Seville
Spain · Best time to visit: Mar-May, Oct-Nov.
Choose your pace
Seville in a Flash — Sunlight, Stone, and the Scent of Orange Blossoms
Plaza de España
LandmarkIf arriving from the city center, walk south through Parque de María Luisa — the palm-lined avenue delivers you to the plaza's north entrance in about 10 minutes. The morning sun hits the eastern-facing semicircle and sets the 52 tiled provincial alcoves ablaze in gold and cobalt — this is the single most photogenic moment in all of Seville. Walk the full curve of the crescent, find your favorite province's painted ceramic bench, then stand at the central fountain for the panoramic shot that makes everyone back home jealous.
Tip: Arrive right at 09:00 — by 10:30 tour buses unload and selfie sticks outnumber people. Shoot from the south bridge for the symmetrical canal reflection with the central tower perfectly centered. Skip the row boats (€6 for a 15-minute paddle in a crowd) — they drift into your shot and the queue isn't worth the novelty.
Open in Google Maps →Seville Cathedral and La Giralda
ReligiousWalk north from Plaza de España through the shaded paths of Parque de María Luisa, cross the Puerta de Jerez roundabout, and head up Avenida de la Constitución — you'll see the Giralda bell tower rising above the rooftops before you've gone two blocks (12-minute walk). The world's largest Gothic cathedral is staggering even from the outside. Circle the entire building: the ornamental west facade along the avenue, the Moorish Puerta del Perdón on the north side with its horseshoe arch, and peer through the iron gate into the Patio de los Naranjos where rows of bitter orange trees fill a sunlit courtyard.
Tip: The best photo of La Giralda is from Calle Mateos Gago looking southwest — the former minaret fills the frame between whitewashed walls like a postcard composing itself. Don't pay for the 'skip the line' guided tours hawked outside the entrance; you're not going in, and those touts pocket a fat commission on overpriced packages.
Open in Google Maps →Bodega Santa Cruz
FoodFrom the Cathedral's east side, slip into the first alley of Barrio Santa Cruz — Bodega Santa Cruz sits on the corner of Calle Rodrigo Caro, a 3-minute walk through a narrow lane fragrant with jasmine. This standing-room tapas bar is pure old Seville: sherry barrels stacked behind the counter, rapid-fire bartenders, and locals jostling shoulder-to-shoulder at noon. Point at the cazón en adobo (crispy marinated dogfish, €3.50) and a montadito de pringa (shredded slow-cooked pork on crusty bread, €2.50), wash it down with a cold cruzcampo on draft (€2), and you're fueled up in 30 minutes flat.
Tip: Do not sit on the terrace — there's a surcharge and the service slows to a crawl. Stand at the bar, order in two quick rounds of different tapas, and eat like a Sevillano. Budget €10-14 per person for a full quick lunch.
Open in Google Maps →Barrio Santa Cruz
NeighborhoodStep out of the bodega and you're already inside Seville's most storied quarter. Walk south to the intimate Plaza de los Venerables, then thread through Callejón del Agua — a narrow lane running alongside the Alcázar's crenelated fortress walls where jasmine spills over ancient stone. Loop back via Plaza de Doña Elvira with its tiled fountain and canopy of orange trees. These winding alleys were the medieval Jewish quarter; every turn reveals a flower-draped iron balcony, a hidden courtyard glimpsed through a cracked door, or a cat asleep on warm tiles. The Alcázar's walls and Moorish gates are magnificent from every angle — you feel centuries of history without stepping inside.
Tip: Callejón del Agua is the single most atmospheric street in the neighborhood — walk it slowly and look up at the jasmine cascading over the Alcázar wall. The 'authentic flamenco show' touts who approach you in this area charge €35-45 for watered-down tourist performances in converted basements; skip them entirely.
Open in Google Maps →Metropol Parasol
LandmarkFrom Santa Cruz, walk north through Calle Sierpes — Seville's buzzing main pedestrian shopping street lined with fan shops, pastelerías, and ceramic stores — and continue straight to Plaza de la Encarnación (12-minute walk). The world's largest wooden structure erupts from the square like six colossal mushrooms, its honeycombed canopy casting geometric shadows on the market below. Take the elevator to the rooftop walkway: the undulating timber path gives you a 360-degree panorama of Seville's terracotta rooftops, with the Cathedral and Giralda framed perfectly to the south against the sky.
