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Grand Palais

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Grand Palais, also known as Grand Palais des Champs-Élysées, is one of Paris's most dramatic cultural landmarks, just off the Champs-Élysées. Built for the 1900 World's Fair, it combines steel, stone, and glass in a monumental setting for major exhibitions and large-scale events.

For a first visit, book your timed exhibition entry online and pick a Friday evening slot if you want extra breathing room and a smoother pace.
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Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the Grand Palais

1
Book your slot early
If you want the widest time choice, secure your timed entry online before you arrive at Grand Palais. On busy exhibition days, on-site inventory can tighten quickly. This keeps your plan predictable and lowers day-of stress.
2
Use Friday late opening
If your priority is a calmer atmosphere, choose Friday evening when the site stays open later. After peak daytime movement around the Champs-Élysées, visitor flow often feels easier. You get more room for architecture views without rushing.
3
Use the right entrance
For most exhibitions, start at Square Jean Perrin (17 Avenue du Général Eisenhower). If your ticket is for a Nave event, go to 7 Avenue Winston Churchill instead. This simple check saves you a needless cross-site walk.
4
Keep a 60-minute buffer
Plan to arrive about 1 hour before your personal cutoff. Last admission is 45 minutes before exhibition close, and ticket desks close 1 hour before closing. If you are arriving from Petit Palais, this buffer keeps your entry smooth and avoids last-minute pressure.
5
Travel light for security
Bring a small bag and use lockers if needed. Bags larger than 42 x 30 x 20 cm (16.5 x 11.8 x 7.9 in) are not allowed in visiting areas, and selected items must stay at the cloakroom. Packing light makes controls faster, so you can focus on the visit.
6
Pair nearby highlights smartly
For a high-yield half day, pair Grand Palais with Petit Palais and Champs-Élysées, then continue to Musée d'Orsay if you still have energy. Distances are short enough for smooth transitions by foot or quick transit. You get strong variety without long transfers.

How to plan a smooth Grand Palais visit

A visit to Grand Palais goes best when you decide timing, entrance, and nearby pairings before you arrive. These three choices remove most friction and keep the architecture and exhibitions center stage.

Pick your time window first

If you want the easiest flow, decide timing before anything else. Standard hours run Tuesday to Sunday, and Friday offers a later closing window that can soften crowd pressure around the Champs-Élysées. Build the rest of your day around that slot so transfers stay calm.

Book your timed entry before arrival

Online booking is the practical default at Grand Palais, especially if you want a specific exhibition and precise timeslot. On-site inventory can disappear on busy days, and late arrivals face hard cutoffs at both ticket desk and final admission. Reserve first, lock your preferred moment, and book now.

Use the correct entrance and transit node

Most visits start at Square Jean Perrin, while many Nave events use 7 Avenue Winston Churchill. Matching your ticket to the right entry point saves a cross-site detour and keeps arrival smooth. For transit, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Champs Élysées Clemenceau are usually the simplest metro anchors.

Build a nearby half-day loop

A high-value route is Grand Palais plus Petit Palais and Champs-Élysées, with Musée d'Orsay or Musée de l'Armée as longer extensions. Distances stay manageable for a compact cultural loop, even without taxis. You get architecture, boulevard atmosphere, and museum depth in one coherent day.

Why Grand Palais feels iconic in Paris

The monument works on two levels at once: deep history and contemporary energy. Once you know its timeline, the visit feels richer from the first steps under the glass.

A World's Fair origin that still shapes the visit

Grand Palais was conceived in the 1890s and opened in May 1900 for the World's Fair, with a bold mix of steel, stone, and glass. That founding ambition is still tangible in the scale of the nave and long visual axes. You are not entering only galleries; you are stepping into a monumental Paris stage set.

From monument status to a new chapter

After the Nave gained heritage protection in 1975, the full monument later received complete historic-monument recognition. In March 2021, the site closed for a major restoration phase, and after four years of renovation it reopened with a renewed cultural program. The experience now feels both historic and sharply current.

A living cultural house beyond ticketed galleries

Beyond paid exhibitions, several areas of Grand Palais remain free to access, including the Rotonde d'Antin, shops, and restaurants. This is useful when your Paris day is tight or mixed between indoor and outdoor stops. You can enter first for atmosphere, then decide whether to add a paid exhibition.

