armée or Musée Rodin first and still want a civilized finish. Use the later one if dinner in Paris 7 matters more than getting home early. That way the ticket follows your night instead of interrupting it.
2
Use Place Vauban, not museum instinct
At night the logic changes: you are not using the daytime museum rhythm, and access runs through Place Vauban. Arrive 20 minutes early and read the ticket details before you leave the métro, especially if you are coming from another arrondissement. This avoids the most annoying mistake of the whole evening.
3
Expect a walk, not theater seats
If your group needs frequent sitting breaks, reset expectations before you arrive: AURA Invalides is a standing, walking experience with stairs. The tradeoff is that the dome feels immersive rather than distant, but older relatives or tired travelers should pace the rest of the day accordingly. That way the show feels magical, not physically long.
4
Solve bags and toilets before entry
There is no cloakroom, there are no toilets on site, and bulky items do not get through security. If you are arriving straight from the train, a museum day, or a long walk along La Seine, deal with that before you queue at Place Vauban. It saves stress, and the evening starts cleaner.
5
Bring kids only if the sound suits them
The show is not recommended for children under 5 because the sound can be loud, and the dark dome is more intense than a gentle museum visit. If you still plan to bring younger children, pack noise-canceling headphones and keep the evening simple beforehand. That way families who come are there for spectacle, not damage control.
6
Pair it with one nearby stop
A strong day here is one daytime anchor plus AURA Invalides, not a heroic checklist. History-first travelers should start with Musée de l'Armée, art-focused visitors can choose Musée Rodin or Musée d'Orsay, and night owls can finish with a short walk toward La Seine. One pairing keeps the logistics light, so you can focus on the dome.

How to plan an AURA Invalides evening around Paris 7

This experience works best when you treat it as the emotional second act of the Invalides area, not as one more monument squeezed in after an overlong day.

Start with the standard evening entry

Best for everyone booking this page. All currently mapped products are straightforward entry tickets, so the real decision is not ticket type but which evening slot suits your day around Paris 7. If you want the simplest purchase with the least risk of timing drift, this is the right buy. Book now.

Choose the earlier or later session on purpose

When the calendar shows two waves, the earlier session is easier if you want Musée de l'Armée or Musée Rodin first and still want to get home at a civilized hour. The later session suits couples who want dinner nearby before the show or repeat visitors turning the Invalides area into a slower night walk. Make the slot follow your evening rather than interrupt it. Book now.

Why Place Vauban changes the evening

Daytime instinct can send you to the wrong side of the complex, but the night experience runs through Place Vauban. Arrive 20 minutes early, expect security checks, and do not plan a last-second sprint from another arrondissement because latecomers are turned away. A calm approach here saves more stress than any supposed Paris shortcut.

Know what the experience physically feels like

This is a standing, walking show with stairs, no seating, flickering light, and strong sound. If your group includes older relatives, sensitive children, or anyone with balance concerns, pace the afternoon gently and set expectations before you enter the dome. That way the magic stays immersive instead of exhausting.

Build one nearby pairing, not a checklist

History-first travelers should do Musée de l'Armée by day and AURA Invalides at night for a satisfying full-site arc. If you want a softer afternoon, pair it with Musée Rodin; if you still want a broader art day, use Musée d'Orsay and then keep the evening simple. One nearby anchor is enough because the real payoff is arriving unhurried at the dome.

Why the dome feels made for AURA Invalides

The show works because the building already has theatrical weight. Light and music are not decorating a neutral box here; they are amplifying one of Paris' most charged spaces.

A royal dome turned nighttime stage

The Dôme des Invalides was inaugurated in 1706, and its gilded outline still dominates the skyline of Paris 7. Under the 60 m (197 ft) painted cupola, AURA Invalides feels less like a projection show pasted onto a monument and more like architecture finally speaking in the dark. Even first-time visitors usually feel that scale before the first musical swell lands.

Napoleon changes the emotional weight

Because Napoleon I's tomb has stood here since 1861, the site never feels like abstract baroque decoration. Memory is already built into the space, which is why the show's middle movement lands with more gravity than a standard sound-and-light spectacle. History-focused visitors notice this most sharply, but casual visitors usually feel it too.

The structure follows the monument's own story

The route moves through creation, collective memory, and universal elevation, which mirrors the way the dome wants to be read: first as architecture, then as national memory, and finally as pure atmosphere. The six chapels keep breaking the scale into smaller episodes, so you are not just staring upward for 50 minutes. The pacing meanders in a good way, almost as if the monument itself were setting the rhythm.

