French impressionism highlights: Private day trip from Paris
Private ride with a local driver
Reviews
About your trip
What to expect
Your day trip begins wherever you are
Meet our professional driver right where you prefer in Paris whenever suits you best. No time wasted getting to the pickup point, grab your bag and start your trip right away.Discover more with local expertise
Your driver’s local insights will set the tone for your day trip. A hidden café here, a must-try restaurant there; insider tips you’ll love sharing later. This isn’t a guided tour but your ride will be rich with stories and discoveries along the way. And throughout the day, your driver will be available for you as needed, ready to assist, happy to help, making your trip stress-free.Explore at your own pace
Perfect for any private group
Whether you're traveling solo, as a family with kids, or as a large group, this service is tailored for your comfort and flexibility. It's the ideal option especially if you have limited time or a busy schedule.Good to know
- Two-way private car transfer
- Air-conditioned vehicle
- Personalized pickup and drop-off
- Professional English-speaking driver
- Complimentary bottled water
- Free cancellation 24 hours before departure
- Entry/Admission tickets to paid attractions Ile des Impressionnistes, Auvers-sur-Oise, and Asnieres Bridge should be purchased separately unless specified otherwise
- Meals, snacks, and gratuity are not included
Your trip at a glance
Your trip at a glance




A small island in the Seine at Chatou, the Ile des Impressionnistes is one of the most important sites in the history of painting, the exact spot where Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, and their circle spent their weekends and produced some of the defining images of Impressionism.
What to see
- La Maison Fournaise, the riverside restaurant and boathouse where Renoir painted the Luncheon of the Boating Party (1881), one of the most celebrated paintings in the Impressionist canon, now a museum with period rooms and a small Impressionist exhibition
- The island's towpath and Seine riverbanks, still largely unchanged from the scenes Renoir, Monet, and Sisley depicted throughout the 1870s and 1880s
What to do
- Lunch at the Maison Fournaise restaurant on the terrace where Renoir's models sat, the view from the table is almost identical to the painting
Take note
- The museum is closed Mondays and Tuesdays; verify hours head of time here https://www.musee-fournaise.com/




In the last 70 days of his life, between May and July 1890, Vincent van Gogh painted more than 70 works in and around the village of Auvers-sur-Oise. Almost every corner of the village appears on canvas.
What to see
- The Auberge Ravoux (also called the Maison de Van Gogh), where Vincent lived and died, the attic room where he spent his last weeks can be visited on a short guided tour
- The village church, wheat fields, town hall, and cafe, all recognisable from specific Van Gogh paintings and marked with reproduction panels showing the exact view he painted
- The cemetery at the edge of the village, where Vincent and his brother Theo are buried side by side under simple slabs of ivy
What to do
- Follow the self-guided Van Gogh trail through the village, which maps 18 painting locations with reproductions at each spot
- Visit the Maison Van Gogh for the guided room tour, it runs on the hour and lasts 15 minutes
Take note
- The House of Van Gogh is open Wednesday to Sunday; check https://www.maisondevangogh.fr/index-en.php for times
- The Musee Daubigny and Chateau d'Auvers offer additional Impressionist context nearby








































