Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket

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Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket

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  • 3 hours
  • From $53
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Operated by Paris Odyssey SAS · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.4 (470)Duration3 hoursPrice from$53Operated byParis Odyssey SASBook viaGetYourGuide

Two Paris classics in one plan. This combo ticket pairs Musée d’Orsay and Musée Rodin with real crowd-bypassing value and flexible timing. I like the dedicated Orsay entry point (Entrance C1) and the separate skip-the-line entrance at Rodin. One thing to consider: scanning can be imperfect sometimes, so keep your barcode/ticket details ready and arrive with a little extra buffer.

Here’s the practical win for your day: you start at Orsay, then head to Rodin without worrying about timed slots. You can take your time inside—no frantic “dash and leave” pressure—while still hitting two top collections in about a half-day to a full-day rhythm.

Key things to know before you go

  • No timed entry required: you can visit either museum any day/time within the validity window
  • Orsay Entrance C1 is dedicated: that’s where you go, not a main general queue
  • Rodin is skip-the-line: you use a separate entrance for faster entry
  • Permanent collection + temporary exhibitions included: you’re not locked into just the headline rooms
  • Unlimited time once inside: you can slow down and actually look
  • Have your barcode ready: some tickets may need staff help to locate/scan the right code

The Big Idea: Why This Orsay + Rodin Combo Works So Well

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - The Big Idea: Why This Orsay + Rodin Combo Works So Well
This isn’t just a ticket bundle. It’s a crowd-smart way to see two different sides of French art in the same day.

Orsay gives you the art-story jump you want first—Impressionists and Post‑Impressionists in a museum that also feels like part of the exhibit. Rodin then shifts the mood completely: sculpture, texture, and light that change as you walk around the forms.

The best part is the “open” structure. You’re not forced into a strict arrival time, so you can adapt to weather, energy levels, or your subway legs. For a city that loves last-minute surprises, that flexibility is real value.

Musée d’Orsay: The Impressionist Highlights You’ll Want First

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - Musée dOrsay: The Impressionist Highlights You’ll Want First
If you’re picking one museum to understand the “arc” of 19th‑century French art, Orsay is a strong start. The museum is known for its extensive Impressionist collection, and this combo ticket explicitly includes access to both the permanent collection and temporary exhibitions.

You’ll especially want to plan around the works everyone talks about—Van Gogh and other major names come up fast once you’re inside. Even if you’re not an art-history sponge, Orsay makes it easy to connect dots just by wandering room to room. Styles shift, colors hit differently, and the museum’s layout nudges you through a storyline.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Paris

A practical pace tip

Orsay can swallow a few hours quickly, especially if you stop for the paintings that catch your eye at first glance. The “3 hours” duration shown for the experience can be enough for a brisk visit of both museums, but only if you keep moving. If you want to truly enjoy, I’d give Orsay extra time and treat Rodin as your slower landing.

Finding Orsay Entrance C1: How to Get In Faster Without Guessing

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - Finding Orsay Entrance C1: How to Get In Faster Without Guessing
Your meeting point is clear and that matters: head to Entrance C1 at the Musée d’Orsay and present your ticket there.

This is the kind of detail that turns a stressful day into a smooth one. Orsay is busy, and when you know the exact door, you’re not wandering while other people line up.

A couple of practical notes to save time:

  • Bring the barcode you were given (phone is often fine). Some entry checks can be more complicated than you’d expect, so having the correct code visible helps.
  • If scanning doesn’t work instantly, don’t panic. Staff may search or manually verify your ticket. The combo ticket still tends to reduce waiting, but a small hiccup can happen.

In plain terms: getting to the right entrance early is how you protect the “skip-the-line” advantage.

Musée Rodin: How The Thinker Changes the Atmosphere

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - Musée Rodin: How The Thinker Changes the Atmosphere
Rodin is the mental palate cleanser after Orsay. Where Orsay is all about color and brushwork, Rodin is about shape, posture, and the drama of surfaces.

This ticket includes skip-the-line entry at Rodin, and once you’re in, you can take your time. Rodin’s work is famous for a reason, and his iconic sculpture The Thinker is the kind of image you understand more the longer you look.

Why Rodin is great at the end of the day

Rodin feels calmer. The museum’s flow encourages walking around pieces to see how light and angle shift what you think you’re seeing. That makes it a smart second stop after Orsay, especially if you want variety instead of another fast, painting-heavy hour.

Also, Rodin is the kind of place where “I’ll just look for a minute” easily turns into “okay, I’ll take the long route.” Your ticket lets you.

You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Paris

Order and Timing: How to Build a Realistic Half-Day or Full-Day Plan

This experience is listed with a 3-hour duration, but that’s only a starting point. In practice, your pace controls everything.

