The Hall of the Bulls recreated at Lascaux IV — a curving cave wall covered in great ochre and black aurochs, horses and deer flowing across the rock, lit low in the darkness. Montignac, Dordogne, France.

Stand inside the cave that 17,000 years made — painted by hands like yours

Lascaux IV skip-the-line — the complete, full-scale replica of the Lascaux cave near Montignac, where the Hall of the Bulls and its 17,000-year-old painted animals are recreated to the millimetre. The original cave has been sealed since 1963 to save it; Lascaux IV is how the world finally gets back in.

See ticket options
  • 1940 Cave discovered by four teenagers and a dog
  • ~17,000 yrs Age of the original Magdalenian paintings
  • ~600 + 1,500 Painted animals & symbols, plus engravings, all recreated
  • Opened 2016 Lascaux IV — the complete full-scale replica

Choose your ticket

Adult ticket (13+)

Full-scale cave replica + centre, timed entry

€36

  • Skip-the-line timed entry to the complete Lascaux cave replica
  • The Hall of the Bulls, the Nave, the Shaft and every recreated gallery
  • The workshop galleries, 3D cinema and interactive exhibits of the centre
  • We lock in your time slot so you simply arrive and go in
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve adult ticket

Child ticket (5–12)

Reduced-rate entry for children aged 5 to 12

€26

  • Skip-the-line timed entry for one child aged 5 to 12
  • The full Lascaux cave replica and the centre's galleries
  • Family-friendly tablet companion that brings the cave to life
  • Same reserved time slot as the rest of your party
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve child ticket
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedBest times, the discovery story, what to look for in the dark.
  • Ready before you flyMobile ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.
4.8 from 57 verified travellers
Sofia L.
Milan, Italy
“I went in worried that a 'replica' would feel like a museum model. It doesn't. It's dark and cold and the walls curve exactly like rock, and when the Hall of the Bulls opened up in front of us I actually gasped. You forget completely that you're not in the real cave.”
May 2026
Thomas B.
Hamburg, Germany
“We almost skipped it because the original is closed — so glad we didn't. The guide explained how the four boys found it in 1940, and the recreation is so precise it's hard to believe artists painted it and not Ice-Age hunters. The workshop galleries afterwards are excellent.”
April 2026
Emily R.
Melbourne, Australia
“Booking the time slot ahead was the right call — the afternoon we wanted was sold out at the door by the time we'd have arrived. Walking past the queue straight into our slot made the whole day relaxed.”
April 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Lascaux 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes that turns the famous photographs into a real story — the four boys who found the cave in 1940, why it had to be sealed forever, and how Lascaux IV brings the whole of it back to life.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • How four teenagers and a dog found the cave in September 1940
  • Why the original was closed in 1963 — and never reopened
  • What to look for in the Hall of the Bulls and the Shaft
  • How Lascaux IV recreates the entire cave to the millimetre

Included free with every ticket. No app, no download — plays in any browser.

About Lascaux IV — International Centre for Cave Art

On 12 September 1940, four teenagers — Marcel Ravidat, Jacques Marsal, Georges Agnel and Simon Coencas — followed a dog to a hole left by a fallen tree near Montignac in the Dordogne, and lowered themselves into a chamber no human had entered for some 17,000 years. The walls erupted with painted animals: great aurochs and bulls, horses, stags and bison, in flowing ochre, black and red. They had found the Lascaux cave, one of the supreme works of Ice-Age art, made by Magdalenian hunter-gatherers of the Upper Palaeolithic. Across its galleries are roughly 600 painted and drawn figures and nearly 1,500 engravings, with the celebrated Hall of the Bulls — its largest aurochs over five metres long — the most famous painted chamber in the world.

Lascaux became so popular after the war that the cave nearly destroyed itself: the breath, heat and humidity of thousands of visitors fed algae and mineral crusts across the paintings. To save them, the original cave was closed to the public in 1963 and has never reopened — it is now monitored in near-darkness and visited only by a handful of conservators. The art you have seen in photographs is real, ancient and astonishingly fragile, and it is sealed away forever for its own protection. That is the honest heart of any visit to Lascaux today: you do not enter the original cave, because no one does.

