Roland-Garros 2026 runs from 25 May to 7 June in Paris (16th arrondissement), with tickets from €29 in Opening Week and from €70 for a Night Session. Carlos Alcaraz, the two-time defending champion, has withdrawn (right wrist injury, 24 April 2026): Jannik Sinner, unbeaten on clay in 2026, is the overwhelming favourite. The Tribune Concorde, free from 3 to 7 June at Place de la Concorde, offers 3,800 seats to watch the quarter-finals and finals. Estimated 48h budget: €310–490 on a budget, €620–1,080 mid-range. Book your hotel and tickets 3 to 6 months in advance.
Two days in Paris around Roland-Garros is not something you can leave to chance. Tickets sell out within minutes, hotels in the 16th arrondissement fill up three months ahead, and the Boulevard d’Auteuil is closed to traffic throughout the fortnight: every detail matters. This practical guide gives you everything you need to structure your 48-hour stay — from choosing the right session to dining after the match, plus transport, hour-by-hour budgeting and the best cultural highlights within 10 minutes of the stadium.
1. Choosing the right moment: three 48h stay options

Opening Week, first week or final: the traveller’s trilemma
According to Roland-Garros official, the 125th edition unfolds in three distinct phases — and the timing of your visit shapes everything else.
Option A — Opening Week (18–22 May): the qualifying rounds offer the tournament’s most affordable access. Tickets at €29 full price, €15 for under-25s, with free movement between all courts. A relaxed atmosphere, and the chance to watch the top seeds practising on Chatrier in the morning. A special event this year: the farewell evening « Gaël & Friends » on 21 May at 7:30 pm on Court Chatrier (Matt Pokora, DJ Martin Solveig, Franglish).
Option B — First week of the main draw (25–30 May): all players in action, first to third round tickets on outer courts from €39 to €65, Night Sessions available from €70. This is the ideal compromise for first-time visitors. The official packages on travel.rolandgarros.com (ticket + 1 hotel night) start at €330–460 depending on the session.
Option C — Second week (1–7 June): quarter-finals, semi-finals, finals. Maximum electricity, Chatrier tickets almost exhausted. The Tribune Concorde (free, 3,800 seats, Place de la Concorde from 3 to 7 June) partially compensates for those without a ticket. Accommodation is scarce and 30–50% more expensive than outside the tournament.
Key points to help you decide
- Opening Week: controlled budget, total freedom, without the big-match crowds
- First week of the main draw: the best balance between accessibility and intensity
- Second week + Tribune Concorde: finals atmosphere without a compulsory ticket
2. Where to stay: budget to prestige, close to the stadium

The best addresses for every budget
According to Booking.com and data from city-paris.fr, hotels in the 16th and Boulogne-Billancourt fill up 3 to 6 months in advance during the tournament, with an average price premium of 30 to 50% compared to rates outside Roland-Garros.
Budget range (€80–140/night): ibis, greet Hotel and B&B Hotels in Boulogne-Billancourt are 10–15 minutes on foot from the stadium, or two Metro stops away. Unbeatable value for money during the tournament. The Résidence Aurmat (Auteuil side, self-catering studios) provides extra space for €100–180/night, a 5-minute walk away.
Mid-range (€150–350/night): the Hôtel Poussin (16th, Auteuil, family-run, 15–20 min on foot), Hôtel Noucha (boutique, Auteuil) and Ibis Styles Paris 16 Boulogne (near Parc des Princes) are all solid bases. Allow a minimum of 3 to 4 months lead time when booking.
Luxury (€400+/night): the Hotel Molitor Paris MGallery (iconic pool, Clarins spa, 400 m from the stadium, 124 rooms) is the closest address to the complex. From approximately €530/night during the tournament. The official packages on travel.rolandgarros.com offer Accor hotels (Sofitel, Pullman) paired with tickets for €200–2,000.
