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Seville

Seville

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Gate8 Global Team

Seville needs 2–3 days. It's the most classically 'this is what I imagined Spain to look like' city in the country — orange trees lining the streets, the Royal Alcázar's Moorish courtyards, and a genuine flamenco scene (not just tourist dinner-theater, if you know where to look). It's also noticeably cheaper than Madrid or Barcelona for hotels and food. Summer heat is real and relentless — June through August regularly hits 100°F/38°C+, so spring and fall are the better call if your dates are flexible.

If someone closed their eyes and pictured 'Spain' — orange trees, wrought-iron balconies, flamenco drifting out of a bar at 11pm — they were probably picturing Seville without realizing it. It's smaller and easier to manage than Madrid or Barcelona, noticeably cheaper, and has the kind of old-town atmosphere that photographs itself.

How many days in Seville?

Two to three days covers it well: one for the Alcázar and Cathedral (buy timed tickets online — both get long lines without one), one for wandering Santa Cruz and Triana, and an evening dedicated to a real flamenco show. It's compact enough to see on foot, with almost nothing requiring a taxi or metro ride.

The Alcázar and Cathedral

The Royal Alcázar is a working royal palace built over a Moorish fortress, with courtyards and tilework that rival the Alhambra on a smaller scale — book a timed entry online, since walk-up lines in peak season can run over an hour. The Seville Cathedral next door is the largest Gothic cathedral in the world and holds Christopher Columbus's tomb; climb the Giralda tower (a converted minaret) for the best rooftop view in the city.

Real flamenco vs. the tourist version

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Flamenco tourist-trap dinner shows exist everywhere and are fine if that's what you want, but Seville also has small, intimate peñas (flamenco clubs) and tablaos where the real, raw version happens — look for venues in Triana (flamenco's traditional home neighborhood) rather than anything with a tout handing out flyers on the main tourist streets. Casa de la Memoria and La Carbonería are well-regarded, lower-key options.

What it costs

ItemApprox. cost
Mid-range hotel, per night$80–140
Tapas + drink, per plate$3–7
Alcázar entry€21 (roughly $23)
Real flamenco show (small venue)$20–35

When to visit

Spring (April–May) and fall (late September–October) are the best months — warm, not brutal, and April's Feria de Abril festival is one of the country's great cultural events if you can time it. Summer (June–August) is genuinely dangerous-hot, regularly over 100°F/38°C, and many locals adjust their whole day around it; if you must visit in summer, plan sightseeing for early morning and evening.

Where to stay in Seville — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Seville?
Two to three days is enough to see the Alcázar, Cathedral, Santa Cruz quarter, and catch a real flamenco show without rushing. It's compact and walkable, so you won't lose time to transit.
Is Seville cheaper than Madrid or Barcelona?
Yes, noticeably — hotels, tapas, and museum tickets all run cheaper in Seville than in Spain's two biggest cities, making it a good value stop on a longer Spain itinerary.
What's the best time to visit Seville?
April–May or late September–October. Summer (June–August) is extremely hot, often exceeding 100°F/38°C, and is genuinely uncomfortable for a full day of sightseeing.

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