REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Montmartre Tour with Local Guide
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Voilà Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Montmartre feels like a movie set that never switches off. On this guided walk with local guide René Kim, you get the bohemian rhythm of the neighborhood while hitting the landmarks most people only see from afar. You’ll move through the cobbled streets with stories that make the area feel lived-in, not just postcard-perfect.
I like how the tour mixes iconic photo stops (Moulin Rouge, Café des Deux Moulins) with short, guided time at the places that actually benefit from a local voice. I also really appreciate the specific stops: you’ll see the bust of Dalida, pass Le Lapin Agile, and stop at Place du Tertre, where the artist energy is part of the atmosphere.
One consideration: the overall rating is modest, and there has been at least one report of a last-minute cancellation with a delayed refund. If you’re booking close to your travel dates, I’d keep a little flexibility built in.
In This Review
- Key points at a glance
- What You’ll Actually Experience in This 2-Hour Montmartre Tour
- Starting at Metro Blanche: The Easiest Way to Begin
- Moulin Rouge: Why the Tour Starts With a Photo Stop
- Café des Deux Moulins and Moulin de la Galette: Small Stops With Meaning
- Place du Tertre: Where the Art World Energy Shows Up
- La Maison Rose, Dalida’s Bust, and Le Lapin Agile
- Finishing at Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre
- What’s Included (and What That Means for Your Money)
- Price and Value: Is $46 Worth It?
- Languages and Guide Style: Getting Explanations You Can Follow
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want a Different Option)
- Should You Book This Montmartre Tour?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the tour?
- When does the tour end?
- How long is the Montmartre tour?
- How much does it cost per person?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- What are some of the stops on the tour?
- Is there food included?
- What languages does the live guide speak?
- What should I bring?
- Is cancellation free?
- Is reserve and pay later available?
Key points at a glance

- Meet René Kim at Metro Blanche (exit by the green kiosk) so you can start without wandering.
- Moulin Rouge photo time is short (about 15 minutes), which helps keep the pace manageable.
- Place du Tertre gets real guide time (about 20 minutes), not just a quick glance.
- Dalida and Le Lapin Agile are specifically included for extra character beyond the main sights.
- A bistro stop with local delicacies is included, so the tour isn’t only walking and photos.
- You’ll have guide support in multiple languages (Spanish, English, French, Lingala).
What You’ll Actually Experience in This 2-Hour Montmartre Tour

This isn’t an all-day Montmartre crawl. It’s a focused 2-hour walking route built around a clear goal: show you the neighborhood’s signature sights while a local guide explains what matters and why people still talk about this area.
The best part is the pacing. You’re not sprinting between stops, and you’re not stuck for ages at one viewpoint either. Instead, you get a rhythm: photo stops for the big name landmarks, then guided time where you’ll get more meaning—especially around Place du Tertre and the final approach to Sacré-Cœur.
You also get a guide who’s there for the walk, not just the attendance. The tour is led by René Kim, listed as a passionate Parisian, and you can choose between Spanish, English, French, and Lingala. That language variety matters if you want explanations you can actually follow.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Paris
Starting at Metro Blanche: The Easiest Way to Begin

You start at the exit of the Metro Blanche at the green kiosk. That detail is worth taking seriously. Montmartre can be a maze of small streets, so starting at a clear meeting point helps you avoid the classic situation of arriving confused and late.
Bring comfortable shoes—the route includes cobbled streets—and plan on carrying a small amount of water and a camera. This isn’t labeled as a strenuous hike, but cobblestones make every step count more than you’d expect.
If you’re the type who likes to be early, aim to arrive a few minutes before the start time shown in availability. The tour runs on a tight two-hour window, so early arrival is your friend.
Moulin Rouge: Why the Tour Starts With a Photo Stop

The itinerary begins at Blanche, then moves you to the Moulin Rouge for a photo stop and guided tour time of about 15 minutes.
That structure is practical. Moulin Rouge is the kind of place where most people need a quick moment to take photos and orient themselves. Starting here also helps you understand the visual contrast right away: you’re entering a highly recognizable icon, then you’re walking into the softer, more artsy corners around it.
A short guided segment here also sets expectations for what you’ll notice later. Instead of treating Montmartre like a list of buildings, the guide can steer your attention toward the stories behind what you see.
Café des Deux Moulins and Moulin de la Galette: Small Stops With Meaning

Next comes a quick photo stop at Café des Deux Moulins (about 5 minutes). Then you head to Moulin de la Galette for another photo stop plus a guided visit time of about 14 minutes.
These stops are short on purpose. In two hours, you can’t linger everywhere, and the tour doesn’t try. Instead, it uses these locations to keep your mental map updated: you see the landmarks, you catch the vibe, and you move on.
If you’re traveling with limited time, these quick moments are a smart trade. You get the highlights without sacrificing the places where the guide time is longer.
Place du Tertre: Where the Art World Energy Shows Up

The biggest time block after Moulin Rouge is Place du Tertre, with about 20 minutes of visit plus guided tour.
This is the stop designed for atmosphere and explanation. The tour highlights the artists who once lived here and focuses on the bohemian character of Montmartre. When a guide spends longer time at a square like this, it usually means you’ll get more than just a name and a photo spot—you get context for what the area has meant to artists.
This is also where the tour’s promise of mysteries starts to feel real. The neighborhood has layers, and the guide helps you connect the dots between the famous sights and the local creative culture that made the place so well known.
If you like places where you can look around and still feel you’re learning something, this is your anchor stop.
La Maison Rose, Dalida’s Bust, and Le Lapin Agile

