Monet's Grave in Giverny: Where Lies the Master of the Water Lilies?

Where is Claude Monet's grave in Giverny? Discover the Sainte-Radegonde cemetery, his funeral, the family burial plot, and plan your visit.

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Tombe de Claude Monet au cimetière de Giverny près de l'église Sainte-Radegonde
Claude Monet rests in the cemetery that surrounds the Sainte-Radegonde church in Giverny. The family tomb, simple and adorned with flowers, lies apart from the house and the gardens: a distinct, quiet place that illuminates the painter's last years.
Plan the visitExplore Giverny in painting
The Monet-Hoschedé family plot in the Sainte-Radegonde cemetery in Giverny.December 5, 1926
Monet's Death at Giverny8 Dec 1926
Burial at the cemetery43 years

Collections

Sources

FAQ

The direct answerMonet is not buried in his garden, but next to the village church.
A common confusion: the pink house, Clos Normand and the water lily pool form the tourist heart of Giverny, while the cemetery lies around the Sainte-Radegonde church, in another part of the village.Location
Cemetery of the Sainte-Radegonde Church, in Giverny, in Eure.Type
Family burial plot, not an isolated monument dedicated solely to the painter.Appearance
Light-coloured stone, sober inscriptions, and flowers left by visitors. Respect The site remains a communal cemetery: silence and discretion are essential. Place
What you see there Function Highlights House and gardens
House, Clos Normand, water garden, Japanese bridge Heritage site managed by Fondation Claude Monet Tickets and seasonal hours Church of Sainte-Radegonde
A Romanesque-origin building reshaped over the centuries Village church Right next to the cemetery Giverny Cemetery

Monet-Hoschedé family plot

Communal cemetery

Separate entrance from the Fondation Claude Monet

December 1926

A deliberately modest funeral

Claude Monet died at his home in Giverny on 5 December 1926, aged 86. The institutional records of the Fondation Claude Monet describe the understated funeral he had wished for: his gardeners carried the coffin to the cemetery, accompanied by his family, villagers, Georges Clemenceau and a few artist friends.

The burial took place on 8 December. This restraint stands in contrast to the international reputation Monet had already acquired. Yet it reflects the practical relationship he maintained with Giverny: a working estate, a team of gardeners, a village and the subjects he observed each day.

Vue de Giverny peinte par Claude Monet
The Musée de l'Orangerie also recounts a scene reported by Sacha Guitry: Clemenceau is said to have removed the black cloth from the coffin and replaced it with a flowered fabric, symbolically refusing black for the painter of light. This should be read as an attributed memorial anecdote, not as a fully documented material detail.A continuing thread

The garden, the gardeners and the flowers remain present, right into the account of bidding farewell to Monet.

View of Giverny

: the village is not merely a biographical backdrop, but a territory painted and lived in.

A family burial

The grave places Monet among his own

The burial plot does not present the painter as a solitary figure. It brings together several members of the Monet-Hoschedé family and recalls the complex structure of the Giverny household.

1883

Settling

Monet settles in Giverny with Alice Hoschedé and their combined children.

1890

Estate

He acquires the house and gradually transforms the gardens into a living studio.

1892

Marriage

Claude Monet marries Alice Hoschedé, whose name remains linked to the family burial plot.

1914–26

Grandes Décorations

The vast Water Lilies filled his final working years.

1926

Final Rest

Monet is buried in the village cemetery where he lived for forty-three years.

The presence of the family changes the way the place is experienced. One does not only visit the grave of a “great man”: one encounters the memory of a household, a property, and an emotional network that accompanied the work of his final decades.

Three places, one story

Giverny is best understood as a journey

The house

A place of everyday life, of Japanese prints, of the yellow dining room, and of the studio. Monet lived there from 1883 for the rest of his life.

The Garden

The Clos normand and the pond become visual compositions. Monet does not merely paint the landscape: he organizes it.

The Cemetery

In Sainte-Radegonde, the journey comes full circle within the village community and family memory.

1

Planning a Respectful Visit

How to fit the cemetery into a day at Giverny

2

The grave lies outside the Fondation Claude Monet site. The house's opening hours and admission tickets do not apply to the cemetery. Always check locally the access conditions for the church and the cemetery on the day of your visit.

