Kid-Friendly Louvre Museum Private Guided Tour
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed immediately
- This activity is available in your language
- This option includes FREE cancellation—book now, risk-free!
Experience Highlights
Experience with your little ones a tour full of art, culture and history with this private guided tour of the Louvre Museum for children, exclusively for you and your group.
You'll get to explore some 35,000 works of art by icons such as Michelangelo, Jacques-Louis David and Leonardo Da Vinci, including the authentic Mona Lisa. A professional guide, specialised in teaching children, will take you on a journey of learning and fun.
- You will explore the Louvre's works of art with your little ones.
- Learn about the artists and their works together with a professional guide.
- You will live a unique and private experience, exclusively for you and your family.
What’s included
- Entrance to the Louvre Museum
- Guided tour of the Louvre Museum for children
- Professional guide specialising in children
- Private tour, exclusively for you and your group
Select participants and date
Step by Step
Discover the world's greatest works of art as a family by joining this guided tour of the Louvre Museum for children. A professional guide specialised in teaching children will accompany you on a tour full of culture and history , exclusively for you and your group.
You can choose between a two- or three-hour visit, depending on your preferences and the ages of your children.
Together with your little ones, you will contemplate paintings such as Leonardo Da Vinci's La Gioconda, also known as the Mona Lisa, considered the most famous painting in the world.
You will live a unique and unforgettable experience when choosing among the 300 rooms of the museum, where more than 35 thousand works of art of incalculable value are exhibited, by authors such as Michelangelo, Jacques-Louis David, Gian Lorenzo Bernini and Théodore Géricault, among many others.
In addition to the canvases, there are countless epoch-making sculptures, such as the Venus de Milo, which dates from 120 BC and whose face is attributed to Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
Another essential statue is the Winged Victory of Samothrace, which is believed to have been sculpted in 190 BC. It shows the figure of an angel about three metres high, whose arms and head have never been found, making it a very beautiful, mysterious and enigmatic work.
If you want to take the experience to another level, there is a learning studio on the ground floor of the Richelieu wing, where activities are held free of charge, in French, so that the little ones can paint and share with art as the protagonist.