For one year, save over €100 on admission tickets and events at over 30 sites (châteaux, parks, gardens, museums, exhibitions, historic towns, etc.).
Privilege Pass price at the Palais Jacques Cœur: €7.50 instead of €9 for the full-price visit

Visual 1 Flyer Palais Jacques Coeur 2026 Cmn Pjc2
For one year, save over €100 on admission tickets and events at over 30 sites (châteaux, parks, gardens, museums, exhibitions, historic towns, etc.).
Privilege Pass price at the Palais Jacques Cœur: €7.50 instead of €9 for the full-price visit
Please note: restoration work on the causeway tower (closure of the attic, the treasure room and the aldermen’s chambers) – Until 30 April 2026 with specialrates.
Guided tour: 1 hour, registration at the entrance, no advance booking required.
October to March :
9.30am-12.15pm / 2pm-5.15pm
April and September :
10am-12.15pm / 2pm-5.45pm
From 2 May to 30 June :
9.30am-12.15pm / 2pm-6.15pm
July and August :
10am – 6.15pm
Open every day except 1st January, 1st May, 1st and 11th November and 25th December.
Last admission to the monument 45 minutes before closing time.
To build his grand house from 1441, after his ennoblement, Jacques Cœur chose to place his building on the ancient Gallo-Roman ramparts of the biturige city, between the upper and lower towns, on an 8,000 m² plot of land not far from his birthplace.
A former urban seigneury, the fiefdom of La Chaussée, the architectural complex, which took several years to build, was supported by a keep and organised around a central courtyard, with stables, reception rooms and private flats. The courtyard was surrounded on the street side, in the upper town, by galleries with arcades opening onto the paved courtyard.

Palais Jacques Cœur| Centre Des Monuments Nationaux

Palais Jacques Cœur|Centre Des Monuments Nationaux
A passageway crosses the residence between the courtyard and the lower town. The layout of the private rooms, laid out in a row, is lined with a corridor, allowing the servants to wander around without disturbing the privacy of the master of the house and his family. Multiple staircases lead up to the rooms. With its kitchens, steam rooms and latrines, the large house was equipped with every comfort.
On the street side, above the porch for horse-drawn carriages, the private chapel is adorned on both sides, street and courtyard, with a canopy housing an equestrian statue of the king, above which large Gothic windows pierced with two hearts supporting a fleur-de-lis flood the upstairs chapel with light.
Confiscated from Jacques Cœur following his trial, it was returned to his family a few years later. Sold to the Colbert family in the 17th century, it later became the Hôtel des échevins.
During the Revolution, the property was sold off as national property.
In the 19th century, part of the building was used as a courthouse.
The town then sold it to the State, and it is now managed by the Centre des Monuments Nationaux.

Palais Jacques Cœur |Route Jacques Cœur

Palais Jacques Cœur |Route Jacques Cœur

Palais Jacques Cœur |Route Jacques Cœur

Palais Jacques Cœur |Route Jacques Cœur
Find out more about the Palais Jacques Cœur on its website and networks: