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Summary:
- The official Top 15 CMN monuments in 2025, with exact visitor numbers
- Why Paris dominates the top of the ranking
- Where the Paris Olympics ripple effect shows up most clearly in the data
- A simple way to pick monuments without turning your trip into a checklist
In 2025, the Centre des monuments nationaux, also known as the CMN, recorded more than 12 million visits across its monuments. In the years before, the total hovered around 11 million. The CMN links this rise to the afterglow of the Paris Olympics, a few anniversary years such as Azay-le-Rideau and Villa Cavrois, and improved visitor routes at certain sites, including Saint-Denis.
This article keeps things simple and useful. You’ll get the Top 15 list with the official counts, then a clear way to read it: what’s pulling people into Paris, which sites gained the most visibility after 2024, and how to choose the right monument for the kind of day you actually want.
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What this ranking covers, and why it matters
This is not a list of every famous place in France. It focuses on monuments managed by the Centre des monuments nationaux, which means the numbers are consistent and comparable across a single network. That’s exactly why the ranking is handy for travellers: you’re not mixing different reporting systems, and you’re looking at sites that share similar ticketing and visitor counting methods.
The 2025 result is easy to interpret. The network crossed 12 million visits for the first time, helped by major event momentum, anniversary-driven attention, and changes that make visits smoother. One example cited by the CMN is work to improve the visitor experience at the Basilica-Cathedral of Saint-Denis. For planning purposes, the message is simple: demand rose, and some places felt busier because more people picked the same “must see” route.
Paris sits on top, because it fits almost every itinerary
Paris takes four spots in the Top 5, and the #1 monument is the Arc de Triomphe with 1,852,271 visitors. That result is not surprising. These monuments are central, they’re easy to combine with neighbourhood walks, and they deliver a strong experience without demanding a full day.
The Top 5 also shows the mix that people love in Paris. You get a viewpoint at the Arc, a pure visual shock inside Sainte-Chapelle, and a heavy atmosphere at the Conciergerie. Add the Panthéon, and you have a classic day that feels “complete” even if you only have a weekend in the city. The real lesson is not that Paris is busy, it’s that a few sites are so convenient that they attract the same waves of visitors.
The Olympic bump, shown in plain numbers
The CMN directly connects part of the 2025 rise to the Olympics effect, and it’s not vague. Two sites come with clear year on year growth figures: the Panthéon increased by 21%, and the Conciergerie increased by 24%. Those are sharp jumps in a single year, and they explain why these places suddenly felt harder to visit even for travellers who planned ahead.
The CMN also points to strong growth for cathedral visits outside Paris: Amiens rose by 95%, Chartres by 74%, and Reims by 43%. That matters because it suggests travellers didn’t only stick to the capital. More people also leaned into cathedral cities, where a visit can anchor a slower day with time to wander and eat well without rushing.
The Top 15 CMN monuments in 2025, with visitor counts
Here is the official Top 15 list for 2025, based on the CMN figures. It’s the fastest way to compare the heavy hitters with the sites just below the headline names, and to decide what belongs on your route.
| Rank | Monument (CMN) | 2025 visitors |
| 1 | Arc de Triomphe | 1,852,271 |
| 2 | Abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel | 1,627,042 |
| 3 | Sainte-Chapelle | 1,333,286 |
| 4 | Panthéon | 1,117,705 |
| 5 | Conciergerie | 773,303 |
| 6 | Château and ramparts of Carcassonne | 616,012 |
| 7 | Hôtel de la Marine | 348,299 |
| 8 | Château d’Angers | 322,495 |
| 9 | Château d’Azay-le-Rideau | 320,786 |
| 10 | Towers and ramparts of Aigues-Mortes | 209,627 |
| 11 | Château de Pierrefonds | 184,587 |
| 12 | Château de Vincennes | 164,004 |
| 13 | Basilica of Saint-Denis | 151,457 |
| 14 | Abbey of Cluny | 140,334 |
| 15 | Château d’If | 120,696 |
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A quick way to use this table without overthinking it is to pick by “day type.” If you want a big visual payoff, choose Arc de Triomphe or a ramparts site. If you want a short, intense interior visit, Sainte-Chapelle delivers. If you want a full day that feels like a journey, Mont-Saint-Michel or Carcassonne can take the spotlight. If you want something calmer that still feels substantial, places like Cluny or Saint-Denis often fit better into a slower schedule.
How to choose monuments without turning your trip into a checklist
The classic travel mistake in France is not picking the wrong monument. It’s trying to do too many in one day, then spending more time transitioning than actually visiting. A simple rule helps: one main monument per half day, then one lighter add on nearby, such as a walk, a café stop, or a neighbourhood you actually want to explore.In Paris, it also helps to avoid stacking monuments that feel similar. Pair one bright, visual experience with one more atmospheric visit. That keeps the day varied, and it usually feels more satisfying than racing through four interiors back to back. Outside Paris, treat the big names as the main event. A place like Mont-Saint-Michel doesn’t want to be squeezed between three other plans. It works best when you give it space.

