Home Essentials Paris Metro & RER Explained: Passes, Zones, Airports

Paris Metro & RER Explained: Passes, Zones, Airports

Classic “METRO” sign, Paris.

The Metro is your dense inner-city network; RER is the fast suburban rail that also crosses Paris. Get a reloadable card at any station, choose a pass only if you’ll ride a lot, and know your airport options (CDG: RER B, ORY: Orlyval+RER B or OrlyBus).

New to Paris? Start with our Paris Travel Essentials

Metro vs. RER (quick difference)

  • Metro: Short distances, frequent stops, trains every few minutes; best for moving around central Paris.
  • RER: Fewer stops inside the city, fast over longer distances; also reaches suburbs and airports. Inside Paris, you can ride RER like the Metro.

Tickets & passes (what to buy)

You can travel with single rides or load products onto a rechargeable card from station machines/counters. Prices change—choose by usage, not cost here.

Options you’ll see most

  • Single ride (t+): Good for occasional trips; allows transfers within a set time window across Metro/RER (inside Paris) and buses/trams (rules vary by mode).
  • Reloadable card (e.g., Navigo Easy/compatible): Keep rides/passes on one plastic card; tap at gates.
  • Multi-day tourist pass (Paris Visite): 1–5 days; convenient if you’ll ride a lot including beyond central Paris.
  • Weekly pass (Navigo Semaine): Calendar-week validity (Mon–Sun); great value if your stay aligns and you’ll ride daily.

How to choose

  • 1–3 rides/day: Single rides on a reloadable card.
  • 4–6+ rides/day: Consider a pass (tourist/weekly).
  • Staying over a Monday–Sunday week: Weekly pass is easiest.
  • Day trips beyond central Paris: Make sure your product covers the required zones (see below).

Zones (the simple version)

Paris center is one zone; airports/Versailles/Disneyland sit in outer zones. Passes can be all-zones or specific ranges. When in doubt, use all-zones for airport trips or buy separate airport tickets.

Airports → city (best routes)

Charles de Gaulle (CDG)

  • RER B: Direct to central stations (e.g., Gare du Nord, Châtelet–Les Halles, Saint-Michel Notre-Dame).
  • RoissyBus: Non-stop to Opéra area.
  • Taxi / ride-hail: Fixed-rate official taxis; expect traffic at peak times.

Orly (ORY)

  • Orlyval + RER B: Orlyval shuttle to Antony, then RER B into the center.
  • OrlyBus: Orly ↔ Denfert-Rochereau (Metro connect).
  • Tram T7 + Metro: Budget-friendly, more transfers.

Beauvais (BVA)

  • Not in the Paris network; dedicated shuttle buses connect to the city (Porte Maillot).

Pro tip: Landing late? Pre-check last-train times; consider pre-booking an airport transfer if you arrive near midnight.

Buying & using tickets (step by step)

  1. Find a machine in any station; switch to English if needed.
  2. Choose product (single ride / pass) and zones/days if applicable.
  3. Pay by card (chip & PIN/contactless) or cash where accepted.
  4. Tap your card at the gate; keep it until you exit—RER often checks on exit.
  5. Transfers: Follow Correspondance signs; stay inside the paid area when changing lines.

Apps, maps & planning

    • RATP app (official) for live times, disruptions, and route plans.
    • Google Maps / Apple Maps for quick door-to-door directions.
    • Offline backup: Save a PDF network map and your accommodation address/screenshots.

If you’re short on time, see our Perfect 48 Hours in Paris itinerary.

Accessibility & etiquette

  • Some older stations lack elevators—plan step-free routes when needed.
  • Let passengers exit first; stand on the right of escalators.
  • Keep daypacks in front in crowded cars; mind the gap and closing doors.

Safety & common issues

  • Watch for pickpockets in crowds and on busy lines.
  • Ignore clipboard/petition approaches; keep moving.
  • Late services run but are less frequent—check last trains.

Sample use-cases (what should you buy?)

  • Weekend, heavy sightseeing: Multi-day pass (zones covering your trips).
  • Mid-week stay Mon–Sun: Weekly pass.
  • Short stopover, 2–3 rides: Single rides on a reloadable card.
  • CDG arrival + central stay + few rides: Airport ticket + singles for the rest.

For budget-friendly picks, see Best Affordable Bistros in Paris

FAQ

Do I need a separate ticket for airports?
Often yes—airport routes sit in outer zones. Some passes include them; otherwise buy a dedicated airport ticket.

Can I use the same card for Metro and RER?
Yes—just ensure your card/product covers the zones you travel through.

Are paper tickets gone?
Paper carnets are being phased out; expect reloadable cards and digital formats at machines.

What’s the fastest way from CDG?
Usually RER B; in heavy traffic it beats road options.