General Admission
Check final refund and time-slot terms at checkout.

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All offers are in one compact list. Filter by ticket type; the official benchmark stays first, followed by partners by price.
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Check final refund and time-slot terms at checkout.
Check final refund and time-slot terms at checkout.
Buying guide
Use the official Paradox Museum Paris checkout first to compare the museum’s current ticket types and total price. Choose the supplied Tiqets priority-entry offer when you value a partner booking channel and its displayed availability, but do not assume “priority” removes security checks or queues inside the museum; recent visitor feedback reports bottlenecks around popular photo exhibits.
Tiqets lists the priority-entry ticket at €27.50 with availability shown on its booking page.
Compare offers ↓The ticket is labelled priority or fast-track, but check the voucher because security or admission controls may still require a queue.
Compare offers ↓Timed admission can help structure the visit, although visitor reports warn that popular exhibits may still create internal photo queues.
Compare offers ↓Official Tiqets
Quick picks
Official Paradox Museum Paris ticket
Compare offers ↓02Tiqets Priority Entry Ticket
Compare offers ↓03Official timed ticket at an off-peak slot
Compare offers ↓04Tiqets Priority Entry Ticket
Compare offers ↓05Whichever option shows the clearest cancellation terms at checkout
Compare offers ↓06Official timed ticket
Compare offers ↓Insider tips
Go to Paradox Museum Paris at 38 boulevard des Italiens, 75009 Paris. It is about 100 metres from Opéra station on Metro lines 3, 7 and 8; Richelieu-Drouot and Havre-Caumartin stations are about 250 metres away. Entry is managed in 15-minute intervals, so arrive about 5 minutes before your booked time with your mobile ticket ready. Late admission may be refused or moved to the first available slot. The official site lists last entry as 2 hours before closing, and says lockers and a cloakroom are available but capacity is limited. Priority wording does not by itself explain which on-site checks or queues are skipped, so verify the voucher.
Paradox Museum Paris lists starting prices of €22.50 for children and €27.50 for adults. The supplied Tiqets offer is listed at €27.50. Compare the final checkout total, ticket category, inclusions and seller terms before paying; do not assume that matching headline prices mean identical conditions.
Paradox Museum Paris welcomes all ages, but visitors under 15 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over. Children under 3 enter free; bring proof of age if requested. No separate official student, senior, resident, disability or companion reduction was verified here, so check the selected ticket category before relying on a concession. Visitors with reduced mobility should contact the museum in advance: elevators are available, but some experiences, including Zero Gravity, are not accessible. Wheelchairs are not available to hire. Because the venue has limited space and multiple floors, the museum encourages families with strollers to use a baby carrier.
Arrive early enough for security checks, ticket scanning and wayfinding.
FAQ
Yes. Official tickets are validated on your phone through the Fever App or by displaying the ticket on your device; printing is not required. Entry is organized in 15-minute intervals, so check the exact date and time on the ticket before travelling.
The museum advises arriving 5 minutes early. If you are only slightly late, staff may admit you at the first available 15-minute slot, subject to capacity, but entry can be refused if you arrive too late.
Official tickets are non-refundable. The museum says date or time changes may be possible free of charge up to 2 hours before the visit, subject to availability, but partner tickets can have different terms, so check the seller's checkout conditions before paying.
The official route is the Paradox Museum website or Fever App, where the museum publishes its ticketing and change rules. A partner may be useful if its selected slot is available or its booking interface suits you better, but compare the final price and inclusions carefully: the supplied Tiqets offer is labelled priority access and explicitly says that security checks may still apply.
The museum confirms that a checkroom and lockers are available, but capacity is limited, and it is not responsible for lost belongings. The official FAQ does not promise a separate security-free entrance; if a partner ticket says “priority” or “fast-track,” verify at checkout which queue is skipped and whether any security or admission check remains.
Children under 3 enter free, while the official site lists starting prices of €22.50 for children and €27.50 for adults; the exact child-age bands and any other reduced rates should be checked for the selected date and ticket type. The official information does not state that under-3 visitors need a separate free timed ticket, so confirm the booking flow before arriving.
The main crowding problem reported by visitors is inside the interactive exhibits, where people may queue to take photos rather than simply at the entrance. Reviews mention long waits at individual installations even with a timed slot, so an early or quieter off-peak slot is the safer choice if you want more time at the photo opportunities.
Yes. The museum says several installations use stroboscopic lights, especially the zoetropes, and that warning messages are displayed before those installations. If flashing lights may affect you, consider this when planning your visit and ask staff for help on arrival.