Day 12 · Loire Valley
Château de Cheverny
Step 1 · Before you enter · ~15 sec

Château de Cheverny

★ 4.5 (22,542) €42 Maps ↗ Website ↗

Look up at this house and you are looking at two worlds at once. It is a real family home that also became the model for Tintin’s Moulinsart.

Stand outside · play the audio first, then read on.

Step 2 · The story · ~2 min

Why this place matters

Cheverny exists because one family has kept living here for centuries, so the rooms still feel arranged for people, not just for visitors. That is why the furniture, the tapestries, and little details like the Gobelins tapestry and the Louis XV regulator matter so much, even when your eyes want to rush to the biggest room. Hergé used this château as the model for Moulinsart, so if you know Tintin, you are standing inside the real-life version of a comic-book castle. And if you want the most memorable moment of the morning, head to the kennel area by 11:15 for the 11:30 Soupe aux chiens, when more than 100 hunting hounds are fed in public. As you stand here, look for the elegant lines of the exterior and the formal gardens, because they connect the polished house to the long, lived-in story behind it.

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Step 3 · Going in

Here's how

Best time to visit

Arrive at opening or early enough to reach the kennel by 11:15 if you want the 11:30 Soupe aux chiens. Cheverny opens at 09:15, and the dog feeding draws a crowd quickly.

Entry strategy

Buy the standard château entry on arrival; the practical add-on to prioritize is the Tintin/Moulinsart exhibition if you are traveling with a teenager. Adults are €15.50 and Melek is €10.50, so it is straightforward to decide whether to include the extra visit.

Recommended route

Start with the interiors while they are quiet, because the house is compact and the main visit is only about 40 minutes. Then go to the Tintin exhibition, and finish at the kennel for the 11:30 feeding after claiming your spot by 11:15.

Tap ⓘ at the top right anytime for hours, address, prices.

Look at this · 1 of 5

Gobelins tapestry in the armoury

Where to find itStand in the Salle d'Armes and look high on the wall behind the main furnishings.

Look forA 17th-century Gobelins tapestry, easy to overlook if you only scan the room for armor and furniture.

Why it matters · It is one of the clearest signals that this is a lived-in aristocratic house, not a bare display case. If you skip it, you miss a major surviving textile work that anchors the room’s status and age.
Look at this · 2 of 5
Louis XV regulator clock

Louis XV regulator clock

Where to find itMove into the Salon des Tapisseries and face the room’s decorative furnishings closely.

Look forA Louis XV regulator, the precision clock used to keep other clocks accurate.

Why it matters · This is the kind of object visitors walk past because it looks like just another clock. It matters because it shows how the house functioned as a working family residence with serious timekeeping and status objects.
Look at this · 3 of 5
Family rooms upstairs

Family rooms upstairs

Where to find itClimb through the second-floor rooms and pause in the birth room, red boudoir, children’s room, bride and groom’s room, dining room, and petit salon.

Look forFurniture arranged as if the family still lives there, with rooms that read like private domestic spaces rather than a museum set.

Why it matters · Cheverny is still inhabited by the same family, so these rooms preserve the logic of a home, not a reconstructed period interior. Without that context, the rooms can seem merely elegant instead of revealing how unusually intact the house remains.
Look at this · 4 of 5
Tintin’s Marlinspike Hall

Tintin’s Marlinspike Hall

Where to find itGo to the Tintin exhibition after the château if you want the easiest second stop for a teenager.

Look forThe model of Marlinspike Hall, the real-world basis for Moulinsart, which Hergé modeled directly on Cheverny.

Why it matters · This is the most obvious bridge between the château and a 17-year-old visitor. Without it, you miss why Cheverny feels oddly familiar even if you have never read the history.
Look at this · 5 of 5
Kennel feeding at 11:30

Kennel feeding at 11:30

Where to find itStand by the kennel area before 11:30 and position yourself by 11:15 for a front view.

Look forMore than 100 hunting hounds being fed publicly during the Soupe aux chiens.

Why it matters · This is the one moment at Cheverny that turns the estate from “beautiful house” into a functioning hunting domain. If you arrive late, the crowd and sightlines make the feeding much less satisfying.
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What it looks like

Almost done · before you leave

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Done · time to eat

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Practical info

Address Av. du Château, 41700 Cheverny, France
Time 11:40
Suggested 140 min
Rating 4.5★ (22,542)
Cost €42
Website www.chateau-cheverny.fr
Map Open in Google Maps

More about this place

Notice the details people rush past: the room furniture is still arranged as a lived-in family home, not a staged museum, and the Gobelins tapestry and Louis XV regulator in the salons are easy to miss if you only skim the big rooms.[1] Go early if you can, because Cheverny opens at 09:15 and the 11:30 “Soupe aux chiens” fills the kennel fast; plan to be there by 11:15 if you want a good view of the public feeding of the hunting hounds.[2][6] It matters because Cheverny is one of the few Loire châteaux still inhabited by the same family for centuries, so you are seeing a house that never fully became a museum.[1][5] For Claudiu, Roxana, and Melek, the Tintin/Moulinsart exhibition is the easiest add-on to make the visit work for a 17-year-old, and the family ticket pricing is straightforward: €15.50 adults, €10.50 for Melek.[2][5]