Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry

REVIEW · PARIS

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry

  • 4.6508 reviews
  • 2 hours
  • From $294
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Operated by TOUR FRANCE EXPERIENCE · Bookable on GetYourGuide

The Louvre can feel like a maze. This family private tour turns it into a short, focused story with kid-friendly questions and reserved entry. In just 2 hours, you get to see top masterpieces without spending half your day just finding your bearings.

I really like the way this plan hits major highlights (hello Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory) while still keeping the kids mentally switched on. Guides such as Martin, Corinne, Eric, and Elena have been praised for pacing that works for young attention spans and for real explanations that make the art feel less distant.

One consideration: while it’s described as wheelchair accessible, the activity is also labeled not suitable for people with mobility impairments. If mobility is a factor, you’ll want to confirm the route details with the provider before you go.

Key things to know before you book

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Key things to know before you book

  • Private group, max 6 people: you get flexibility and less waiting around.
  • Reserved entry + separate entrance: you skip the worst queues and start seeing faster.
  • 2 hours is the sweet spot: enough time for top works, not enough time to wander aimlessly.
  • Kids up to 15 are the target: the tour adjusts to child ages you provide ahead of time.
  • Temporary exhibitions are not included: you’re focused on the permanent collection highlights.
  • No large bags or luggage: plan to travel light inside the museum.

A Louvre Visit That Works for Families (Without a Full-Day Marathon)

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - A Louvre Visit That Works for Families (Without a Full-Day Marathon)
Let’s be honest: the Louvre is huge. Even with good intentions, families can end up walking and re-walking the same halls while kids get restless.

This tour is built for the reality of family timing. It’s only 2 hours, and the route is designed to cover the big, recognizable masterpieces you’d want to see in your photos and memories. You’re not trying to see everything. You’re seeing the right things, in a logical order, with a guide doing the hard thinking for you.

The other win is the “detective” element. The guide uses questions and prompts that keep kids engaged while you learn the why behind famous works. In multiple guide styles (people like Corinne, Eric, Sendhil, and Lee), the common thread is active attention: kids are not just watching a wall label.

You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Paris

Where to Meet: Napoleon Square and the Louis XIV Statue

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Where to Meet: Napoleon Square and the Louis XIV Statue
Good meetings make good tours. This one starts at 8 Pl. du Carrousel, then you’ll meet your guide at the museum area near the outside entrance.

Look for the guide in front of the Louis XIV statue in the Napoleon square area. On Google Maps, it’s listed as Louis XIV sous les traits de Marcus Curtius (copie). If you’re arriving by metro, this is the kind of landmark meeting point that saves time.

You’ll also end back at 8 Pl. du Carrousel, which is handy when you’re planning the rest of your day in central Paris.

Skip the Lines, Then Get Smart About the Time

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Skip the Lines, Then Get Smart About the Time
Reserved entry is not just a nice-to-have at the Louvre. It changes the entire rhythm of your visit. Instead of losing precious energy to queues, you use that time watching, listening, and asking questions.

For a 2-hour private tour, that matters even more. You want the guide to get you into the key rooms and galleries fast, then slow down at the stops that need explanation.

This tour also stays focused on the Louvre’s permanent collection. That’s great for families with limited time, because the guide can plan the route around iconic works like La Joconde (Mona Lisa) and the sculpture set that most first-time visitors picture immediately.

Mona Lisa and the Big Three: What Each Stop Gives You

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Mona Lisa and the Big Three: What Each Stop Gives You
The Louvre hits families best when stops are different enough to keep interest moving. This tour builds in variety: painting, sculpture, and different eras of art history.

La Joconde (Mona Lisa): The Detective Moment

Yes, it’s busy. That’s exactly why having a guide matters. Your stop at La Joconde (Mona Lisa) is treated like more than a photo-op.

The guide uses question prompts that keep kids thinking. That detective vibe is one of the most praised elements in guide performance styles across families—whether the guide is telling stories, connecting details, or answering curiosity on the spot. Kids often stay attentive longer when they feel like they’re solving something, not just looking.

A practical note: at Mona Lisa, you’ll want to help kids manage expectations. The painting is small. From a distance, it can be easy to feel underwhelmed if you’re not guided on where to look and what to notice. The guide’s job here is to make that first look click.

Venus de Milo: A Sculpture Stop Kids Can Read

Next up is Venus de Milo, one of the most instantly recognizable sculptures in the museum. Sculpture works well for families because it’s easier to connect to body language and form than a dense wall of text.

A good guide can also help you understand the broader context—what this kind of figure meant in its time, and why it still holds attention today. Guides described as patient with young kids often shine here, because kids can ask questions and the guide has time to pace answers without rushing.

Victoire de Samothrace (Winged Victory): Drama in Stone

Then comes Victoire de Samothrace. If you want a moment that feels cinematic, this is it. The figure’s movement and the sense of action make it an excellent family stop—kids often react to the energy even if they don’t know the name yet.

A guide can also connect it to mythology and the political or cultural weight behind major artworks. Some families have highlighted guides using the tour to explain not only the art, but also the museum building history and the story of Paris’s monarchy. That kind of context helps the sculpture stop feel bigger than just a statue you passed once.

A Tour Through Eras, Not Just Attractions

The tour focuses on key works that represent major periods: Italian Renaissance art, Egyptian time periods, and the French Revolution era themes show up in the overall selection. For many families, the benefit is that you’re not just ticking off famous art. You’re getting a sense of how these works connect across time.