Good fit for families and reduced-mobility visitors

Families can use changing facilities and dedicated spaces like the Salon Seine and Palais des enfants, while reduced-mobility visitors benefit from step-free routes, elevators, and support equipment. If you prefer a slower rhythm, add short breaks in free-access zones between galleries. That pacing keeps the day comfortable and still full of highlights.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Grand Palais free to enter?

Several areas in Grand Palais are free year-round, including the Rotonde d'Antin, shops, bookshops, and restaurants. Most exhibitions still require a paid timed ticket.
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How much time should I plan for one visit?

For one major exhibition, plan about 1.5 to 2.5 hours. If you also want free-access spaces and a café break, a 3-hour stop usually feels more comfortable.
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What is the latest practical entry time?

Treat last admission, 45 minutes before exhibition close, as your hard cutoff. Ticket desks usually close 1 hour before closing, so very late arrivals can miss entry.
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Which entrance should I use?

Most visitors should start at Square Jean Perrin (17 Avenue du Général Eisenhower). Events in the Nave can use the separate entrance at 7 Avenue Winston Churchill.
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Is Grand Palais wheelchair-accessible?

Yes. Grand Palais offers step-free access, ramps for the Nave, elevators from the main entrance, accessible toilets, and support equipment like wheelchairs and seat canes.
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Are lockers available for larger personal items?

Yes, lockers are available at level -1. Keep in mind that bags over 42 x 30 x 20 cm (16.5 x 11.8 x 7.9 in) are not allowed in visiting areas.
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When does the visit usually feel less crowded?

Weekday mornings and later Friday evening windows often feel less compressed than peak afternoon periods. If you care about space and pacing, those windows are usually easier.
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What can I pair with Grand Palais nearby?

A practical nearby route is Petit Palais plus Champs-Élysées, with Musée d'Orsay or Musée de l'Armée as longer extensions if you want a fuller culture day.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The public schedule at Grand Palais runs Tuesday to Sunday from 9:30 am to 8 pm, with late opening on Fridays until 10:30 pm. It is closed on December 25, May 1, and July 14, with early closing at 6 pm on December 24 and December 31, and exceptional opening on January 1. Some exhibitions run specific hours, so check your event page before arrival.

tickets

Online booking is strongly recommended for all visitors, including free-admission categories, because on-site tickets depend on remaining availability. Published exhibition prices currently appear in tiers of €15, €17, or €19 (reduced €12, €13, or €16), depending on the program and date. Price reference retrieved on 2026-03-01; recheck before booking.

address

Grand Palais
Main entrance: Square Jean Perrin, 17 Avenue du Général Eisenhower
Nave entrance: 7 Avenue Winston Churchill
75008 Paris, France

how to get there

Metro: Lines 1 and 9 to Franklin D. Roosevelt, or Lines 1 and 13 to Champs Élysées Clemenceau.
RER: Line C to Invalides.
Bus: 28, 42, 52, 63, 72, 73, 80, 83, 93.
Public bike stations are on Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt and Avenue Dutuit.

accessibility

Grand Palais provides step-free access at the main entrance and ramps at the Nave entrance. Two elevators support reduced-mobility access from Square Jean Perrin, and accessible toilets are available across public areas. Wheelchairs and seat canes are available for self-service use, and adapted support exists for visually and hearing-impaired visitors.

security

Security checks apply at entry. Certain items must be left at the cloakroom, including large bags, helmets, unfolded umbrellas, tripods, and sharp objects; scooter or bike batteries require dedicated deposit points. Arrive a little early so checks do not cut into your visit time.

lockers

Self-service lockers are available at cloakroom level (-1), accessed via Square Jean Perrin. Bag size inside visiting areas is limited to 42 x 30 x 20 cm (16.5 x 11.8 x 7.9 in). Locker sizes are 30 x 50 x 49 cm (11.8 x 19.7 x 19.3 in), 30 x 50 x 64 cm (11.8 x 19.7 x 25.2 in), and 30 x 50 x 98 cm (11.8 x 19.7 x 38.6 in).
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