REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Eiffel Tower Hosted Tour, Seine Cruise and City Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by ParisCityVision · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Three ways to see Paris fast with skip-the-line Eiffel Tower access and a Seine cruise. I like how the tour strings together the big icons in a way that helps you get your bearings fast, whether it’s your first day or your last. One thing to plan for: the timing is tight, and elevator waits can add up at the Eiffel Tower, especially in high season.
I also appreciate the start at Trocadéro Gardens, where the Eiffel looks like it’s framed for a postcard. The bus portion uses an audio guide you can download, so you’re not stuck staring at a map. Just remember this is not a sit-around-and-watch show; you’ll be moving, checking in, and then navigating on your own once the tour drops you at the Eiffel Tower.
In This Review
- Quick hits
- How this tour helps you see the real Paris, quickly
- Meeting point at Place de Sydney: don’t go to the tower first
- Check-in closes early, and waits happen anyway
- Entering the Eiffel Tower with the green-flag route
- Eiffel Tower: 2nd floor vs summit, and what you should choose
- The 2nd floor is the best “most of it” option
- Summit is for view-chasers and good timing
- One key limitation: 3rd floor access and mobility
- The Seine cruise on a glass trimaran: 1 hour of story time
- Commentary in many languages, including a kids version
- Timing flexibility is a common plus
- Panoramic bus tour: the landmarks you can actually remember
- What this bus tour covers well
- What to watch for: time on the road
- Comfort and group size: what “small group” means here
- Timing reality: the tour ends at the Eiffel Tower
- Price and value: why $116 can work well for the right traveler
- Who should book this tour
- Who might want a different option
- Should you book this Eiffel + Seine + city combo
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the tour?
- Do I need to go to the Eiffel Tower to collect tickets?
- What Eiffel Tower access is included?
- How long is the Seine cruise and what is it like?
- Is audio commentary included, and in what languages?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Quick hits

- Trocadéro Gardens setup: Eiffel Tower views before you head up.
- Eiffel Tower by elevator (2nd floor): skip the main ticket line experience.
- Optional summit upgrade: more height if you choose it.
- Glass-enclosed Seine cruise: 1 hour, with commentary in 13 languages (plus a kids version in French).
- Panoramic bus city tour: major landmarks with downloadable audio and 360°/3D visuals.
- Ends at the Eiffel Tower: you’re on your own afterward, so plan your next stop.
How this tour helps you see the real Paris, quickly

This is a value-minded “three stops, one plan” kind of tour: panoramic bus, Eiffel Tower access, and a Seine cruise. If your Paris time is short, it’s a practical way to line up the must-sees without spending your limited daylight bouncing between tickets and transport.
What I like most is the pacing. You get the Eiffel moment with height and scale, then you switch to the calmer Seine perspective, then you round out with city highlights from the bus. It’s a smooth way to turn Paris from a list into a sense of place.
Other guided tours we've reviewed at Paris
Meeting point at Place de Sydney: don’t go to the tower first

The tour’s meeting point is Place de Sydney 75015, on the corner of Avenue de Suffren and Rue Jean Rey. Look for your guide holding a PARISCityVISION sign, and follow them from there.
Important: you do not go to the Eiffel Tower to collect tickets. Several visitors get tripped up by this, especially if you’re already standing in the Eiffel area. Public transport options shown for getting there include Metro Line 6 (Bir-Hakeim), RER C (Champ de Mars/Tour Eiffel), or Bus 82 (Champ de Mars).
Check-in closes early, and waits happen anyway

Plan to arrive a bit before the start time. Check-in closes 10 minutes before departure, so showing up late can mean losing your place with the group.
At the Eiffel Tower, security and elevator access can create waits. In high season, the total wait to access the 2nd floor can be up to 25 minutes. If you selected the summit option, expect an additional elevator wait of up to 20 minutes after you reach the 2nd-floor area.
Entering the Eiffel Tower with the green-flag route

At arrival, you’ll join the lines for Visitors with tickets marked with a green flag. That’s the part that saves you the most stress: you’re not stuck in the main long ticket queues.
Before the climb, the tour sets you up with Trocadéro Gardens. This is where you get that iconic Eiffel view from across the Seine, and it’s also where you’ll hear about nearby sculptures like L’Homme and La Femme and the Warsaw Fountains.
Then it’s elevator time. With the standard option, you’re hosted to the Eiffel Tower’s 2nd floor. With the upgrade, you can go on to the summit for the highest views.
Eiffel Tower: 2nd floor vs summit, and what you should choose

Other Seine river cruise combos we've reviewed at Paris
The 2nd floor is the best “most of it” option
The 2nd floor gives you a wide, layered view over the city. You’re still high enough to appreciate Paris as a grid of neighborhoods and major avenues, not just rooftops.
For many people, this is the sweet spot because it’s less time lost to elevator logistics than the summit path.
Summit is for view-chasers and good timing
If you like tall viewpoints and you’re comfortable with extra time in lines, the summit option is worth considering. The tour explicitly notes additional waiting for summit elevator access in high season, so choose it when you’re okay with a longer on-site timeline.
One key limitation: 3rd floor access and mobility
The tour includes access only up to what your ticket allows (2nd floor standard, summit if selected). Also note the Eiffel Tower’s safety rule: access to the 3rd floor isn’t permitted for some visitors based on physical conditions or mobility impairments, since that level is elevator-only and can’t be evacuated by stairs.
The Seine cruise on a glass trimaran: 1 hour of story time

