Cordoba
City Guide

Cordoba

Spanien · Best time to visit: Mar-May, Sep-Nov.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €65.00/day
Best season Mar-May, Sep-Nov
Language Spanish
Currency EUR
Time zone Africa/Ceuta
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

The Golden Arc — A Thousand Years in One Breathless Walk

08:30

Roman Bridge

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Begin at the south bank of the Guadalquivir where the sixteen-arch Roman Bridge stretches 250 meters toward the Mezquita — in the low morning sun the honey-colored stone glows and the cathedral bell tower casts a perfect reflection on the still water. Pause at the midpoint for the definitive Cordoba photograph: the Mezquita silhouette framed by the river with the Sierra Morena foothills rising behind.

Tip: Face north at the bridge's midpoint between 08:30–09:00 — the sun is directly behind you, lighting the Mezquita facade without glare. Skip the Calahorra Tower at the south end; the modest exhibits inside aren't worth your limited time.

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10:00

Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba

Religious
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €13

Walk north off the bridge and through the Puerta del Puente — the Mezquita's south wall is directly ahead, a 2-minute stroll. Arriving at the 10:00 opening means you'll have the forest of 856 red-and-white double arches nearly to yourself for the first spellbinding fifteen minutes before tour groups flood in. Work your way to the Renaissance cathedral erupting impossibly from the center, then decompress in the Patio de los Naranjos among the orange trees.

Tip: Buy tickets online the night before to skip the ticket window. Enter via the Puerta de las Palmas and turn left immediately — the western aisles are emptiest early. The most photogenic corner is the mihrab in the far southeast, where Byzantine gold mosaics catch the morning light filtering through the eastern lattice.

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12:00

Bar Santos

Food
Duration: 30min Estimated cost: €8

Exit the Patio de los Naranjos through the north gate and turn right on Calle Magistral González Francés — Bar Santos is 30 seconds away. This standing-room counter has served one thing supremely well since 1960: a thick wedge of golden tortilla de patatas stuffed into a crusty roll (montadito de tortilla, €3.50), best washed down with a cold Cruzcampo (€2). Eat elbow-to-elbow with local tradesmen on their break and you'll understand why half of Cordoba swears this is the city's best tortilla.

Tip: Stand at the bar counter, not the terrace — it's faster, cheaper, and more fun. Point at the tortilla under the glass dome and you'll be eating in 90 seconds. Budget €6–10 per person.

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13:00

Calleja de las Flores and the Jewish Quarter

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 100 meters north from Bar Santos and duck into Calleja de las Flores, a lane barely three meters wide that dead-ends at a balcony framing the Mezquita bell tower behind cascading geraniums — Cordoba's most photographed view. Then weave westward through the whitewashed labyrinth of the Judería, where every turn reveals a flower-draped courtyard or a silent plaza with a single trickling fountain, passing the facade of the medieval Synagogue on Calle Judíos — one of only three surviving in all of Spain.

Tip: Visit Calleja de las Flores right after lunch when tour groups disperse — between 13:00 and 14:00 you can get a clean shot without twenty selfie sticks in frame. Walk to the very end of the dead-end lane for the bell tower composition that made this street famous.

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14:30

Alcazar de los Reyes Cristianos

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €5

Continue southwest through the Jewish Quarter's narrowing lanes — a 5-minute walk past jasmine-scented doorways brings you to the Alcázar's entrance on Campo Santo de los Mártires. Head straight for the gardens: terraced reflecting pools lined with clipped hedges, rows of cypress and bitter-orange trees, and long water channels that mirror the fortress towers in the afternoon light. Climb the western rampart for a panoramic view stretching from the garden geometry to the Guadalquivir below.

Tip: Climb the western tower's rampart first while legs are fresh — it gives the best overhead angle of the garden symmetry. Afternoons after 14:00 are notably quieter than mornings. The Alcázar is closed on Mondays.

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19:30

Taberna Salinas

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €22

Walk north from the Alcázar along the river for two blocks, then cut inland through quiet residential streets where neighbors chat on doorsteps in the evening cool — a 12-minute stroll to Calle Tundidores. Taberna Salinas has poured wine in a former salt warehouse since 1879, and the vine-covered interior patio is where Cordobeses come to eat properly. Order the salmorejo cordobés (€5) — thicker and silkier than any gazpacho, crowned with jamón shavings and hard-boiled egg — then the berenjenas con miel, crispy fried aubergine drizzled with dark honey (€7).

Tip: Arrive at 19:30 sharp — Salinas fills completely by 20:15 and does not take reservations for the patio. Sit in the interior courtyard, not the front bar. Budget €18–28 with wine. Avoid the restaurants ringing the Mezquita plaza: they charge double for half the quality, and tourist-kitchen salmorejo is never the real thing.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Cordoba?

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

What's the best time to visit Cordoba?

The easiest season for most travelers is Mar-May, Sep-Nov, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Cordoba?

A practical starting point is about €65 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Cordoba?

A good first shortlist for Cordoba includes Roman Bridge, Alcazar de los Reyes Cristianos.