REVIEW · PARIS
Montmarte painting session and walking tour for kids !
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Trivial Guides · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Montmartre becomes a kids art adventure. You’ll spend two lively hours turning cobblestone lanes into a game and ending with real painting in front of a Paris view. It’s a simple idea with strong results: learn about Montmartre’s artists through quests, then make your own work with provided supplies.
Two things I like a lot: the kids-centered mazes and challenges that keep everyone moving, and the hands-on painting time that feels like you’re doing what artists once did. One consideration: Montmartre has steep streets, so plan for a walking-heavy outing.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth showing up for
- Meeting Point: Montmartre Cemetery Entrance
- Walking Tour for Kids: Games, Riddles, and Little Challenges
- Learning Montmartre’s Artists the Fun Way
- The Maze Sheets and Printed Missions: Why They Work
- The Steep Streets Factor (What to Plan For)
- Panoramic Painting Stop: Create Your Own Montmartre Masterpiece
- Youth Prize: The Little Moment That Makes It Memorable
- What’s Included (So You Don’t Overpack)
- Languages and Guide Style: English, French, Spanish
- Price and Value: Is $35 a Good Deal?
- Who This Tour Fits Best
- Should You Book This Kids Montmartre Painting Session?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Montmartre painting session and kids walking tour?
- Where do we meet for the tour?
- What is included with the painting materials?
- Do you provide food or drinks during the activity?
- Is the tour inside any landmarks?
- What languages is the live guide available in?
- Is there a prize at the end?
- Is the tour suitable for families who prefer easy walking?
- What are the cancellation and payment options?
Key highlights worth showing up for

- Montmartre as a playground with games, riddles, and mini missions for kids
- Action-packed 2 hours that blend art facts with physical fun
- Painting with a panoramic finish, using a big canvas plus a smaller sketch canvas
- Guide Billy’s kid energy—the tour is built for interaction, not lectures
- A prize for the child you can call Youth at the end of the session
Meeting Point: Montmartre Cemetery Entrance

You’ll meet right in front of the Montmartre Cemetery entrance. That’s useful because it anchors you in the real neighborhood right away, not in some distant “tourist starting zone.” It also means you’ll begin with streets that feel local, narrow, and character-filled.
Because this is outdoors and active, I’d treat this start like a “show up ready” moment. Comfortable shoes matter here more than fashion. And if your kids get grumpy when they’re cold or wet, pack an extra layer—this walk is meant for moving, not waiting.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Paris
Walking Tour for Kids: Games, Riddles, and Little Challenges

The main event is a guided walking adventure designed for young explorers. Instead of long explanations, you’ll get a steady rhythm of tasks that keep kids engaged. Think games and riddles, plus printed maze sheets to solve and color along the way.
The “maze” part is more than a gimmick. It nudges kids to actually pay attention to streets and turns. In a place like Montmartre, where lanes can twist and slope, that kind of structure helps everyone feel like they’re navigating the area—not just following an adult.
You also won’t be stuck in one spot. The tour uses the neighborhood itself as the classroom: you walk, solve, stop, and then move again. That matters for families. Two hours can drag when everyone’s tired, but this format keeps momentum.
Learning Montmartre’s Artists the Fun Way

This tour doesn’t try to teach art history like a textbook. It introduces legendary names kids can latch onto—Picasso, Van Gogh, and Utrillo—through game-style storytelling.
What I like about this approach is that it gives you something to talk about afterward. When kids hear an artist name in a clue, then see it tied to what they’re doing, it sticks. You’re not just collecting facts. You’re building a mental map of Montmartre as an artists’ neighborhood.
The guide—Billy—shows up as a warm, engaging presence. Multiple families highlight how well he involves kids and how the experience is fun and educational for both children and adults. In other words, you’re not silently enduring a kid-focused tour while your coffee cools.
The Maze Sheets and Printed Missions: Why They Work

You get printed sheets for the games and mazes, and kids complete them on the spot. The set includes activities you can color, which is great because it gives a satisfying “I did something” finish even between stops.
These materials are also handy if your kids need a quick reset. When they focus on a page, they slow down just enough to pay attention to the guide’s directions. And if you’ve ever tried to wrangle kids through crowded Paris streets, you know that small structure can save the day.
The Steep Streets Factor (What to Plan For)
Montmartre is famously hilly, and this tour includes steep walking. The experience is for people who enjoy lovely walks with history, but it’s not a flat stroll.
If you have very small kids, kids in strollers, or anyone who gets winded easily, plan smart:
- Wear shoes that grip on cobblestones.
- Start with a snack before you meet (since no food is provided).
- Bring a calm attitude for slower moments—steep streets can be part of the lesson, not a crisis.
Panoramic Painting Stop: Create Your Own Montmartre Masterpiece