After the Eiffel stop, you’ll get your river cruise ticket for a 1-hour Seine cruise. The boat is described as a glass-enclosed trimaran, which matters more than it sounds like. It’s a comfortable way to enjoy the river view even if the weather turns.
As you cruise, you pass major landmarks including Notre-Dame Cathedral, Musée d’Orsay, the Louvre Museum, and Place de la Concorde. That route helps you connect the city you just saw from above with the shoreline details you might not notice on foot.
Commentary in many languages, including a kids version
The cruise includes audio commentary in 13 languages, plus a kids-focused version in French. It’s not just facts; it’s the kind of guided background that makes landmarks feel connected instead of random.
Timing flexibility is a common plus
A practical benefit that shows up in how people use the ticket: once you’ve done the Eiffel portion, you’re generally free to take the cruise later rather than immediately on the clock. Some visitors also mention that their cruise tickets can be valid for a long time (like a year), which is handy if rain or crowds scramble your schedule. If you’re planning a tight one-day itinerary, this flexibility can make the difference.
Panoramic bus tour: the landmarks you can actually remember

The bus segment is a classic way to get orientation. You’ll ride through central Paris with an audio guide, seeing big names like the Champs-Élysées, Arc de Triomphe, and Notre-Dame Cathedral.
This part also uses an app-based audio system you can download to your device. The tour description mentions 3D reconstructions and 360° interior views of monuments, which helps you visualize places you can’t fully experience from the street.
What this bus tour covers well
The bus portion is built for recognition. When you later walk on your own, you’ll know why certain streets and squares matter. It’s also a nice way to handle heat or rain since you’re seated while the city rolls by.
What to watch for: time on the road
If you’re the type who wants lots of photo stops, the tour’s limited duration may feel like you’re watching more than you’re capturing. Even when the city is gorgeous, the bus ride is still moving; you won’t have hours for deep exploration between stops.
Also, the bus overview can omit some areas. One note from a past schedule: Sacre-Cœur and Montmartre are mentioned as not included. If those are your top priorities, plan a separate visit.
Comfort and group size: what “small group” means here

This isn’t sold as a giant cattle-car. The tour is described as having small group availability, and that tends to make check-in and movement easier, especially when you’re dealing with security lines at the Eiffel Tower.
You’ll also have a hosted greeter experience in multiple languages. The listed host/greeter options include English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Korean, and Portuguese.
Timing reality: the tour ends at the Eiffel Tower

This tour does not include hotel pick-up or drop-off. The day ends at the Eiffel Tower, which means you need to figure out your next transport step.
That matters for planning. If you want to head straight to dinner, or if you’re traveling to another neighborhood, I’d map your route before you finish the Eiffel portion. Some visitors have also mentioned that being dropped in this area can require a bit of navigation work after the tour ends.
Price and value: why $116 can work well for the right traveler
At $116 per person for a 3–4 hour experience, the price only makes sense if you’re using the tour for what it’s designed to do: save time and stack the big highlights.
Here’s the value logic I’d use:
- You’re paying for Eiffel Tower elevator access plus the hosted route that helps you avoid the most painful queues.
- You get a 1-hour Seine cruise with multilingual commentary.
- You also get a bus overview that can help you decide what to revisit later.
If you were to buy these pieces separately and fight the timing yourself, you’d likely spend more energy than money. If your schedule is flexible, the cruise ticket timing helps too. If your schedule is super tight, the skip-the-line approach is the part you’re really paying for.
Who should book this tour
This is a great fit if you:
- Have limited time in Paris and want a hit list that actually connects.
- Prefer audio and guided context over wandering with zero plan.
- Want the Eiffel Tower experience without spending your precious morning trapped in long ticket lines.
- Like the idea of seeing Paris from three angles: from the street (bus), from above (Eiffel), and from the water (Seine).
Who might want a different option
This tour is not suitable for people with mobility impairments, based on the information provided.
Also, if you’re the type who wants long, stop-and-explore visits at each place, the overall length and the “hosted then free time” structure may feel rushed. In that case, you might be happier with a slower plan centered on one or two neighborhoods plus one standout attraction.
Should you book this Eiffel + Seine + city combo
I’d book it if you want a fast, efficient way to see the Eiffel Tower and a first taste of Paris’s major sights without turning your day into a logistics puzzle. The best reason is the combination: Eiffel access plus a Seine cruise plus a city overview in one organized package.
I’d hesitate if you hate any waiting at all. Even with the streamlined approach, security and elevator queues can still add time—especially if you choose the summit. And since the tour ends at the Eiffel Tower, make sure you’re comfortable planning your next move.
If you’re ready to see Paris in a well-timed sweep, this is a smart way to do it.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the tour?
Meet your guide at Place de Sydney 75015 Paris, on the corner of Avenue de Suffren and Rue Jean Rey. Your guide will be holding a PARISCityVISION sign.
Do I need to go to the Eiffel Tower to collect tickets?
No. You should not go to the Eiffel Tower to collect your ticket. You’ll meet the guide at the meeting point and then go from there.
What Eiffel Tower access is included?
The tour includes a hosted visit to the Eiffel Tower 2nd floor by elevator. If you select the summit option, hosted access to the summit by elevator is included as well.
How long is the Seine cruise and what is it like?
The Seine cruise is 1 hour. It’s described as a glass-enclosed trimaran with commentary.
Is audio commentary included, and in what languages?
Yes. Audio commentary is included via a downloadable app, with languages listed including Spanish, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, and Japanese, along with a kids version in French on the cruise.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a 60% refund.





























