The Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur crowning the Butte Montmartre in the 18th arrondissement of Paris
75018 · The 18th arrondissement of Paris

The artists'
hill of Paris

The white domes of the Sacré-Cœur above the rooftops, painters on Place du Tertre, the village streets of the Abbesses and Rue Lepic, a hidden vineyard and the red windmill of the Moulin Rouge — the 18th is Montmartre, the most romantic hill in Paris.

Photo: the Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur, Montmartre · Chait Goli / Pexels
Things to do

Tickets & experiences in the 18th

The hill of Montmartre rewards walkers — the Sacré-Cœur and its view, the painters of Place du Tertre, hidden vineyards and windmills, and the cabarets at the foot of the slope. A hand-picked selection, most with free cancellation.

★ Walking tour

Montmartre walking tour

Wind up the lanes of the hill with a local guide — the Sacré-Cœur, Place du Tertre, the vineyard and the haunts of the artists who made Montmartre famous.

from €25Book now
★ View

Sacré-Cœur dome climb

Climb the 300 steps of the dome for the highest panorama in Paris — a 360° view from the top of the Butte, above the rooftops of the whole city.

from €8Official site
Museum

Musée de Montmartre

The hill's story in its oldest house, with the Renoir gardens and a view over the vineyard — studios once used by Renoir, Valadon and Utrillo.

from €15Official site
Cabaret

Moulin Rouge revue

The legendary cabaret at the foot of the hill — feathers, sequins and the French cancan, with dinner or Champagne. Book well ahead.

from €88Official site
★ Food tour

Montmartre food & wine tour

Taste your way around the village — cheese, charcuterie, pastries and wine — on a guided walk through the foodiest corners of the hill.

from €65Book now
Art

Place du Tertre & the painters

The artists' square behind the basilica, where portraitists still work at their easels — have your portrait drawn, or just soak up the village atmosphere over a coffee.

Discover

A hill of artists & windmills

The 18th is built around the Butte Montmartre — the highest natural point in Paris, once a village of vineyards and windmills outside the city walls. Below the hill stretch the Abbesses, Pigalle, the Goutte d'Or and the great markets of Barbès, a lively, multicultural slice of the city.

Sacré-Cœur & the Butte

The white-domed basilica crowning the hill, with the best free panorama in Paris from its parvis. The 18th's unmistakable landmark.

Place du Tertre

The little square behind the basilica where painters still set up their easels — the historic heart of artists' Montmartre, once home to Picasso and Utrillo.

The Abbesses

The most charming corner of the hill: its Art Nouveau metro entrance, café-lined Rue des Abbesses and the steep, cinematic Rue Lepic.

Vineyard & windmills

The last working vineyard in Paris (the Clos Montmartre) and the surviving windmills — the Moulin de la Galette and Moulin Radet — recall the village's rural past.

Pigalle & the Moulin Rouge

At the foot of the hill, the red windmill of the Moulin Rouge and the neon of Pigalle — birthplace of the cancan and of Belle Époque Paris by night.

Barbès & the Goutte d'Or

The vibrant, multicultural east of the 18th — the bustling Marché Barbès, the fabrics of the Marché Saint-Pierre and a soundtrack of world cuisines.

Where to eat & drink

Tables of the 18th

From a Belle Époque brasserie to a village bistro behind the Sacré-Cœur, Montmartre eats with real character — historic addresses, terraces on the Abbesses and the smell of roast chicken on Rue Lepic.

Brasserie · Seafood

La Mascotte

52 Rue des Abbesses

A Montmartre institution since 1889 on the Rue des Abbesses — seafood platters, oysters and Auvergne specialities in a warm, bustling brasserie.

French · Poultry

Le Coq Rico

98 Rue Lepic

Chef Antoine Westermann's "bistro of beautiful birds" near the windmills — free-range poultry roasted to perfection, with a view over the hill.

€€€€
Historic brasserie

Wepler

14 Place de Clichy

A grand brasserie on Place de Clichy since 1892, famous for its oyster bar — once a haunt of Picasso, Apollinaire and Henry Miller.

Historic bistro

La Bonne Franquette

2 Rue des Saules (cnr Rue Saint-Rustique)

A village bistro in the oldest corner of the Butte, where Van Gogh, Renoir and Pissarro once gathered — French terroir cooking and a leafy courtyard.

