Hours, directions, entrances and the best time to arrive
Palais Galliera is Paris’s fashion museum, best known for rotating exhibitions of haute couture, historic dress, and designer retrospectives rather than a permanent display. It’s a compact museum in a grand 19th-century palace, so the visit feels focused rather than sprawling, but what you see depends heavily on what’s on that season. The difference between a rewarding visit and a disappointing one is checking the current exhibition before you go. This guide covers timing, tickets, layout, and the smart way to plan your stop.
If you’re deciding whether this museum fits your Paris plans, these are the details that actually change the visit.
🎟️ Friday evening slots and headline exhibitions at Palais Galliera can sell out several days ahead in summer and during fashion week. Lock in your visit before the time you want is gone. See ticket options
Hours, directions, entrances and the best time to arrive
Visit lengths, suggested routes and how to plan around your time
Compare all entry options, tours and special experiences
How the galleries are laid out and the route that makes most sense
Palace interiors, rotating couture shows, and craftsmanship displays
Restrooms, lockers, accessibility details and family services
Palais Galliera sits in Paris’s 16th arrondissement, a short walk from Iéna and Alma-Marceau, and about 15–20 minutes by metro from central Paris.
10 Avenue Pierre Ier de Serbie, 75116 Paris, France
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Full getting there guide
There is one public entrance, and the bigger mistake here is not choosing the wrong door but assuming you can arrive at the last minute and still browse comfortably. The front entrance works for all visitors, with only occasional security or ticket checks outside during major shows.
Full entrances guide
When is it busiest? Weekend afternoons, Friday from 5pm onward, and summer months from May to September are busiest, when the smaller galleries feel crowded fastest.
When should you actually go? Tuesday–Thursday soon after opening gives you the easiest viewing conditions, especially if you want time with labels, room shots, and the more detailed textile displays.
| Ticket type | What's included | Best for | Price range |
|---|---|---|---|
General admission ticket | Entry to current exhibition(s) on the day of your visit | A short museum stop where you want flexibility and are happy with a self-guided visit of about 45–60 minutes | From €14 |
Combined exhibition ticket | Entry to all current exhibitions + same-day access across both exhibition areas | A visit where one rotating show won’t feel like enough and you want the fuller museum experience for a small extra cost | From €17 |
Official guided tour | Entry + museum guide + scheduled 1.5-hour tour | A designer retrospective or history-heavy exhibition where labels alone won’t give you enough context | From about €20 |
Reduced admission | Entry to current exhibition(s) + reduced-rate access for eligible visitors with valid proof | A budget-conscious visit where you qualify for a concession and don’t need a guided format | From €12 |
Palais Galliera is a compact, split-level museum with one main exhibition route in the palace rooms and additional galleries below, so it’s easy to self-navigate but worth checking the exhibition leaflet if two shows are running at once.
Suggested route: Start in the palace rooms while your attention is freshest for silhouettes and labels, then head downstairs for the denser textile and technique displays that many people rush at the end.
💡 Pro tip: If two exhibitions are open, don’t leave the lower galleries for the final 15 minutes — the technique displays and multimedia sections are the part most visitors shortchange.
Get the Palais Galliera map / audio guide





Attribute — Era: 19th-century Beaux-Arts palace
The building is part of the visit, not just a container for it. Mosaic floors, painted ceilings, sculpted details, and the formal approach through the garden give the museum a sense of occasion before you’ve even seen a dress. Most visitors look up only once, then move on too quickly — the ceiling and floor details are easiest to notice in the quieter first rooms.
Where to find it: Entrance hall, main staircase approach, and the first sequence of historic salons
Attribute — Theme: Fashion craftsmanship from the 18th century to today
This is where the museum becomes more than a parade of beautiful clothes. The displays focus on the making of fashion — weaving, embroidery, lace, embellishment, and surface detail — and they reward slow looking more than quick room-by-room scanning. What most people miss are the comparison displays that place historical techniques beside modern couture, which is where the exhibition really clicks.
Where to find it: Lower galleries and vaulted exhibition spaces
Attribute — Era: 18th-century women’s fashion and later reinterpretations
If this exhibition is on during your visit, it’s one of the clearest examples of how Galliera connects fashion history to modern style. You’ll see court silhouettes, corsetry, panniers, and decorative detail, but the payoff is in the comparisons showing how later designers kept borrowing from that world. Visitors often rush past the accessories, even though they explain how the full silhouette worked.
Where to find it: Main temporary exhibition rooms in the palace galleries
Attribute — Collection type: Archival dress and accessories
Galliera is strongest when a garment is not only visually striking but tied to a real person, date, or moment. Pieces linked to figures such as Marie-Antoinette or Empress Joséphine bring a different kind of weight to the rooms because you’re not just seeing fashion — you’re seeing personal history preserved in fabric. The labels matter here, and many visitors don’t give them enough time.
