Seville, Spain
Spain · Europe

Viajes a medida a Seville

Flamenco's cradle, where oranges and cathedrals share the air.

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Desde 1,600/persona·Mejor época: March–May, October–November·★★★★★ 500+ viajeros conectados
Foto de Ramon Perucho en Pexels

¿Qué es un viaje a medida a Seville?

A custom Seville tour is a privately curated itinerary that books the Alcázar at opening, arranges flamenco instruction with working bailaoras in Triana, and times evening walks to catch the Giralda at sunset. It avoids crowds, respects Andalusian rhythms, and treats the city as a living neighborhood rather than a monument checklist.

Seville doesn't announce itself gently. The Guadalquivir River bends through ochre-walled neighborhoods where flamenco still lives in unmarked studios, where orange blossoms perfume narrow streets in spring, and where the Giralda—that Renaissance bell tower—catches light at angles that photographs fail to capture. A custom tour here means skipping the midday crowds and booking the Alcázar at 8 a.m., when sunlight floods the azulejo tiles and courtyards belong almost entirely to you.

This is Andalusia's capital, but it doesn't feel like a capital. It feels like a city that inherited centuries of Moorish geometry, Roman pragmatism, and Gypsy defiance, then decided to stay exactly as it was. The Cathedral holds one of Europe's largest Gothic interiors. The Plaza de España spreads itself across an entire block like a film set—because it was one. Triana, across the river, still produces flamenco dancers the way other neighborhoods produce accountants.

CustomizeYourTour.com builds itineraries that honor Seville's rhythms: early mornings for monuments, midday breaks in courtyards, late afternoons in tapas bars where sherries arrive without ordering. March through May and October through November turn Seville into a climate where walking feels like breathing. July and August are punishing—45°C heat that locks the city into siesta and sends sensible travelers elsewhere. Seven days uncovers the essential Seville; fourteen allows you to extend into Córdoba's Mezquita or the white villages of Cádiz province.

¿Cuándo es la mejor época para visitar Seville?

Nuestros meses recomendados son March–May, October–November. Aquí una vista mensual con notas de planificación.

Jan
Temporada baja — mejor disponibilidad y precio.
Feb
Temporada baja; tranquilo y a menudo más barato.
Mar
Recomendado
Temporada media; el tiempo mejora.
Apr
Temporada media; empieza el tiempo ideal.
May
Recomendado
Temporada media alta; reserva con antelación.
Jun
Temporada alta; buen tiempo, precios más altos.
Jul
Temporada alta; concurrido pero animado.
Aug
Temporada alta; mes de vacaciones en gran parte de Europa.
Sep
Temporada media alta; nuestro mes favorito.
Oct
Recomendado
Temporada media; luz preciosa y menos turistas.
Nov
Recomendado
Temporada media baja; tranquilo y con ambiente.
Dec
Temporada baja salvo Navidad y Nochevieja.

Las mejores experiencias en Seville

Momentos seleccionados por nuestras agencias locales. Cada viaje incluye una selección de estas — o algo mejor si lo encontramos.

Alcázar palace at opening — Seville
Experiencia 1
Alcázar palace at opening
Enter the Alcázar at 8 a.m. before crowds arrive. Walk courtyards of interlocking arches, gardens where water channels whisper through azulejo tiles, and rooms that blend Moorish and Renaissance design across six centuries.
Cathedral and Giralda climb — Seville
Experiencia 2
Cathedral and Giralda climb
Climb the Giralda's 35 ramps for 360° views of orange-tree canopy and terracotta roofs. Explore the Cathedral's Gothic vastness and the tomb of Columbus. The light here reshapes itself hourly.
Flamenco workshop in Triana — Seville
Experiencia 3
Flamenco workshop in Triana
Learn palmas (hand claps) and basic footwork from a working bailaora in Triana's unmarked studios. Understand flamenco not as performance art but as the neighborhood's living inheritance and daily language.
Plaza de España sunset walk — Seville
Experiencia 4
Plaza de España sunset walk
Walk the arcaded perimeter of Plaza de España, admiring azulejo maps of Spanish provinces and watching Renaissance Revival architecture shift colors as sunlight moves. Dinner here tastes like the building looks.
Córdoba Mezquita day trip — Seville
Experiencia 5
Córdoba Mezquita day trip
Day-trip by train to Córdoba's Mezquita—a hypostyle forest of red-and-white arches. The 8th-century mosque-cathedral is most luminous at dawn. Return to Seville by evening via 45-minute train.
Tapas tour in Santa Cruz — Seville
Experiencia 6
Tapas tour in Santa Cruz
Bar-hop through Santa Cruz's whitewashed streets with a local guide. Taste manzanilla sherry, jamón ibérico, espinacas con garbanzos, and croquetas. Learn that Seville's food culture lives at the counter, not the table.