The finale is the best kind of payoff: you settle into a panoramic spot overlooking Paris and paint. This is where the tour shifts from “follow the clues” to “make something.”
You’ll get two canvas options: a big canvas for painting and a small canvas for sketching. You also receive paint, brushes, a sketching pencil, and color crayons. That’s a smart mix because kids can choose a path that matches their comfort level—paint big ideas or sketch first and color in.
This is also the moment where you see why the walking game matters. By the time you reach the view, kids are ready to slow down. They’ve been moving and solving; now they can focus on creation and enjoy the scene.
And yes, rain can happen—one family even called out rain during their session. Since it’s outdoors, come prepared. A light rain layer and a bag or small towel for materials can make a big difference in how smooth the painting part feels.
Youth Prize: The Little Moment That Makes It Memorable

At the end of the tour, a prize is awarded to a child called Youth. This is simple, but it adds a fun finish line. Kids like to aim at something, and it gives them a clear reason to stay engaged through the last tasks.
It also helps turn the whole experience into a memory. Not every family outing hands back an achievement moment. Here, the tour ends with recognition, not just leaving with photos.
What’s Included (So You Don’t Overpack)
Your ticket includes painting materials and the game sheets. Specifically, you’ll get:
- A big canvas for painting
- A small canvas for sketching
- Paint, brushes, and a sketching pencil
- Color crayons
- Prints of the games and mazes to complete and color
- A live guide who takes kids through the Montmartre story
So you don’t need to bring art supplies. That said, no one will hand you snacks or drinks during the activity. If your kids need sugar or water on demand, plan ahead.
Also, this is an outdoor experience. You won’t go inside the listed landmarks. That’s useful to know because it keeps expectations aligned: you’re there for street life, views, and activities, not museum-style interiors.
Languages and Guide Style: English, French, Spanish

The live guide works in English, French, and Spanish. This is a practical advantage for families, especially if you’re traveling with mixed language comfort.
Billy is consistently described as kind, generous, and able to connect with kids. That connection is the difference between an “okay” kids tour and a tour where your child insists on doing it again. From what families report, he makes the pacing work for kids and still keeps adults interested.
Price and Value: Is $35 a Good Deal?
At $35 per person for a two-hour Montmartre experience, you’re paying for three things at once: guided storytelling, guided game structure, and a real painting activity with materials included.
Here’s where the value lands for me:
- You’re not just walking. You’re solving and creating.
- Materials are included (canvas, paint, brushes, crayons). That cuts down on what you’d otherwise buy.
- The tour is interactive, and the guide is set up to involve kids rather than keep them passive.
Is it the cheapest way to spend time in Montmartre? Probably not. But it’s also not the kind of “generic sightseeing” ticket that fades fast. For families who want an activity that feels purposeful, $35 makes sense.
Who This Tour Fits Best
This tour is especially good if you want a family activity that doesn’t feel like work for anyone. It fits well if:
- Your kids like games, challenges, and short bursts of focus
- You want a Montmartre experience beyond looking at views
- You’d like your kids to take home more than just photos
It may feel like a tough match if you have kids who struggle with physical walking due to the steep streets. But even then, you can plan around it with pacing and breaks.
Also, if your kids love drawing or painting, you’ll likely enjoy the last part even more, since the supplies are ready and the setting is made for looking out at Paris.
Should You Book This Kids Montmartre Painting Session?
I’d book it if you want a structured, kid-friendly way to see Montmartre without losing the day to indecision. The combination of street games, an interactive guide, and a painting finale makes it feel like a complete experience, not a half-hour activity padded with walking.
Skip it if your group needs a flat, low-effort outing, because Montmartre’s slopes are part of the reality here. And if you don’t want to deal with outdoors weather, plan for layers.
If your kids are 7-ish through early teen years, this is the sweet spot where challenges land without feeling too simple or too complex. But even younger kids can enjoy it if they’re game for movement and attention to clues.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Montmartre painting session and kids walking tour?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
Where do we meet for the tour?
You meet right in front of the Montmartre Cemetery entrance.
What is included with the painting materials?
You get a big canvas for painting, a small canvas for sketching, paint, brushes, a sketching pencil, and color crayons. You also get printed game and maze sheets to complete and color.
Do you provide food or drinks during the activity?
No. No beverages or foods are distributed during the activity.
Is the tour inside any landmarks?
No. It’s an outdoor activity, and you will not go inside the listed landmarks.
What languages is the live guide available in?
The guide is available in English, French, and Spanish.
Is there a prize at the end?
Yes. A prize is awarded to a child called Youth at the end of the tour.
Is the tour suitable for families who prefer easy walking?
It includes steep streets. The tour is for people who enjoy lovely walks filled with history.
What are the cancellation and payment options?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. You can also reserve now and pay later.

































