How To Virtually Tour of Paris’ Louvre & See Every Masterpiece
If you’re an art enthusiast, the Louvre is probably at the top of your Paris or museum wish list.
As the world’s largest and most visited museum, it boasts an impressive collection of 35,000 artworks, ranging from the 6th century BC to the 19th century AD, all housed within a magnificent Renaissance palace.
However, as you might imagine, visiting the Louvre can be quite the experience.
It’s often packed with crowds, flashing cameras, selfie sticks, and people bustling around or trying to touch the art. This can make it feel a bit chaotic and overwhelming.
But there’s good news! You can now explore the Louvre from the comfort of your home, avoiding the hustle and bustle.
I’ll guide you through how to virtually visit this iconic museum and view all its must-see masterpieces. Get ready to enjoy your personal Leonardo or Michelangelo experience in peaceful solitude.
Layout of the Louvre
The Louvre is a U shape, divided into three wings: Denon, Sully, and Richelieu. Each of the wings has four floors.
The Denon Wing is home to the Louvre’s best known art work, including the world’s most famous painting, the Mona Lisa .
The Sully Wing is known for its statuary and antiquities.
The Richelieu Wing houses the lavish apartments of Napoleon III and some famed Dutch art works.
Virtual Tour of Louvre Masterpieces
Let’s take an online virtual tour of the Louvre, wing by wing.
You can see all the must see masterpieces via 360 video tours, YouTube videos, or online tours on the Louvre Website itself. For a lengthy overall YouTube tour of the Louvre, click here .
The Denon Wing
The Denon Wing is the most visited part of the Louvre. It boasts the fabulously ornate Apollo Gallery, with high arches and frescoed ceilings.
It’s a shrine to Sun King Louis XIV. The paintings were begun by Charles Le Brun and completed by Eugene Delacroix.
1. French Paintings in the Denon Wing
The Denon Wing is most renowned for its iconic French paintings from the Neoclassical and Romantic periods of art history. The must see French masterpieces include:
- Eugene Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People
- Jacques-Louis David, The Coronation of Napoleon
- Theodore Gericault, Raft of the Medusa
- Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, Grand Odalisque
You can take a virtual tour of the recently restored Apollo Gallery on the Louvre’s website here . You can learn about the Coronation of Napoleon from this Louvre YouTuber .
You can take a virtual video tour of the world’s most famous French painting, Liberty Leading the People here . And learn about the Grand Odalisque here .
Via my blog, you can also explore the Louvre’s underrated masterpieces in the Denon Wing.
I also have a guide to what I think is the best painting in the Louvre , Gericault’s Raft of the Medusa , a then-scandalous painting based on a true story.
2. Italian Paintings in the Denon Wing
The Denon Wing also boasts treasures from the Italian Renaissance.
This is where you’ll find works by Sandro Botticelli , Leonardo da Vinci , Raphael , and Titian. The must see masterpieces include:
- Leonardo Da Vinci, Mona Lisa
- Leonardo Da Vinci, The Virgin and Child With St. Anne
- Titian, Pastoral Concert
- Raphael, Portrait of Baldasarre Castiglione
- Paolo Veronese, The Wedding Feast at Cana
You can take a virtual 360 tour of the Grand Gallery, which houses much of the Louvre’s Italian art.
If you’re a Mona Lisa fan, the Louvre is offering the museum’s first virtual reality experience , which brings to life the story of the enigmatic portrait. You can also take a virtual tour of the Mona Lisa here , with Smarthistory, an artsy YouTube channel.
In the Louvre’s busiest room, the Mona Lisa stares across at Veronese’s massive Wedding Feast at Cana . You can take a virtual tour and get the full scoop on the Louvre’s largest painting here .
You can virtually tour Raphael’s paintings, including Baldasarre , on Google Arts & Culture . Learn about Titian’s Pastoral Concert , which inspired Edouard Monet’s groundbreaking painting Luncheon on the Grass , here .
READ : 3 Day Impressionism Tour of Paris
3. Sculptures in the Denon Wing
If you prefer sculpture to painting, the Denon Wing has one of the world’s most magnificent sculptures — the Winged Victory of Samothrac e.
It also has a room on the ground dedicated to Italian sculpture, the Michelangelo Gallery. It’s one of my favorites spots in the Louvre.
It’s home to Michelangelo’s Dying Slave and Rebellious Slave , from 1513-15. These sculptures seem to struggle to escape the marble.
They were originally intended for the Tomb of Pope Julius II in Rome. But Michelangelo got distracted with the ceiling of the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel and could never finish the tomb.
READ : Masterpieces of the Vatican
You can also find Antonio Canova’s incredibly romantic Psyche Revived by Cupid’s Kiss . It’s considered Canova’s master work.
You can take a virtual tour of Michelangelo’s Slaves here , a virtual tour of Canova’s work on Google Arts & Culture , and a virtual tour of Canova’s Psyche here . You can take a virtual 360 tour of the Winged Victory here .