What you visit instead is Lascaux IV — the International Centre for Cave Art, opened in 2016 below the hill that hides the real cave. Designed by the architects Snøhetta, it is the first complete, full-scale replica of the entire Lascaux cave, recreated to the millimetre by artists and 3D-imaging specialists so that the rock, the contours and every painted line match the original. Walking it in the cool and the dark, it is almost impossible to tell you are not inside the cave itself — and unlike the few who saw Lascaux before 1963, you get the whole of it, with workshop galleries, a 3D cinema and interactive exhibits that explain how and why our ancestors painted here. It is, paradoxically, the closest anyone alive can get to standing inside Lascaux.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open most of the year with seasonal hours — broadly from the morning (around 09:00–10:00) into the late afternoon or evening, longer in summer. Closed on a small number of dates including early January and 25 December, with an annual maintenance closure in January. Entry is by timed slot; we confirm the current hours and your exact slot with your booking.
Address
Lascaux IV — Centre International de l'Art Pariétal, Avenue de Lascaux, 24290 Montignac-Lascaux, Dordogne, France
Getting there from Bordeaux
≈2 hours by car (about 190 km) via the A89 motorway. By rail, trains run to Le Buisson or Condat-Le Lardin, with onward taxi to Montignac; a car is far easier.
Getting there from Sarlat
≈30 minutes by car (about 26 km) — Sarlat-la-Canéda makes a convenient base for the Vézère valley caves.
Getting there from Périgueux
≈45 minutes by car (about 50 km) via the N89 and D704.
Time needed
Allow about 2.5 hours: roughly 1 hour for the guided cave replica, plus time in the workshop galleries, 3D cinema and interactive spaces afterwards. Arrive at least 20 minutes before your slot.
Accessibility
The centre and the cave replica are designed to be accessible, with step-free routes and adapted facilities — a major advantage over the original cave. Contact us before booking if you have specific mobility or sensory needs and we will confirm current arrangements.
Photography
Photography rules inside the cave replica can be restricted to protect the visitor experience; the staff brief you on arrival. The centre's exhibition spaces are generally more relaxed.
Food
There is a café on site, and the town of Montignac a short distance away has restaurants and shops. The wider Vézère valley and nearby Sarlat are renowned for Périgord cuisine.

About our service

Lascaux Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors book skip-the-line, timed-entry tickets to Lascaux IV, the International Centre for Cave Art at Montignac. We are an independent concierge service, not the site operator — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to book directly, the operator's own ticketing is available online.

Frequently asked

Is this the real, original Lascaux cave?

No — and that's an important and rather wonderful thing to understand. The original Lascaux cave has been closed to the public since 1963 to protect its 17,000-year-old paintings, which were being damaged by visitors' breath and humidity, and it has never reopened. What you visit is Lascaux IV, the complete full-scale replica opened in 2016, which recreates the entire cave to the millimetre. It is the closest anyone alive can get to standing inside Lascaux — and because the original is sealed forever, the replica is genuinely how the world experiences this masterpiece today.

If it's a replica, is it actually worth visiting?

Yes — overwhelmingly so. Lascaux IV is not a model in a museum case; it is a full-scale recreation of the whole cave, built into the hillside, kept cool and dark, with the rock contours and every painted line reproduced by artists and 3D-imaging specialists from precise scans of the original. Most visitors say that within minutes they forget it isn't the real cave. And unlike the few who saw Lascaux before 1963, you experience the complete cave, plus workshop galleries, a 3D cinema and interactive exhibits that explain the art. It regularly ranks among the best-reviewed cultural sites in France.

Why was the original Lascaux cave closed?

Lascaux became hugely popular after its 1940 discovery, and by the early 1960s the breath, heat, carbon dioxide and humidity of large numbers of visitors had triggered algae and mineral deposits that began to damage the paintings. To save them, the original cave was closed to the public in 1963. It remains closed today, monitored in near-darkness by conservators, and is not open to tourists under any ticket.

Who discovered the Lascaux cave?