Itinerarios de muestra

Dos puntos de partida — tu itinerario real es a medida. Construimos desde aquí.

7 días clásico

  1. 1
    Día 1: Arrival in Seville
    Land at San Pablo Airport and transfer to your hotel in Santa Cruz or Triana. Afternoon orientation walk through narrow streets, scouting tapas bars for later. Evening aperitif on a rooftop overlooking the Giralda as it shifts from gold to amber. Overnight in central Seville.
  2. 2
    Día 2: Alcázar palace at opening
    8 a.m. private entry to the Alcázar—before tour groups arrive. Walk the Patio de las Doncellas, the gardens where water channels cool courtyards, the plasterwork that still whispers of 14th-century Granada. Late morning coffee in Santa Cruz's whitewashed plazas. Afternoon free for rest.
  3. 3
    Día 3: Cathedral and Giralda climb
    Early entry to the Cathedral—Gothic vastness and the tomb of Columbus. Climb the Giralda's 35 ramps (no stairs; a Renaissance accessibility feature) for 360° views of Seville's orange trees and terracotta roofs. Lunch in a family-run restaurant overlooking the river. Afternoon exploring the ecclesiastical museum.
  4. 4
    Día 4: Flamenco workshop in Triana
    Cross into Triana, the riverside neighborhood where flamenco was born. Morning workshop with a working bailaora—learn palmas (hand claps) and basic footwork. Lunch at a traditional bar where locals still gather. Afternoon visit to a cerámica studio to watch artisans hand-paint tiles as they have for centuries.
  5. 5
    Día 5: Plaza de España sunset walk
    Morning in the Museo de Bellas Artes—Murillo and Velázquez in a former convent. Afternoon siesta at your hotel. Late afternoon to Plaza de España: walk the arcaded perimeter, admire the azulejo map of Spanish provinces, watch light turn the building the color of honey. Sunset dinner at a terrace café overlooking the plaza.
  6. 6
    Día 6: Tapas tour in Santa Cruz
    Guided walk through Santa Cruz's labyrinthine streets. Stop at three traditional bars: manzanilla sherry with jamón ibérico, espinacas con garbanzos, croquetas de jamón. Learn the difference between a bar counter culture and restaurant dining. Visit a historic bodega where sherries age in soleras. Evening free for independent exploration.
  7. 7
    Día 7: Departure from Seville
    Morning stroll through the Triana neighborhood or the Sunday market (if timing allows). Transfer to airport for onward travel. Optional: extend to Córdoba or Cádiz province before departing Spain.

