Plan – Tips & Logistics

Can You Share the Paris Museum Pass?

No — the pass is non-transferable and tied to one visitor. Here’s exactly what that means in practice, and the best options for couples and groups.

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Is the Paris Museum Pass Transferable?

Official Rule
No. The Paris Museum Pass is strictly non-transferable. It is valid for one person only and must be used by the same person from activation to expiry. It cannot be passed between members of a group, even within a couple.

This applies to both digital and physical versions of the pass. Each person in your travel group who wants unlimited museum access needs their own pass.

How Is the Non-Transferable Rule Enforced?

Enforcement varies by venue, but the rule is consistent across the programme. Here’s what to expect at the major sites:

Venue Enforcement Level Notes
Louvre Strict Timed entry slot matched to pass. Staff check at entrance.
Versailles Strict Reservation required per pass. Digital passes scanned individually.
Sainte-Chapelle Strict Timed slot per person required. One scan per visit.
Musée d’Orsay Moderate Pass scanned on entry. Staff may ask for ID at busy periods.
Arc de Triomphe Moderate Pass scanned; single-use per activation period.
Smaller museums Varies Pass shown at desk. Less likely to be cross-checked with ID.
Digital passes are scanned electronically. Once a QR code is scanned at a venue, it is logged. Attempting to re-use the same QR code for a second person at the same venue on the same day will be rejected.

The Right Options If You’re Travelling Together

1

Each person buys their own pass

The standard solution for couples and groups who plan to visit the same museums. If everyone is doing 4+ major venues each, a pass per person works out better value than individual tickets. Use the worth-it calculator to check the maths for your group size.

2

Mix pass + individual tickets

If one person in your group is a keen museum-goer and another is happy with 2–3 venues, it may make sense for only one person to get a pass while the other buys individual tickets as needed. Run the numbers for each person separately.

3

Children under 18 don’t need a pass

All children under 18 get free entry to French national museums and monuments regardless of nationality — no pass required. For EU residents under 26, entry is also free to national museums. So for family groups, only the adults typically need to purchase. See our full under-18 and under-26 guide →

4

Stagger your visit days

If two people are sharing a trip but visiting museums on different days — for example, one person wants to spend a full day at the Louvre while the other is shopping — each person still needs their own pass. The consecutive-day counting means the pass is only valid for the named holder from their activation date.

Do Children Need Their Own Pass?

In most cases, no. Children under 18 receive free entry to all French national museums and monuments covered by the pass — this applies to visitors of any nationality, not just French residents.

Free for under-18s: Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, Versailles, Sainte-Chapelle, Arc de Triomphe, Rodin, and all other national museums covered by the pass. Children simply queue (or pre-book) alongside their group.

The main exception is the Eiffel Tower, which is not a national museum and charges for entry regardless of age (though children under 4 are free). For a full breakdown see our under-18 and under-26 guide →

Frequently Asked Questions

No. The pass is non-transferable and must be used by the same person for every visit. Using another person’s pass — even a family member’s — violates the terms and conditions, and the pass may be confiscated if caught. Each person needs their own pass.
No. Each digital pass QR code is valid for one person only. At venues that use electronic scanning (including the Louvre, Versailles, and Sainte-Chapelle), the code is registered on first use and a second attempt to use it for another person will be declined. Even at venues with less rigorous checking, doing this violates the terms of the pass.
No. There is no family pass, group pass, or couple’s version of the Paris Museum Pass. Each visitor must have their own individual pass. However, since children under 18 get free entry to all French national museums regardless of nationality, families typically only need to purchase passes for the adult members of the group.
Only if the pass has never been activated. Once you present a pass at any venue and it is stamped (physical) or scanned (digital), it is tied to that activation date and the countdown begins. An unactivated, unopened physical pass could technically be given to someone else before use — but this is not officially sanctioned and the pass is sold as a personal document.
It depends on how many museums you each plan to visit. The 2-day pass costs €62 per person — if you’re both planning to visit 3+ major venues (e.g. Louvre + Versailles + Orsay), two passes will save you money versus two sets of individual tickets. Use the worth-it calculator and run the numbers for each person individually.
Paris Museum Pass — one pass per person, from €62 Buy the Pass →