2. The Sully Wing
In the Sully Wing, you’ll find some of the world’s most beautiful sculptures, antiquities, and the remains of the Medieval Louvre.
One of the Louvre’s greatest ladies, a Hellenistic masterpiece, is here — the Venus de Milo . Even without arms, Venus de Milo is considered the classical epitome of female beauty.
You can also see another masterwork, Sleeping Hermaphrodite , a mythological merger of a male and female body. The ancient sculpture was discovered in Rome near the Baths of Diocletian.
Cardinal Scipione Borghese commissioned the Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini to carve the mattress in 1619. He later sold the piece to the French when he was strapped for cash.
READ : The Bernini Trail in Rome
The Egyptian Antiquities are a well loved highlight of the Sully Wing. The collection features the 12 ton Great Sphinx of Tanis, model ships, ancient sculptures, a massive statue of Ramses II, and a sarcophagus room.
The medieval Louvre is also a fascinating place. Originally, the Louvre was a 12th century fortress built by King Philippe Auguste.
The lower levels are all that remain. Archeologists discovered and excavated the underground medieval remains during the construction of I.M. Pei’s pyramid in 1983-85.
You can take a virtual tour of all the Louvre’s Roman Antiquities here , the Venus de Milo here , and the Sleeping Hermaphrodite here . You can take a virtual tour of the famed Egyptian Antiquities here and walk around the Medieval Louvre here .
3. The Richelieu Wing
In Richelieu Wing, you can admire the Louvre’s Mesopotamian Antiquities, Napoleon III’s Second Empire rooms, sculptures, and some amazing Dutch masterpieces.
The Richelieu Wing boasts the spectacular Cour Marly, a spacious glass roofed courtyard.
It’s stuffed with 17th and 18th marble and white stone sculptures, many commissioned by Sun King Louis XIV and Louis XV. There’s also a magnificent Fountain of Diana, dating from 1550.
Perhaps the most famous part of the Richelieu Wing is the Napoleon III apartments. They were built between 1852-57 to accommodate visiting dignitaries. They’re sumptuous.
Crystal chandeliers glitter, gilded furniture gleams, and the ceilings sport beautiful frescos — all set amid red velvet and red drapery. The Rococo state dining room could seat almost 100 people.
You can virtually tour the Cour Puget here and the Cour Marly here . You can take a virtual tour of Napoleon’s Apartments here .
The Richelieu Wing is also home to some unmissable Dutch old master paintings, including:
- Johannes Vermeer, The Lacemaker
- Johannes Vermeer, The Astronomer
- Rembrandt, Bathsheba at Her Bath.
- Hieronymous Bosch, Ship of Fools
- Georges de la Tour, The Cheat with the Ace of Diamonds
From the Louvre’s website, you can see and get an education on The Lacemaker here , Bathsheba here , Ship of Fools here , and The Cheat here .
If you’re a Beyonce fan, her recent music video featured pieces from the Louvre. Now, you can follow the Beyonce Louvre Trail on the Louvre website.
The Louvre is also featuring an Artwork of the Day . If you’re interested in the history of the Louvre, here’s my guide .
Tickets For The Louvre
Naturally, if you decide to visit the Louvre in person, it’s essential to p re-book a skip the line ticket . If you take your art seriously, you may want to book a guided tour .
I hope you’ve enjoyed my guide to taking a virtual tour of the Louvre. You may enjoy these other Paris travel guides:
- 3 day itinerary for Paris
- 3 day art weekend in Paris
- 5 day itinerary for Paris
- Hidden gems in Paris
- Guide to the Latin Quarter
- Guide to Montmartre
- Best museums in Paris
- Monet guide to Paris
- Louvre survival Tips
- Tourist traps to skip in Paris
- Guide to the Musee d’Orsay
If you’d like to take a virtual tour of the Louvre from home, pin it or later.
1 thought on “How To Virtually Tour of Paris’ Louvre & See Every Masterpiece”
Good day. I was wondering if you would recommend the Louvre at night . Is there a significant difference in terms of avoiding crowds, the lighting for pics and access to different wings?
Leave a Comment Cancel reply
Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Last Updated on January 20, 2024 by Leslie Livingston
- Skip to main content
- Keyboard shortcuts for audio player
Not Heading To Paris This Summer? The Louvre Has Digitized 482,000 Artworks
The Apollon Gallery at the Louvre museum in Paris on Jan. 14, 2020. Stephanie de Sakutin/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
The Apollon Gallery at the Louvre museum in Paris on Jan. 14, 2020.
One of the world's most massive museums has announced an encompassing digitization of its vast collection.
"The Louvre is dusting off its treasures, even the least-known," said Jean-Luc Martinez, President-Director of the Musée du Louvre, in a statement on Friday . "For the first time, anyone can access the entire collection of works from a computer or smartphone for free, whether they are on display in the museum, on loan, even long-term, or in storage."
