Paris City Pass 2026: Complete Guide & Review
A Paris City Pass is an all-in-one tourist ticket combining access to dozens of Parisian attractions, often coupled with unlimited public transport. In 2026, three passes dominate the market: Turbopass Paris, Paris Museum Pass, and Go City Paris.
Turbopass Paris: the most comprehensive pass
Turbopass Paris is our recommendation for 2-4 day stays. With 70+ attractions included (vs 50 for Museum Pass), it covers the complete Parisian tourist experience: monuments, museums, guided tours, transport, and even premium experiences like wine tastings at Caves du Louvre or perfume workshops at Fragonard.
What's included in Turbopass Paris 2026
- Eiffel Tower summit (3rd floor) with skip-the-line – worth $50
- Louvre Museum with audio guide – worth $24
- Complete Versailles Palace (palace + gardens + Trianon) – worth $30
- Unlimited transport: metro, bus, RER zones 1-5 (airports included)
- 30+ national museums: Orsay, Rodin, Picasso, Orangerie, Decorative Arts...
- Major monuments: Arc de Triomphe, Pantheon, Sainte-Chapelle, Conciergerie
- Île-de-France castles: Fontainebleau, Vincennes, Chantilly, Rambouillet
- Guided tours: Montmartre, Stade de France, 3h bike tour
- Unique experiences: Caves du Louvre, Fragonard Workshop, Paradox Museum
Real savings calculation over 3 days in Paris
Here's a typical itinerary of a user who saved $160 with Turbopass:
Day 1: Eiffel Tower summit ($50) + Seine cruise ($20) + Arc de Triomphe ($14) + Rodin Museum ($16) = $100
Day 2: Complete Versailles ($30) + Orsay Museum ($18) + Sainte-Chapelle ($14) + Pantheon ($13) = $75
Day 3: Louvre ($24) + Picasso Museum ($16) + Hop-on bus 24h ($39) + Montparnasse Tower ($21) = $100
3-day transport: Navigo Pass zones 1-5 = $31
Total individual tickets: $306
Turbopass 3-day price: $145
💰 Real savings: $161 (or -53%)
Is Turbopass Paris worth it? Our 2026 review
Yes, if you visit 3+ major attractions per day. The pass becomes very profitable for intensive stays where you combine monuments + museums + transport. The main added value is skip-the-line: you save 2-3 hours of queuing at the Eiffel Tower and Versailles, which alone justifies the investment for some visitors.
No, if you only visit 1-2 sites per day. In this case, favor individual skip-the-line tickets or a more targeted pass like the Museum Pass for pure museum lovers.