Before you go in, notice how the Dufour Pavilion stands on the courtyard side as a modern gateway. Versailles used to be a place for kings, courtiers, and ceremonies, but today it also has to move thousands of visitors smoothly, and this entrance does that job without pretending to be the original palace façade. For your family, this is the right moment to have tickets and IDs ready, let the two adults collect the audioguides, and let Melek use the free-entry ticket for minors. Then head straight for the State Apartments, the Hall of Mirrors, and the Queen’s Apartments, because those are the rooms that tell the palace story in the clearest way. As you wait, look at the way the pavilion separates the flow of visitors from the old courtyards behind it. That small shift in direction is easy to miss, but it shows how Versailles is both a historic residence and a working museum today. If you keep moving, a 14:00 exit is a sensible target before the afternoon crowds build, leaving you time for the gardens and, if you want, the Trianon after that.
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