Basilique Notre-Dame de Montréal interior — royal-blue ceiling studded with gold stars, carved walnut reredos, rose-window stained glass. Gothic Revival 1829.

Step into the royal-blue vault of Old Montréal's basilica

Basilique Notre-Dame de Montréal — daytime self-guided visit or the AURA immersive light experience, booked in English before the French-first ticket site catches you out.

See ticket options
  • 1829 Gothic Revival — oldest church in Montréal
  • National Historic Site of Canada, 1989
  • 5 000 carved wooden figures in the sanctuary
  • 1 M / yr Paid visitors per year

Choose your ticket

Daytime visit

Self-guided basilica visit, anytime during opening hours

€22

  • Self-guided basilica entry — Mon–Sat 09:00–16:30, Sun 12:30–16:00
  • 24 interpretation panels in French and English
  • Pre-trip email with what to expect and how to find the entrance
  • No time slot — arrive any time within opening hours
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve daytime visit

AURA Light Show

Evening light show · Tue–Sat · final showtime confirmed via Fever

€40

  • AURA 45-minute multimedia show in the basilica
  • Reserved evening time slot (18:00, 19:00, 20:00 or 21:00)
  • English-language pre-trip support
  • Combined daytime visit available — see below
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve AURA ticket

AURA — Reduced

Senior 65+ or Student · Tue–Sat · final showtime confirmed via Fever

€35

  • AURA 45-minute show
  • Reserved evening time slot
  • Photo ID required at entry
  • 5-minute audio history sent before your visit
Reserve reduced
4.8 from 39 verified travellers
Nicole D.
Paris, France
“We did daytime first and AURA the same evening. The daytime visit is about the architecture and the stained glass; AURA is a different kind of visit — the ceiling stars literally move, the walls narrate a wordless story. Two experiences, not one. Both worth the ticket.”
March 2026
Andrew T.
Boston, USA
“Tried the French-first booking site and gave up after three attempts at the tiered-AURA calendar. These guys had both tickets for the same day in my inbox in under an hour.”
February 2026
Sarah K.
Sydney, Australia
“The royal-blue ceiling is what the photos show. What the photos don't show is how much gold leaf is on everything else — the pulpit, the pillars, the altarpiece. It's the most elaborate church interior I've seen in North America.”
January 2026
  • Refund if we can't deliver
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  • Instant confirmation
  • Concierge in your language, 24/7

5-minute audio guide

Your Notre-Dame Basilica 5-minute guide

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit. Five minutes on the Irish-American architect who converted to Catholicism on his deathbed to be buried inside it, Bourgeau's deep blue ceiling completed in 1880, and the AURA light show that's been running since 2017.

  • James O'Donnell: Protestant, Irish-American, buried beneath the floor
  • Victor Bourgeau's interior: gold leaf, ultramarine, Montréal's stories in the windows
  • The Casavant organ — 7,000 pipes, 1891, still played at every Mass
  • What to expect from the AURA evening light show

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

About Basilique Notre-Dame de Montréal

Notre-Dame de Montréal was built between 1824 and 1829 on the Place d'Armes in what was then the Catholic heart of a British-ruled, French-speaking city. The architect was James O'Donnell, an Irish Protestant from New York; he converted to Catholicism the year before his death so he could be buried in his own creation. The Gothic Revival exterior was radical for North America in 1829 — no other building on the continent looked like it.

The interior is the reason to visit. Victor Bourgeau's redesign in the 1870s filled the sanctuary with carved walnut, gilt-leaf painted details, and the royal-blue ceiling studded with 24-karat gold stars that's become the building's signature image. The stained-glass windows — unusual because they depict scenes from Montréal's religious history rather than biblical ones — were installed 1929–31 by Francis Chigot of Limoges. The Casavant Frères organ has nearly 7,000 pipes; Celine Dion was married in this church in 1994.

AURA is the evening product. Produced by Moment Factory (Montréal's own immersive-media studio), it projection-maps a 45-minute orchestral show onto the interior — the ceiling stars come alive, the walls ripple, the sanctuary becomes a stage for a wordless narrative. It sells as a separate-ticket evening experience, distinct from the daytime self-guided visit. The daytime interior is architecture and history; AURA is what Moment Factory does to architecture with light. Two different visits.