Tip: The €5 ticket includes a free drink at the rooftop bar — redeem it for a tinto de verano (red wine with lemon soda, Seville's unofficial summer drink) and sip it while watching the city turn golden in the afternoon light. The walkway has zero shade, so wear a hat if visiting between May and October.
Open in Google Maps →Eslava
FoodWalk west from Las Setas through the quiet residential back streets of the San Lorenzo neighborhood — you'll pass the beautiful baroque Iglesia de San Lorenzo and its peaceful plaza where old men sit on benches under the trees (10-minute walk). Eslava is one of Seville's most celebrated tapas restaurants, where creative Andalusian cooking meets deep tradition. The slow-cooked egg with truffle oil and wild mushroom foam (€4.80) is legendary — it arrives like modern art and tastes like a forest floor in the best way possible. Follow it with carrillada ibérica (braised Iberian pork cheek that falls apart at the touch of a fork, €5.50) and a cold glass of manzanilla sherry from Sanlúcar.
Tip: Eslava opens for dinner at 20:00 — arrive at 19:50 and you'll walk right in. If there's a wait, put your name on the list and have a drink at La Trastienda next door (same owners, same quality). Budget €25-35 per person with wine. Avoid the restaurants ringing Plaza de la Encarnación with picture menus and greeters pulling you inside — they charge tourist prices for microwaved mediocrity.
Open in Google Maps →Moorish Gold and a Square Built for Dreams
Royal Alcázar of Seville
LandmarkBegin at the southern edge of the old town, where the Puerta del León opens to the oldest royal palace still in active use in Europe. Arrive by 9:00 for your pre-booked 9:30 slot — you'll enter the Patio de las Doncellas in honeyed morning light with barely a soul around, then wander the layered Mudéjar gardens while the air is still cool.
Tip: Book online at least two weeks ahead — same-day tickets often sell out by 10:00. Pay the extra €6 for the Royal Apartments upstairs: the rooftop views alone are worth it, and you'll walk through the rooms used as Dorne's Water Gardens in Game of Thrones. Skip the audio guide — the beauty is self-explanatory.
Open in Google Maps →Seville Cathedral and La Giralda
ReligiousExit the Alcázar and cross Plaza del Triunfo — the Cathedral entrance is directly opposite, a two-minute walk. Step into the largest Gothic cathedral in the world, where the five-nave interior swallows every tour group whole; climb the Giralda's 35 gentle ramps — built for horses, not stairs — for the definitive Seville panorama.
Tip: Head straight to the Giralda ramp the moment you enter — the queue builds fast after 11:30. The ramps are gentle enough for anyone, and the top platform gives a 360-degree view with Plaza de España to the south and Triana across the river to the west. Don't miss Christopher Columbus's ornate tomb near the south transept entrance.
Open in Google Maps →Bodega Santa Cruz
FoodWalk out the Cathedral's south door and turn right down Calle Rodrigo Caro under a canopy of orange trees — two minutes on foot. This standing-only tapas bar has no tables, no printed menu, and no pretense: point at what looks good behind the glass, grab a cold caña, and eat elbow-to-elbow with Sevillano office workers on their lunch break.
Tip: Order the carrillada ibérica (braised Iberian pork cheek, ~€3.50) and the montadito de pringa (slow-cooked pork on toast, ~€2.50) — both outstanding. Don't wait for a table; locals stand at the bar or lean against the wall outside. Arrive by 13:00 sharp to beat the 13:30 crush. Budget €10–15.
Open in Google Maps →Barrio de Santa Cruz
NeighborhoodStep away from the bodega and you're already inside the labyrinth — the old Jewish quarter unfolds in whitewashed walls, sudden tiny plazas, and iron balconies trailing jasmine. Find Plaza de Doña Elvira (the most photogenic square), then duck into Callejón del Agua, a narrow tiled alley with stolen glimpses through wrought-iron gates into the Alcázar gardens.
Tip: At 14:00 a stripe of direct sunlight cuts between the walls of Callejón del Agua — the single best photo opportunity in all of Santa Cruz. Most visitors cluster around Plaza de los Venerables; walk one block east to Plaza de Santa Cruz (with its iron cross and jacaranda shade) for an equally beautiful square with no one in it.
Open in Google Maps →Plaza de España
LandmarkWalk south from Santa Cruz along the old university building — the tobacco factory that inspired Bizet's Carmen — a flat twelve-minute stroll into Parque de María Luisa. The immense semicircular palace, built for the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition, wraps around a canal lined with 48 hand-painted tile alcoves representing every Spanish province, all gilded by the afternoon sun.
