REVIEW · PARIS
Private Tour, Luxury Eiffel Tower Lunch, Seine Cruise & Louvre
Book on Viator →Operated by Wonder Meets and Tours · Bookable on Viator
Four icons, one luxe Paris day. This private tour strings together the Eiffel Tower, a Madame Brasserie lunch, a Seine cruise, and Louvre entry with an English-speaking guide who helps you see how everything connects. You also get an orientation around the Louvre area and a pocket guide to keep you moving through Paris like you mean it.
I especially like the built-in convenience: Eiffel Tower admission plus a pre-planned lunch (so you’re not piecing it together yourself), and Louvre entry with an audio guide so you can keep exploring after the tour ends. One thing to plan for: Eiffel Tower lift access is limited between floors, and the day can feel fast if you want maximum time inside the Louvre.
In This Review
- Key Highlights Worth Marking on Your Map
- What You’re Really Buying for $465.76 Per Person
- Madame Brasserie Lunch on the Eiffel Tower: The Best Kind of First Stop
- Eiffel Tower floors and the lift limitation
- What views you’re setting up
- Champs de Mars to the French Military School: Paris Gets Its Scale
- From Notre-Dame to the Arc de Triomphe: A Walking “How Paris Thinks” Moment
- Seine Cruise: A One-Hour Picture Parade That Can Be Longer If You Stay On
- What you’ll see on the water
- Cruise duration and how not to cut your own trip short
- Drinks and snacks vibe
- Louvre Museum: Orientation Outside First, Then Tickets Inside
- What the orientation covers
- Louvre tickets and the audio guide
- A scheduling tip that really matters
- Timing and Logistics: Where This Tour Works and Where It Can Feel Tight
- The Value Angle: When This Feels Like a Smart Purchase
- Who This Tour Suits Best
- Should You Book It? My Decision Rule
- FAQ
- What time does the tour start?
- Is lunch included, and where is it?
- Are Eiffel Tower, Seine cruise, and Louvre tickets included?
- Do I get an audio guide for the Louvre?
- Is this tour private?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Can I stay longer inside the Louvre?
Key Highlights Worth Marking on Your Map

- Madame Brasserie lunch on the Eiffel Tower: sit on the first floor, then keep going up afterward
- Tickets handled for you: Eiffel Tower, Seine cruise, and Louvre entry with audio guide included
- Seine cruise views from the water: see major landmarks like Notre-Dame, the Louvre, La Conciergerie, and Musée d’Orsay
- Louvre-area orientation before you go in: get oriented around the historic axis and Tuileries area
- Your group is private, but the Eiffel and cruise still have crowds: it’s guided privacy, not empty monuments
- Eiffel floor-to-floor logistics: there’s no direct lift connection between the 1st and 2nd floors
What You’re Really Buying for $465.76 Per Person
At $465.76 per person, this isn’t a budget “hit the highlights” shuffle. You’re paying for three things that matter in Paris:
Time certainty. The tour includes admission tickets and a guide, so you’re not spending your day waiting in separate lines or trying to coordinate entrances while jet-lagged.
A guided flow. You’re not just eating lunch and wandering. The guide helps you connect the Eiffel Tower views to the city landmarks you’ll later see from the Seine and then use at the Louvre.
A smoother Louvre start. Louvre time is where many “one-day” plans fall apart. Here, you’ll get an orientation near the Louvre first, then you can spend as long as you like inside (tickets are handed to you at the end).
One caution that affects value: this day can compress if you pick a later lunch time. If your top goal is Louvre deep time, you’ll want to protect it.
Other private Louvre tours in Paris
Madame Brasserie Lunch on the Eiffel Tower: The Best Kind of First Stop