On 12 September 1940, four teenagers — Marcel Ravidat, Jacques Marsal, Georges Agnel and Simon Coencas — discovered the cave near Montignac after exploring a hole left by a fallen tree, famously after Ravidat's dog had drawn attention to the spot. Inside they found walls covered with Ice-Age paintings that had been hidden for some 17,000 years. It is one of the most important archaeological discoveries of the 20th century.

How old are the Lascaux paintings?

The original paintings are roughly 17,000 years old, made by Magdalenian hunter-gatherers in the Upper Palaeolithic. They are among the finest surviving works of Ice-Age art anywhere in the world, which is why Lascaux is often called the 'Sistine Chapel of prehistory'. Lascaux IV recreates these paintings exactly.

What is the Hall of the Bulls?

The Hall of the Bulls is the most famous chamber of Lascaux — a rotunda whose walls are covered with great painted aurochs (wild cattle), horses and deer, including an aurochs over five metres long, the largest animal figure in the cave. It is usually the dramatic high point of the visit, and it is fully recreated at Lascaux IV so you can stand within it just as the discoverers did in 1940.

How many paintings are in the cave?

Lascaux contains roughly 600 painted and drawn figures — animals such as aurochs, horses, stags, bison and ibex, along with abstract signs — plus nearly 1,500 engravings, making close to 6,000 figures in total across its galleries. Almost no human figures appear, and there is one celebrated scene of a bird-headed man in the Shaft. All of it is reproduced at Lascaux IV.

Is the ticket for a specific time?

Yes. Lascaux IV admits visitors in timed slots, and tickets are time-stamped for a specific day and entry time. We book and hold your chosen slot, so you arrive, skip the ticket-office queue, and go straight in with your group. Please arrive at least 20 minutes before your slot to check in.

What time should I arrive?

Arrive at least 20 minutes before the time on your ticket. This gives you time to check in, collect any tablet companion, and join the correct group before your guided entry into the cave replica. Slots run to schedule, so arriving late can mean missing your entry.

How long does the visit take?

Allow about 2.5 hours in total. The guided tour of the cave replica lasts roughly an hour, and afterwards you can spend as long as you like in the workshop galleries, the 3D cinema and the interactive exhibition spaces, which explain how and why the paintings were made.

Is Lascaux IV suitable for children?

Very. Children are fascinated by the animals and the story of four teenagers discovering the cave, and Lascaux IV provides a tablet companion that turns the visit into an interactive exploration. Children under 5 enter free, and we offer a reduced-rate child ticket for ages 5 to 12. It is one of the best family attractions in the Dordogne.

Do children get in free?

Children under 5 enter free — there's no need to book a ticket for them, simply bring them along. For children aged 5 to 12 we offer a reduced-rate child ticket. Everyone aged 13 and over is booked on the adult ticket.

Where is Lascaux IV and how do I get there?

Lascaux IV is on the edge of Montignac-Lascaux in the Dordogne, in south-west France's Vézère valley. It is about 30 minutes by car from Sarlat, 45 minutes from Périgueux and around two hours from Bordeaux. There is no convenient direct train, so most international visitors arrive by car; we can advise on routes when you book.

Can I visit the other Lascaux replicas instead?

There are earlier partial replicas — Lascaux II, opened in 1983 near the cave, reproduces two of the most famous galleries. Lascaux IV, opened in 2016, is the complete full-scale recreation of the entire cave and the modern flagship visit, with the full International Centre for Cave Art around it. For most visitors wanting the definitive experience, Lascaux IV is the one to book.

Is Lascaux a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

Yes. Lascaux was inscribed by UNESCO in 1979 as part of the 'Prehistoric Sites and Decorated Caves of the Vézère Valley', a group of caves and rock shelters in the Dordogne that together form one of the most important records of prehistoric human life and art in the world.

Is the visit guided, and in which language?

The cave replica is visited with a guide on a timed tour, and tablet-based audio companions are available in several languages so international visitors can follow in their own language. The workshop galleries and exhibition that follow are self-guided at your own pace. We confirm the available language options when you book.

Is Lascaux IV accessible for visitors with mobility needs?

Yes — and far more so than the original cave ever was. Lascaux IV was purpose-built with step-free routes and adapted facilities throughout the centre and the cave replica. If you have specific mobility or sensory requirements, contact us before booking and we will confirm the current arrangements with the site.