Tip: Rent a rowboat on the canal (€6 for 35 minutes) — genuinely fun and the only way to get the low-angle reflection shot of the towers. For the best wide-angle photo of the entire semicircle, walk to the far north end of the colonnade. The Barcelona tile alcove has the most intricate artwork; Seville's own is the most photographed.
Open in Google Maps →La Brunilda Tapas
FoodWalk north through Parque de María Luisa and back into the old town toward the Arenal quarter — twenty minutes under canopy shade along the river. This buzzing creative tapas bar is where young Sevillanos queue without complaint for inventive plates rooted in Andalusian tradition, served in a narrow space that hums with conversation and clinking glasses.
Tip: No reservations — arrive at 19:15, fifteen minutes before dinner service, to claim a table. Order the solomillo con foie y reducción de Pedro Ximénez (sirloin with foie and PX sherry reduction, ~€16) and tataki de atún rojo (~€14). Budget €25–35. Tourist trap warning: avoid any restaurant on Calle Mateos Gago with laminated picture menus — they serve microwaved paella at triple the fair price. One block deeper into any side street, the food is better and half the cost.
Open in Google Maps →Across the River to Where Flamenco Was Born
Metropol Parasol
LandmarkStart at Plaza de la Encarnación, where the world's largest wooden structure — locals call it Las Setas, the Mushrooms — rises over a Roman archaeological site in the basement. Arrive at the 9:30 opening for the sinuous rooftop walkway almost to yourself, with the Giralda, the Cathedral dome, and the distant Sierra Norte spread below in clean morning light.
Tip: Your ticket includes a free drink at the rooftop bar — get a fresh-squeezed orange juice and take it to the highest viewing point facing south for the best Cathedral-and-Giralda composition. The Antiquarium in the basement (included in the ticket) holds remarkably preserved Roman mosaics — worth fifteen minutes on your way out.
Open in Google Maps →Casa de Pilatos
MuseumWalk eight minutes east through Calle Imagen, past neighbourhood bakeries and small ceramic shops pulling up their shutters. This 15th-century Mudéjar-Renaissance palace is the Alcázar's quieter, more romantic twin — bougainvillea cascading over courtyard columns, the finest azulejo tilework in the city, and on the upper floor, Velázquez-era frescoes that fewer than one in fifty Seville visitors ever see.
Tip: Pay the full €12 for both floors — the upper floor is only accessible by guided tour departing every 30 minutes, so join the first available. The central courtyard with its Roman statues and purple bougainvillea is the single best photo spot in Seville that isn't on any postcard. Midmorning light fills the courtyard evenly with no harsh shadows.
Open in Google Maps →Taberna Coloniales
FoodWalk three minutes southwest to Plaza Cristo de Burgos, following the local foot traffic. The noise hits you before the door does — this tapas institution is packed with Sevillanos who come for the solomillo al whisky and stay for the heated football debate at the next table.
Tip: Arrive at 13:00 sharp — by 13:30 every seat is taken. No reservations for the tapas bar; grab a counter spot for faster service. Order the solomillo al whisky (pork loin in whisky sauce, ~€4.50) and the secreto ibérico a la plancha (grilled Iberian pork, ~€7). Budget €12–18.
Open in Google Maps →Triana Neighbourhood
NeighborhoodWalk west down Calle Sierpes — Seville's main pedestrian shopping street — and cross the Puente de Isabel II; pause midway for the postcard view of Torre del Oro mirrored in the Guadalquivir. This is the birthplace of flamenco and Seville's ceramic soul: start inside Mercado de Triana built atop the Inquisition castle ruins, then wander Calle San Jorge for century-old workshops, and finish along Calle Betis as the late-afternoon light turns the far bank gold.
Tip: Inside Mercado de Triana, find the seafood counter at the back left (Mariscos Emilio) — their €2 shrimp tapas have a local queue for good reason, better than any sit-down seafood restaurant in the centre. For ceramics, Cerámica Santa Ana at Calle San Jorge 31 has been hand-painting traditional Triana tiles since 1870 and ships worldwide.
Open in Google Maps →Casa de la Memoria
EntertainmentCross back over Puente de Triana as golden light floods the Cathedral tower — a fifteen-minute walk east through the old town's quieting streets; stop for a copa de fino at any terrace along the way. In the courtyard of a converted 15th-century palace, just eighty seats surround three performers delivering raw cante, toque, and baile with no microphones and no distance — flamenco stripped to its nerve.
