REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Grévin Wax Museum Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by GREVIN WAX MUSEUM · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Paris fame, in wax, under one roof. At Grévin Paris, you meet lifelike wax figures of stars like DJ Snake, Aya Nakamura, Lady Diana, and Marie Curie, with a sound-and-light show that turns picture time into a proper moment.
The museum also plays fair with your senses and your eyes. You’ll walk through gold-and-marble rooms, with history pieces you can actually stand next to, plus workshop areas where the statue-making process gets explained.
One thing to plan for: the entrance line can run about 20 minutes. If you hate waiting, aim for earlier entry and you’ll enjoy the flow a lot more.
In This Review
- Key highlights to watch for
- Grévin Paris in one glance: who you’ll meet
- Finding the entrance fast on Boulevard Montmartre
- The main wax-figure route: celebrities, presidents, and cartoon moments
- Sound-and-light scenes that make it feel like a show
- Creation Workshops and Maestro: how the statues get made
- Historical relic rooms: Marie-Antoinette and Marat in the same building
- Architecture and room design: why Grévin feels special even before you see the figures
- Price and value: is $33 worth it for a 1-day ticket?
- Who should book this Grévin ticket
- Should you book Grévin Wax Museum tickets?
- FAQ
- What is included with the Grévin Wax Museum ticket?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
- Is the ticket refundable?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- Does the ticket include access to private or special events?
Key highlights to watch for

- 250+ celebrities and icons spanning music, film, sports, art, and internet culture
- Sound-and-light scenes that make the museum feel like a show, not a hallway
- Creation Workshops with Maestro showing how the statues get made, from pose to paint
- Real historical relics such as the Conciergerie door tied to Marie-Antoinette and Marat’s bathtub
- Interactive character zones featuring pop culture and French history moments, from PAW Patrol to General de Gaulle
Grévin Paris in one glance: who you’ll meet

Grévin is built around a simple idea: you are the star while you move through galleries of stars. The cast is huge. Expect over 250 celebrities, mixing French icons with well-known international names and even recognizable characters.
What makes it fun is the variety. You’re not only looking at wax faces in a row. You’re walking through themed worlds tied to music, film, sports, art, cuisine, and pop culture. The museum’s own examples cover a wide range of experiences, like singing a duet with Gims, marching beside General de Gaulle, or traveling through space with Thomas Pesquet.
You’ll also notice that the lineup isn’t static. They’re set up to add new personalities through the year. If you visit once and come back later, it’s more likely to feel different than a typical fixed museum.
And yes, the photos are a big part of the appeal. The figures are designed to be approached. They’re positioned so you can play along, even if you’re traveling with kids who will happily pose for 200 shots.
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Finding the entrance fast on Boulevard Montmartre

Grévin’s entrance is at 10, Boulevard Montmartre. It’s a central, easy-to-navigate part of Paris, and it sits near other famous attractions, including Hard Rock Paris in the same area.
When you arrive, plan for the usual museum flow: security first, then check-in. From firsthand accounts people commonly describe it as straightforward and they feel safe at the start, which matters when you’re visiting with a family or a mixed-age group.
The practical move: give yourself a little buffer for the entry line. Even when you have tickets, the bottleneck is the front door. If you want the smoothest experience, start earlier rather than later.
Also, this is a wheelchair-accessible site. If you need step-free routes, you’ll likely appreciate that the layout is set up for access rather than being a set of tight stair-only rooms.
The main wax-figure route: celebrities, presidents, and cartoon moments

The heart of Grévin is a guided-feeling walk through multiple zones. You’ll see celebrities posed as if they’re mid-story: musicians frozen in performance, public figures caught in iconic moments, and characters placed so your brain believes you’re entering their world.
A few of the named examples give you a strong sense of what the museum prioritizes:
- Music and pop: DJ Snake, Vianney, Aya Nakamura, and the chance to sing along in a scripted moment
- International icons: Lady Diana and Marie Curie are both highlighted in their own ways
- French history on stage: General de Gaulle appears as part of a marching scene
- Family-friendly favorites: PAW Patrol shows up as part of the fun zone energy
- Science and exploration: Thomas Pesquet brings space travel into the mix
- Adventure-story format: a Koh-Lanta council scene is mentioned as one of the experiences you can face like a challenge
Here’s what I like about this structure for your time in Paris. It reduces the “what am I supposed to do here?” problem. Instead of guessing which figure to see next, the museum gives you themes, and you can let the route steer you.
Still, there’s one reality check: the mix leans toward French fame. If you mainly recognize celebrities from outside France, you might spend some time admiring the craft even when the name doesn’t hit. That doesn’t make the experience bad. It just changes what you’re getting out of it: more about the artistry and staging than about instant recognition.
Sound-and-light scenes that make it feel like a show

Grévin isn’t only about static displays. There’s a captivating sound and light show that changes the pace. It’s the kind of moment where you stop thinking like a museum visitor and start thinking like you’re inside a staged scene.
People often describe it as sensory, with lights and mirror effects that work especially well for kids. If you’re traveling with younger travelers, this kind of attraction helps them stay engaged. If you’re traveling with adults, it breaks up the flow so the afternoon doesn’t turn into one long line of faces.
This also matters for photos. Lighting inside museums can make or break pictures. Grévin’s show elements create dramatic contrasts and that gives you more interesting images than a plain, evenly lit gallery.
The practical advice: keep an eye on how the light changes. If you want the best shot, don’t just stand still. Move a step, wait for the scene to settle, and then take your photo. It’s worth it.
Creation Workshops and Maestro: how the statues get made