14 días en profundidad

  1. 1
    Día 1: Arrival in Seville
    Land at San Pablo Airport and transfer to your hotel in Santa Cruz or Triana. Afternoon orientation walk through narrow streets, scouting tapas bars for later. Evening aperitif on a rooftop overlooking the Giralda as it shifts from gold to amber. Overnight in central Seville.
  2. 2
    Día 2: Alcázar palace at opening
    8 a.m. private entry to the Alcázar—before tour groups arrive. Walk the Patio de las Doncellas, the gardens where water channels cool courtyards, the plasterwork that still whispers of 14th-century Granada. Late morning coffee in Santa Cruz's whitewashed plazas. Afternoon free for rest.
  3. 3
    Día 3: Cathedral and Giralda climb
    Early entry to the Cathedral—Gothic vastness and the tomb of Columbus. Climb the Giralda's 35 ramps (no stairs; a Renaissance accessibility feature) for 360° views of Seville's orange trees and terracotta roofs. Lunch in a family-run restaurant overlooking the river. Afternoon exploring the ecclesiastical museum.
  4. 4
    Día 4: Flamenco workshop in Triana
    Cross into Triana, the riverside neighborhood where flamenco was born. Morning workshop with a working bailaora—learn palmas (hand claps) and basic footwork. Lunch at a traditional bar where locals still gather. Afternoon visit to a cerámica studio to watch artisans hand-paint tiles as they have for centuries.
  5. 5
    Día 5: Plaza de España sunset walk
    Morning in the Museo de Bellas Artes—Murillo and Velázquez in a former convent. Afternoon siesta at your hotel. Late afternoon to Plaza de España: walk the arcaded perimeter, admire the azulejo map of Spanish provinces, watch light turn the building the color of honey. Sunset dinner at a terrace café overlooking the plaza.
  6. 6
    Día 6: Tapas tour in Santa Cruz
    Guided walk through Santa Cruz's labyrinthine streets. Stop at three traditional bars: manzanilla sherry with jamón ibérico, espinacas con garbanzos, croquetas de jamón. Learn the difference between a bar counter culture and restaurant dining. Visit a historic bodega where sherries age in soleras. Evening free for independent exploration.
  7. 7
    Día 7: Córdoba Mezquita day trip
    Train from Seville to Córdoba (45 minutes). Enter the Mezquita at dawn—the hypostyle forest of red-and-white arches is most luminous in early light. Explore the Roman bridge and Jewish quarter. Lunch in a courtyard restaurant overlooking the Guadalquivir. Return to Seville by evening.
  8. 8
    Día 8: Extension: Cádiz arrival and old town walk
    Drive or train to Cádiz (2 hours)—Europe's oldest continuously inhabited city. Walk the medieval streets of the old town, climb the Tavira Tower for views across the Atlantic. Lunch on fresh seafood at a beachfront chiringuito. Evening in Plaza San Juan de Dios with sherry and olives. Stay overnight in Cádiz.
  9. 9
    Día 9: Extension: Cádiz beaches and white villages
    Morning beach time at La Caleta or Playa de la Victoria. Afternoon drive inland to a white village (Vejer de la Frontera or Medina Sidonia)—whitewashed houses, winding streets, views to the Atlantic. Stop at a cortijo (farmhouse) for local wine and jamón. Return to Cádiz for dinner.
  10. 10
    Día 10: Extension: Cádiz to Seville return
    Morning leisure in Cádiz or beach time. Midday train or drive back to Seville. Afternoon arrival and rest. Evening in a favorite bar from earlier in the week.
  11. 11
    Día 11: Free day: Independent exploration
    No guided itinerary. Revisit favorite neighborhoods, browse the Sunday antiques market (if timing allows), take a cooking class, or visit smaller museums. Lunch and dinner at bars you discovered earlier. This day belongs entirely to your pace and curiosity.
  12. 12
    Día 12: Ceramics and craftsman heritage
    Visit a working cerámica studio in Triana to watch artisans hand-paint Andalusian tiles. Workshop opportunity to design and paint your own piece (fires and ships in 2–3 weeks). Afternoon in the Museo de Artes y Costumbres Populares. Late afternoon sherry tasting at a traditional bodega.
  13. 13
    Día 13: Riverside walk and farewell dinner
    Morning stroll along the Guadalquivir's paseos (parks). Visit Torre del Oro and the naval museum. Afternoon in your favorite Santa Cruz plaza. Evening: farewell dinner at a rooftop restaurant with the Giralda illuminated against the night sky.
  14. 14
    Día 14: Departure from Seville
    Final morning walk through Seville's streets. Transfer to San Pablo Airport for onward travel, carrying ceramic tiles, the smell of orange blossoms in your luggage, and the rhythm of flamenco still in your feet.

Información práctica

Visado
Schengen visa; 90 days visa-free for US/UK/CA
Moneda
Euro (€)
Idioma
Spanish, Andalusian
Zona horaria
CET (UTC+1)

Preguntas frecuentes

When is the best time to visit Seville?+

March–May and October–November. Spring offers orange blossoms and perfect 20–25°C weather; autumn mirrors this comfort. Summer (July–August) reaches 45°C and empties the streets by midday. Winter is mild but wetter. Semana Santa (Holy Week, dates vary) and April Feria draw crowds but reward with extraordinary processions and flamenco.

How many days do you need in Seville?+

Seven days covers the essential monuments, flamenco experience, and local rhythms—Alcázar, Cathedral, Giralda, Triana workshops, Plaza de España, and Santa Cruz's tapas bars. Fourteen days allows a Córdoba or Cádiz extension, returning to Seville for deeper exploration of neighborhoods and independent discovery.

Do US, UK, and Canadian citizens need a visa for Seville?+

No. US, UK, and Canadian passport holders enjoy 90 days visa-free under Schengen rules. Ensure your passport has at least 6 months validity. EU/EEA citizens require only an ID card or passport. Non-Schengen visitors should apply for a Schengen visa through the Spanish consulate.

What does a 7-day custom Seville tour cost?+

CustomizeYourTour.com custom tours start at €1,600 per person for 7 days, including private guide time, early-access bookings (Alcázar at 8 a.m.), cultural experiences (flamenco workshop), and curated itineraries. Accommodation, meals, and internal transport are customized to your budget and preferences.

What should you pack for a Seville tour?+

For spring/autumn: light layers, comfortable walking shoes, sunscreen, and a hat (afternoon sun is intense). Bring a light scarf for cathedral visits. If visiting July–August: breathable fabrics, sunglasses, and a water bottle (mandatory). Year-round: a small backpack, power adapter (EU 2-pin), and euros. Casual dress works everywhere; beachwear belongs at the river, not in restaurants.

La gente también pregunta

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  • Why is the Alcázar so famous and what makes it different from other Spanish palaces?
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  • Is it safe to walk around Seville at night alone?

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