Tip: Book online at least three days ahead — this intimate venue sells out nightly. The 19:00 or 19:30 show is ideal for pairing with a late dinner after. Sit in the second row: the first row risks the dancer's skirt brushing your face during zapateado turns. Arrive ten minutes early to choose your seat in the open courtyard.
Open in Google Maps →Enrique Becerra
FoodWalk five minutes west through quiet evening lanes to Calle Gamazo, still buzzing from what you just witnessed. A white-tablecloth Sevillano institution since 1979, where the family still cures its own olives and the oxtail stew has simmered on the menu for forty-five years — the kind of farewell dinner that makes you promise to come back.
Tip: Reserve for 20:30 — prime Spanish dinner hour. Order the cola de toro (oxtail stew, ~€18) and choco frito (fried cuttlefish Seville-style, ~€14). Start with a copa de fino sherry — this is sherry country and the family curates their own list. End with tocino de cielo, a caramel custard invented by Seville's nuns. Budget €30–40. Tourist trap warning: if anyone approaches you near Santa Cruz after dark offering 'private flamenco,' 'VIP rooftop bar,' or selling sprigs of rosemary, keep walking — all are well-rehearsed scams targeting post-show tourists.
Open in Google Maps →The Alcázar at First Light — Seville's Most Perfect Morning
Royal Alcázar of Seville
LandmarkArrive at the Puerta del León on Patio de Banderas ten minutes before the 9:30 opening — the first visitors get the Patio de las Doncellas almost entirely to themselves, the reflection pool mirroring the stucco arches in perfect stillness. The Palacio de Pedro I is the crown jewel: morning light pours through horseshoe arches and sets the azulejo tiles ablaze in cobalt and gold. Lose yourself in the layered gardens afterward, where the Galería del Grutesco offers an elevated walkway above the fountains with views that catch every visitor off guard.
Tip: Book timed-entry tickets online at least two days ahead — walk-up queues routinely exceed 45 minutes by 10:00. Enter the gardens last, not first; most visitors do the reverse, so the courtyards empty out by the time you circle back.
Open in Google Maps →Seville Cathedral & La Giralda
ReligiousExit the Alcázar through the Puerta del León, cross the orange-tree-lined Patio de Banderas, and the Cathedral's south entrance stands directly across the street — a two-minute walk. The world's largest Gothic cathedral overwhelms with sheer vertical scale: Columbus's tomb beneath a canopy of gilded bearers, and the 30-meter altarpiece that took eighty years to carve. Climb La Giralda's 35 gentle ramps — no steps, originally designed for horseback — to a bell-tower panorama that frames the Alcázar gardens you just explored.
Tip: Climb La Giralda immediately upon entering, before your legs tire from the morning — the north side of the bell tower gives the best aerial view down into the Alcázar gardens. The cathedral is open every day, but Monday mornings are free for residents, making them slightly more crowded.
Open in Google Maps →Bodega Santa Cruz
FoodExit the Cathedral from the Puerta de los Palos on its east side, slip into the narrow lanes, and reach Calle Rodrigo Caro in four minutes. This standing-room tapas bar has no sign and no pretension — just a marble counter, rapid-fire bartenders, and montaditos that keep half the neighborhood coming back daily. Order the carrillada ibérica (braised Iberian pork cheek, €3.50) and espinacas con garbanzos (spinach with chickpeas, €3.00), the dish Seville claims as its own — budget €12–18 per person.
Tip: No tables and no reservations — arrive at 13:30 sharp; by 14:00 it's shoulder-to-shoulder. Eat standing at the marble counter with a cold cruzcampo like a sevillano.
Open in Google Maps →Barrio de Santa Cruz
NeighborhoodStep out of the bodega and you're already inside it — Santa Cruz's whitewashed labyrinth begins at your feet. Alleyways barely wide enough for two people open onto sudden plazas with ceramic-tiled benches and orange trees; find Plaza de Santa Cruz for its wrought-iron cross, then Plaza de Doña Elvira where guitarists sometimes play in the afternoon shade. Give yourself permission to get lost — every dead end reveals a courtyard or a tiled doorway worth photographing.
Tip: The photogenic sweet spot is between 15:00 and 16:30, when the high walls cast sharp shadow lines across the white facades — shoot from below for dramatic contrast. Use this as your thirty minutes of free strolling: no map, just turns and instinct.