Key points
- ibis Boulogne-Billancourt: reliable budget option 10 min from the stadium, well connected by Metro Line 10
- Hotel Molitor MGallery: prestige 5 min on foot, listed Art Deco swimming pool
- 15th arrondissement or Left Bank (RER C): price/access alternative if the 16th is fully booked
3. Getting to the stadium: Metro, bike, RER — avoid the car

Line 10, Vélib’ and RER C: the three best routes
According to bewellotels.com and RATP, the best access to the stadium remains Metro Line 10, Porte d’Auteuil station: a 2-minute walk from the PPO Auteuil (main entrance gate). From Montparnasse, allow 30 minutes; from Gare de Lyon or Gare du Nord, approximately 45 minutes.
From Charles de Gaulle (CDG): RER B → Châtelet → RER C towards Versailles Rive Gauche → Boulainvilliers or Avenue du Président Kennedy (~60–70 min, €12.30). Taxi/private hire: €40–65, 40–60 min depending on traffic.
From Orly: Orlyval → RER B → Châtelet → Metro (~50 min, €14.80). Private hire: €30–45.
Within Paris: Navigo Day pass at €12.30 for the whole day, or a single ticket at €2.15. The Vélib’ (24h pass: €5 mechanical, €10 electric) is particularly practical from the Trocadéro — a 15-minute cycle along the Seine towpath on dedicated cycling lanes.
Car: the Boulevard d’Auteuil is closed to traffic during the tournament (prefectural order). Parking is virtually impossible in the 16th (€4/h). Alternative car parks in Boulogne-Billancourt are 10–15 minutes on foot from the stadium. Strongly inadvisable.
Key points
- Metro L10 Porte d’Auteuil: direct, no changes required from most central arrondissements
- Vélib’ from Trocadéro: pleasant 15-minute riverside cycle, avoids the Metro crowds
- Arrive 30–45 minutes before the PPO gates open to avoid security queues
4. 48h itinerary: day by day inside the stadium and the 16th arrondissement

Day 1: Roland-Garros immersion, from morning to night
According to Roland-Garros official, the Jardin des Chefs 2026 (1,200 m², Jardin des Serres d’Auteuil, adjacent to Court Simonne-Mathieu) brings together from 24 May to 5 June a line-up of Michelin-starred chefs: Pascal Barbot, Jessica Préalpato, Yves Camdeborde, Christophe Adam and Juan Arbelaez. Signature dishes at lunchtime (11:30–15:30), bodega evening (18:00–22:00).
Day 1 schedule (typical Week 1):
09:30 — Arrive at PPO Auteuil (30–45 min before gates open to avoid queues). Drop oversized bags at the left luggage (~€5).
10:00 — Outer courts open: roam freely to catch first-round matches on the smaller courts, just a few metres from top-100 players.
11:30 — Jardin des Chefs: signature chef platters (€15–30) or Click & Collect via the app to skip the queue.
14:00 — Day’s top matches on Chatrier or Lenglen according to the programme.
18:00 — If you have a Night Session ticket: head to the Chatrier waiting area (gates at 18:30, first ball at 20:15). If no evening ticket: Auteuil Brasserie (the former Auteuil station building, rooftop garden terrace, live match screening) or Treize au Clubhouse directly opposite the stadium.
Key points
- Click & Collect via the official app before 13:00: avoids on-site food queues
- Outer courts in the morning: intimate atmosphere, close proximity to the players
- Night Session on Chatrier: a unique experience under the roof, one big match in an electric atmosphere

Day 2: morning at the stadium, afternoon in the 16th arrondissement
The 16th arrondissement hides several cultural gems less than 20 minutes on foot from the stadium, perfect for a tournament-free afternoon.
Day 2 morning (stadium): outer courts, Tenniseum (the tennis museum integrated into the stadium, guided tours available), option brunch at the Jardin des Chefs.
Cultural afternoon:
— Fondation Louis Vuitton (8 avenue du Mahatma Gandhi, Bois de Boulogne): exhibition « Calder. Dreaming in Balance » (15 April–16 August 2026), spectacular Frank Gehry architecture, €18. Free shuttle from Concorde and Sablons. Open Mon, Wed, Thu 11:00–20:00, Fri 11:00–21:00, Sat–Sun 10:00–20:00, fondationlouisvuitton.fr.