This tour starts with the Eiffel Tower, and lunch is built in at Madame Brasserie on the first floor. That’s a smart choice because it turns one of the most stressful spots in Paris into a structured, sit-down moment.
What you’ll like about this setup:
- You get a “Paris big moment” lunch right where the photos happen.
- You don’t burn time trying to fit a restaurant reservation between Eiffel security and summit plans.
- After dining, you continue your Eiffel visit, including access to other floors (with a small catch—see below).
Eiffel Tower floors and the lift limitation
The one practical snag is lift access. There’s no lift direct connection from the 1st floor to the 2nd floor. After dining, you use stairs to reach the 2nd floor, then take the lift to go up to the summit.
If you’re fine with stairs and you keep your pace calm, it’s manageable. If you hate stairs or you’re tight on mobility, this is the part you should think about first.
What views you’re setting up
From this starting point, your guide lines up the bigger picture. You’ll see Paris landmarks and get context on what you’re looking at—especially around the Seine-facing classics you’ll later spot from the water.
Champs de Mars to the French Military School: Paris Gets Its Scale

After lunch, the tour stays outdoors and helps you understand where you are on the Paris map. This isn’t just random sightseeing; it’s about getting scale.
You’ll pass through the area around Champs de Mars and the French Military School, and that’s useful because the Eiffel Tower doesn’t sit alone—it anchors a whole network of roads, viewpoints, and historic axes.
Why this matters: when you later see the city from the Seine (and when you enter the Louvre area), those landmarks stop feeling like isolated postcards and start feeling like a connected route.
Other Louvre and Seine River cruise combos in Paris
From Notre-Dame to the Arc de Triomphe: A Walking “How Paris Thinks” Moment

A highlight here is the way the guide helps you connect iconic sites across different eras.
Here are the landmarks you’ll see as part of this panoramic story:
- Notre-Dame Cathedral: discussed from the Eiffel viewpoint, including its long timeline and that it drew enormous public attention after the 2019 fire
- Arc de Triomphe and the Tomb of the Unknown French Soldier after the Armistice of 1918
- Les Invalides and the gold dome tied to Napoleon I, including its role as military hospitals
This is the kind of tour segment that works best if you keep your phone in your pocket for a bit and listen. The information helps you look smarter at the skyline, not just higher.
Seine Cruise: A One-Hour Picture Parade That Can Be Longer If You Stay On

Next comes the Seine. You’ll leave the Eiffel area and take a short ride to the boat portion.
What you’ll see on the water
From the cruise, you get another angle on many of Paris’s headline landmarks, including:
- the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower
- Notre-Dame
- La Conciergerie
- Hôtel de Ville
- the American Church of Paris
- Musée d’Orsay
You’ll also spot bridge moments tied to the Louvre area—like the bridge connected to the section tied to King Louis XIV’s Grand Carousel, plus the “love locks” bridge linked to Palais des arts.
Cruise duration and how not to cut your own trip short
The Seine part is described as a 1-hour tour, but the cruise itself is designed as a longer loop experience (about 1 hour 42 minutes with multiple stops). The big practical point: you have the flexibility to disembark at different stops or complete the full journey.
So if your goal is to see more and keep the experience fully intact, plan to stay on the boat rather than jump off early.
Drinks and snacks vibe
The cruise includes a comfortable boat ride and you can choose champagne or other drinks and snacks of your choice. That makes the time on the water feel less like “transport” and more like part of the day’s pleasure.
Louvre Museum: Orientation Outside First, Then Tickets Inside

The Louvre is where many people either rush or get lost. This tour attacks the problem by giving you an orientation around the Louvre area first, then handing you tickets so you can spend as much time as you please.
What the orientation covers
Outside and nearby, you’ll get history context that helps you orient quickly once you’re inside. The tour includes discussion of:
- the Tuileries Garden, created by Catherine de Médicis and connected to Henri II
- the historic axis of Paris and a smaller triumphal arc that ties to Napoleonic-era victories (you’ll get the meaning, not just the sight)
The benefit: when you walk the Louvre later, you understand why the museum and its surroundings are arranged the way they are.
Louvre tickets and the audio guide
Your Louvre admission is included, and you’ll also receive an audio guide. When you’re paying real money and time for the Louvre, the audio helps you move at your own pace without waiting for the guide to reach the next highlight.
At the end of the tour, you’ll finish at the Louvre entrance and you can stay inside for as long as you want.
A scheduling tip that really matters
Lunch time affects everything after it. Lunch is either 11:30am or 1pm, and the Seine and Louvre are after lunch.
If you want more time inside the Louvre, you’ll get the best outcome by choosing a timeslot that gives you more runway—especially if you’re aiming to linger rather than just “touch the main rooms.”
Timing and Logistics: Where This Tour Works and Where It Can Feel Tight

