REVIEW · PARIS
Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids Ticket Included
Book on Viator →Operated by Paris Tours with Kids · Bookable on Viator
The Louvre can overwhelm a family fast. This Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids turns the maze into a short, focused walk through the museum’s biggest hits, with pre-booked entry so you’re not hunting for tickets at the door. I especially like how the tour is built for real kid attention spans (breaks, questions, and games) and how adults still come away feeling informed. The one drawback to keep in mind: the price is high for a reason, and very young kids may fade after the second hour even with a great guide.
You pick between two tour lengths, and it runs in English with a private group setup. You’ll meet your guide just outside the Louvre, pass mandatory security checks, and then head straight into the art highlights—focused, efficient, and easier than trying to do it alone with kids in tow.
In This Review
- Key things that make this tour work for families
- Why a Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids makes sense in Paris
- Pre-booked tickets: the real time-saver
- Meeting outside the Louvre and what to expect right after security
- The highlights route: what you’ll actually see (and how it’s chosen)
- A realistic drawback: the museum is huge, so the tour is focused
- How kids get engaged: games, coloring pages, and a steady pace
- Adult-friendly side effect: kids moving keeps the adults moving
- Your group experience: what adults should expect while kids are busy
- Price and value: what you’re really paying for at $228.66
- Logistics you’ll want to know before you go
- Who this Louvre highlights tour is best for
- When you might think twice
- Should you book the Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids?
- FAQ
- How long is the Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids?
- Is the tour private?
- What’s included in the ticket price?
- Is the tour in English?
- Do I need to buy museum tickets ahead of time?
- What do I need to bring for entry?
- Are kids allowed on the tour?
- Are there any free admission options?
- Where do we meet the guide?
Key things that make this tour work for families

- Pre-booked Louvre entry so you skip the ticket-office stress
- Private, kid-friendly format with a kid-focused guide approach
- An art historian guiding the route (not just facts, but context)
- Two duration options to match your schedule and your kids’ stamina
- High-demand highlights in a short time including the Mona Lisa area and more
Why a Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids makes sense in Paris

The Louvre is famous for a reason. It’s also famous for how much it can drain a group. One wrong turn and you can lose an hour to crowd flow, signage, and bathroom math.
This tour is timed for control. Expect roughly 1.5 to 3 hours, with two duration options, so you can choose what fits your day. If you’re traveling with younger kids, you’re not forced to “see everything.” If you have older kids (or grandparents), you still get a structured route that hits the museum’s major story lines without wandering.
You’ll feel the difference the moment you walk in. Instead of planning, arguing, and regrouping, you follow the guide and let the thinking happen for you.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Paris
Pre-booked tickets: the real time-saver

At the Louvre, time often goes to logistics, not art. This tour includes the €22 museum entrance ticket, with pre-booked entry handled for you.
That matters because it removes one of the biggest friction points:
- no stopping at the ticket desk
- less waiting while your kids get cranky
- more time for the parts you came for
On top of the entry ticket, the tour includes a local guide and a professional art historian guide plus a kid-friendly guide approach. Translation: you’re paying for access and direction, not just someone saying museum facts while you stand in line.
Meeting outside the Louvre and what to expect right after security

You meet your guide just outside the Louvre. Then you head through mandatory security checks before you start seeing the highlights.
A few practical notes that help you plan:
- You’ll need a current valid passport on the day of travel.
- Service animals are allowed.
- It’s near public transportation, so it fits well into a typical Paris itinerary.
- You’ll use a mobile ticket.
You also get a private group experience, meaning it’s only your group participating. That tends to help with pacing when kids need a stop, a question, or a quick reset.
The highlights route: what you’ll actually see (and how it’s chosen)

This tour isn’t a random scan of famous paintings. The guide works with themes, so the museum feels like a set of connected stories instead of 3 miles of rooms.
Expect the tour to focus on big “anchor” exhibits and themes such as:
- Egyptian gods and related mythology themes
- the legend and fame surrounding the Mona Lisa
- the Crown Jewels
- Napoleon III’s apartments
- major collections tied to well-known artists, including Géricault, Canova, Delacroix, Bernini, and Michelangelo
Why this works: you’re not trying to read every label. You’re collecting a clear shortlist of what the Louvre is, how it evolved, and why certain pieces became icons.
It also helps that the museum itself has layers—built as far back as the 12th century, serving as fortress and royal residence before becoming what you see today. A good guide turns that timeline into kid-friendly story beats, not a long lecture.
A realistic drawback: the museum is huge, so the tour is focused
Because the time is limited, you won’t see everything. That’s the trade. The tour is designed to help you get the Louvre’s best hits and strongest story threads without burnout. If your goal is to do every wing and every masterpiece, you’ll still need another visit later.
How kids get engaged: games, coloring pages, and a steady pace