Coronavirus Live Updates
France's louvre reopens most of the museum — sans big crowds.
Some of this is hyperbole. The entire collection is so huge, no one even knows how big it is. The Louvre's official release estimates about 482,000 works have been digitized in its collections database , representing about three quarters of the entire archive. (The museum's recently revamped homepage is designed for more casual visitors, especially those on cellphones, with translations in Spanish, English and Chinese.)
"It's just overwhelming," says Andrew McClellan, a Tufts University professor and author of Inventing the Louvre: Art, Politics and the Origins of the Modern Museum . The strategy of putting nearly everything online is in keeping with the Enlightenment ideals that shaped the museum after the French Revolution, he says: "collecting the world's knowledge together under one roof, and then making it available for researchers and the general public."
Major institutions have been digitizing their collections for many years, but the Louvre's online archives required especially exhaustive labor. Every image, according to the museum, is accompanied with scientific data: "title, artist, inventory number, dimensions, materials and techniques, date and place of production, object history, current location and bibliography. ... These documentary entries, drawn up by museum curators and researchers, come from two museum collection databases, and are updated on a daily basis."
Given the expense of running those databases, McClellan and other observers have wondered whether the Louvre may find ways to monetize some of these images, and whether the online collection will affect real-life attendance. ( " I am sure that this digital content is going to further inspire people to come to the Louvre to discover the collections in person," the museum's director said in his statement.)
'The Louvre Is Suffocating': Museum Closed As Workers Strike, Citing Overcrowding
It's also unclear how many of the online images may be of sacred objects, from countries other than France, and not meant to be casually viewed. The digital catalog includes items that may have been plundered — by Nazis or colonial forces — in a separate album titled "MNR" works , which stands for Musées Nationaux Récupération, or National Museums Recovery.
"This has to be coming up against these questions around restitution and repatriation and thinking about what the digitization of cultural heritage means within a context that is contested," observes Suse Anderson, a professor of Museum Studies at George Washington University , who studies the impact of digital technology on museums. She's generally impressed, she says, by the Louvre's online expansion, especially since it steers visitors beyond the obvious marquee works of art such as the Mona Lisa and the Venus de Milo .
Architecture
Landmark at the louvre: the pyramid turns 20.
"I'm a serendipitous browser," she says. "I'm not the person seeking the hero works. They're so easy to find. I'm the person who wants to find the unexpected."
Like the actual museum, the Louvre's online collection provides pathways towards new discoveries, Anderson says. "It helps you see things you might not otherwise. It helps you find surprises. And that's where I think you often get the connection to your own life, is when you find something that resonates, that isn't the thing you went looking for."
And online, you can ... Louvre ... the jostling crowds of tourists far behind.
You Can Now Explore the Louvre’s Entire Collection Online
A new digital database features 480,000 works from the Paris museum’s holdings
Nora McGreevy
Correspondent
When cultural institutions around the world were forced to shutter last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic , even the most popular art museum in the world felt the effects. The Louvre , home to such masterpieces as the Mona Lisa , welcomed just 2.7 million visitors in 2020—a 72 percent drop from 2019, when 9.6 million people flocked to the Paris museum.
But even as physical museums remained closed, art enthusiasts continued to seek inspiration in new ways : In that same pandemic year, 21 million people visited the Louvre’s website, according to a statement .
Thanks to a major website redesign and a new online collection database, browsing the historic museum’s holdings from home is easier than ever, reports Alaa Elassar for CNN . For the first time ever, the Louvre’s entire art collection is available to search online. The updated catalogue boasts more than 480,000 entries, from rare items stowed away in storage to the iconic Venus de Milo and Winged Victory of Samothrace . (Though the digital database is free to browse, offerings are not open access , meaning users cannot directly download, share or reuse the images.)
“Today, the Louvre is dusting off its treasures, even the least-known,” says the museum’s president, Jean-Luc Martinez, in the statement. “… [A]nyone can access the entire collection of works from a computer or smartphone for free, whether they are on display in the museum, on loan, even long-term, or in storage.”
Martinez adds, “The Louvre’s stunning cultural heritage is all now just a click away.”
Viewers can also click through an interactive map of the museum, virtually walking through the cavernous halls of the Renaissance castle or the sleek steel-and-glass pyramid designed by American architect I.M. Pei in 1989.
Previously, the public only had access to about 30,000 listings of works in the Louvre’s collections, reports Vincent Noce for the Art Newspaper . Per France24 , more than three-quarters of the entries in the Louvre’s online collection contain images and label information. The museum plans to continue to expand and improve the database in the coming months.
The archive also includes the collections of the Musée National Eugène-Delacroix , which is run by the Louvre, and the nearby Tuileries Garden , as well as a number of Nazi-looted artworks that are in the process of being returned to their original owners’ families.