Why repeat Paris visitors love it

If you already know the big museum checklist, AURA Invalides gives you something rarer: a familiar monument under night conditions, with a completely different mood from the daytime complex. Couples tend to love the theatrical setting, repeat visitors enjoy the fresh angle, and solo travelers often appreciate how concentrated the whole experience is. It feels intentional, not accidental, which is a rare luxury in Paris after dark.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly happens during AURA Invalides?

It is a 50-minute immersive night experience inside the Dôme des Invalides, built from light, orchestral music, and video mapping. You move through the dome and its chapels on foot, so it feels more like a guided architectural mood shift than a seated show.
Read more.

How much time should I plan in total?

Plan about 70 to 90 minutes door to door. The show itself lasts about 50 minutes, and you should arrive 20 minutes early for access and security checks.
Read more.

Can I buy tickets on-site?

No. Tickets are sold online in advance only, so do not arrive at Place Vauban assuming there will be a night ticket desk. Booking ahead is mandatory here, not just recommended.
Read more.

Which entrance should I use?

Your ticket gives the exact meeting point and time, but in practice the evening access is via Place Vauban. No other entrance is open for the night visit, so do not follow daytime museum habits.
Read more.

Is AURA Invalides suitable for children?

It is not recommended for children under 5 because of the loud sound, although children under 5 are admitted free and do not need a ticket. Families who still bring younger children should pack noise-canceling headphones and keep expectations realistic.
Read more.

Is the experience wheelchair accessible?

Partly. The entrance has about 15 steps and no ramp, but accompanied wheelchair users can be assisted onto the entrance platform, and the show space inside is wheelchair accessible. The small chapel walkthrough is not yet fully adapted.
Read more.

What should I know about bags, strollers, and toilets?

There is no cloakroom, no toilets on site, and no entry for suitcases or other bulky items. Strollers are not allowed inside, but families can leave them at the reception desk with staff help. In practice, it is smartest to arrive light and sorted already.
Read more.

Will language be a problem during the show?

No. The experience is designed to work regardless of language, because the storytelling comes through light, music, movement, and the building itself. That makes it especially easy for mixed-language groups.
Read more.

What is the smartest nearby pairing?

For site continuity, pair it with Musée de l'Armée earlier in the day. For a softer cultural build-up, use Musée Rodin, and if you still want a broader art day, Musée d'Orsay is the strongest bigger detour. Just stop at one of them, not all of them.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

As checked on April 9, 2026, AURA Invalides was operating on selected evenings only, after sunset, with current April sessions showing start times around 8:35 pm and 9:55 pm on active dates. The experience lasts about 50 minutes, and you should arrive 20 minutes early for access and security checks. Recheck the live calendar before you go, because dates and start times shift through the month.

tickets

Official prices checked on April 9, 2026: adult €28, under-26 €18, under-18 €12. Children under 5 enter free and do not need a ticket. Tickets are sold online in advance only, and the current compared inventory on this page consists of standard evening entry tickets.

address

AURA Invalides
Dôme des Invalides
2 Place Vauban
75007 Paris
France

security

Plan to arrive 20 minutes early for security checks, and do not count on being waved in late: no latecomers are admitted once the session has started. Food, drinks, and smoking are forbidden on site. The show also uses flickering light and strong sound, so sensitive visitors should plan with that in mind.

how to get there

Evening access is via Place Vauban. The closest métro stops are Saint-François-Xavier on line 13, about 6 minutes away on foot, and École Militaire on line 8, about 8 minutes away; buses 92, 28, and 69 also stop nearby, and the closest parking listed by the venue is at 23 rue de Constantine. It pairs easily with a daytime visit to Musée de l'Armée or Musée Rodin.

accessibility

The hardest part is the entrance: there is no wheelchair ramp at the dome, and there are about 15 steps before the access platform. If the wheelchair user is accompanied, staff can help with the empty chair and entry to the platform; once inside, the show itself is wheelchair accessible. The small chapels in the 15-minute walkthrough are not yet adapted, so visitors who need access planning should contact aura@cultival.fr in advance.

luggage

There is no cloakroom service. Suitcases, scooters, strollers, and bulky items are not allowed on site, although staff can help families leave strollers at the reception desk. There are also no toilets on site, so solve both comfort problems before you head for Place Vauban.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.