— Musée Marmottan Monet (2 rue Louis-Boilly, La Muette): the world’s largest Monet collection, Segantini exhibition (29 April–16 August 2026), €14. Open Tue–Sun 10:00–18:00, Thu until 21:00, marmottan.fr.
— Auteuil Art Nouveau walk: free stroll along Rue Jean de la Fontaine (Castel Béranger by Guimard, 1898 — the first competition for building facades).
Late afternoon: Rue de Passy for shopping (Sandro, Maje, upmarket second-hand boutiques) or Marché couvert de Passy (Wed and Sat 7:00–14:00). Evening: Trocadéro and the illuminated Eiffel Tower (30 min by Metro Line 6 from Michel-Ange Auteuil).
Key points
- Fondation Louis Vuitton + Bois de Boulogne: a complete half-day of culture and nature 10 min from the stadium
- Guimard Art Nouveau walk: free and rare — more than half of the architect’s works are in the 16th
- Jardin des Serres d’Auteuil (3 av. de la Porte d’Auteuil, free): 1895 botanical garden right next to Court Simonne-Mathieu
5. Budget breakdown: 48h in Paris for Roland-Garros 2026

From €310 to €3,000: choosing your comfort level
Based on data from travel.rolandgarros.com and goaltickets.com, here are the per-person estimates for a 48-hour stay:
| Expense | Budget (Opening Week) | Mid-range (Week 1) | Luxury (Week 2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roland-Garros tickets (×2 days) | €58–80 | €160–300 | €400–840 |
| Accommodation (2 nights) | €160–280 | €280–500 | €600–1,500 |
| Food and drink (2 days, all meals) | €60–80 | €100–150 | €200–400 |
| Transport (airport + Metro) | €30–50 | €50–80 | €100–200 (taxi/private hire) |
| Cultural activities | €0 (free Bois/Concorde) | €30–50 | €80–120 |
| Estimated total per person | ~€310–490 | ~€620–1,080 | ~€1,380–3,060 |
On-site catering at the stadium costs €3 for a coffee, €5 for a crêpe, €15–25 for a main course. Budget €20–30 per meal on site if you do not use the Jardin des Chefs. Secondary market tickets are 2 to 5 times the official prices (Chatrier first-round tickets at a minimum of €299 versus €80–120 at official sale). The FFT warns against fraudulent websites copying its visual identity.
Key points
- Navigo Day pass at €12.30: covers all public transport in Paris for the day
- Tribune Concorde (3–7 June): free, 3,800 seats, 4 food trucks, giant screen for quarter-finals and finals
- Official tickets only at tickets.rolandgarros.com: official resale available on the day for returned tickets
6. Practical information: eSIM, travel insurance and flights to Paris
The Roland-Garros app requires a data connection for QR code tickets and Click & Collect. An eSIM for France available from the moment you land at CDG or Orly — no queues, no physical SIM to track down.
From €4.50 / 1 GBNomad Insurance: global coverage from $56/4 weeks. Particularly useful if you have expensive Roland-Garros tickets to protect against forced cancellation (illness, travel disruption). 10% off via our link.
From $56 / 4 weeksFlight prices to Paris Charles de Gaulle typically rise 3 weeks before Roland-Garros. Compare live fares from London (Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted) and other UK airports to find the best arrival and departure dates.
From — € (fares subject to availability)Frequently asked questions — Roland-Garros 2026 Paris 48h
Is Carlos Alcaraz playing at Roland-Garros 2026?
No. The two-time defending champion (2024, 2025) withdrew on 24 April 2026 due to a right wrist injury sustained at the Barcelona tournament. His statement: « The most sensible thing is to be cautious and not play Rome or Roland-Garros. » Jannik Sinner, unbeaten on clay in 2026 with five consecutive Masters 1000 titles, is the clear favourite according to Tennis Majors.
How do I get last-minute Roland-Garros 2026 tickets?
Three official routes: (1) the official resale on tickets.rolandgarros.com, where tickets returned by initial buyers go back on sale on the day (check from 9:00 am); (2) the daily queue for outer courts, by arriving before 9:30 am in the first days of the main draw; (3) the official packages on travel.rolandgarros.com (ticket + 1 hotel night), with certain dates still available depending on the stage. Avoid unofficial resellers: according to the FFT, prices there are 2 to 5 times official rates and fraud is on the rise.
