Paris Tourist Cards: Should you buy the new Paris Passlib’?

Paris Passlib' cards and pamphlets
Paris Passlib’ card.

Visiting Paris on a budget is sort of our thing, and if we haven’t made it clear, it’s fairly easy to do. The city is trying to make it even easier with the new Paris Passlib’, an expanded visitor card that promises a lot – but does it really deliver?

Let’s break down the pass, and try to make it comprehensible. The website, in typical French style, doesn’t make it extremely easy at first glance, but the multiple options aren’t too complicated to follow.

What is the Passlib’?

The Paris Passlib’ is actually a combination of several existing Paris passes into one mega-pass:

  • The Paris Museum Pass: which offers free entry to many of the city’s big museums and galleries +
  • The Paris Passlib’ card (the new addition): which covers an hour-long boat cruise and a day-long sightseeing bus tour.

All of these passes are available in 2-, 3-, and 5-day options (see prices below).

There is also another option, the “Passlib’ Mini” that excludes the Paris Museum and the Paris Visite passes, so essentially it’s just a boat ride and a one-day bus tour, plus the chance to upgrade to a visit to the Eiffel Tower  (see below).

Passlib’ prices

The cost of the new Passlib’ varies depending on your age and the duration of the pass. (See all pass options on the Passlib’ website):

Adults:

  • Paris Passlib’ Mini – Adult: €40
  • Paris Passlib’ 2 Days – Adult: €109
  • Paris Passlib’ 3 Days – Adult: €129
  • Paris Passlib’ 5 Days – Adult: €155
    + Eiffel Tower (second level): €15 extra

Youth: (EU members: 12-25; non-EU: 12-17 years)

  • Paris Passlib’ Mini – Youth: €35
  • Paris Passlib’ 2 days – Youth: €65
  • Paris Passlib’ 3 days – Youth: €70
  • Paris Passlib’ 5 days – Youth: €90
    + Eiffel Tower (second level): €15 extra

Children (4-11 years)

  • Paris Passlib’ Mini – Child: €26
  • Paris Passlib’ 2 Days – Child: €35
  • Paris Passlib’ 3 Days – Child: €39
  • Paris Passlib’ 5 Days – Child: €47
    + Eiffel Tower (second level): €15 extra

Skip line at Eiffel Tower

And on top of all of these choices, you can add a €15 supplement to access the Eiffel Tower’s second level without waiting in line. While it seems attractive, remember that another ticket is required to reach the top of the tower, costing an additional few euros.

Usually, tourists can book a time slot to go up the tower in advance, but often dates and times are sold out months in advance, or it ends up raining on the day of your reservation. This addition with the Paris Passlib’ changes all of that.

The verdict?

Is it really worth it? It depends. For a 2-day pass for an adult, at €109 (without the Eiffel Tower), you’ll get the following items, which would normally total roughly €117.15:

  • Paris Visite: €18.15/2 days
  • Paris Museum Pass: €48/2 days
  • Bus tour: €32/day tour
  • Boat tour: €14/1 hour tour
  • Paris Passlib’ book: (a map) maybe valued at €5.

So you save a bit, but the real question is, did you want all of that?

Paris is an entirely walkable city, and most tourists can get by just fine splitting a carnet (a booklet of 10 Metro tickets) over a few days.

The museum pass for two days will require some intensive museum-going in order to make it worth it, and what if the weather’s great and you just want to picnic or stroll? Also, children under 18 get in free to museums anyway, and the Paris Visite is cheaper for them.

And what about that bus ride? Do you want to sit on a bus for a whole day? If it’s your first time to Paris, maybe, but then to sit on a boat as well? It could be a bit of overkill. Could you just have spent €1.80 on a public bus and toured the city like the locals?

The argument for…

The pass certainly does group everything together in one package, and the addition of the Eiffel Tower line-hop is attractive, as long as too many people don’t purchase this same option.

If money is no issue, the pass is a solid way to prepare a family trip without too much fuss, while ensuring activities for the whole family.

If money is an issue, but you want to pack in as much sightseeing and visits as possible, the card could work in your favor if you plan accordingly: Spend one day on a bus, then two days crisscrossing the city in the Metro to visit the most expensive museums for free. It could work.

The argument against…

For budget travelers looking to really explore Paris, the pass may create a stress to spend time doing things that you may not have wanted to do in the first place. In the interest of “getting your money’s worth,” you may forgo exploring the streets of Paris in order to heap on museums and vehicle tours around town.

Don’t forget that some of the city’s best museums are free (the Carnavalet, the Victor Hugo house) and the boat and bus rides could be overkill for those who like to walk (or take a Velib’ like the locals). In a city where sitting in a café and watching the world go by constitutes an activity in my book – and at only €2-3 for a coffee on a terrace – it’s difficult to consider the pass a great idea.

Final thought

For those seeking the structure and the serenity of a travel pass, the Pass Parislib’ could work well. Just be sure you know why you’re purchasing it and be certain that it will really offer you experiences that you want during your visit to Paris.

About the author

Bryan Pirolli

About the author: A journalist and tour guide, Bryan makes it his mission to cover Paris from top to bottom. He has also successfully defended a PhD in travel communication at Sorbonne Nouvelle, giving him some more street cred. Bryan regularly travels on a budget, experiencing the best of European culture while still trying to make rent.  So far, so good. You can follow his adventures on his blog: www.bryanpirolli.com.

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3 thoughts on “Paris Tourist Cards: Should you buy the new Paris Passlib’?”

  1. Heather Steinmiller

    The Pass’lib is total overkill. Go for the Navigo Découverte like the locals. A week of Metro travel in all five zones in Paris costs about 22 euros. You have to buy a card for 5 euros, and provide a small (3 cm x 2.5 cm) photo. You can get the card at the RER booth at CDG airport. It’s good for the trip from CDG to the center of Paris, the busses and trams. Much better deal. One caveat:I have heard of foreigners being hassled to get the Paris Visite, but legally they have to sell you the Découverte. Fares go from Monday am to Sunday pm, so you do have to plan your trips. Check it out on the web; sorry, I’m on my phone and don’t have the link. Just look up Navigo and you’ll see what I mean. Love all your tips and hacks!

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  2. Bryan, what a great post this is – I think you listed everything there is to say. As someone living just outside of Paris (a 35′ RER trip to the heart of the City) I can only wholeheartedly agree to everything you said. I got exhausted and out-of-breath just reading all the stuff a visitor MUST do to make the fee work in their favour…. As someone with many, many visitors all the time (it’s so handy for them :)….) I always make sure that everyone comes at least once on a boat-cruise and one of their best loved museums (if they want that). We skip the ET but take the lift to Montparnasse. Or we go on the terrasse of the Galeries Lafayette. A bus tour is only fun if you don’t mind the ‘stink’ of the congested streets and the nerve-wrecking driving of the Parisians – we include always a meal in a typical and very good resto and do a lot of footwork (walking) in little side streets, quiet corners and/or parks and gardens.
    Thanks for this excellent post! Highly recommendable to all interested readers.

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