Sculptor’s Home & Studio · Meudon · Day Trip from Paris

Musée Rodin Meudon & the Paris Museum Pass

Rodin lived and worked at the Villa des Brillants in Meudon for the last 20 years of his life. A quieter, more intimate Rodin experience than the Paris museum — and covered by the same pass.

Individual ticket
€8
With Museum Pass
Included
Timed slot
Not required
Open
Sat–Sun only
From Paris
~25 min (RER C)
Last updated: February 2026 · Prices and details verified

Is Musée Rodin Meudon included in the Paris Museum Pass?

Yes — the Paris Museum Pass covers entry to both the Musée Rodin in Paris (7th arrondissement) and this separate Meudon site, saving you €8 per person. Note that Meudon is only open on Saturdays and Sundays, and only from May to September. It’s a 25-minute journey from central Paris by RER C.

Musée Rodin Meudon — Fast Facts

Address19 Avenue Auguste Rodin, 92190 Meudon
TrainRER C to Meudon-Val-Fleury — then 15 min walk uphill. Or RER C to Bellevue then 10 min walk.
Opening hoursSaturday–Sunday only, 1 May – 30 September, 1pm–6pm
ClosedMonday to Friday all year · October to April all week
Individual ticket€8 (2026)
With Museum PassFree — included

What to Know Before You Visit

The Villa des Brillants is the house and studio where Rodin lived from 1895 until his death in 1917, and where he was buried alongside his companion Rose Beuret in the garden. The site is far more intimate than the Hôtel Biron in Paris — a working artist’s home rather than a grand mansion. The house itself is modest; the draw is the studio spaces, the extensive gardens, and the sense of being in Rodin’s actual working environment rather than a curated museum setting.

Seasonal opening: Meudon is only open on weekends from May to September. If you’re visiting Paris outside these months, or only on weekdays, you cannot visit this site. Plan your itinerary around this constraint before making the journey.
Combine with the Paris Rodin Museum: The pass covers both sites. Many visitors find the Meudon site works best as a complement to — not a substitute for — the Paris museum. See the major sculptures and collection at the Hôtel Biron first, then visit Meudon for the personal, biographical context. Both in one day is a full day devoted to Rodin.

Collection Highlights

Highlight 1
Rodin’s Studio
The large studio where Rodin worked on major commissions during his Meudon years, including The Gates of Hell. Plaster casts, tools and working models are displayed as they were during his lifetime.
Highlight 2
The Villa des Brillants
The house itself — a modest 18th-century villa — contains personal furniture, objects and photographs that give an intimate picture of Rodin’s domestic life and the artists and writers who visited.
Highlight 3
Rodin’s Grave
Rodin is buried in the garden alongside Rose Beuret. Above his grave stands a cast of The Thinker — one of the most visited sculptural grave markers in France.
Highlight 4
The Gardens & Views
The grounds overlook the Seine valley and, on clear days, Paris. Several sculptures are placed throughout the gardens. The setting is genuinely beautiful in summer.
Visitor tip: The walk from Meudon-Val-Fleury station is uphill — comfortable but noticeable. Wear good walking shoes. The site is uncrowded even on summer weekends, which is part of its appeal. Bring a picnic — the gardens are pleasant and there are no cafés on site.

Getting There from Paris

Take RER C (direction Versailles-Chantiers or Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines) to Meudon-Val-Fleury — about 25 minutes from Paris Austerlitz or Saint-Michel Notre-Dame. From the station it’s a 15-minute uphill walk following signs for the Musée Rodin. Alternatively, alight at Bellevue station (one stop further) for a slightly shorter and flatter walk. There is no direct bus from the station to the museum. Taxis are limited in Meudon — better to walk.

Visit Both Rodin Sites with One Pass

The Paris Museum Pass covers both the Musée Rodin in Paris (saves €14) and Meudon (saves €8). Use both on the same pass.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, for a different reason. The Paris museum is about the art — the major sculptures, the collection. Meudon is about the man — his studio, his home, where he lived and died. If you have a genuine interest in Rodin rather than just ticking off the major works, Meudon adds significant biographical depth. If your primary interest is sculpture, the Paris museum alone is sufficient.
You can, but you’ll get more from the visit if you’ve already encountered Rodin’s major works. The Meudon site assumes some familiarity with the sculptor’s life and career — there’s less interpretive material and the displays are less comprehensive than at the Hôtel Biron. First-time Rodin visitors should prioritise the Paris museum, which is open daily year-round and has the primary collection.
Most visitors spend 1 to 1.5 hours on site, including the studio, house and gardens. The site is not large. Combined with travel time (roughly 40 minutes each way from central Paris including the walk from the station), budget a half-day for the full excursion. Saturday afternoons in July and August are the busiest periods, though the site never becomes crowded.

Other Sculpture & Art Museums on the Pass

See all pass venues outside Paris in our day trips guide →