This is a private tour with a dedicated English guide, but it’s not private-in-the-sense-of-empty. You’ll still be moving around during normal attraction hours, so bring that realistic mindset.
Here are the practical logistics that shape the experience:
- No hotel pickup/drop-off: you’ll need to reach the meeting point on your own.
- Meeting point: 13 All. Paul Deschanel, 75007 Paris.
- Start time: 11:00am, though lunch seating can be 11:30am or 1pm.
- No direct 1st-to-2nd floor lift at the Eiffel: plan for stairs after lunch.
Also, keep in mind the flow is designed for a full day of major landmarks. That’s great if your goal is to “see Paris in one pass.” If your goal is to slow down and go deep into one museum wing, you might feel the squeeze.
The Value Angle: When This Feels Like a Smart Purchase

This tour is best value when you match what it’s designed to do: one organized day that combines three big priorities—Eiffel, Seine, Louvre—with tickets handled.
You get value from:
- Included admissions (Eiffel Tower + Louvre Museum + Seine cruise tickets)
- A luxury lunch at a specific Eiffel restaurant, not just a generic meal stop
- Audio support at the Louvre, which saves you from relying only on a live guide
- A guide who helps you connect the dots, especially between the Eiffel viewpoint and what you’ll later see from the Seine and around the Louvre
Where it may not be the best deal:
- If you’re very sensitive to schedules and stairs, or if you absolutely want the Louvre as a slow, unstructured marathon with no time pressure.
Who This Tour Suits Best
This fits well for:
- First-time Paris visitors who want the big hits without the planning headache
- People who like a guide for context, then prefer to roam on their own once they’re inside
- Couples and small groups who want private guidance while still enjoying classic public-location energy
If you’re traveling with mobility limits related to stairs at the Eiffel, pay extra attention to the lift restriction between floors.
Should You Book It? My Decision Rule
If you want a guided day that covers Eiffel Tower + Seine cruise + Louvre with tickets handled and a lunch that feels like part of the experience, I’d say this is a strong booking choice.
My “yes” checklist:
- You’re okay with a packed schedule that runs about 5 to 6 hours
- You’re fine with Eiffel stair steps between floors
- You want to leave the Louvre with energy—not a half-visited feeling
My “maybe” checklist:
- Your top priority is a slow, ultra-detailed Louvre plan and you’re worried about time
- You strongly dislike stairs or you want elevator-first planning
If you do book, protect your Louvre time by choosing the earlier lunch slot when possible, and wear comfortable shoes. Paris rewards the walkers.
FAQ
What time does the tour start?
The tour starts at 11:00am. Lunch seating is either 11:30am or 1pm depending on the reservation time.
Is lunch included, and where is it?
Yes. Lunch is included at Madame Brasserie on the first floor of the Eiffel Tower.
Are Eiffel Tower, Seine cruise, and Louvre tickets included?
Yes. Eiffel Tower admission is included, the Seine cruise tickets are included (24-hour Seine River cruise tickets), and Louvre Museum admission is included (with an audio guide).
Do I get an audio guide for the Louvre?
Yes. The Louvre Museum tickets include an audio guide.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
Is hotel pickup included?
No. There is no hotel pickup or drop-off, so you’ll handle transportation to and from the meeting point and the Eiffel Tower area.
Can I stay longer inside the Louvre?
Yes. The tour ends at the Louvre entrance, and you can spend as much time as you please inside after you receive your tickets.





