According to the new online catalogue , about 61,000 works stolen by the Nazis were retrieved from Germany and brought back to France after World War II. Of these works, 45,000 have been returned to their rightful owners. A number of others were sold by the French state. The remaining 2,143 unclaimed works were categorized as National Museum Recovery (MNR) and entrusted to French cultural institutions, including the Louvre, for safekeeping.
Despite the Louvre’s involvement in repatriation efforts, lingering concerns remain that Nazi-looted art may have made its way into the Louvre’s permanent collections during the war. Since hiring curator Emmanuelle Polack to lead a wartime provenance research project in January 2020, the Louvre has checked nearly two-thirds of the 13,943 works it acquired between 1933 and 1945, Martinez tells the Art Newspaper .
In the future, the museum plans to debut the findings of this research project on its website. The director notes that he has instructed curators to conduct a similar investigation of the thousands of artworks in the Louvre’s collections that hail from countries formerly under French control, such as Algeria, Tunisia, Syria and Lebanon.
The goal of this long-term project, he says, will be to identify which items in the Louvre’s encyclopedic collections were obtained through looting or colonial violence.
“Our collections are mostly archaeological and come from digs shared with the countries of origin,” Martinez tells the Art Newspaper , adding that the museum often obtained new archives through “bilateral” legal agreements.
At the same time, Martinez adds, “[M]useums like the Louvre served imperial ambitions and we have to deal with this history.”
Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.
Nora McGreevy | | READ MORE
Nora McGreevy is a former daily correspondent for Smithsonian . She is also a freelance journalist based in Chicago whose work has appeared in Wired , Washingtonian , the Boston Globe , South Bend Tribune , the New York Times and more.
Louvre Museum Official Website
Aller au contenu
Louvre - Homepage
Welcome to the louvre.
The museum is open today
9:00 AM à 6:00 PM
Get inspired at the Louvre
Modern Invention, Ancient Legacy. 24 April – 16 September 2024
A New Look at Jan Van Eyck
The Madonna of Chancellor Rolin. 20 March - 17 June 2024
The MET au Louvre
Near Eastern Antiquities in Dialogue. 29 February 2024 - 28 September 2025
THE LOUVRE’S MASTERPIECES
What exactly is a masterpiece? Follow this trail to find out!
Visitor trails
Discover the masterpieces of the Louvre with trained guides who take you through the museum’s most impressive spaces.
The restoration of the Arc du Carrousel [ENG subtitles]
Video 7 min
Galerie Campana
Video 2 min
The Salle des Etats
Video 4 min
« Forêt » by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and Némo Flouret [EN subtitles]
Delve into the Louvre
On Instagram
Share your photos under the hashtag #museedulouvre or #louvre
Follow us!
museelouvre - on Instagram
🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, intéressons-nous à la Vénus de Milo ! 🔍
🕰️ La Vénus de Milo, découverte en avril 1820, s’est imposée depuis lors comme l’une des icônes de la sculpture grecque. Cette statue d’Aphrodite à demi nue, sculptée en marbre de Paros vers 120-100 avant J.-C. est une ode à la déesse de la beauté.
🇫🇷 Le mardi, c’est le #JourDeFermeture au musée du Louvre ! Dans l’aile Richelieu, douce lumière dans les salles de sculptures médiévales. 👀
🌍 Tuesday is #ClosingDay at the Louvre! In the Richelieu wing, the rooms of medieval sculptures are bathed in soft light. 👀
🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, intéressons-nous à ce tableau de Luc-Olivier Merson (1846-1920) actuellement présenté dans l’exposition « L’Olympisme. Une invention moderne, un héritage antique », le Soldat de Marathon ! 🔍
⚔️ La bataille de Marathon (490 avant J.-C) reste inscrite dans la mémoire collective comme l’épisode le plus glorieux de l’histoire de l’Attique et de l’Athènes antiques. Selon les sources, une phalange de 192 hoplites athéniens parvint à mettre en déroute dans la plaine côtière de Marathon un débarquement perse trente fois supérieur en nombre.
🇫🇷 L’exposition « L’Olympisme. Un héritage antique, une invention moderne » ouvre ses portes ! 🏃
🏺 Dès aujourd’hui, venez découvrir les sources de cet événement mondial, les Jeux Olympiques ! Outre Pierre de Coubertin, diverses personnalités françaises et grecques sont à l’initiative de la plus grande et la plus suivie de toutes les manifestations sportives. 🤝
🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, intéressons-nous à ce vase de fleurs ! 🔍
💐 Le peintre hollandais Jan Van Huysum utilise dans ce tableau (v. 1720-1740) les motifs traditionnels de la peinture de fleurs qu'il pousse à un haut degré de somptuosité décorative, à l'asymétrie joyeuse et aux coloris vifs.