Fondue · Convivial

Le Refuge des Fondus

17 Rue des Trois Frères

A tiny, legendary Montmartre address for cheese and meat fondue, wine served in baby bottles and elbow-to-elbow tables. Fun and unmistakably local.

Brasserie · Terrace

Le Sancerre

35 Rue des Abbesses

A quintessential Abbesses café-brasserie with a buzzing terrace — homemade French dishes from breakfast to late, in the heart of the village.

Tourist guide

Must-see places in the 18th arrondissement

A basilica with a view, a square of painters, a hidden vineyard and the most famous cabaret in the world — the places that make Montmartre unique.

Basilica · Free (dome paid)

Basilique du Sacré-Cœur

The white travertine basilica at the summit of Montmartre (35 Rue du Chevalier de la Barre), with a vast mosaic of Christ and a panorama over all of Paris.

Square · Free

Place du Tertre

The artists' square behind the basilica, ringed by cafés, where portraitists and painters still work. Loveliest early in the morning.

Museum · Paid

Musée de Montmartre & gardens

The hill's history in its oldest house, with the Renoir gardens and a view over the Clos Montmartre vineyard. Once a studio for Renoir, Valadon and Utrillo.

Vineyard · View from street

Clos Montmartre

The last working vineyard in Paris, on the corner of Rue des Saules and Rue Saint-Vincent — its harvest is celebrated each October at the Fête des Vendanges.

Windmill · View from street

Moulin de la Galette

The most famous of Montmartre's surviving windmills, immortalised by Renoir — once an open-air dance hall, now a romantic survivor on Rue Lepic.

Cabaret · Show

Moulin Rouge

The world's most famous cabaret at the foot of the hill (Place Blanche), home of the French cancan since 1889 — book ahead for the evening revue.

Before you go

Weather in the 18th arrondissement

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Live data for Montmartre · Open-Meteo
Map

Explore the 18th on the map

The landmarks, viewpoints, museums and tables of Montmartre and its slopes. Click a marker — or a list item — to see what's there.

Map © Leaflet · © OpenStreetMap contributors · © CARTO
Orientation

Understanding Paris & its transport

Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements that spiral outward clockwise from the centre, like a snail. The 18th is in the north, on the Right Bank, rising over the Butte Montmartre and spreading down to Pigalle, Barbès, the Goutte d'Or and the ring road at Porte de la Chapelle and Porte de Clignancourt.

It is a hill of two faces: the romantic, village-like Montmartre of the Abbesses and the Sacré-Cœur above, and the lively, multicultural quarters of Barbès and the Goutte d'Or below — together one of the most characterful corners of the city.

Since 2025 the system has been simplified: paper tickets are gone, replaced by the contactless Navigo Easy card or your phone. A single Métro/RER ticket is now a flat fare, and a day pass quickly pays for itself if you ride often.

For door-to-door directions, the Bonjour RATP and Citymapper apps are the most reliable companions.

Métro / RER single€2.55
Bus / tram single€2.05
Day pass (unlimited)€12.30
Navigo Week pass~€31
Airport ticket (CDG/Orly)€14
Navigo Easy card€2 (reusable)
Getting around

How to reach the 18th arrondissement

Metro line 2 skirts the foot of the hill (Anvers, Pigalle, Blanche) and line 12 climbs into the village (Abbesses, Lamarck–Caulaincourt). Here are the essentials.

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By metro

  • 2 Anvers Sacré-Cœur & funicular
  • 12 Abbesses Village heart
  • 2 Blanche · Pigalle Moulin Rouge
  • 12 Lamarck–Caulaincourt North slope & vineyard
🚠

Up the hill

  • Funicular de Montmartre Place St-Pierre → basilica
  • Montmartrobus Loops around the Butte
  • The stairs Free — and the best views
  • On foot from Abbesses Through the village lanes
✈️

From the airports

  • Roissy–Charles de Gaulle RER B to Gare du Nord + 4, ~45 min
  • Orly line 14 to St-Lazare + 12, ~50 min
  • Le Bourget ~35 min
  • Beauvais shuttle to Porte Maillot, ~1h15

