The colonnaded façade of the Hôtel de la Marine on the Place de la Concorde in Paris — a long neoclassical peristyle of paired Corinthian columns above a stone arcade, glowing in late-afternoon light. Paris, France.

The palace on Place de la Concorde where the crown once kept its treasures

Hôtel de la Marine skip-the-line — Ange-Jacques Gabriel's colonnaded royal palace of 1774, home of the king's Garde-Meuble and, for two centuries, the French Navy. Walk the restored 18th-century apartments, the gilded state salons and the loggia above the great square, with the acclaimed 3D audio headset included.

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  • 1757–1774 Ange-Jacques Gabriel's royal palace for the crown
  • Garde-Meuble Once the storehouse of the crown's furniture and jewels
  • Until 2015 Home of the French Navy for over two centuries
  • Opened 2021 Reborn after a landmark four-year restoration

Choose your ticket

Grand Tour ticket

Full visit — the intendant's apartments, the state salons and the loggia, with the 3D audio headset, timed entry

€30

  • Skip-the-line timed entry at your chosen slot
  • The fully restored 18th-century apartments of the Garde-Meuble intendant
  • The gilded state salons (salons d'apparat) and the loggia over Place de la Concorde
  • The acclaimed geolocated 3D 'Confidant' audio headset, included
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
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4.8 from 71 verified travellers
Rebecca H.
Bristol
“One of the best-value visits in Paris and hardly anyone knows it. The apartments are jaw-dropping and the audio headset is genuinely the best I've used anywhere — it follows you room to room. Booking a timed slot meant we walked straight in.”
Thomas B.
Hamburg
“The loggia view down the Place de la Concorde is worth the ticket on its own. We came for an hour and stayed two. Far calmer than the big museums and the restoration is immaculate.”
Élodie R.
Brussels
“Fascinating on the Crown Jewels theft and the whole Garde-Meuble story. The spatial-audio guide is clever without being gimmicky. A wonderful antidote to the Louvre crowds a few minutes away.”

5-minute audio guide

Your Hôtel de la Marine 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns a beautiful façade into a real story — the royal storehouse of the crown, the night the Crown Jewels vanished, and the palace the French Navy called home for two hundred years.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why Gabriel built two matching palaces on the Place de la Concorde — and what the eastern one was really for
  • The Garde-Meuble: how the crown's furniture and jewels were kept and shown to the public
  • The 1792 theft of the Crown Jewels and the famous Regent Diamond stolen from these rooms
  • Two centuries as the French Navy ministry — and the restoration that brought the palace back

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Hôtel de la Marine

The Hôtel de la Marine is one of the great secrets of central Paris, hidden in plain sight on the north side of the Place de la Concorde. It is the eastern of the two matching palaces that the royal architect Ange-Jacques Gabriel raised between 1757 and 1774 to frame what was then the Place Louis XV — a long, luminous colonnade of paired Corinthian columns above a stone arcade, one of the defining images of French neoclassical architecture. For its first decades it was not a private mansion at all but the Garde-Meuble de la Couronne: the royal storehouse where the furniture, tapestries, arms and jewels of the crown were kept, conserved and displayed.

It was here, in September 1792, that thieves broke in and made off with a set of the crown’s coronation diamonds — among them the celebrated Regent Diamond, one of the most famous diamonds in the world, recovered about a year later and today displayed among the French crown jewels in the Louvre. After the Revolution the building was given to the navy, and for almost two centuries it served as the Ministère de la Marine — the headquarters of the French Navy — until the ministry moved out in 2015. That long naval tenure gave the palace its name, and left it one of the last great 18th-century interiors in Paris never opened to the public.

In June 2021, after a meticulous four-year restoration by the Centre des monuments nationaux, the Hôtel de la Marine finally opened its doors. Visitors can now walk the sumptuously restored apartments of the intendant of the Garde-Meuble, furnished as they were on the eve of the Revolution; the gilded state salons that look out over the Concorde; and the loggia that runs the length of the façade, giving one of the finest views in Paris — straight down the square to the obelisk, the Tuileries and the Eiffel Tower beyond. A celebrated 3D audio headset, worn throughout, turns the visit into a whispered, room-by-room story.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open daily. State salons and loggia 10:30–19:00 (late opening to 21:30 on Fridays); the intendant's apartments open on the same daily schedule. Last admission is around one hour before closing. Hours can vary on public holidays, so check when you book.
Address
Hôtel de la Marine, 2 Place de la Concorde, 75008 Paris, France
Getting there
On the north side of the Place de la Concorde. Métro: Concorde (lines 1, 8 and 12) is a two-minute walk. Numerous buses stop on the square. It sits between the Tuileries Garden and the foot of the Champs-Élysées, an easy walk from the Louvre and the Orangerie.
Time needed
Allow about 1.5 to 2 hours for the full Grand Tour of the apartments, salons and loggia with the audio headset. The immersive route rewards an unhurried visit.
Accessibility
The palace is largely accessible, with lifts serving the main visitor floors and the audio headset available to all. If you have specific mobility or sensory needs, contact us before booking and we will confirm the current accessible route and any assistance available.
Photography
Permitted for personal use without flash or tripod in most areas. The loggia over the Place de la Concorde is the signature shot, best in the warm light of late afternoon.
Food
The palace has its own café and restaurant off the glazed courtyard. The Concorde, the Tuileries and the rue Saint-Honoré nearby offer cafés and restaurants for every budget within a short walk.