Here’s a sensible approach that fits how most people experience these two museums:

  • Start at Orsay when you’re fresh. Concentrate on the Impressionist/Post‑Impressionist highlights first.
  • Plan a slower handoff to Rodin. Treat it like a de-stress session: look, walk around sculptures, then circle back if something grabs you.

If you’re the kind of visitor who reads placards and pauses often, you’ll probably want more than 3 hours overall. Even if you don’t, give yourself buffer time for getting from museum to museum and lining up at the right door.

The open-ticket advantage

You can visit any time and any day within validity. There’s no timeslot to hunt down and no forced “arrival window.” That means you can choose the best moment for your day—morning energy or late-afternoon calm—and still hit both museums.

The Value Check: Is $53 Worth It for Two Big Names?

At about $53 per person, this combo is priced like a “smart shortcut” rather than a casual add-on. The value comes from two things you actually feel on-site:

  1. Less friction getting into major museums (dedicated Orsay Entrance C1 and Rodin skip-the-line)
  2. Two museums for one decision, so you’re not juggling separate tickets while availability gets tight

There’s another angle too: time flexibility. When you can’t get timed entry and you still want both museums, the combo acts like a backup plan that still keeps your day usable.

In short, it’s worth it when you care about not wasting your Paris hours in lines, and when you want Orsay + Rodin without turning your schedule into a stressed spreadsheet.

What’s Not Included (And How You Should Plan Around It)

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - What’s Not Included (And How You Should Plan Around It)
This ticket covers entry and museum access. It does not include everything you might assume is automatic.

Not included:

  • Audio guide
  • Food
  • Transportation

What I recommend you do

  • If an audio guide matters to you, plan to rent or download one separately once you’re there.
  • Build in a simple food plan nearby. These museums can take long enough that you’ll likely want a snack break before you run out of steam.
  • Don’t treat the museums as walking distance freebies. You’ll still be moving through Paris, so factor in travel time between sites.

This combo saves you time on entrances. It doesn’t remove the normal reality that Paris is a real city with real distances.

Accessibility and Comfort: Good to Know Before You Go

The experience is listed as wheelchair accessible, and that’s a big practical plus for mobility planning.

What you should still do is keep your expectations flexible. Museums can have different floor surfaces and crowd patterns depending on the day, so giving yourself extra time to route smoothly is always wise—especially when you’re also trying to hit a specific entrance.

Booking Questions I’d Ask Before I Spend

When I’m deciding on a combo ticket, I focus on three practical items:

  • Can I use it on my schedule?
  • Will it help me avoid annoying delays?
  • Does it include the “right doors” so I’m not stuck figuring it out on the spot?

This one scores well. You get open tickets (no timed entry required), and you have clear entry handling at both museums, including the Rodin skip-the-line and Orsay Entrance C1.

One more detail that can affect your smoothness: you receive tickets about 24 hours before your booked date. That doesn’t block you, but it’s smart to wait for the ticket message rather than planning as if you already have it in hand.

Should You Book This Orsay + Rodin Combo?

Paris: Orsay Museum and Rodin Museum Combo Entry Ticket - Should You Book This Orsay + Rodin Combo?
Yes—if your priority is seeing both museums without turning entry lines into your main activity.

Book it if:

  • You want Orsay’s Impressionist lineup and Rodin’s sculpture masterpieces in the same day
  • You like the flexibility of no timeslot and the ability to go at the moment that fits your energy
  • You’re trying to protect time and not waste it at busy entrances

Skip it (or consider a different option) if:

  • You need an audio guide included with the ticket (it isn’t part of this package)
  • You dislike the idea of needing to have the correct ticket code ready for scanning at entry

If your goal is a focused art day—great paintings, then great sculpture—this combo is a strong, efficient choice that respects your schedule.

FAQ

Where do I enter at the Musée d’Orsay?

Go to Entrance C1 at the Musée d’Orsay and present your ticket there.

How do I get into the Rodin Museum with this ticket?

The Rodin Museum portion includes skip-the-line entry through a separate entrance.

Is there a specific time slot I must use?

No. This ticket is open entry. You can visit any time and any day within the ticket’s validity period.

How long can I stay in each museum?

You can spend as much time as you like in each museum. The tickets are for one visit per museum.

What is included with the combo ticket?

You get access to the permanent collection and temporary exhibitions in both museums.

Do I get an audio guide with the ticket?

No. An audio guide is not included.

When will I receive the tickets?

You receive your tickets 24 hours before your booked date.

How long are the tickets valid?

The tickets are valid for 3 months.

Where is the Musée Rodin located?

The address is 77 Rue de Varenne, 75007 Paris, France.

Is the experience wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is listed as wheelchair accessible.

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