. 🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, focus sur la Sainte Marie Madeleine sculptée par Gregor Erhart. 🔍 - 👼 Cette singulière figure nue, datant de 1515-1520, représente sainte Marie-Madeleine en ascète mystique. Selon la légende, la pécheresse repentie vivait retirée dans la grotte de la Sainte-Baume, vêtue de ses seuls cheveux. Elle était chaque jour enlevée au ciel par des anges pour entendre les chœurs célestes. - ⛪️ La sainte était à l’origine soutenue par des anges sculptés. Maintenue dans une structure ovale métallique, la statue en tilleul était suspendue à la voûte d’une église. Elle était visible de tous côtés, puisque son dos est aussi soigneusement sculpté et polychromé que sa face. - ☁️ Le génie du sculpteur allemand est de transcrire de manière inédite l’image traditionnelle de la sainte portée au ciel par les anges. Loin du canon gothique, menu et irréel, il dévoile des formes féminines épanouies, à peine dissimulées par la souple chevelure dorée qui coule sur le buste et qui se déploie dans le dos. ∴ 🌎 Let’s inspect the works of the museum with #LouvreDetails ! Today, focus on Saint Mary Magdalene sculpted by Gregor Erhart. 🔍 - 👼 This unusual nude figure, from 1515-1520, represents saint Mary Magdalene as a mystic ascetic. According to legend, the repentant sinner lived a secluded life in the cave of Sainte-Baume, clothed only by her hair. Every day she was raised up in the sky by angels to hear the heavenly chorus. - ⛪️ The saint was originally held up by carved angels. Encased in an oval metal structure, the wooden statue was suspended from the vault of a church. It must have been seen in the round, since the back is as carefully carved and colored as the front. - ☁️ The genius of the German sculptor was to interpret the traditional image of the saint being carried to heaven by angels in an unprecedented manner in sculpture. Far from the Gothic convention of a thin, unreal figure, he reveals feminine curves, scarcely hidden by the rippling mane of golden hair which spreads across her back. - 📷 © Musée du Louvre / Nicolas Bousser . . . #Louvre #MuséeDuLouvre
🇫🇷 Le mardi, c’est le #JourDeFermeture au musée du Louvre ! Dans l’aile Denon, le torse de Milet attend le retour des visiteurs. 👀
🌍 Tuesday is #ClosingDay at the Louvre! In the Denon wing, Milet’s torso awaits the return of visitors. 👀
🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, penchons-nous sur cette célèbre œuvre de Rosso Fiorentino. 🔎
🏰 Rosso est appelé en 1530 par François Ier sur le chantier du château de Fontainebleau. Commandé par le connétable Anne de Montmorency dont il porte les armes, ce tableau se distingue par l’âpre vision du drame, résumé dans le geste pathétique de la Vierge défaillant au seuil du tombeau du Christ.
🇫🇷 Le mardi, c’est le #JourDeFermeture au musée du Louvre ! Dans l’aile Denon, la Victoire de Samothrace trône en haut de l’escalier Daru. 👀
🌍 Tuesday is #ClosingDay at the Louvre! In the Denon wing, the Victory de Samothrace takes pride of place at the top of the Daru staircase. 👀
🇫🇷 Inspectons les œuvres du musée avec #LouvreALaLoupe ! Aujourd’hui, intéressons-nous à cette sculpture en terre cuite de Félicie de Fauveau, assistée de son frère Hippolyte.
🕰️ Entrée dans les collections du musée en 2018, cette œuvre met en scène sainte Réparate. Elle fut réalisée en 1855, lors de l’épidémie de choléra qui toucha une grande partie de la population de Florence, y compris l’amie intime de Félicie de Fauveau, la grande duchesse de Toscane.
Prepare your visit
- Preplanned tours
- Daytrips out of Moscow
- Themed tours
- Customized tours
- St. Petersburg
Moscow Metro
The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours’ itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin’s regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as “a people’s palace”. Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings, mosaics, stained glass, bronze statues… Our Moscow metro tour includes the most impressive stations best architects and designers worked at - Ploshchad Revolutsii, Mayakovskaya, Komsomolskaya, Kievskaya, Novoslobodskaya and some others.
What is the kremlin in russia?
The guide will not only help you navigate the metro, but will also provide you with fascinating background tales for the images you see and a history of each station.
And there some stories to be told during the Moscow metro tour! The deepest station - Park Pobedy - is 84 metres under the ground with the world longest escalator of 140 meters. Parts of the so-called Metro-2, a secret strategic system of underground tunnels, was used for its construction.
During the Second World War the metro itself became a strategic asset: it was turned into the city's biggest bomb-shelter and one of the stations even became a library. 217 children were born here in 1941-1942! The metro is the most effective means of transport in the capital.
There are almost 200 stations 196 at the moment and trains run every 90 seconds! The guide of your Moscow metro tour can explain to you how to buy tickets and find your way if you plan to get around by yourself.
Guided Walking Tour of the Moscow Metro
Description, good to know.
