REVIEW · STRASBOURG
Strasbourg: 7-Day City Pass
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Strasbourg Tourist Office · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Strasbourg is best felt from multiple angles, not just from streets. This 7-day City Pass stacks discounts across the city’s top hits, letting you build your own mini itinerary while you save money. I especially liked how it pairs classic must-sees (like the cathedral climb) with fun, active options (boats, bikes, and even Segway). The one thing to watch is that it’s a discount pass, not a free-everything pass—and the walking tour is only in French and German.
For value, I like that the pass covers enough “big ticket” experiences—cathedral platform, boat options, museums, and science/kid-friendly stops—that you can realistically earn your money back fast. One common take: at roughly $5, it can repay quickly when discounts land around half off on several attractions. The tradeoff: public transportation isn’t included, so you’ll still need your own way of getting around.
If you want an easy plan for a first Strasbourg trip, this pass gives you structure without locking you into one tour. It also works well if you like mixing “quiet” time (museums and audio) with higher-energy sightseeing (bikes, Segway, and night-sky sessions). Just remember it’s for individuals only, not groups.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Use the Pass For
- What the Strasbourg 7-Day City Pass Really Covers (And Why It Matters)
- Where You Pick Up the Pass and How to Start Your 7 Days
- Cathedral Platform Climb: The View That Changes How You Read Strasbourg
- Boat Life in Strasbourg: Classic Views and an Electric Option
- Museums, Chocolate, and Château Vodou: Pick the Culture Level You Want
- Municipal Museums
- Château Vodou Museum
- Chocolate Museum
- Guided Walking Tour, Audio Tour, and the Language Reality
- Neustadt by Sightseeing Train and Two-Wheeled Strasbourg
- Science Breaks: Vaisseau and a Night-Sky Session at Jardin des Sciences
- Evening Culture: TJP – National Centre for Dramatic Arts
- How I’d Build a 7-Day Strasbourg Plan Using the Pass
- Day 1: Get oriented fast
- Day 2: Walking or learning day
- Day 3: Museum mix
- Day 4: Unusual curiosity
- Day 5: Move the city
- Day 6: Science and stars
- Day 7: Flexible finale
- Price and Value: Why Around $5 Can Add Up Quickly
- Should You Book the Strasbourg 7-Day City Pass?
- FAQ
- Where do I pick up the 7-day city pass?
- How long is the pass valid?
- Is public transportation included with the pass?
- What attractions and activities does the pass include discounts for?
- Is the guided walking tour available in English?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
- Is the pass meant for groups?
Key Things I’d Use the Pass For

- Pick-and-choose sightseeing: You’re not stuck with one route; you build your own 7-day rhythm.
- Cathedral views on your terms: Climb up to the viewing platform when you’re ready, not on a fixed schedule.
- Strasbourg by water counts twice: You get discounts for both a Strasbourg boat tour and an electric boat ride.
- Hands-on options are built in: Vaisseau (the science center), planetarium sessions, bike rental, and guided bike ride fit different travel styles.
- You can do it fast or slow: An audio-guided city tour helps you fill gaps, even if you skip a guided component.
- One line has a limitation: The sightseeing train tour is only valid on the Neustadt route.
What the Strasbourg 7-Day City Pass Really Covers (And Why It Matters)

This pass is valid for 7 consecutive days starting from the moment you activate it. That single detail matters a lot: you can pick a natural start day (often the day you arrive) and then plan backward or forward without rushing.
Instead of being one attraction ticket, the pass gives discounted rates across a bundle of popular activities and museums. That’s why it can feel better than buying single admissions one by one. Even if you don’t hit every option, you can still “win” if you choose a few high-value stops.
Here are the exact types of things the pass can discount over those 7 days:
- Strasbourg boat tour
- Municipal museums admission
- Climb to the platform of the Strasbourg Cathedral
- Sightseeing train tour (only the Neustadt route)
- Château Vodou museum admission
- Guided walking tour (only in French and German)
- Admission to the Vaisseau (science center for kids)
- Bike rental
- Planetarium at Jardin des Sciences (a night sky session with stars)
- Guided bike ride
- Segway® tour
- A show at the TJP – National Centre for Dramatic Arts
- Electric boat ride
- Chocolate Museum admission
- Audio-guided city tour
The big practical point: you’ll save most when your plan includes both “one big landmark” time and “repeatable fun” time (boats, bikes, science, night sky, and guided options).
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Strasbourg.
Where You Pick Up the Pass and How to Start Your 7 Days