What is the best way to get to Roland-Garros from central Paris?
Metro Line 10, Porte d’Auteuil station, remains the most direct option: a 2-minute walk from PPO Auteuil (the main entrance gate). From Montparnasse: 30 minutes; from Gare de Lyon or Gare du Nord: 45 minutes. Vélib’ (24h pass: €5 mechanical) is ideal from the Trocadéro — 15 minutes along the Seine on dedicated cycling lanes. Driving is strongly inadvisable: the Boulevard d’Auteuil is closed during the tournament and parking is virtually impossible in the 16th. Allow 30 to 45 minutes’ leeway for gate security checks, according to bewellotels.com.
Is the Tribune Concorde Roland-Garros really free?
Yes, 100% free. From 3 to 7 June 2026, Place de la Concorde hosts a fan zone with 3,800 seats (up from 2,800 in 2025), two giant screens broadcasting the quarter-finals, semi-finals and finals live from Court Chatrier. Gates open at noon (improved from 14:00 in 2025), 4 food trucks, a bar, the official Roland-Garros shop, DJ entertainment and Wilson urban tennis. Perfect for those without a ticket or who simply want to experience the atmosphere in Paris without entering the stadium, according to Roland-Garros official.
How much does a 2-day Paris trip for Roland-Garros 2026 cost?
On a budget (Opening Week): approximately €310–490 per person (tickets €29–40/day + hotel in Boulogne €80–140/night + food €30–40/day + transport). Mid-range (first week of the main draw): €620–1,080 (ticket €80–150/day + 3-star hotel in the 16th €140–250/night). Finals and VIP hospitality: €1,380–3,060 and above. The Tribune Concorde (free from 3 to 7 June) is the zero-cost alternative for the quarter-finals and finals. Sources: travel.rolandgarros.com, goaltickets.com.
Which museums should I visit in the 16th arrondissement during Roland-Garros?
Three unmissable options within 10–20 minutes of the stadium: Fondation Louis Vuitton (Calder « Dreaming in Balance » exhibition until 16 August 2026, €18, Frank Gehry architecture, free shuttle from Concorde); Musée Marmottan Monet (Segantini exhibition, €14, the world’s largest Monet collection); and the Guimard Art Nouveau walk (free, Rue Jean de la Fontaine — Castel Béranger 1898). Within 30 minutes by Metro: the Trocadéro museums (Palais de Chaillot) and Musée Guimet (Asian art). Sources: fondationlouisvuitton.fr, marmottan.fr.
Sources
- Roland-Garros official — Ticketing Opening Week 2026 — prices and programme, accessed 12 May 2026
- Roland-Garros official — Jardin des Chefs 2026 — chefs and opening hours, accessed 12 May 2026
- Roland-Garros official — Tribune Concorde 2026 — free fan zone, accessed 12 May 2026
- Roland-Garros official — Gaël & Friends 21 May 2026 — farewell evening, accessed 12 May 2026
- Roland-Garros official — Ticket fraud warning — official FFT alert, accessed 12 May 2026
- Eurosport — Carlos Alcaraz withdraws from Roland-Garros 2026 — withdrawal 24 April 2026, accessed 12 May 2026
- Tennis Majors — Roland-Garros 2026 predictions — Sinner as favourite, accessed 12 May 2026
- Roland-Garros Travel — Official ticket+hotel packages — prices and availability, accessed 12 May 2026
- Bewellotels — Access and PPO Roland-Garros — transport guide, accessed 12 May 2026
- Goaltickets — Roland-Garros 2026 ticket prices — pricing grid, accessed 12 May 2026
- Fondation Louis Vuitton — Tickets and booking — Calder exhibition 2026, accessed 12 May 2026
- Musée Marmottan Monet — Prices and opening hours — Segantini exhibition, accessed 12 May 2026
- City-Paris.fr — Paris hotel prices 2026 — pricing data, accessed 12 May 2026
- RATP — Getting to Roland-Garros — official transport guide, accessed 12 May 2026
Research conducted on 12 May 2026. Prices and availability subject to change.
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