Open in Google Maps →Vinería San Telmo
FoodFrom the Jardines de Murillo at Santa Cruz's eastern edge, walk south along the tree-shaded Paseo Catalina de Ribera for three minutes. This slender wine bar treats every tapa like a composed plate — the solomillo al whisky (whisky-flambéed pork tenderloin, €5.50) is the signature everyone orders; pair it with the tataki de atún rojo (red tuna tataki, €7.00). Budget €25–35 per person with a glass of the house crianza.
Tip: No reservations — arrive at 19:30 when dinner service opens; by 20:15 the queue spills onto the sidewalk. Avoid the restaurants lining Calle Mateos Gago between the Cathedral and Santa Cruz — they survive entirely on tourist foot traffic, charge double, and every local knows to skip them.
Open in Google Maps →Across the Guadalquivir — Where Seville Learned to Dance
Plaza de España
LandmarkAt nine o'clock the semicircular plaza belongs to joggers and pigeons — the tour buses don't arrive until after ten. The 1929 World's Fair masterpiece curves around a canal crossed by ornamental bridges, with 48 tiled alcoves representing each Spanish province — find yours and take a photo on the hand-painted ceramic bench. Rent a rowboat on the canal (€6 for 35 minutes) — absurdly romantic, genuinely fun, and the best way to see the full sweep of the colonnade.
Tip: The morning sun lights the east-facing tiled alcoves perfectly between 09:00 and 10:30 — by afternoon the entire facade falls into shadow and photographs flatten. Stand on the northern bridge for the classic symmetrical shot with the central tower reflected in the water.
Open in Google Maps →María Luisa Park
ParkStep through the plaza's southern arcade and you are immediately under the park's canopy — the shift from sun-blasted tile to dappled shade feels like entering another climate. These former private gardens of the Palacio de San Telmo are a world of towering palms, ceramic-tiled benches tucked into hidden glorietas, and paths that spiral inward toward secret clearings. Find the Glorieta de Bécquer — a circular bench beneath a tall cypress, ringed with bronze figures of lovers — the most quietly beautiful corner of the park.
Tip: Bring water — there are very few vendors inside the park and Seville's heat builds fast even in spring. The Isleta de los Patos (Duck Island) has benches in full shade and is the best resting spot before the walk to Triana.
Open in Google Maps →Casa Cuesta
FoodExit the park's western gate, cross the Puente de San Telmo into Triana — from the bridge the Torre del Oro gleams upriver — and walk north along Calle Pureza for fifteen minutes to Calle Castilla. Casa Cuesta has occupied this corner since 1880, making it one of the oldest taverns in the barrio. Order the cazón en adobo (marinated fried dogfish, €4.50) and chicharrones (crispy pork belly, €4.00) with a cold manzanilla sherry — budget €15–20 per person.
Tip: Sit downstairs at the tiled bar, not the upstairs dining room — the atmosphere is warmer and the tapas come faster. Ask for media ración portions if you're not starving; they're generous enough for one person.
Open in Google Maps →Triana
NeighborhoodTurn right out of Casa Cuesta and walk five minutes down Calle Castilla toward the river — the ceramic-shop facades tell you immediately that this is where Seville's famous tiles have been made for five centuries. Explore the Mercado de Triana, built over the ruins of the Inquisition castle — the excavated cells are visible through glass floors beneath the market stalls. Then walk along Calle Betis on the riverfront, the barrio that gave birth to flamenco — you can feel it in the street art, the guitar workshops, and the cante jondo drifting from open doorways.
Tip: Cerámica Santa Ana on Calle San Jorge is the oldest ceramics workshop in Triana (since 1870) — their hand-painted tiles make a meaningful souvenir at a fraction of what the tourist shops near the Cathedral charge. Use this as your thirty minutes of free wandering.
Open in Google Maps →Abades Triana
FoodWalk north along Calle Betis for eight minutes toward the Puente de Isabel II — the restaurant sits right on the riverbank with floor-to-ceiling windows framing the illuminated Torre del Oro across the water. The modern Andalusian kitchen excels at seafood: order the arroz caldoso de carabineros (soupy rice with scarlet prawns, €22) and salmorejo cordobés with jamón shavings (€9) to start. Budget €35–45 per person with wine.