Practical information

Opening hours
Daytime visits: Mon–Fri 09:00–16:30, Sat 09:00–16:00, Sun 12:30–16:00. AURA evening shows: various start times, typically 18:00, 19:00, 20:00, 21:00 Tue–Sat.
Address
110 Rue Notre-Dame Ouest, Montréal, QC H2Y 1T1, Canada
Getting there
Metro to Place-d'Armes (Orange line), 2-min walk. On Rue Notre-Dame Ouest between St-Sulpice and St-Laurent. Old Montréal is walkable from most downtown hotels.
From Montréal-Trudeau Airport
Train/bus ~45 min, taxi 25 min. Most visitors are arriving from downtown or cruise terminals.
Time needed
Daytime self-guided: 45–60 min. AURA: 45 min plus 15 min arrival buffer. Combined same-day: 90–120 min if you do both.
Best time to visit
Morning weekdays for the daytime visit (quiet). AURA sells out summer Fridays and Saturdays — book 1–2 weeks ahead in peak. Winter visits are quieter and particularly atmospheric with low natural light.
Mass and services
The basilica is still an active parish. Sunday mass is at 11:00 (French); mass is free to attend but tourist visits are not permitted during services. We don't book mass attendance — just walk up.
Old Montréal context
The basilica is on Place d'Armes, the historic core of the city. Pair with the Pointe-à-Callière museum (archaeology + city history) a 5-min walk away, or the Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel (sailors' church) on the waterfront.
Accessibility
Step-free entry through the main doors. Wheelchair-accessible inside. Audio guide compatible with hearing loops. Elevator access to the gallery.
Photography
Permitted without flash or tripod during daytime visits. Photography is not permitted during AURA shows (copyright + immersion).

About our service

Notre-Dame Montréal Tickets is an independent concierge service. For the AURA evening light show and basilica entry, we book your ticket through Fever (our ticketing partner) and transfer it to you using Fever's "send to a friend" feature. You will receive the ticket via the Fever app or email — open the Fever link at the basilica door, not a PDF. We are not affiliated with the Fabrique de la paroisse Notre-Dame de Montréal, the basilica's operator. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. Our value: English-language support, 2-hour reply time, multi-currency display, and a clear refund policy when the operator can't deliver.

Frequently asked

What's included in the daytime ticket?

The daytime self-guided visit uses 24 interpretation panels in French and English only. There is no multilingual audio-guide app. The AURA evening show is non-narrated — visual and musical, no language requirement.

What is AURA exactly?

A 45-minute immersive multimedia experience produced by Montréal's Moment Factory. The basilica interior becomes a projection canvas: the ceiling stars animate, the walls are painted with light, a full orchestral score plays through the sanctuary's sound system. It's wordless, narrative-led, and designed as a standalone evening experience separate from the daytime self-guided visit.

Can I do both daytime and AURA same day?

Yes — they're separate tickets at separate times. A common pattern: daytime visit at 10:00 (with your audio guide), free day in Old Montréal, back at 19:00 or 20:00 for AURA. The two visits complement each other well.

Is AURA suitable for children?

Yes, with caveats. Most kids 6+ are captivated; the darkness, music and lights are immersive but not scary. Toddlers may find the sound volume overwhelming. There's no age restriction but under-7s are free (lap seating). AURA starts after dinner time for small kids.

Is mass free to attend?

Yes — the basilica is still an active Catholic parish. Sunday mass is at 11:00 in French. Mass attendance is free and doesn't require a ticket. Tourist visits are not permitted during mass. If you want to attend in a non-tourist capacity, just walk up.

Is there a dress code?

Smart casual. No shorts shorter than mid-thigh, no tank tops, shoulders covered. The basilica doesn't strictly enforce but asks politely; most tourists comply without being asked. Kids' usual clothing is fine.

What's your refund policy?

Tickets are issued for a specific date and are non-transferable once issued. If you need to change your visit, reply to your confirmation email at least 48 hours ahead and we'll do our best to move you to a new available slot.

Is it safe?

Very — Old Montréal is one of the safest tourist districts in Canada. Normal street-smart rules around Place d'Armes. Nothing specific to the basilica.