REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Montmartre Tour with Local Guide
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Voilà Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Montmartre has you walking uphill, smiling. This 2-hour guided walk takes you past Montmartre’s most famous backdrops, with local stories from your guide, René Kim. You’ll hit classic photo moments, then linger where artists and legends still feel close.
I like the way the route is built around names you already know. You get a structured stop at Moulin Rouge, then you move on to the Place du Tertre area and end at Sacré-Cœur, so the trip feels like a clean Montmartre highlight reel. I also like the small details: Dalida’s bust, Le Lapin Agile, and the walk through cobbled streets where mystery stories fit the setting.
One thing to weigh: the overall rating is just okay (3.4 from 8 reviews), and there’s at least one complaint about a last-minute cancellation and a slow refund. If your plans are tight, keep that in mind and consider booking with flexibility.
In This Review
- Key things that matter on this Montmartre walk
- Getting Oriented at Metro Blanche: A simple start point
- Moulin Rouge and the Blanche area: the iconic warm-up
- Café des Deux Moulins: a quick photo stop that still counts
- Moulin de la Galette: cobblestones, windmill vibes, and time to look
- Place du Tertre: the artist square with guided time
- La Maison Rose, Dalida’s bust, and Le Lapin Agile legends
- Sacré-Cœur finish: a satisfying ending point
- What you get for $46: value check (not just a price tag)
- Languages and guide style: René Kim in your language
- Who this tour fits best (and who might feel annoyed)
- Book with eyes open: cancellations do happen
- Should you book this Montmartre tour?
- FAQ
- Where does the tour meet?
- How long is the Montmartre walking tour?
- What are the main stops on the route?
- What languages are offered?
- Is food included?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
Key things that matter on this Montmartre walk

- Meet at Metro Blanche (green kiosk exit) so you can start on time.
- René Kim guides the experience, with stories tied to artists and the neighborhood vibe.
- Moulin Rouge is a scheduled photo stop, not just a drive-by look.
- Place du Tertre gets a guided 20 minutes, enough time to feel the artist-square atmosphere.
- You finish at Sacré-Cœur, giving the walk a proper ending point.
- Local delicacies at a bistro are included, so you’re not doing Montmartre on empty.
Getting Oriented at Metro Blanche: A simple start point

The tour starts in the exit of the Metro Blanche, at the green kiosk. That matters more than it sounds. Montmartre is made for wandering, but the start point has to be clear, especially if you’re arriving by metro and not taxiing up the hill.
Your walking time is about 2 hours, and the itinerary moves in short, timed segments. That style fits Montmartre well: you get mini “chapters” rather than one long slog where everyone’s patience evaporates.
You’ll also want to wear comfortable shoes and bring water. Even if you’re in good shape, Montmartre’s streets are the kind that make you notice the texture underfoot.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Paris
Moulin Rouge and the Blanche area: the iconic warm-up

The first big visual hit is Moulin Rouge. Expect a photo stop plus a short guided moment (about 15 minutes). This is one of the most useful ways to experience it because you’re not guessing where to stand or what to notice.
What I’d watch for here is the contrast. Moulin Rouge is loud in reputation, but the surrounding streets are much calmer once you step away from the crowd energy. Your guide’s job in this first segment is to help you read the place, not just photograph it.
This section is also where timing matters. If you’re chasing a perfect picture, you’ll appreciate having a defined block of time instead of spending 20 minutes deciding where to look.
Café des Deux Moulins: a quick photo stop that still counts

After Moulin Rouge, there’s a brief stop at Café des Deux Moulins for photos (about 5 minutes). Short stops can feel like filler, but in Montmartre, they work as breathing points. You’re moving from one landmark feel to the next, and a quick camera moment keeps momentum without wearing you out.
If you care more about photos than stories, this stop is mostly about getting the shot. If you like context, use the minutes you have to ask your guide what to look for as you move on.
Moulin de la Galette: cobblestones, windmill vibes, and time to look

Next comes Moulin de la Galette, with another photo stop plus a guided visit (about 14 minutes). This is longer than the Café des Deux Moulins stop, so it’s your chance to slow down a bit and actually take in the area rather than just snapping and sprinting.
Why this stop works: it ties Montmartre’s look to a specific neighborhood identity. Windmill-era imagery is part of the Montmartre story, and having a guided visit means you don’t treat it like a postcard without meaning.
Also, it’s a good moment to check your pace. If your legs are already feeling it, now is when you can judge whether you need to take the next cobbled sections at a steady stroll.
Place du Tertre: the artist square with guided time

Place du Tertre is given the most attention after the big sights, with about 20 minutes of visit and guided tour. This is where Montmartre’s bohemian reputation turns from a slogan into a lived-in feel.
You’re not just looking at street scenes. You’re getting guidance on what the artists have meant in this area and how the neighborhood drew creative people over time. Even if you’re not an art-world person, this kind of story helps your eyes land on details you might otherwise miss.
In practice, this is also the square where you’ll see a lot of activity, and your guide’s pacing helps keep it enjoyable instead of chaotic. It’s the segment where you can decide whether you want to do some extra looking before the group moves again.
La Maison Rose, Dalida’s bust, and Le Lapin Agile legends

