Versailles is three hours from Le Havre. That is a long drive for a shore day — and it is worth it.
The Palace of Versailles is not just a building. It is the physical expression of absolute power: 700 rooms, 2,000 acres of formal gardens, a Hall of Mirrors that runs for 73 metres and still stops
people in their tracks. Louis XIV built it to remind everyone — guests, courtiers, ambassadors, rivals — exactly who was in charge.
This private tour picks you up at the Le Havre cruise terminal and takes you directly to Versailles, giving you five full hours to explore at your own pace. No group, no guide with a flag, no schedule that isn't yours.
Your driver returns you to Le Havre in time for our ship — guaranteed.
Important: The Palace is closed on Mondays.
The gardens remain open. If your ship is in port on a Monday, the gardens alone are still an extraordinary half-day — but check the date before booking.
Cruise Passengers: Your driver will be waiting at the Le Havre cruise terminal with a sign bearing your name. Contact us via the Viator messaging system if you need assistance.
Hotel Guests: Your driver will meet you in the lobby of your hotel at the agreed pick-up time.
Important: The Palace of Versailles is closed on Mondays. Book your entrance tickets in advance at chateauversailles.fr — queues without a timed ticket can exceed two hours in peak season.
The State Apartments are where Louis XIV received foreign dignitaries and conducted the daily rituals of royal life. Each room is named after a planet or a god — the Salon of Apollo, the Salon of War — and decorated accordingly, with painted ceilings, gilded cornices, and furniture that took craftsmen years to complete. The Hall of Mirrors is the centrepiece. Seventeen arched mirrors reflecting seventeen arched windows, filled with light from the gardens. It was here that the German Empire was proclaimed in 1871, and the Treaty of Versailles signed in 1919. The room carries history in every reflection. The Royal Chapel and the Queen's Apartments complete the main circuit — each as lavishly decorated as the last, each telling a different chapter of the three centuries of French history played out within these walls.
André Le Nôtre designed the gardens of Versailles as a demonstration of humanity's dominion over nature — 800 hectares of clipped hedges, geometric pools, fountains, and tree-lined avenues radiating outward from the palace like rays from the Sun King himself. The Grand Canal stretches for 1.6 kilometres. The Fountain of Apollo shows the sun god rising from the water. On weekends and select weekdays, the Musical Fountains Show runs — check the Versailles website for dates, as it significantly enhances the visit. Allow at least two hours for the gardens — more if you want to reach the Trianons, the smaller palaces at the far end where Marie Antoinette kept her private retreat.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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