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Notre-Dame’s Restored Towers Reopen to Visitors After Six Years

The reopening introduces a reimagined route with 400,000‑yearly capacity caps, €16 online tickets, following a presidential inspection by Emmanuel Macron.

Overview

  • Public access to the twin towers resumes from Saturday, marking the final major area to reopen after the cathedral welcomed visitors again in December 2024.
  • Macron toured the new route on Friday in Paris, with Culture Minister Rachida Dati joining the visit ahead of the public opening.
  • The redesigned climb covers 424 steps via a new oak double‑helix staircase, reaches terraces at 69 meters, and offers close views of the great bells Emmanuel and Marie.
  • Entry is strictly limited to small groups of 19, with an annual cap of about 400,000; tickets cost €16 online, with free access for under‑18s and many EU residents up to 25.
  • Tower restoration included replacing charred beams, removing and testing bells, and hydraulically lifting the 150‑ton campanile; further work on the apse and exterior remains under the multi‑phase program financed at €552 million for this stage.