TimetableĪlthough the tour is totally flexible, the start times from the airport are for arrivals between 6 am and 6 pm. You'll be able to visit Montmartre and visit the Sacre Coeur Basilica and the Place du Tertre. If your layover is eight hours, you'll have more time to discover the French capital, specifically about five hours. If your airport layover is five hours, you'll have about two hours to visit the main places in Paris, such as the Eiffel Tower, the Garnier Opera House, the Tuileries Gardens until you reach the Louvre Museum or walk around the Champs-Elysées, following the Arc de Triomphe. For this reason, the duration of the tour will be about three and a half hours less than the layover. Please note that the total time from the airport (both Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports) is approximately 80 minutes, and you'll need to be at the airport at least two hours before the departure of your flight. You can also adapt the itinerary to your preferences.
We'll be waiting for you at the arrivals terminal holding a sign with your name on and, depending on the time of your layover, you'll enjoy more or less time in the City of Light.
Or can I stay airside since I'm not going through security?Īirside, by definition, means past security, so I'm unsure what you were thinking of here.The Paris Layover Tour is private, includes vehicle, and an English speaking driver from the airport pick up to the return transfer. will you even have your boarding pass for next day's flight? Will security in T1 allow you in? Seems doubtful.Īre these flights even on a single ticket? You apparently need to transfer from 2D to 1, which I believe is only landside. I question whether you're going to be able to get to that point though, since your flight isn't until the following day. If you clear exit immigration, you have left the Schengen Area. France, like Slovenia, is in the Schengen Area. If I go through passport control, am I then "landside"? I don't understand why you'd want to do this. Check if your destination has a subreddit to find local events, meetups or a travel partner.User created guides / "so you want to go.".View News / Articles Hide News / Articles Where to Go / What to Do It's rude to the people that responded and makes it hard for other people with similar questions to find your post. Example of an excellent postĭo not delete posts after receiving substantive responses. Low-effort posts ("Peru: tell me everything!", "Where should I go?") will be removed without further notice. This applies to all questions, image, and blog posts. Stay around to answer questions or respond to comments. We were able to see much more on the tour then we ever would have been able to get to on our own. It was a little more money but we are glad we did it. Present the research you've already done so we don't feel like we're doing everything for you we are not your travel agents. At first we were just going to try to go off on our own, but after some research we decided to do the layover tour. Visa and passport questions: state your country of citizenship. No quotes, selfies, or other clichés: we're not your facebook.īe as specific as possible: where you're starting, dates of travel, budget, interests, places you've been, things you like and dislike. If submitting an image or video include context - read this section of the FAQ. One or two word titles rarely provide enough information. Check our destinations of the week page for country and city tips. Search the subreddit to see if topics have been covered already.
Cross the glass pyramid and wander aimlessly through its maze of galleries, with iconic artworks such as the Mona Lisa, The Coronation of Napoleon, Delacroix’s Liberty Leading the People, or the Venus de Milo. Your pictures, questions, stories, or any good content is welcome.Ĭlickbait, spam, memes, ads, brochures, classifieds, surveys or self-promotion will be removed. 6- Explore the Iconic Artworks at the Louvre From the Royal Palace to the world’s most visited museum in the world, you cannot miss the Louvre, one of the most iconic sites in Paris. r/travel is a community about exploring the world.