Tip: Reserve a window table at least 24 hours ahead — specify 'mesa junto al ventanal con vista al río' for the river-facing glass wall. Avoid the cluster of terrace bars at the south end of Calle Betis near Puente de San Telmo — they charge double for half the quality, coasting on the sunset view alone.
Open in Google Maps →An Unhurried Farewell — Art, Shade, and One Last Tapa
Metropol Parasol
LandmarkThe world's largest wooden structure rises from Plaza de la Encarnación like something from another planet — six mushroom-shaped canopies of undulating timber that the locals simply call 'Las Setas.' Take the elevator to the rooftop walkway, where the morning sun casts waffle-grid shadows across the curved surface and you can see clear to the Giralda and the Sierra Norte beyond. Below, the Antiquarium (included in the ticket) holds Roman mosaics and fish-salting ruins discovered during construction — a two-thousand-year surprise beneath a 21st-century sculpture.
Tip: Buy the €5 rooftop ticket at the basement kiosk, not the machines upstairs — shorter queue. The ticket includes a drink redeemable at the rooftop bar; save it for after you've completed the walkway circuit and enjoy it facing the Giralda.
Open in Google Maps →Museum of Fine Arts of Seville
MuseumWalk west from Plaza de la Encarnación along Calle Imagen, through quiet streets lined with local shops and corner bars — a twelve-minute walk that feels like crossing from modern Seville into old. Spain's second-finest art museum after the Prado is housed in a 17th-century convent, with courtyards of bougainvillea and tile fountains between the galleries. Murillo's luminous Inmaculada Concepción and Zurbarán's austere monastic portraits are the highlights — the convent setting gives the religious paintings a resonance no purpose-built museum can match.
Tip: The museum is free for EU citizens and €1.50 for others — there is rarely a queue. Closed on Mondays: if your Day 3 falls on a Monday, swap it with Day 2's itinerary.
Open in Google Maps →Eslava
FoodExit the museum, walk north along Calle Alfonso XII past the elegant Plaza del Museo, and turn right on Calle Eslava — an eight-minute stroll through a residential quarter that feels a world away from the tourist center. Eslava is a culinary pilgrimage site for anyone who loves tapas: the huevo roto con setas y foie (broken egg with wild mushrooms and foie gras, €4.80) has its own devoted following, and the carrillada ibérica (braised pork cheek, €4.50) melts without resistance. Budget €18–25 per person.
Tip: The restaurant has two sides: the left-hand bar serves tapas on a first-come basis (no reservations), and the right-hand dining room takes bookings. For the full experience, stand at the bar — arrive right at 13:00 when it opens to guarantee a spot.
Open in Google Maps →Alameda de Hércules
NeighborhoodWalk four minutes north from Eslava and the Alameda de Hércules opens before you — Seville's oldest public promenade, anchored by ancient Roman columns at each end and canopied by rows of tall plane trees. Once the city's bohemian fringe, it's now a relaxed neighborhood of independent cafés, vintage shops, and street art where the creative class mingles with old-timers. Grab a café con leche at any of the terrace bars, sit beneath the trees, and watch sevillanos living at their unhurried, characteristic pace.
Tip: The Alameda is Seville's best people-watching spot between 15:00 and 17:00 — locals emerge after siesta and the terraces fill naturally without a tourist in sight. Use this as your final thirty minutes of free time to absorb the city's rhythm one last time.
Open in Google Maps →Taberna del Alabardero
FoodWalk south from the Alameda along Calle Amor de Dios for ten minutes, passing through the quiet streets around Plaza del Duque, to reach Calle Zaragoza. This 19th-century palace turned restaurant is where Seville's culinary school trains its students under professional chefs — the result is food of remarkable precision at honest prices. The solomillo ibérico con reducción de Pedro Ximénez (Iberian pork with PX sherry reduction, €18) is the perfect farewell dish; start with the salmorejo con virutas de jamón (€8) — budget €35–45 per person with wine.
Tip: Reserve a table in the interior courtyard — the tiled columns and trickling fountain create a setting that feels like dining inside the Alcázar. Avoid the 'authentic flamenco dinner' packages advertised around Calle Sierpes and Plaza Nueva — they charge €70+ for mediocre food and tourist-circuit choreography; for genuine flamenco, book a late show at Casa de la Memoria separately.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Seville?
Most travelers enjoy Seville in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Seville?
The easiest season for most travelers is Mar-May, Oct-Nov, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Seville?
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 Seville?
A good first shortlist for Seville includes Plaza de España, Metropol Parasol.