House and gardens

3

Begin with the spaces built by Monet: the house, Clos Normand, the water garden and the Japanese bridge. For the 2026 season, the Fondation announces daily opening from 1 April to 1 November, 10am to 6pm, with last admission at 5:30pm.

Village and church

Then continue on to Sainte-Radegonde as you cross the village. The walk takes you beyond the museum-only route and restores the real scale of Giverny. Cemetery Locate the family plot, stay on the paths, and keep your visit brief and quiet. Avoid any staged photographs.
Question Helpful answer Practical information
Do you need a ticket? Yes for the house and gardens; the grave lies in the communal cemetery. Do not confuse the two entrances.
How much time should you allow? The Fondation recommends 1h30 to 2h for the house and gardens. Include the walk through the village and a quiet visit to the cemetery.
Can you take photographs? A discreet photograph of the monument may be possible under local rules. Respect the other graves and the people present.

When to visit?

Spring and autumn often offer a soft light to the village.

Check the official information before traveling.

From the garden to the ultimate masterpiece

Why Giverny remains inseparable from the Water Lilies

Monet arrived at Giverny in 1883 and remained there until 1926. He did not merely find a motif: he transformed his surroundings. The water garden, the willows, the wisteria, the Japanese bridge and the water lilies became a system of observation continually renewed according to the hour and the season.

The Orangerie Museum notes that the Water Lilies cycle spans roughly three decades, from the late 1890s until the end of the painter's life. It culminates in the large decorative panels given to the State and installed in 1927, a few months after his passing.

Nymphéas panoramiques de Claude Monet
The grave and the Orangerie panels thus form the two ends of a single narrative. At Giverny, private and family memory endures; in Paris, the monumental space designed to envelop the viewer extends the garden into the public realm.

Art Institute of Chicago

Haystacks, London and modern collections.

Fondation Claude Monet

The institutional records confirm the death on 5 December 1926, the coffin carried by the gardeners, and the understated character of the funeral. The practical information page provides the seasonal opening hours of the house and gardens for 2026.

Official practical information

Musée de l'Orangerie

The museum places Monet's death, his friendship with Clemenceau and the posthumous installation of the large decorations within the chronology of the Water Lilies.

History of the cycle

Village of Giverny

The local presentation describes the Sainte-Radegonde church, the age of the cemetery, and Monet's settling in the village in 1883.

Discover the village

Frequently Asked Questions

Visiting Claude Monet's tomb in Giverny

Where exactly is Monet's tomb?

In the cemetery surrounding the Sainte-Radegonde church in Giverny, not in the garden of his home.

Is Monet buried alone?

No. He rests in a Monet-Hoschedé family plot with several members of his family.

When did Claude Monet die?

He died in Giverny on 5 December 1926, at the age of 86. His funeral took place on 8 December.

Do you need a ticket to see the tomb?

The cemetery is separate from the paid Fondation Monet site. However, please check the local access rules and conditions on the day of your visit.

Is the tomb located on Monet's property?

No. The house and gardens are located at 84 rue Claude Monet; the burial site is in the Sainte-Radegonde cemetery.

Can you visit the house and the tomb on the same day?

Yes. Allow time for the house and gardens, then a short walk through the village to the church and the cemetery.

What are the 2026 opening dates for the Foundation?

The Fondation Claude Monet announces daily opening from April 1 to November 1, 2026, from 10am to 6pm, with last entry at 5:30pm. Check the information before your visit.

Who attended Monet's funeral?

The Fondation mentions the family, part of the village, Georges Clemenceau and a few artist friends. The gardeners carried the coffin.

Why visit Sainte-Radegonde?

Because the place situates Monet within the village and his family, beyond the sole image of the painter in his garden.

  • What to see after Giverny to understand the Water Lilies?
  • The Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris preserves the eight large compositions installed in 1927 following Monet's plans.
  • Main sources

Fondation Monet, institutional file and 2026 practical information.

Musée de l'Orangerie, history of the Water Lilies cycle and Monet–Clemenceau chronology.

View of the village of Giverny and the Sainte-Radegonde church.

Giverny beyond the garden

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