This is where the tour earns its star rating. The best part is not just that a guide is friendly—it’s that the guide actively manages attention.
From real examples:
- Joanna came with coloring pages, plus built-in breaks.
- Agatha was especially helpful for a nervous child, keeping the pace gentle.
- Dominique is described as using interactive elements like a treasure hunt.
- Alberto stayed patient when energy dipped around the 2-hour mark.
- Rosana helped with search games that turn looking into a mission.
- Pauline reportedly brought maps and used a treasure hunt idea for different ages.
- Helene introduced the museum in a way that got kids thinking and participating, not just staring.
- Laurita kept it fun with an animated style and repeated questions/games.
- Carol helped first-timers by using something like a themed approach (one group even mentioned a minion moment).
Even when the group has mixed ages—like a 5-year-old with older kids—the guide aims to keep the whole group engaged. Sometimes that means the youngest may lose steam faster. That’s normal. A tour like this gives you the best chance, not a guarantee.
Adult-friendly side effect: kids moving keeps the adults moving
Here’s the bonus most parents care about: when kids are actively looking and answering, the group doesn’t stop constantly. Adults get to enjoy the highlights without feeling like they’re dragging everyone behind.
Your group experience: what adults should expect while kids are busy

I like tours where parents don’t feel like they’re sitting through a kid show. This one usually lands that balance.
In practice, you can expect:
- clear explanation of what you’re seeing, not just names
- answers to questions beyond the planned route
- history connected to the art and the museum’s evolution
Some groups even described older relatives and guests with different needs staying engaged. That’s often because the guide adjusts pace and uses participation instead of long monologues.
And if you’re coming for photos, the route planning helps. People noted getting good moments in front of major works like the Mona Lisa without feeling like you were stuck in the same crowd crush the whole time.
Price and value: what you’re really paying for at $228.66

The $228.66 per person price is not cheap. You can feel that sticker shock.
But here’s the value math that makes sense for families:
- You get pre-booked tickets handled for you.
- The tour includes a local guide and a professional art historian guide.
- You also get a kid-friendly guide approach, which is a skill set, not an add-on.
- It’s a private tour, so your group doesn’t share the guide with a larger crowd.
Could you do the Louvre on your own? Sure. But with kids, “free” often turns into wasted time and repeated regrouping. That’s the part this tour buys back.
One more value point: the average booking time is about 50 days in advance. That tells you something. This is a popular slot, and you’re more likely to get the time that fits your plan when you book early.
If you’re visiting only once, or you’re traveling with kids who won’t handle a long museum day, the cost can feel more reasonable. If you’re planning to return and you’re comfortable managing lines and routing, you might choose a DIY approach instead.
Logistics you’ll want to know before you go

This tour includes a mobile ticket and confirmation at booking. You’ll also want to remember:
- Children must be accompanied by an adult.
- Security checks are mandatory, so build in a little patience.
- Hotel pickup/drop-off and transportation aren’t included.
- Food and drinks aren’t included, so plan breaks around your tour length.
Also, keep expectations tied to the format. This is a highlight tour. You’re not getting a slow, room-by-room museum education. You’re getting a smart hit list with a guide who can explain what matters and keep kids involved.
Who this Louvre highlights tour is best for
This tour fits families who want the Louvre without the chaos.
I’d point it toward:
- families with kids who get restless in museums
- first-time Louvre visits (especially with children)
- parents who want a clear route and less decision fatigue
- mixed-age groups (kids plus grandparents or older teens)
- anyone who wants English guiding and a focused pace
When you might think twice
If your kids love museums for hours with zero breaks, you might enjoy a DIY plan. And if you’re on a super tight schedule, double-check the duration option you choose—1.5 hours can feel short for some families, while 3 hours can be a long stretch for very young kids.
Should you book the Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids?
If you want the most Louvre for the least stress, I think this is a strong buy. The key reasons are practical: pre-booked entry, a private format, and guides who know how to get kids looking instead of wandering.
Book it if you’re worried about lines, crowds, or losing your group. Book it if you want the Mona Lisa and other major anchors, but still want your kids to have fun while you learn.
Don’t book it if your goal is to see everything in the museum at your own speed. This tour gives you highlights with smart pacing, not a full museum marathon.
FAQ
How long is the Louvre Highlights Tour for Kids?
The tour is listed as about 1 hour 30 minutes to 3 hours (approx.), depending on the duration option you choose.
Is the tour private?
Yes. It’s described as a private tour/activity, with only your group participating.
What’s included in the ticket price?
The tour includes a local guide, a professional art historian guide, a private tour, a kid-friendly guide, and a €22 Louvre entrance ticket.
Is the tour in English?
Yes. The tour is offered in English.
Do I need to buy museum tickets ahead of time?
No. The tour states that tickets are pre-booked, so you don’t waste time purchasing at the ticket office.
What do I need to bring for entry?
You’ll need a current valid passport on the day of travel. Security checks are mandatory.
Are kids allowed on the tour?
Yes, but children must be accompanied by an adult.
Are there any free admission options?
The information notes free admission applies to visitors under 18 and EEA residents under 26 (with valid ID and proof of residency).
Where do we meet the guide?
You meet your guide just outside the Louvre, and then you go through security checks before starting the highlights.





























