Château de Fontainebleau & the Paris Museum Pass
Napoleon’s favourite palace — 1 hour from Paris by train, fully covered by the Museum Pass. The most royal day trip you can make from the city.
Is the Château de Fontainebleau included in the Paris Museum Pass?
Yes — full entry is included, saving you €14 per person. No advance reservation is required. The château is about 40 minutes from central Paris by RER D train. Allow a full day. Closed Tuesdays.
Why Fontainebleau Is Worth a Day of Your Pass
For a couple, the €14 saving per person adds up to €28 on a single day trip — and that’s before factoring in the dozens of Paris venues the same pass covers. The château’s apartments and state rooms are all included; there’s no premium wing or partial exclusion to watch out for.
During peak summer weekends there can be modest queues at the entrance, but nothing approaching the wait times at Paris’s city-centre museums. Arriving at opening (9:30am) is enough to beat any crowd.
Fontainebleau — Fast Facts
| Address | Place du Général de Gaulle, 77300 Fontainebleau |
| Train from Paris | RER D from Gare de Lyon → Fontainebleau-Avon (~40 min) |
| From station to château | 15-min walk or Ligne 1 bus (Château stop) |
| Opening hours | Nov–Apr: 9:30am–5pm (last entry 4:15pm) May–Oct: 9:30am–6pm (last entry 5:15pm) |
| Closed | Tuesdays · 1 January · 1 May · 25 December |
| Individual ticket | €14 (2026 price) |
| With Museum Pass | Free |
| Reservation required | No |
| Suggested visit time | 3–4 hours (château + gardens) |
| Full day trip time | 6–7 hours from Paris including travel |
Why Visit Fontainebleau?
Versailles gets the crowds. Fontainebleau gets the history. Every French king from François I to Napoleon III passed through these halls — more than 700 years of continuous royal occupation, compared to Versailles’s relatively brief reign as the seat of court. The result is a layered, eclectic palace that feels lived-in rather than staged.
Napoleon was particularly attached to Fontainebleau. He signed his abdication here in 1814, in the room still called the Salle du Conseil. His personal apartments are among the best-preserved imperial interiors in France — more intimate than the grand ceremonial rooms at Versailles, and in many ways more compelling for it.
For pass holders, Fontainebleau is one of the best value inclusions on the entire list. The €14 individual ticket is modest, but the fact that you can spend a full day here — château, gardens, and surrounding forest — without paying anything extra makes it an excellent day to slot into a 4-day or 6-day pass itinerary.
What’s Included with the Pass
The Museum Pass covers entry to the Grand Appartements — the main state rooms, Napoleon’s apartments, and the historical galleries. This is the majority of what most visitors come to see.
Getting There from Paris
Fontainebleau is straightforward to reach by train — no rental car needed, and the journey is half the fun if you take the scenic route through the Île-de-France countryside.
Take the RER D from Gare de Lyon
The most direct route: RER D from Gare de Lyon (or Châtelet-Les Halles) to Fontainebleau-Avon. Journey time is approximately 40 minutes. Trains run every 20–30 minutes on weekdays, roughly every 30 minutes on weekends. Standard SNCF ticket applies — the Paris transport pass (Navigo/t+ tickets) is not valid beyond Zone 5.
Get from the station to the château
From Fontainebleau-Avon station, you have two options: a 15-minute walk through the town (pleasant and well-signed), or the Ligne 1 bus to the Château stop (5 minutes, runs frequently). The walk is recommended — it takes you through the market square and gives a feel for the town.
Enter via the main gate on Place du Général de Gaulle
Present your Museum Pass at the ticket desk. No reservation needed — simply show the pass and collect your entry wristband. Audio guides are available for hire (not included with pass).
How Long to Spend at Fontainebleau
The château interior takes most visitors 2–3 hours at a comfortable pace. Add the formal gardens and you’re looking at a full half-day. If you want to explore the surrounding forest (a UNESCO-listed biosphere reserve, popular with climbers and walkers), allow a full day from Paris.
A recommended schedule for a day trip:
- 8:30am — Depart Paris (Gare de Lyon)
- 9:15am — Arrive Fontainebleau-Avon, walk to château
- 9:30am — Enter château at opening (beat the day-tripper crowds)
- 12:30pm — Lunch in town (several good options near the market square)
- 2:00pm — Explore the gardens and Grand Canal
- 4:00pm — Walk back to station
- 5:00pm — Train back to Paris
Fontainebleau vs Versailles — Which Day Trip?
Both are covered by the Museum Pass. Both make excellent day trips. The choice depends on what you’re after.
Versailles is larger, grander, and more famous — the Hall of Mirrors alone justifies the trip. But it’s also significantly more crowded, requires advance booking for the château, and the full estate takes most of a day just for the main palace and gardens. Individual ticket is €25 vs Fontainebleau’s €14.
Fontainebleau is quieter, deeper in history, and arguably more authentic. The town is charming, the forest is spectacular, and the absence of the megabus crowds makes the visit more relaxed. If you have a 6-day pass, there’s a case for doing both — Versailles on day 4, Fontainebleau on day 6. See the full comparison in our Paris day trips guide.
Planning a 6-Day Pass Itinerary?
Fontainebleau fits perfectly into a 6-day pass. See our suggested day-by-day schedule with the best sequence for all major venues.
Frequently Asked Questions
Other Day Trips Covered by the Pass
Fontainebleau is one of several day-trip destinations included in the Museum Pass. See all options in our Paris day trips guide, or visit these specific pages:
See all 50+ pass venues in our complete museum list → or plan your trip with the 6-day itinerary.
Day Trip Included
Fontainebleau Entry Included with the Museum Pass
Plus Versailles, Chantilly, and 50+ more Paris museums and monuments. From €90 for 2 days.