Where to find it: Rotating collection and history-led exhibitions throughout both gallery levels
Attribute — Format: Temporary couture and designer exhibitions
The museum’s biggest crowd-pullers are retrospective shows devoted to designers and fashion houses, and these are often the reason people book in the first place. They work best when you slow down for the sketches, photos, videos, and archival context, not just the most famous look in each room. Most visitors cluster around the headline pieces and miss the quieter work that explains the designer’s evolution.
Where to find it: Usually in the palace’s main exhibition circuit, with supporting material in adjacent rooms
Palais Galliera works best for school-age children, teens, and fashion-curious families, especially when the current exhibition has bold silhouettes, photography, or a strong designer story.
Photography is usually allowed for personal use, but individual rooms or especially light-sensitive garments may be marked as no-photo zones, so check the signage rather than assuming the same rule applies everywhere. Flash should be considered off-limits, and tripods and selfie sticks are not appropriate inside the exhibition spaces.
La Galerie Dior
Distance: 1km — 10–15 minutes’ walk
Why people combine them: It makes for a natural fashion-focused half day, with Galliera giving you the broader history and Dior giving you one house’s immersive brand story.
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Palais de Tokyo
Distance: 250m — 3 minutes’ walk
Why people combine them: It’s the easiest same-area add-on if you want to balance historical fashion with contemporary art without adding more transport to your day.
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Trocadéro and Eiffel Tower viewpoints
Distance: 600m — 10 minutes’ walk
Worth knowing: This is the easiest post-museum walk if you want iconic Paris views without committing to another indoor attraction.
Musée Guimet
Distance: 350m — 5 minutes’ walk
Worth knowing: It’s a smart nearby second museum if you want a quieter cultural follow-up and don’t mind shifting from fashion to Asian art.
This part of the 16th arrondissement is polished, quiet, and easy for a short museum stop, but it isn’t the most characterful base if this is your first Paris trip and you want café density, nightlife, and easy wandering. It works best if walkability to Trocadéro, the Seine, and a few higher-end sights matters more than neighborhood buzz.
Most visits take 45–60 minutes, and 90 minutes is usually enough even if two exhibitions are open. The museum is compact, so it’s easy to fit into a larger day, but fashion fans who read every label and linger over the craftsmanship displays will naturally take longer.
Usually, no — you can often book 0–2 days ahead or even buy on-site. That changes when a major retrospective is on, during summer travel peaks, or for Friday evening openings, when booking ahead is the safer move if you want a specific visit window.
Usually not, because lines are short enough that standard entry works fine most days. It only starts to make a noticeable difference during blockbuster exhibitions, busy summer weekends, or popular Friday late openings when the entry area can back up.
Arrive about 10–15 minutes early if you have a guided tour or a busy exhibition slot. General admission is more forgiving than major Paris landmarks, but arriving a little early gives you time for bag storage and lets you start the galleries without feeling rushed.
Yes, but large bags and luggage should be left in the cloakroom before you enter the galleries. A small bag is easiest for this museum, because the visit is short and you’ll spend less time dealing with storage than you would with a larger daypack.
Usually yes, but photography rules can vary by room or by individual object. Personal photos are generally fine, while flash should be avoided and some light-sensitive pieces may be marked as no-photo. Always check the signage in each gallery instead of assuming one rule applies everywhere.
Yes, group visits are possible, and the museum also offers guided formats for deeper context. Smaller groups work better in the galleries because the rooms aren’t large, so if you’re organizing a class, tour, or study group, pre-booking is the smoother option.
Yes, as long as your expectations match the format of the museum. The visit is short, stroller access is manageable, and fashion-focused children or teens often enjoy the visuals, but younger kids who need hands-on activities may engage for less time than adults.
Yes, Palais Galliera is wheelchair-accessible. Elevators connect the exhibition levels, and the museum can assist with the most practical accessible entrance route because the building is historic. If you need specific support, it’s worth asking at the front desk when you arrive.
Food options are better near the museum than inside it. The visit is short enough that most people eat before or after, and nearby choices around Trocadéro, Avenue Marceau, and Palais de Tokyo are much more useful than trying to pause mid-visit.
The easiest way is usually Metro Line 9 to Iéna, followed by a 3-minute walk. Alma-Marceau on the same line is also close, and RER C to Pont de l’Alma works well if you’re coming from the Eiffel Tower or Musée d’Orsay side of the city.
No, Palais Galliera is not usually included in the standard Paris Museum Pass. It belongs to the Paris Musées network rather than the national-museum lineup most pass users expect, so check current inclusions before assuming it’s covered.