You’ll leave understanding that the Louvre isn’t one theme. It’s a collection of eras that explain shifting tastes, power, belief, and identity.

How Guides Keep Kids Engaged (Without Turning It Into a Cartoon)

Not every guide can handle kids and adults at the same time. The reviews you’re drawing from show a pattern: the best guides read the room and adjust pace.

For example, guides such as Corinne, Astrid, Eric, and Martin have been singled out for keeping children engaged, pacing the tour well, and answering questions with patience. Other guides like Sendhil and Elena have been praised for efficiently navigating crowds while keeping explanations clear and interesting for kids.

One fun detail that families have noted: some guides use warm, personal language to make kids feel included. A guide addressing a child as mademoiselle was specifically mentioned as a moment that stuck.

If your kids are prone to zoning out, ask your guide a question early and signal what kind of engagement works for your family. The best results come when you give the guide the chance to match your kids’ style—quiet curiosity, hands-on questions, or challenge-based detective clues.

What Makes the Route Efficient in the Real Louvre

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - What Makes the Route Efficient in the Real Louvre
Even with reserved entry, the Louvre is crowded. The tour’s value is not only what you see, but how you get there.

A strong guide helps you:

  • See the key places without wandering (especially with a 2-hour window)
  • Spend more time looking and less time lost
  • Avoid long delays that can drain kid energy fast
  • Make the building itself part of the story, not just a hallway between rooms

Families have specifically praised guides for navigating efficiently, packing a lot into the short visit, and helping both kids and adults learn something new—even for people who had visited the Louvre before.

That last point matters. If you’ve already been once, you still get value from a targeted plan and someone who knows where to slow down.

Price and Value: $294 per Person for a Private, Reserved-Entry Plan

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Price and Value: $294 per Person for a Private, Reserved-Entry Plan
At $294 per person for a 2-hour private tour, you’re paying for three things: the guide time, the reserved entry advantage, and a short route that avoids wasted minutes.

The tour includes an entrance ticket to the Louvre’s permanent collection, listed at €28 per adult. That doesn’t mean the price is a simple ticket pass-through, but it does help explain why the cost can still feel reasonable compared to piecemeal options.

The other cost logic is group size. This tour allows a maximum of 6 persons. If you’re traveling as a family (or small group), the private format can feel like a smart way to buy back time and reduce stress.

What’s not included:

  • Temporary exhibitions
  • Audio guide (€4.80)

So if you’re hoping to use your time for special rotating shows, you’ll likely need a separate plan. This is a permanent-collection highlights-and-eras experience.

What to Bring (and What to Leave Behind)

The museum experience is easier if you show up ready.

Bring:

  • Passport or ID card

Plan to travel light. The tour notes that luggage or large bags are not allowed, and oversize luggage is also not permitted. If you have bulky items, consider leaving them in your lodging or choosing a different transport plan so you aren’t stuck figuring it out at the entrance.

Also, be ready to provide the age of all attending children. The tour says it adjusts accordingly for kids up to 15.

Who Should Book This Tour—and Who Should Rethink It

Paris: Louvre Private Family Tour for Kids + Reserved Entry - Who Should Book This Tour—and Who Should Rethink It
This is a great fit if:

  • You want major Louvre highlights without a full-day commitment
  • You have kids and want them actively engaged, not just stalled in lines
  • You appreciate a guide who can explain art in a way kids can follow

It’s also a good pick if you’ve visited before and want a better route. A private guide can change how you experience familiar masterpieces.

A mismatch to watch for:

  • If your child is over 15, the provider advises booking a different Louvre option: the Louvre Masterpieces Private Tour with Reserved Entry.
  • If mobility needs are involved, don’t assume. The activity is listed both wheelchair accessible and not suitable for people with mobility impairments. That contradiction is worth clarifying with the provider before you arrive.

Should You Book This Louvre Private Family Tour with Reserved Entry?

I’d book it if you’re going to the Louvre with kids and you want the visit to feel like a guided story with real stops, not a marathon of aimless hallway walking.

Here’s the decision shortcut:

  • If your top priority is Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory, and you want a plan that respects kid attention spans, this tour makes sense.
  • If you’re hunting for temporary exhibitions or want a very self-directed museum day, you’ll probably want a different approach.
  • If you’re traveling with mobility constraints, confirm details first, since the accessibility notes conflict.

For most families, the best part is simple: you get the Louvre’s most famous moments in a short window, with a guide who keeps kids thinking while adults actually learn something too. That’s a win.

FAQ

How long is the Louvre private family tour?

It lasts 2 hours.

Where does the tour start and end?

You start at 8 Pl. du Carrousel and you return there at the end.

Who do I meet, and where exactly is the meeting point?

Meet the guide in front of the Louis XIV statue in the Napoleon square, near the Louvre outside entrance. The statue is listed on Google Maps as Louis XIV sous les traits de Marcus Curtius (copie).

What’s included in the tour price?

Included are a private guided tour, the tour guide, and an entrance ticket to the Louvre’s permanent collection (ticket value listed as €28 per adult).

What is not included?

The tour does not include temporary exhibitions. It also does not include an audio guide (listed at €4.80).

What age range is this tour suitable for?

It’s suitable for groups including children up to 15 years. If children are above 15, the provider recommends another tour option.

What should we bring, and can we bring luggage?

Bring a passport or ID card. Luggage or large bags are not allowed, including oversize luggage.

Is there a limit on group size?

Yes. There’s a maximum of 6 persons per group. If you have more, you’ll need an additional booking.

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