About our service

Hôtel de la Marine Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors purchase skip-the-line, timed tickets for the Hôtel de la Marine, which is owned and managed by the French state. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is hotel-de-la-marine.paris.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?

Priority timed entry past the ticket queue, the full Grand Tour route — the restored 18th-century apartments of the Garde-Meuble intendant, the gilded state salons and the loggia over the Place de la Concorde — and the acclaimed geolocated 3D audio headset worn throughout the visit.

Is the ticket for a specific time?

Yes — the Hôtel de la Marine admits visitors in timed slots to keep the apartments uncrowded, so your ticket is for a chosen date and entry time. Tell us your preferred date and time when you book and we issue the ticket so you walk straight in at your slot. You can take your time inside once admitted.

What is the Hôtel de la Marine?

It is an 18th-century royal palace on the Place de la Concorde in Paris, built between 1757 and 1774 by the architect Ange-Jacques Gabriel. It first served as the Garde-Meuble de la Couronne — the storehouse of the crown's furniture and jewels — and then, for nearly two centuries, as the headquarters of the French Navy, which gave it its name. After a four-year restoration it opened to the public in 2021, and visitors can now see the restored apartments, the state salons and the loggia over the square.

What is the audio headset everyone mentions?

It is the 'Confidant' — a geolocated 3D audio headset worn throughout the visit that plays spatial sound keyed to the exact room you are standing in, layering voices, music and ambience so the palace seems to come alive around you. It is widely rated one of the finest museum audio experiences anywhere, and it is included with your ticket in several languages.

Is this where the Crown Jewels were stolen?

Yes. When the palace was the royal Garde-Meuble, the Crown Jewels were kept and displayed here, and in September 1792 thieves broke in and stole much of the collection — including the celebrated Regent Diamond, one of the most famous diamonds in the world, later recovered and now displayed among the French crown jewels in the Louvre. The story is one of the highlights of the visit.

How long does a visit take?

Allow about 1.5 to 2 hours for the full Grand Tour of the apartments, salons and loggia with the audio headset. The immersive route is designed to be savoured rather than rushed, so give yourself a little longer if you can.

What are the opening hours?

The palace is open daily, with the salons and loggia open 10:30–19:00 and a late opening until 21:30 on Fridays. Last admission is around an hour before closing. Hours can change on public holidays, so it is worth confirming when you book.

Can I show the ticket on my phone?

Yes. We issue an e-ticket that you present on your phone at the entrance — there is no need to print it. Just have it ready to show at your timed slot, and our concierge team is on call if anything needs sorting on the day.

How do I get to the Hôtel de la Marine?

It is on the north side of the Place de la Concorde. The nearest Métro is Concorde (lines 1, 8 and 12), a two-minute walk, and many buses stop on the square. It sits between the Tuileries Garden and the Champs-Élysées, an easy walk from the Louvre and the Musée de l'Orangerie.

Is the loggia really worth it?

For many visitors it is the highlight. The loggia runs the length of the façade above the arcade and looks straight out over the Place de la Concorde to the obelisk, the Tuileries and, on a clear day, the Eiffel Tower — one of the finest free-standing views in central Paris. It is at its best in the warm light of late afternoon.

Is the Hôtel de la Marine wheelchair accessible?

It is largely accessible, with lifts serving the main visitor floors and the audio headset available to everyone. If you have specific mobility or sensory needs, contact us before booking and we will confirm the current accessible route and any assistance the palace offers.

Can I take photographs inside?

Yes — photography for personal use is permitted in most areas without flash or a tripod. The signature shot is from the loggia, looking out over the Place de la Concorde, and the restored salons photograph beautifully in the daylight from the tall windows.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes. The visit is the right length for families, and the 3D audio headset keeps younger visitors engaged as it changes room by room. The Crown Jewels theft and the grandeur of the salons tend to capture children's imagination, and the loggia is a memorable finish.

How is this different from the Louvre or a big museum?

It is a restored palace rather than a vast collection, so the visit is calm, self-contained and rarely crowded — a striking contrast to the Louvre a few minutes away. Instead of galleries of art, you walk through the lived-in rooms of an 18th-century royal institution, guided by spatial audio, and finish on the loggia over the great square. Many visitors find it one of the most rewarding hours in Paris.

Can we change the date or time?

Your ticket is for a chosen date and entry time. If you need to move it, reply to your confirmation email as early as you can and our concierge team will do its best to adjust the booking with the palace wherever its calendar allows.

Who built the Hôtel de la Marine and when?

It was designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel, first architect to King Louis XV, and built between 1757 and 1774 as one of the two colonnaded palaces framing the Place Louis XV — now the Place de la Concorde. Its twin, to the west, is today the Hôtel de Crillon. The Hôtel de la Marine served first as the royal Garde-Meuble and then as the Navy ministry.

Can I combine it with other sights nearby?

Easily. The Hôtel de la Marine sits on the Place de la Concorde between the Tuileries Garden and the Champs-Élysées, a short walk from the Louvre, the Musée de l'Orangerie with its Monet water-lilies, and the Jeu de Paume. Its calm, timed visit of an hour or two pairs naturally with a larger museum or a walk up the Champs-Élysées.