- Pricing details
Departure place
You would like, admiring the frescoes in kurskaya and komsomolskaya metro stations, marvelling at the architecture of the moscow metro, listening to your guide's commentary, essential information *, duration 1 hour 50 minutes, starting time 2:00 pm.
Set off to discover the most breathtaking stops on Moscow’s beautiful metro system on this walking tour.
Some of the stops on the Moscow metro are real masterpieces. Head underground and admire the Moscow metro with your guide.
During your guided tour, you will get to admire the Ploshchad Revolyutsii , designed by the architect Dushkin. There are no fewer than 72 sculptures in this station!
You will then explore Kurskaya station, built in 1938. The design, mosaics and slogans will immerse you in the era of Stalin. You will also see the frescoes depicting Russian victories in Komsomolskaya station.
Then, continue to one of Moscow’s must-see metro stations, Novoslobodskaya , which resembles an underground palace: marble, stained glass windows...
Join your guide to explore the most lavish and important metro stops in Moscow!
- Availability: every day (excluding exceptional dates)
- Duration: 1 hr. 50 mins approx.
- Departure point: The Kremlin
- Languages: English
- Please wear comfortable shoes
- Metro tickets are included for the metro stations visited during the activity
- A valid student card will be requested from participants who have booked the reduced student tariff
- A minimum of 2 participants is required to book this activity
Price includes
- Metro tickets
- The services of an English-speaking tour guide
- The guided tour of the Moscow metro
Price doesn’t include
- Access to stations not included in the tour
- Hotel pick-up/drop-off
- Tips (optional)
- All other extras
Customers also look
Moscow Metro Tour
- Page active
Description
Moscow metro private tours.
- 2-hour tour $87: 10 Must-See Moscow Metro stations with hotel pick-up and drop-off
- 3-hour tour $137: 20 Must-See Moscow Metro stations with Russian lunch in beautifully-decorated Metro Diner + hotel pick-up and drop off.
- Metro pass is included in the price of both tours.
Highlight of Metro Tour
- Visit 10 must-see stations of Moscow metro on 2-hr tour and 20 Metro stations on 3-hr tour, including grand Komsomolskaya station with its distinctive Baroque décor, aristocratic Mayakovskaya station with Soviet mosaics, legendary Revolution Square station with 72 bronze sculptures and more!
- Explore Museum of Moscow Metro and learn a ton of technical and historical facts;
- Listen to the secrets about the Metro-2, a secret line supposedly used by the government and KGB;
- Experience a selection of most striking features of Moscow Metro hidden from most tourists and even locals;
- Discover the underground treasure of Russian Soviet past – from mosaics to bronzes, paintings, marble arches, stained glass and even paleontological elements;
- Learn fun stories and myths about Coffee Ring, Zodiac signs of Moscow Metro and more;
- Admire Soviet-era architecture of pre- and post- World War II perious;
- Enjoy panoramic views of Sparrow Hills from Luzhniki Metro Bridge – MetroMost, the only station of Moscow Metro located over water and the highest station above ground level;
- If lucky, catch a unique «Aquarelle Train» – a wheeled picture gallery, brightly painted with images of peony, chrysanthemums, daisies, sunflowers and each car unit is unique;
- Become an expert at navigating the legendary Moscow Metro system;
- Have fun time with a very friendly local;
- + Atmospheric Metro lunch in Moscow’s the only Metro Diner (included in a 3-hr tour)
Hotel Pick-up
Metro stations:.
Komsomolskaya
Novoslobodskaya
Prospekt Mira
Belorusskaya
Mayakovskaya
Novokuznetskaya
Revolution Square
Sparrow Hills
+ for 3-hour tour
Victory Park
Slavic Boulevard
Vystavochnaya
Dostoevskaya
Elektrozavodskaya
Partizanskaya
Museum of Moscow Metro
- Drop-off at your hotel, Novodevichy Convent, Sparrow Hills or any place you wish
- + Russian lunch in Metro Diner with artistic metro-style interior for 3-hour tour
Fun facts from our Moscow Metro Tours:
From the very first days of its existence, the Moscow Metro was the object of civil defense, used as a bomb shelter, and designed as a defense for a possible attack on the Soviet Union.
At a depth of 50 to 120 meters lies the second, the coded system of Metro-2 of Moscow subway, which is equipped with everything you need, from food storage to the nuclear button.
According to some sources, the total length of Metro-2 reaches over 150 kilometers.
The Museum was opened on Sportivnaya metro station on November 6, 1967. It features the most interesting models of trains and stations.
Coffee Ring
The first scheme of Moscow Metro looked like a bunch of separate lines. Listen to a myth about Joseph Stalin and the main brown line of Moscow Metro.
Zodiac Metro
According to some astrologers, each of the 12 stops of the Moscow Ring Line corresponds to a particular sign of the zodiac and divides the city into astrological sector.
Astrologers believe that being in a particular zadiac sector of Moscow for a long time, you attract certain energy and events into your life.