Between the major landmarks, the tour weaves in the fun Montmartre extras. You’ll stop by La Maison Rose, see the bust of Dalida, and pass by Le Lapin Agile.
These aren’t just cute names to collect. They do a key job: they turn Montmartre from famous-to-familiar. When your guide connects these places to people and past scenes, the neighborhood stops being just a photo route.
This is also where you’ll likely enjoy the “mysteries” vibe described for the cobbled streets. You’re in an area where art, performance, and local legends overlap. A guided walk is the easiest way to feel that blend without doing your own research while you’re already tired from walking.
If you’re into French pop culture or music history, Dalida’s stop is a highlight. If you’re more into atmosphere, Le Lapin Agile’s legend-by-passing can still be satisfying, since you get the story even if you don’t linger for a deep dive.
Sacré-Cœur finish: a satisfying ending point

The tour ends back at the meeting area, with the final stop at the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre. This end point matters because it’s a natural “cap” for the whole walk. You start with show-business energy at Moulin Rouge, and you finish with the basilica’s presence.
From a reader point of view, this is a good structure. You’re less likely to feel like you got dropped somewhere random. Ending at a single named place also makes it easier to keep exploring after the tour, whether you want food nearby or more wandering in the side streets.
Don’t rush this last stretch. Sacré-Cœur is one of those places where even a short guided finish gives you enough time to reset and take in the moment before you head elsewhere.
What you get for $46: value check (not just a price tag)
At $46 per person for about 2 hours, you’re paying for a guided route through major Montmartre stops plus a few signature stops that give the area personality. This is not the kind of tour where you only stand in front of monuments and call it done.
Here’s what’s included in a practical way:
- a guided Montmartre walk
- visits to key landmarks like Moulin Rouge, Sacré-Cœur, and Place du Tertre
- authentic local delicacies at a bistro
- a multilingual live guide (Spanish, English, French, Lingala)
What’s not included: hotel pickup and drop-off. So plan to get yourself to Metro Blanche.
Is it good value? For me, it’s strongest if you want someone to point out what matters while you walk, and you also want a small food stop without arranging it yourself. If you’re the type who enjoys planning your own Montmartre route and stopping on your own schedule, you might find better value by building a DIY route. But if you want an easy, organized walk with context and a built-in bistro break, $46 feels reasonable.
Languages and guide style: René Kim in your language

The guide listed is René Kim, described as a passionate Parisian. The tour offers live guidance in Spanish, English, French, and Lingala.
That multilingual option is genuinely useful. Montmartre can feel like it’s built for tourists who already know what everything is. Having a guide who can explain the why in your language reduces that friction.
Even if your French is basic, you’ll get more out of the cobblestone streets when someone can connect the names—Moulin Rouge, Dalida’s bust, Place du Tertre—to the human stories behind them.
Who this tour fits best (and who might feel annoyed)
This tour makes the most sense if you:
- want a guided route that hits Montmartre’s big names without overthinking logistics
- enjoy neighborhoods with stories behind the sights, not just landmarks
- like photo moments but also want a guided explanation
- want a simple food stop included, not a separate planning mission
You might be less happy if:
- you’re extremely time-sensitive and hate last-minute changes (there’s at least one reported cancellation issue)
- you prefer slow, long wandering with no timed structure
- you expect a deep, museum-level history session; this is a walking tour with several short segments
Book with eyes open: cancellations do happen
This experience has a free-cancellation option (up to 24 hours in advance) and a reserve-and-pay-later approach. Those are both there to protect your plans. Still, one review problem mentions a cancellation happening just two hours before and a refund taking a while.
So my practical advice is simple: if your schedule is tight, don’t treat this as a guaranteed show at the last second. Keep your backup plans ready, and if you’re paying attention to refunds, know you may need patience if something goes sideways.
Should you book this Montmartre tour?
I’d book it if you want a guided, efficient Montmartre walk with famous stops, story connections, and a small included bistro moment. René Kim’s route design does a good job of mixing the big stage-name sights (Moulin Rouge) with the more personal neighborhood cues (Dalida, La Maison Rose, Le Lapin Agile).
I’d hesitate if your trip is inflexible or you rely on this specific tour as a fixed anchor with no wiggle room, given the reported cancellation and delayed refund experience from one unhappy review.
If you can book with flexibility, lace up your shoes, and show up at Metro Blanche (green kiosk), this is a solid way to understand Montmartre without spending your whole day figuring it out.
FAQ
Where does the tour meet?
The tour starts at the exit of the Metro Blanche at the green kiosk.
How long is the Montmartre walking tour?
It lasts about 2 hours.
What are the main stops on the route?
You’ll visit Moulin Rouge (photo stop and guided time), Café des Deux Moulins (photo stop), Moulin de la Galette (photo stop and guided visit), Place du Tertre (visit and guided tour), and end at the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur de Montmartre. You’ll also stop by La Maison Rose, see the bust of Dalida, and pass by Le Lapin Agile.
What languages are offered?
The live guide is available in Spanish, English, French, and Lingala.
Is food included?
Yes. Authentic local delicacies at a bistro are included.
Is hotel pickup included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.































