The Château de Chenonceau spanning the River Cher — five white stone arches across the water, steep slate roof with Renaissance turrets, reflected in the still river. Loire Valley, France.

Château de Chenonceau Tickets — Loire 3-château day plan

Chenonceau + Chambord + Cheverny

Reserve Loire combo

The loire 3-château day plan option at Château de Chenonceau Tickets — chenonceau + chambord + cheverny. Includes three of the loire's iconic châteaux in one day, plus 4 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.

What's included

Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.

• Three of the Loire's iconic châteaux in one day • Optimised driving route + parking guidance • Chenonceau morning + Chambord afternoon + Cheverny late • English audio guide at each site • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit

Who this is for

This option is designed for chenonceau + chambord + cheverny. If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.

On the day

The Château de Chenonceau is a Renaissance palace in France's Loire Valley, famous for the two-storey gallery built across the River Cher and for the chain of women who shaped it over four centuries. The original house was built between 1513 and 1521 by Katherine Briçonnet, wife of royal financier Thomas Bohier; the bridge across the Cher was added 1556–1559 under Diane de Poitiers, and the gallery on top of it 1570–1576 under Catherine de Medici.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?
Priority entry to the château bypassing the ticket-office queue, plus access to the full estate: the château rooms, the gallery across the Cher, the kitchens, the chapel, Diane de Poitiers' garden, Catherine de Medici's garden, the vegetable garden, the maze, and the farm. The HistoPad tablet is an optional upgrade.
When's the queue worst?
July–August 11:00–15:00 is the peak. Weekend ticket-office queues can hit 45–60 minutes. Mornings (from 09:00) and late afternoons (after 16:00) are calmer. Skip-the-line gets you past any queue in under 5 minutes.
How long does a visit take?
Allow 2.5–3 hours for the château interior, the gallery, the kitchens, and both formal gardens. Add another hour for the farm, maze, and the quiet far end of the estate. A full afternoon (4 hours) is ideal.
What's the HistoPad?
A tablet-guided tour that, in each room, shows a 3D reconstruction of how the room looked under Catherine de Medici — the tapestries, the fires, the paintings that have since moved. 12 languages including EN/FR/DE/ES/IT/JP/ZH. Kids' mode and expert mode both included. Worth the €10 upgrade.