Loire Châteaux A field guide
N° 01 — of 09
Château de Chambord
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The Loire Valley · France

Nine châteaux.
One river.

Fifty miles of the French Renaissance, strung along the Loire. A field guide to the great houses — which to choose, and where to book.

Find your château
9great houses in this guide
< 1 hrtypical drive between them
2–3 daysfor the classic loop by car
2000Loire Valley UNESCO listing
A short orientation

One river, a century of ambition

When the French court moved to the Loire, it built to impress — and the valley became an open-air museum of the Renaissance, the densest gathering of great châteaux in Europe.

Most sit within an hour of one another, reached from Tours or Blois. No two are alike: Chambord overwhelms by scale, Chenonceau bridges a river, Villandry is really a garden, and Cheverny is a family home that never emptied out.

Every château in this guide links to its own booking page — a dedicated ticket service for that house, in your language and your currency. Choose below, or read the loop we'd drive.

Start here

Which château is for you?

The collection

Nine houses on the river

Each links to its own booking page — pay in your currency, tickets by email.

Planning the trip

The classic two-day loop

Two châteaux a day is comfortable, three is a full day. This is the loop we'd drive from Tours — swap houses freely; nothing is more than about an hour from anything else.

THE LOIRE A field map of the nine châteaux · Angers → Chambord N Paris · TGV about 1 h 15 to Tours → Orléans · Paris Loire Cher Indre BLOIS TOURS 01 Chambord 02 Chenonceau 03 Villandry 04 Cheverny 05 Chaumont 06 Amboise 07 Clos Lucé 08 Azay-le-Rideau 09 Angers Château Gateway town River Road link Schematic — not to scale
The valley at a glance — numbered as in the guide below. Schematic, not to scale.
  1. Morning one — Chambord

    Arrive at opening for the double-helix staircase and rooftop before the coaches. Allow two to three hours.

  2. Afternoon one — Cheverny or Chaumont

    Cheverny for the furnished rooms and the hounds' feeding; Chaumont in festival season for the gardens. Both sit near Blois.

  3. Morning two — Chenonceau

    The gallery over the Cher is quietest in the first hour. Two and a half hours does it justice.

  4. Afternoon two — Amboise & Clos Lucé

    Both in Amboise town, a short walk apart: the royal château and Leonardo's last home make a natural pair.

  5. With a third day — Villandry, Azay, Angers

    Villandry's terraces west of Tours, Azay-le-Rideau on its island in the Indre, and the fortress of Angers with the Apocalypse Tapestry further downstream.

When to come

Late spring to early autumn is the sweet spot — gardens at their fullest, evenings long. Chaumont's Garden Festival runs late April to early November; interiors are a year-round pleasure.

Getting around

A car is easiest; several houses sit off the rail network. Tours and Blois are the gateways. Amboise and Chenonceaux have their own stations, and guided day-trips cover the rest.

Booking

Most Loire châteaux sell open-dated tickets and rarely sell out — the reason to book ahead is skipping the ticket desk, not scarcity. Each house in this guide has its own booking page, in your language and currency.

Before you go

Questions, answered plainly

How many Loire châteaux can I visit in one day?
Two, comfortably — each deserves ninety minutes to two hours, plus driving. Three makes a full day. Pair a marquee house (Chambord, Chenonceau) with a smaller or slower one nearby, and don't try four.
Which Loire château is the best one to visit?
There's no single answer — they excel at different things. Chambord is the grandest, Chenonceau the most beautiful, Villandry has the finest gardens, Cheverny the best-furnished rooms, and Clos Lucé is the most fun with children. If you can only see two, most first-timers pick Chambord and Chenonceau.
Do I need a car for the Loire Valley?
It helps. Amboise and Chenonceaux have their own train stations, and Blois is a good rail gateway — but Villandry, Cheverny and Chaumont are awkward without a car. If you're not driving, guided day-trips from Tours or Amboise cover the main houses.
When is the best time to visit the Loire châteaux?
Late spring through early autumn. The gardens — Villandry especially — are at their peak, and Chaumont's International Garden Festival runs from late April to early November. Winter is quiet and the furnished interiors still reward a visit.
Do Loire château tickets sell out?
Rarely. Most houses sell open-dated tickets with no daily cap, so booking ahead is about skipping the ticket-office queue rather than scarcity. The exception is peak-summer weekends at the biggest names, where queues get long — another reason to arrive with a ticket.
Where should I base myself?
Tours or Blois for rail connections and choice; Amboise for charm — it's a small riverside town with two great houses in walking distance and the rest of the valley within an hour's drive.
Is the Loire Valley a UNESCO site?
Yes — the Loire Valley between Sully-sur-Loire and Chalonnes was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage cultural landscape in 2000, covering the river, its towns and the great châteaux along it.
Is Cheverny really Tintin's Marlinspike Hall?
It is. Hergé modelled Captain Haddock's Marlinspike Hall (Moulinsart) on Cheverny, minus the two outer wings — and the château keeps a permanent Tintin exhibition, alongside its working pack of around a hundred hounds.