The Paris Métro at a glance

One of the world's densest networks — 16 lines, over 300 stations, a train every 2–4 minutes. You're never far from a station.
1 2 3 3b 4 5 6 7 7b 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
🎨
Colour & number coded. Each line has a unique number and colour. Follow the line colour and the name of the terminus in your direction — that's how platforms are signposted.
⏱️
Frequent. Trains run roughly every 2 minutes at peak and 4–8 minutes off-peak, from ~5:30 am to ~1:15 am (2:15 am Fri–Sat).
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Free transfers. Change lines as often as you like within the métro/RER on a single ticket, valid up to 2 hours, as long as you don't exit the gates.
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The funicular. The Montmartre funicular counts as a normal metro journey — use the same ticket or Navigo to ride up to the Sacré-Cœur instead of the stairs.
📍
For the 18th: Anvers (2) for the Sacré-Cœur and funicular; Abbesses (12) for the village; Blanche (2) for the Moulin Rouge.
📱
Apps. Bonjour RATP and Citymapper give live routes, platform exits and disruptions — far easier than paper maps.
Tickets: the paper ticket is gone — load journeys onto a contactless Navigo Easy card (€2) or your phone.
Local tip: climb to the Sacré-Cœur for sunrise or just before sunset — the light over Paris is at its best and the crowds are thinnest.
Good to know

Frequently asked questions

What is there to see in the 18th arrondissement (75018)?
The 18th is the artists' hill of Paris: the Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur crowning the Butte Montmartre with its panoramic view, Place du Tertre and its painters, the village streets and cafés of the Abbesses and Rue Lepic, the last working Montmartre vineyard (Clos Montmartre), the Moulin de la Galette, and the Moulin Rouge and Pigalle at the foot of the hill.
Is the Sacré-Cœur free to visit?
Yes — entry to the basilica is free, and so is the parvis in front of it, which offers one of the best panoramic views over Paris. There is a separate paid ticket to climb the dome. The basilica sits at 35 Rue du Chevalier de la Barre, reached on foot, by the stairs, or by the funicular from Place Saint-Pierre.
What is Place du Tertre?
Place du Tertre is the small square just behind the Sacré-Cœur, the historic heart of artists' Montmartre, where painters and portraitists still set up their easels. Once frequented by Picasso, Utrillo and Modigliani, it is lined with cafés and is best enjoyed early in the morning before the crowds.
Is there really a vineyard in Montmartre?
Yes — the Clos Montmartre, on the corner of Rue des Saules and Rue Saint-Vincent, is a small working vineyard, a survivor of the hill's wine-growing past. Its harvest is celebrated each October during the Fête des Vendanges de Montmartre, one of the neighbourhood's biggest festivals.
How do I get to Montmartre and the 18th?
The 18th is served by metro line 2 (Anvers for the Sacré-Cœur, Pigalle and Blanche for the Moulin Rouge), line 12 (Abbesses, Lamarck–Caulaincourt, Jules Joffrin), line 4 (Château Rouge) and line 13. From Anvers, walk up to Place Saint-Pierre and take the funicular or the stairs up to the basilica.
Before you go

Plan your stay

A few practical essentials to make your visit to the 18th arrondissement smooth and stress-free.

🗓️

Best time to visit

Montmartre is magical early in the morning and at sunset, when the crowds thin and the light is golden. Come in October for the Fête des Vendanges; the hill is busiest midday in summer.

🥾

Wear good shoes

Montmartre is steep and cobbled, with many stairs. Comfortable shoes make all the difference — or take the funicular up and wander down through the village lanes.

🎟️

Book ahead

The Sacré-Cœur is free, but the dome climb, the Musée de Montmartre and the Moulin Rouge revue all benefit from booking online, especially in high season.

💶

Money & tipping

Cards are accepted almost everywhere; small cafés and market stalls may prefer cash. Service is included by law; rounding up for great service is appreciated, never expected.

📸

Mind the crowds

Place du Tertre and the basilica steps draw pickpockets and pushy "bracelet" sellers. Keep bags zipped, decline politely and walk on — the quieter back lanes are the real Montmartre.

🕒

Opening hours

The basilica opens daily from early morning to evening; cabarets run nightly shows; many shops on the hill open late morning. The vineyard is viewable from the street year-round.

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Explore the 20 arrondissements of Paris

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