The Château de Chambord at golden hour — symmetrical white-stone keep with a fantastical roofline of turrets, lantern tower and hundreds of chimneys, reflected in the canal of its walled park. Loire Valley, France.

Chambord Tickets — Loire two-château day plan

Chambord + Chenonceau in one day

Reserve Loire combo

The loire two-château day plan option at Chambord Tickets — chambord + chenonceau in one day. Includes skip-the-line entry to both chambord and chenonceau, 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.

• Skip-the-line entry to both Chambord and Chenonceau • An optimised driving route between the two (≈50 min apart) • Chambord for architectural scale, Chenonceau for furnished interiors • Open-date flexibility on the Chambord leg • 5-minute audio history for each château sent before your visit

Who this is for

This option is designed for chambord + chenonceau in one day. 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 Chambord is the largest château in France's Loire Valley, begun in 1519 as a hunting lodge for King François I and completed around 1547. It is the defining monument of the early French Renaissance — a symmetrical keep wrapped in a roofscape of turrets, dormers and 282 chimneys around a central lantern tower, set within a walled park of 52.

Frequently asked

What's included in the skip-the-line ticket?
Priority entry past the ticket-office queue, plus access to the keep — the double-helix staircase, the royal apartments, the vaulted halls and the rooftop terraces — and the French formal gardens and walled park. The ticket is open-dated, so you choose your own day.
Is the ticket for a specific time slot?
No. Chambord's standard ticket is open admission — valid during opening hours on the day you visit, with no fixed time slot. We issue an open-dated ticket so you can arrive whenever suits you and walk straight in.
Who designed the double-helix staircase?
The open double-spiral staircase is the centrepiece of the château — two intertwined flights around a hollow core so people climbing up and down never meet. It is often attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, who spent his final years nearby at Amboise under François I; while this is not definitively confirmed, many scholars credit him with the design.
How long does a visit take?
Allow 2.5 to 3 hours for the keep, the staircase and the roof terraces. Add another 1 to 2 hours if you want to explore the park by bike, electric cart or rowing boat, or walk the formal gardens.