One of the more distinctive elements here is how the tour goes beyond the headline attractions.
You’ll stop by La Maison Rose, see the bust of Dalida, and pass Le Lapin Agile. These aren’t just random extras—they add personality to the walk. They also broaden what you associate with Montmartre. It’s not only the big public monuments. It’s also the characters and creative identities attached to the streets.
The Dalida bust is a particularly strong “Montmartre identity” moment. You’re not just looking at a statue—you’re using the guide’s explanation to understand why certain figures are tied to this area’s storytelling.
Le Lapin Agile, included as a pass-by, is the kind of stop that works well on a guided route. You might notice a venue from the street, but a guide helps you place it in the bigger picture of Montmartre’s artistic reputation.
Finishing at Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre

The tour ends at the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre. This final stop makes sense: it ties your walk together with one of the most recognizable endpoints in the neighborhood.
A finish at Sacré-Cœur is also useful logistically. It gives you a clear moment to pause, take a last look, and reset before you continue on your own. Since the itinerary is only two hours, that final destination matters for how your day flows.
One small note: the activity description says it ends back at the meeting point, while the itinerary says it finishes at Sacré-Cœur. Practically, you should expect the tour to conclude in that Sacré-Cœur area and then you’ll be able to head onward from there.
What’s Included (and What That Means for Your Money)

The tour includes a guided walk of Montmartre with visits to iconic locations like Moulin Rouge, Sacré-Cœur, and Place du Tertre. It also includes authentic local delicacies at a charming bistro.
That bistro stop is part of why the price can make sense. You’re not just paying for someone to point at sights. You’re paying for guided storytelling plus a built-in break where you can taste something local along the route.
What’s not included is hotel pickup and drop-off. That’s normal for walking tours, but it matters for planning. You’ll need to get to the meeting point at Metro Blanche on your own.
Price and Value: Is $46 Worth It?

At $46 per person for a two-hour guided walking tour, you’re paying for three things: a local guide (René Kim), access to multiple key locations, and included local delicacies at a bistro.
For short tours in central areas, $46 is not unusual, but value depends on execution. This one looks designed to keep time tight: photo stops are brief, guided time is concentrated at Place du Tertre and key points, and you have a clear start and finish.
If you only care about ticking off major names, you could do Montmartre independently. But if you want the stories—artists who once lived there, the bohemian character, and how specific points like Dalida’s bust fit into the larger identity of the neighborhood—then the guide time is the difference maker.
My practical take: the value works best when you treat this as orientation plus storytelling, not as a deep, long-form Montmartre exploration.
Languages and Guide Style: Getting Explanations You Can Follow
The tour is offered with a live guide in Spanish, English, French, and Lingala.
This matters more than it sounds. In a place like Montmartre, the details can get lost if you can’t fully understand the guide’s explanations. Having multiple language options gives you a better chance of actually learning what you’re seeing, not just watching someone talk.
The guide is named René Kim, so you also know you’re getting one consistent voice throughout the walk, not rotating guides.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want a Different Option)
This tour is best for you if:
- you want a high-efficiency Montmartre route in about two hours
- you like a guided explanation at the major “story stops” like Place du Tertre
- you enjoy a mix of photos plus brief visits to specific points (Moulin Rouge, Dalida, Le Lapin Agile)
- you’re open to walking on cobbled streets and want a structured plan
It may be less ideal if you:
- want a long, slow wandering day with lots of free time
- prefer to spend most of your time resting or sitting rather than moving between stops
- need hotel pickup (this one doesn’t include it)
And one more note: with a modest overall rating and reports of late cancellation and refund delays, you’ll want to avoid booking this as a single point of failure. If it’s critical to your schedule, keep your plans flexible.
Should You Book This Montmartre Tour?
I’d book it if you want the Montmartre highlights in a tight window and you value a local guide who can connect what you see with the area’s artistic identity. The mix of Moulin Rouge, Place du Tertre, Dalida’s bust, and the Sacré-Cœur finish is a solid set of anchor points for first-time Montmartre visitors.
I’d pause and think twice if your trip is very tight and you can’t handle the possibility of a late change. The tour’s overall rating is not high, and there has been at least one account of a last-minute cancellation with delayed refund processing. If you can stay flexible, you’re better positioned to enjoy the walk.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the tour?
You meet in the exit of the Metro Blanche at the green kiosk.
When does the tour end?
The tour ends at the meeting point area according to the activity description, and the itinerary lists the finish at the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre.
How long is the Montmartre tour?
It lasts about 2 hours.
How much does it cost per person?
The price is $46 per person.
Is hotel pickup included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
What are some of the stops on the tour?
You’ll see Moulin Rouge, Café des Deux Moulins, Moulin de la Galette, Place du Tertre, and finish at the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre. You’ll also stop by La Maison Rose, see the bust of Dalida, and pass Le Lapin Agile.
Is there food included?
Yes. Authentic local delicacies are included at a charming bistro.
What languages does the live guide speak?
The tour guide speaks Spanish, English, French, and Lingala.
What should I bring?
Bring comfortable shoes, a camera, and water.
Is cancellation free?
The activity offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is reserve and pay later available?
Yes. You can reserve now and pay later, with the option to book your spot and pay nothing today.


































