Cádiz
City Guide

Cádiz

Spanien · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €90.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language Spanish
Currency EUR
Time zone Africa/Ceuta
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Cádiz in One Breath — Golden Dome, Atlantic Light, Fried Fish

09:00

Cádiz Cathedral (Catedral de Cádiz)

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Arrive fresh from the train station — a 12-minute walk down Avenida del Puerto with the port on your left. The early sun turns the cathedral's golden-yellow dome into something breathtaking, and Plaza de la Catedral still has that Andalusian hush before the tour groups arrive. This is the moment you understand why Cádiz is called 'la tacita de plata' — the little silver cup.

Tip: The money shot is from Calle Pelota looking up at 9 AM with the sun at your back — the façade glows honey. Skip the south-side plaza cafés: triple-priced coffee and the view from the church steps themselves is better and free.

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10:00

Torre Tavira

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €8

8-minute stroll northwest up Calle Compañía, passing centenarian confectioners with almond-sweet windows. Torre Tavira is the highest point of the old town at just 45 metres, and its 1700s camera obscura projects the living city onto a concave dish — an analog satellite feed three centuries before satellites. The rooftop gives you all of Cádiz in one frame: cathedral dome, watchtowers, and the Atlantic wrapping three sides.

Tip: Book the 10:30 camera obscura session online at torretavira.com — drop-ins wait 40+ minutes in peak season. The session is narrated in Spanish but entirely visual; skip the English tour (longer queue, identical images).

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12:00

Mercado Central de Abastos

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €15

6-minute walk north down Calle San Francisco into Plaza de Topete, with its blue-tiled fountain and flower stalls. The 1838 market hall now houses a 'Rincón Gastronómico' food court — twenty-plus stalls plating whatever Cádiz pulled from the Atlantic at dawn. Grab a paper cone of mixed pescaito frito and a glass of manzanilla, then eat on the benches outside while the plaza buzzes around you.

Tip: Order the mixed fry cone at 'Las Flores' stall for €10 — adobo, boquerones, puntillitas — and eat standing in Plaza Topete. Avoid the sit-down restaurants fronting the market building: markup is triple and the fish is from the exact same morning batch.

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13:30

Parque Genovés & Alameda Apodaca

Park
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

10-minute walk west along Calle Sagasta through Plaza de Mina — the square where Manuel de Falla was born, shaded by Indian laurels. Parque Genovés is Cádiz's oldest park (1892), with topiary carved into chess pieces and a grotto waterfall, and the adjoining Alameda Apodaca promenade delivers your first face-to-face with the open Atlantic: indigo, wind-whipped, endless. Sit on a clifftop bench and let the sea breeze reset your legs for the second half of the day.

Tip: Climb the small staircase beside the waterfall grotto to a hidden clifftop bench facing the bay — it's where Cádiz abuelitas sit to read. Free, shaded, and the finest pause-breath moment in the city.

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15:30

La Caleta & Castillo de San Sebastián Causeway

Landmark
Duration: 2.5h Estimated cost: €0

12-minute coastal walk down Paseo Fernando Quiñones, with Castillo de Santa Catalina rising sand-coloured on your right like a mirage. La Caleta is the most filmed beach in Cádiz — the opening of 'Die Another Day' used it as Havana — and a 750-metre stone causeway stretches into the Atlantic to the 17th-century Castillo de San Sebastián. Walk the full causeway out and back: the light turns gold, waves slap the stones either side, and this is the photograph you came to Cádiz to take.

Tip: Wear sneakers, not sandals — the causeway stones are uneven and sea spray soaks them. Check tidetimes.es before you commit: at high tide the final 50m is cordoned off, so aim to arrive within the two-hour window either side of low tide for the full walk.

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19:30

El Faro de Cádiz

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €50

8-minute walk back through Barrio de la Viña — the gritty fishermen's quarter that invented Carnaval — where you'll almost certainly catch someone rehearsing a chirigota from an open window. El Faro, opened 1964, is the shrine of pescaito frito and the benchmark every other Cádiz kitchen measures itself against. Order the tortillitas de camarones (€14, paper-thin shrimp lace) and urta a la roteña (€26, local white fish in tomato-pepper sauce) — both non-negotiable.

Tip: Walk in at 19:30 sharp — Spanish locals still aren't eating and you'll get a table without a reservation; after 21:00 the wait stretches to 45 minutes. If the dining room is full, slip into the tapas bar at the front (same kitchen, half the price). Final warning: avoid any restaurant facing Plaza de San Juan de Dios near the port — tourist-priced, microwaved, soulless. The real Cádiz eats here in La Viña.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Cádiz?

Most travelers enjoy Cádiz in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Cádiz?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Cádiz?

A practical starting point is about €90 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Cádiz?

A good first shortlist for Cádiz includes Cádiz Cathedral (Catedral de Cádiz), Torre Tavira, La Caleta & Castillo de San Sebastián Causeway.