One of the most “wait, cool” parts of Grévin is the mention of Creation Workshops and the role of Maestro, who guides you through the process.
This is where the museum turns craftsmanship into a story. You’re shown the secrets behind making statues: everything from choosing the pose to the final touches of paint. Even if you’re not a figure-arts expert, you’ll probably notice how much work goes into making a wax face look alive—especially the way details are layered rather than simply painted on.
I like this section because it gives you a lens. After you see the making process, the main galleries feel less like a gimmick and more like controlled artistry. You stop asking, Is that really the person? and start asking, How did they achieve that expression?
This also helps if you’re traveling with teens. You get a reason to look longer, and you’re not just ticking through name after name.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Paris
Historical relic rooms: Marie-Antoinette and Marat in the same building

Grévin doesn’t only trade in celebrity culture. It also includes real historical artifacts you can walk past, which adds weight to the experience.
Two named examples are especially memorable:
- The Conciergerie door associated with Marie-Antoinette’s imprisonment
- Marat’s actual bathtub, tied to the assassination context
Seeing these kinds of pieces in a wax-museum setting is a useful reminder. The museum isn’t trying to be only entertainment. It’s also acting like a guardian of the past while keeping the present front and center.
If your Paris trip includes heavier museums like the Louvre or Musée d’Orsay, Grévin offers a different kind of learning. It’s less formal, but it still gives you real objects tied to major stories.
The practical tip: slow down in the history rooms. The museum’s other zones move fast because they’re performance-like. History sections reward a slower pace—read the cues, look closely, and take in the difference between a relic display and a wax portrait.
Architecture and room design: why Grévin feels special even before you see the figures

The museum setting itself is part of the ticket value. Grévin is described as an outstanding architectural heritage experience, and it’s filled with gold, marble, and historical artwork.
This matters more than it sounds. When a building looks like it belongs to the story, you naturally pay more attention to details. The design supports the illusion. You’re not just viewing figures in a generic mall-like space.
Also, the layout is built for movement. Reviews often praise how easy navigation feels and how the museum path flows from area to area. That reduces the stress of trying to plan your own route on the fly.
If you’re someone who wants to walk in, enjoy, and not worry about logistics, the building design helps you do that.
Price and value: is $33 worth it for a 1-day ticket?

At about $33 per person, you’re paying for more than “a wax museum.” You’re paying for a package of four things that usually cost separate money elsewhere in Paris:
- a large collection of celebrity figures (over 250)
- theatrical sound-and-light effects
- hands-on-style educational content in the Creation Workshops
- history artifacts embedded into the route
That combination is what makes the value work. If all you wanted was statues, you could spend less money in other museums or attractions. But Grévin’s strength is that it changes formats: names and characters, workshop making, history objects, and show lighting.
There’s also the family factor. The museum is described as fun and memorable for the whole family, and the show elements and character moments can keep kids from melting down halfway through a standard museum day.
The trade-off is personalization. If you strongly prefer the wax figures to match your exact interests—say, a very specific set of international celebrities—the museum’s focus may or may not match your expectations. The museum is French-rooted by design, even when it includes international stars.
Still, for a one-day stop in Paris, it’s a strong buy if you want an experience that feels playful without being dumb.
Who should book this Grévin ticket

This is a great fit if you want:
- a photo-friendly Paris stop that doesn’t require museum-reading stamina
- a family-friendly activity where kids and adults can have different reasons to enjoy it
- a mix of pop culture and historical references rather than one theme only
- an indoor plan that works even when the weather doesn’t cooperate
It’s also a decent choice for first-timers who want a “Paris highlight” that feels local and specific.
If you’re the type who prefers museums with deep labels, long academic pacing, and a tight time period focus, you might find Grévin lighter than your usual favorites. But you’d still probably enjoy it as an afternoon break because it’s designed to be fast, visual, and fun.
If you’re limited on time in Paris and want one attraction that can keep multiple age groups happy, Grévin is often the kind of decision that reduces conflict in the group.
Should you book Grévin Wax Museum tickets?
Yes, I’d book it if your goal is a fun, well-designed Paris attraction with 250+ celebrity wax figures, a real show component, and a mix of workshop and history moments. It’s also a solid option for families because the lighting and character zones do a lot of the engagement work for you.
I’d think twice if you’re mainly chasing a very specific list of international celebrities and you want everything to match your personal pop-culture radar. In that case, you may still enjoy the craftsmanship, but your “recognition pleasure” might be lower.
One last practical note: because there can be a line at the entrance, I’d aim to go earlier in the day. You’ll feel the building and the scenes more calmly, and you’ll get better photos.
FAQ
What is included with the Grévin Wax Museum ticket?
The ticket includes Grévin Wax Museum entrance only.
Where is the meeting point?
The meeting point is at the Grévin entrance, 10, Boulevard Montmartre.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the activity is wheelchair accessible.
Is the ticket refundable?
No. The ticket is non-refundable.
How long is the ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 1 day. You’ll need to check availability to see the starting times.
Does the ticket include access to private or special events?
No. The ticket does not give access to private or special events.



