Paleontological finds
Red marble walls of some of the Metro stations hide in themselves petrified inhabitants of ancient seas. Try and find some!
- Every day each car in Moscow metro passes more than 600 km, which is the distance from Moscow to St. Petersburg.
- Moscow subway system is the 5th in the intensity of use (after the subways of Beijing, Tokyo, Seoul and Shanghai).
- The interval in the movement of trains in rush hour is 90 seconds .
What you get:
- + A friend in Moscow.
- + Private & customized Moscow tour.
- + An exciting pastime, not just boring history lessons.
- + An authentic experience of local life.
- + Flexibility during the walking tour: changes can be made at any time to suit individual preferences.
- + Amazing deals for breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the very best cafes & restaurants. Discounts on weekdays (Mon-Fri).
- + A photo session amongst spectacular Moscow scenery that can be treasured for a lifetime.
- + Good value for souvenirs, taxis, and hotels.
- + Expert advice on what to do, where to go, and how to make the most of your time in Moscow.
Write your review
Claudia Looi
Touring the Top 10 Moscow Metro Stations
By Claudia Looi 2 Comments
Komsomolskaya metro station looks like a museum. It has vaulted ceilings and baroque decor.
Hidden underground, in the heart of Moscow, are historical and architectural treasures of Russia. These are Soviet-era creations – the metro stations of Moscow.
Our guide Maria introduced these elaborate metro stations as “the palaces for the people.” Built between 1937 and 1955, each station holds its own history and stories. Stalin had the idea of building beautiful underground spaces that the masses could enjoy. They would look like museums, art centers, concert halls, palaces and churches. Each would have a different theme. None would be alike.
The two-hour private tour was with a former Intourist tour guide named Maria. Maria lived in Moscow all her life and through the communist era of 60s to 90s. She has been a tour guide for more than 30 years. Being in her 60s, she moved rather quickly for her age. We traveled and crammed with Maria and other Muscovites on the metro to visit 10 different metro stations.
Arrow showing the direction of metro line 1 and 2
Moscow subways are very clean
To Maria, every street, metro and building told a story. I couldn’t keep up with her stories. I don’t remember most of what she said because I was just thrilled being in Moscow. Added to that, she spilled out so many Russian words and names, which to one who can’t read Cyrillic, sounded so foreign and could be easily forgotten.
The metro tour was the first part of our all day tour of Moscow with Maria. Here are the stations we visited:
1. Komsomolskaya Metro Station is the most beautiful of them all. Painted yellow and decorated with chandeliers, gold leaves and semi precious stones, the station looks like a stately museum. And possibly decorated like a palace. I saw Komsomolskaya first, before the rest of the stations upon arrival in Moscow by train from St. Petersburg.
2. Revolution Square Metro Station (Ploshchad Revolyutsii) has marble arches and 72 bronze sculptures designed by Alexey Dushkin. The marble arches are flanked by the bronze sculptures. If you look closely you will see passersby touching the bronze dog's nose. Legend has it that good luck comes to those who touch the dog's nose.
Touch the dog's nose for good luck. At the Revolution Square station
Revolution Square Metro Station
3. Arbatskaya Metro Station served as a shelter during the Soviet-era. It is one of the largest and the deepest metro stations in Moscow.
Arbatskaya Metro Station
4. Biblioteka Imeni Lenina Metro Station was built in 1935 and named after the Russian State Library. It is located near the library and has a big mosaic portrait of Lenin and yellow ceramic tiles on the track walls.
Lenin's portrait at the Biblioteka Imeni Lenina Metro Station
5. Kievskaya Metro Station was one of the first to be completed in Moscow. Named after the capital city of Ukraine by Kiev-born, Nikita Khruschev, Stalin's successor.
Kievskaya Metro Station
6. Novoslobodskaya Metro Station was built in 1952. It has 32 stained glass murals with brass borders.
Novoslobodskaya metro station
7. Kurskaya Metro Station was one of the first few to be built in Moscow in 1938. It has ceiling panels and artwork showing Soviet leadership, Soviet lifestyle and political power. It has a dome with patriotic slogans decorated with red stars representing the Soviet's World War II Hall of Fame. Kurskaya Metro Station is a must-visit station in Moscow.
Ceiling panel and artworks at Kurskaya Metro Station
8. Mayakovskaya Metro Station built in 1938. It was named after Russian poet Vladmir Mayakovsky. This is one of the most beautiful metro stations in the world with 34 mosaics painted by Alexander Deyneka.
Mayakovskaya station
One of the over 30 ceiling mosaics in Mayakovskaya metro station
9. Belorusskaya Metro Station is named after the people of Belarus. In the picture below, there are statues of 3 members of the Partisan Resistance in Belarus during World War II. The statues were sculpted by Sergei Orlov, S. Rabinovich and I. Slonim.
10. Teatralnaya Metro Station (Theatre Metro Station) is located near the Bolshoi Theatre.
Teatralnaya Metro Station decorated with porcelain figures .