You collect your 7-day pass at the Strasbourg Tourist Office Shop. It’s the right place to start because you can confirm you’re set up for the attractions included and ask where to go first.
Then comes the timing rule: the pass is valid 7 days from first activation. So if you’re arriving and you’re not ready to start sightseeing yet, it’s worth thinking about when you want that countdown to begin. Once it’s activated, you’ll want to use that week.
One more “fit” note: the city pass is for individuals only, not intended for groups. If you’re traveling with friends as a group, you’ll want to plan individual passes accordingly.
Cathedral Platform Climb: The View That Changes How You Read Strasbourg

The Strasbourg Cathedral climb is one of those “even if you don’t do anything else, do this” moments. With the pass, you can access the climb to the cathedral’s viewing platform at a discounted rate.
Why I think this is a smart use of the pass: the cathedral isn’t just a photo stop. From above, you get a different map of the city—how streets bend, where major areas sit, and how the historic core connects. It helps the rest of your sightseeing click into place.
A good planning tip: aim to do the climb early in your trip. That way, the view becomes your reference point for the days that follow—especially if you’ll be navigating by water, walking routes, or bike paths.
The main consideration is straightforward: climbing up is still physical effort. If you’re short on energy, you might want to schedule this for a time you know you’ll feel strong.
Boat Life in Strasbourg: Classic Views and an Electric Option
A city pass that includes boat time is usually a win, because you get spectacle without being stuck in a long walking line. With this pass, you get discounts for both:
- Strasbourg boat tour
- Electric boat ride
Doing both can be a fun contrast, especially if you like seeing the city’s famous architectural layers reflected in the water. You also get to experience Strasbourg from a perspective that’s hard to replicate on foot.
What I like most about this category in particular: boat sightseeing naturally pairs with other parts of your day. You can do a museum in the afternoon, then head to the water for a slower, scenic session in the evening—or reverse it if that feels better to you.
One practical note: electric and standard boat experiences may have their own schedules and conditions, so check timing before you commit. The pass gives discounts, but you still need to match the experience to when it’s running.
Museums, Chocolate, and Château Vodou: Pick the Culture Level You Want

This pass covers discounted admission to several different kinds of indoor stops, which is useful on rainy days or when you want a break from walking.
Municipal Museums
If you want a broad cultural hit, the pass includes municipal museums admission. This can be a solid choice when you want something “on-theme” without committing to one very specific niche.
Château Vodou Museum
The pass also covers Château Vodou museum admission. This is the kind of stop that can add a different angle to a trip—something beyond the usual landmark loop. If you like learning through unusual or specialized museums, this is a good place to spend an hour or two.
Chocolate Museum
Then there’s the Chocolate Museum, which is exactly what it sounds like: a sweeter option that can be a playful break from heavier sites. It can work well if you’re traveling with kids—or if you just want a lighter stop that still feels like part of the local experience.
The main drawback here isn’t the pass—it’s decision fatigue. With multiple museum choices, you’ll do best if you choose one “serious” museum day and one “fun curiosity” museum day, rather than trying to cram everything.
Guided Walking Tour, Audio Tour, and the Language Reality
You get two ways to learn the city: a guided walking tour and an audio-guided city tour.
The guided walking tour is only in French and German. If you don’t speak either, you’ll likely prefer the audio option. Still, the inclusion is a big plus because guided city walking can help you connect the dots—why areas developed the way they did and how key places relate.
The audio-guided city tour is helpful because it gives you flexibility. You can take it at your own pace and use it to “fill in” moments between larger stops like the cathedral climb and boat rides.
A simple strategy: if you don’t have the language comfort for the walking tour, use the audio tour on a day when you want to move through the historic center without feeling rushed.
Neustadt by Sightseeing Train and Two-Wheeled Strasbourg
This pass includes a sightseeing train tour, but there’s a clear limitation: it’s only valid on the Neustadt route. If Neustadt is on your list, great. If not, you’ll want to focus your savings on the other included options instead.
Then comes the fun, active side:
- Bike rental
- Guided bike ride
- Segway® tour
This is one of the biggest reasons the pass can feel good value. It gives you multiple ways to cover ground without relying on public transportation—which is important because public transportation isn’t included with the pass.
If you like “movement sightseeing” (rolling through neighborhoods, seeing distances, feeling the city rather than just looking at it), this section of the pass can be a lifesaver. It’s also a good fit for mixed travel days: one day heavy on museums, another day heavy on outdoor or movement-based activities.
One consideration: bikes, Segway, and guided bike rides are weather-dependent and skill-dependent. The pass helps you save, but your best day is still the day you’re ready to ride comfortably.
Science Breaks: Vaisseau and a Night-Sky Session at Jardin des Sciences