Taking the metro's escalator at the end of the tour with Maria the tour guide.
Have you visited the Moscow Metro? Leave your comment below.
January 15, 2017 at 8:17 am
An excellent read! Thanks for much for sharing the Russian metro system with us. We're heading to Moscow in April and exploring the metro stations were on our list and after reading your post, I'm even more excited to go visit them. Thanks again 🙂
December 6, 2017 at 10:45 pm
Hi, do you remember which tour company you contacted for this tour?
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Please go to the Instagram Feed settings page to create a feed.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The Advent of the Artist. For its 5th edition, the Petite Galerie takes a closer look at the transition from the typically anonymous craftsman of the classical period to the artist of the Renaissance, featuring works by Delacroix, Rembrandt, Tintoret and more. Launch virtual tour.
Let's take an online virtual tour of the Louvre, wing by wing. You can see all the must see masterpieces via 360 video tours, YouTube videos, or online tours on the Louvre Website itself. ... The paintings were begun by Charles Le Brun and completed by Eugene Delacroix. Theodore Gericault, Raft of the Medusa, 1819. 1. French Paintings in the ...
Filmed in Paris in the Spring, this 4K Virtual Louvre Museum tour takes from inside by the iconic Mona Lisa to outside, and the Carrousel Arc de Triomphe and...
Gain an understanding and appreciation of one of the world's largest museums without visiting it in person during this Louvre virtual tour. From the comfort of your own home, on the device of your choice, you'll explore the museum with a licensed guide showing you behind-the-scenes photos and videos. Hear facts you may not have heard otherwise, and buckle down at the end for a special Q ...
The Apollon Gallery at the Louvre museum in Paris on Jan. 14, 2020. One of the world's most massive museums has announced an encompassing digitization of its vast collection. "The Louvre is ...
Explore the Louvre online. The Louvre is accessible via collections.louvre.fr. The page is part of the museum's new and improved website that aims to provide a more user-friendly and immersive experience for digital museum visitors. "The Louvre is dusting off its treasures, even the least-known," Jean-Luc Martinez, the President-Director ...
The Louvre Museum or Musée du Louvre , is the world's largest art museum and a historic monument in Paris, France. In 2019, the Louvre received 9.6 million v...
\\English text below//Venez découvrir le Louvre, le Jardin des Tuileries et le Palais Royal dans cette visite guidée virtuelle et immersive à 360°.Regardez a...
For the first time ever, the Louvre's entire art collection is available to search online. The updated catalogue boasts more than 480,000 entries, from rare items stowed away in storage to the ...
Welcome to the Louvre's official online sales site. We strongly advise all visitors to book a time slot in advance to guarantee their admission to the museum in case of overcrowding. Entry to the exhibitions 'The Met at the Louvre: Near Eastern Antiquities in Dialogue' (29 February 2024-28 September 2025) and 'A New Look at Jan Van Eyck: the ...
Tour the wonders of Le Louvre. (30) The museum highlights and more. I will lead you through the intricate paths of Le Louvre to marvel at its masterpieces and learn all there is to know about them. From the Mona Lisa to the Winged Victory, as well as a massive and magnificent Sphinx of Egypt, the gorgeous Venus de Milo, along with the work of ...
Le mardi, c'est le #JourDeFermeture au musée du Louvre ! Dans l'aile Denon, la Victoire de Samothrace trône en haut de l'escalier Daru. ∴ Tuesday is #ClosingDay at the Louvre! In the Denon wing, the Victory de Samothrace takes pride of place at the top of the Daru staircase.
Wandering in the world's largest art museum and a historic monument, Louvre Museum. Click here to see highlights and guide. The Louvre is not only one of t...
Moscow Metro. The Moscow Metro Tour is included in most guided tours' itineraries. Opened in 1935, under Stalin's regime, the metro was not only meant to solve transport problems, but also was hailed as "a people's palace". Every station you will see during your Moscow metro tour looks like a palace room. There are bright paintings ...
Set off to discover the most breathtaking stops on Moscow's beautiful metro system on this walking tour. Some of the stops on the Moscow metro are real masterpieces. Head underground and admire the Moscow metro with your guide. During your guided tour, you will get to admire the Ploshchad Revolyutsii, designed by the architect Dushkin. There ...
Moscow Metro private tours. 2-hour tour $87: 10 Must-See Moscow Metro stations with hotel pick-up and drop-off. 3-hour tour $137: 20 Must-See Moscow Metro stations with Russian lunch in beautifully-decorated Metro Diner + hotel pick-up and drop off. Metro pass is included in the price of both tours.
The two-hour private tour was with a former Intourist tour guide named Maria. Maria lived in Moscow all her life and through the communist era of 60s to 90s. She has been a tour guide for more than 30 years. Being in her 60s, she moved rather quickly for her age. We traveled and crammed with Maria and other Muscovites on the metro to visit 10 ...