If you want a different flavor of Strasbourg sightseeing, the pass has two strong science-leaning options:
- Admission to the Vaisseau, a science center for kids
- A session to discover the night sky full of stars at the Planetarium in Jardin des Sciences
Even if you’re not traveling with kids, the Vaisseau stop can be a great reset—hands-on, not just “look and read.” It’s the kind of place where you can lose track of time, and that’s often a relief during a city trip.
The planetarium night-sky session is also special because it adds a day-night rhythm. It’s not only a daytime sightseeing city pass. It gives you an evening-style activity option with a built-in reason to slow down.
The only thing to plan for is simple: if you want both, you should leave enough space in your week so the night-sky session doesn’t force you into rushed days.
Evening Culture: TJP – National Centre for Dramatic Arts

The pass includes a show at TJP – National Centre for Dramatic Arts. This is a great inclusion if you like “city night” plans beyond just dinner and wandering.
It also balances the trip. A theater show can be the perfect counterpoint to all the walking, climbing, and riding. If you’re building a week of sightseeing, it helps keep you from burning out.
No extra detail is provided about language or show format, so treat it as a cultural add-on you’ll match to your schedule and preferences once you see what’s on.
How I’d Build a 7-Day Strasbourg Plan Using the Pass
The best part of this pass is that you can make your own order. But here’s a practical way to structure the week so you don’t waste discount opportunities.
Day 1: Get oriented fast
Start with something that changes how you see the city—use the cathedral viewing platform climb early. Then finish with a Strasbourg boat tour while you’re still fresh. You’ll come away with both a landmark reference and a water-level perspective.
Day 2: Walking or learning day
If you can use it, try the guided walking tour (remember it’s only French and German). If not, go with the audio-guided city tour and let it guide your pacing.
Day 3: Museum mix
Pick one “culture” choice (like Municipal museums) and one lighter option (like the Chocolate Museum). That keeps your week from becoming all indoor weight.
Day 4: Unusual curiosity
Add Château Vodou museum if you want a change of pace. Pair it with outdoor time near the areas you’ve already mapped out from your cathedral view.
Day 5: Move the city
Use bike rental or the guided bike ride for your “cover ground” day. If you like gadgets and balance-based sightseeing, this is also a strong day to fit in a Segway® tour.
Day 6: Science and stars
Save the Vaisseau for daylight and keep the planetarium night-sky session for evening if you can.
Day 7: Flexible finale
Choose what you enjoyed most and repeat it—or use it for the remaining discount you haven’t used yet. If you’re in the mood for evening culture, aim for the TJP show.
This structure works because each day matches a different travel mode: landmark view, learning, museums, movement, then science and stars.
Price and Value: Why Around $5 Can Add Up Quickly
The pass price is listed at about $5 per person, and the rating sits at 4.1 from 290 reviews. That combination suggests it’s easy to buy, easy to use, and not just “for people who already know the city.”
Here’s the value logic I’d use:
- If you plan only one discounted item, you might not feel a big win.
- If you plan two or three big-ticket activities—cathedral climb, a boat, and a museum—your savings should start to feel real.
- One example described the pass as repaying quickly because discounts can reach around 50% on many attractions. Even if your exact numbers vary, that’s the math you should aim for.
Also, since public transportation isn’t included, you should compare your expected spending: the pass helps reduce attraction costs, not transit. So make sure your itinerary uses enough pass discounts to justify the overall spend, even after you account for getting around on your own.
Should You Book the Strasbourg 7-Day City Pass?
I’d book this pass if you want a week in Strasbourg where you can swap plans day to day while still hitting the key experiences: cathedral platform views, boat sightseeing, at least one museum block, and one active option (bike or Segway).
I would hold off if:
- You’re only interested in one or two attractions total.
- You can’t use the guided walking tour language options (French/German) and you don’t want to rely on the audio tour.
- You’d rather spend your time on transit-heavy routes than on the specific pass-listed activities (especially since the sightseeing train tour is only on the Neustadt route).
If you want flexibility without spending like it’s a museum crawl, this pass is a strong way to keep Strasbourg affordable while still feeling like a full trip.
FAQ
Where do I pick up the 7-day city pass?
You pick up the pass at the Strasbourg Tourist Office Shop.
How long is the pass valid?
It’s valid for 7 consecutive days, starting from the first activation.
Is public transportation included with the pass?
No. Public transportation is not included.
What attractions and activities does the pass include discounts for?
The pass offers discounted rates for items such as the Strasbourg boat tour, municipal museums admission, the cathedral viewing platform climb, the sightseeing train tour (Neustadt route only), Château Vodou museum admission, Vaisseau, planetarium night sky sessions, bike rental, guided bike ride, Segway® tour, a TJP show, electric boat ride, Chocolate Museum admission, and an audio-guided city tour.
Is the guided walking tour available in English?
No. The guided walking tour is only offered in French and German.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is the pass meant for groups?
No. It is for individuals only and is not intended for groups.






















