TripPick Spain Spain

Grand Andalusia 7-Day — Seville, Córdoba, Granada & Ronda

Seville's core + a Córdoba day trip + a Granada overnight + Ronda and the white villages

Seven days does Andalusia properly. Days 1-2 cover Seville (Alcázar, Cathedral, Plaza de España, Triana flamenco); Day 3 is a Córdoba day trip; Days 4-5 are a Granada overnight for the Alhambra; Day 6 visits Ronda and a white village (pueblo blanco); Day 7 is a final slow Seville day and departure. Book the Alhambra 2-3 months ahead and the Real Alcázar online. Ronda is easiest with a guided day tour or a rental car for the day.

A full week is enough to actually understand Seville. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$700

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,410

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$3,200

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Real Alcázar + Cathedral & Giralda + Santa Cruz tapas

Real Alcázar (UNESCO Moorish palace) - Seville Cathedral - Giralda climb - Barrio Santa Cruz - tapas crawl

Activities

  1. 09:30 Real Alcázar — UNESCO Moorish palace & gardens 2h30

    Open at 9:30 with a pre-booked timed ticket (€14.50). A living royal palace of Moorish and Mudéjar architecture with 700-year-old gardens — the Game of Thrones Dorne filming location. Allow 2-3 hours; the gardens are as much a highlight as the palace rooms.

    Cost: €14.50 (book online) TIP: Book the first morning slot online — same-day queues hit 90 minutes in summer. The free Monday-evening entry (6-7pm, Apr-Sep) is popular but has its own queue. Don't rush the gardens. Morning light and cooler temperatures make 9:30 ideal.
  2. 12:30 Seville Cathedral + Giralda tower climb 2h

    The world's largest Gothic cathedral, home to Christopher Columbus's tomb, with the Giralda bell tower (€12 combined). The tower is climbed via 35 gentle ramps rather than stairs, ending in a sweeping Old Town view.

    Cost: €12 (combined ticket) TIP: The Giralda's ramps (built so a guard could ride a horse up) make it an easy climb for most people. The Cathedral is closed Sunday mornings for services. Go before the afternoon heat. A 2-minute walk from the Alcázar.
  3. 14:30 Lunch — Santa Cruz tapas (Las Columnas) 1h30

    Lunch on classic tapas in the old Jewish quarter. Bodega Santa Cruz 'Las Columnas', a minute from the Cathedral, serves cheap montaditos de pringá and solomillo al whisky to a permanent street crowd.

    Cost: €8-15 per person TIP: Order at the bar and eat standing like the locals — there are almost no seats. Montaditos de pringá (€2.5-3) are the signature cheap bite. Bring small cash. A great anchor for an afternoon Santa Cruz wander.
  4. 16:30 Barrio Santa Cruz wander + siesta break 1h30

    Lose yourself in the tiled, whitewashed alleys of the old Jewish quarter — orange trees, hidden plazas, and the Plaza de Doña Elvira. In summer this is the time to retreat indoors or to a shaded café during the afternoon heat.

    Cost: Free TIP: Santa Cruz is built for aimless wandering; the narrow lanes stay shaded and cooler. In July-August, use the 2-6pm window to rest indoors. Stop for an horchata or a cold drink. Watch your bag in the crowded sections.
  5. 20:30 Dinner — tapas crawl (El Rinconcillo & Casa Morales) 2h

    Start the evening late, local-style. El Rinconcillo (since 1670, the city's oldest bar) for espinacas con garbanzos and jamón, then Casa Morales (since 1850) for wine poured straight from giant barrels.

    Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: Order one or two plates per bar and move on — that's the local rhythm. Stand at the counter for the classic experience. Dinner runs late here (9-11pm). Both bars get busy, so go before 9pm or be ready to squeeze in.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

Santa Cruz · €3-8

A tostada with olive oil or tomato and a café con leche — the local breakfast.

Lunch

Bodega Santa Cruz (Las Columnas)

Barrio Santa Cruz · €8-15

Cheap classic tapas a minute from the Cathedral — montaditos de pringá.

Dinner

El Rinconcillo + Casa Morales

Alfalfa / El Arenal · €15-25

A tapas crawl through the city's oldest bars — spinach-and-chickpeas and barrel wine.

Transit:

Everything today is on foot — the Alcázar, Cathedral, and Santa Cruz are within a few minutes of each other in the flat historic center. No transit needed.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $90 Mid $180 Luxury $420
DAY 2

Plaza de España + María Luisa Park + Metropol + Triana flamenco

Plaza de España - Parque de María Luisa - Metropol Parasol (Las Setas) - Triana - flamenco show

Activities

  1. 09:30 Plaza de España — 1929 Expo showpiece 1h30

    A vast semicircular plaza built for the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition, with a canal, tiled bridges, and 48 painted-tile alcoves for Spain's provinces (it played the planet Naboo in Star Wars). Free and always open.

    Cost: Free (canal boat €6/30 min) TIP: Go in the morning before the heat and crowds, or return at sunset for golden-hour photos. Find your home region's tiled alcove. A rowboat on the canal is €6 for 30 minutes — fun in cooler hours.
  2. 11:00 Parque de María Luisa — shaded gardens 1h

    The leafy park surrounding Plaza de España — fountains, tiled benches, ponds, and shade. A welcome cool-down and an easy stroll between the plaza and the rest of the day's sights.

    Cost: Free TIP: The park's shade is a relief in warm months. You can rent a four-person pedal car. Combine it naturally with Plaza de España next door before walking back toward the center.
  3. 13:00 Lunch — modern tapas (La Brunilda or La Azotea) 1h30

    Lunch on creative Andalusian tapas. La Brunilda in El Arenal (inventive, well-priced plates like pork-cheek carrillada and risotto) or La Azotea (tartares and ceviches) are both highly rated.

    Cost: €15-28 per person TIP: La Brunilda is tiny and busy — arrive right at the 1:30pm opening or expect a wait. Both take cards. A step up from the old taverns in style and price, but still good value for the quality.
  4. 16:00 Metropol Parasol (Las Setas) rooftop 1h30

    A giant modern wooden lattice in the Plaza de la Encarnación, nicknamed 'Las Setas' (the mushrooms). A rooftop walkway (~€15) gives 360° views over the Old Town rooftops — striking at sunset.

    Cost: ~€15 rooftop walkway TIP: Time the rooftop for late afternoon into sunset for the best light and views. The ticket usually includes a drink. The surrounding district has good shops and bars for an early evening drink afterward.
  5. 20:00 Triana — riverfront, ceramics & dinner 1h30

    Cross the Isabel II bridge to Triana, flamenco's birthplace. Walk the riverfront for Old Town views, browse the hand-painted-ceramic shops, and dine on fried quail at Casa Ruperto or garlic mushrooms at Las Golondrinas.

    Cost: €12-20 per person TIP: Casa Ruperto's fried quail (codorniz) is the local must-order — it's a stand-and-eat spot with a line. Triana feels more local than the tourist core. Time dinner before your flamenco show.
  6. 22:00 Flamenco show (Casa de la Memoria or Casa Anselma) 1h30

    End the night with flamenco. Casa de la Memoria is an intimate, serious show (~€25-30, book ahead); for the raw local version, Casa Anselma in Triana opens around midnight with spontaneous singing and dancing (no cover, minimum spend).

    Cost: €25-30 (tablao) / drinks (Casa Anselma) TIP: Book tablao shows 2-3 days ahead. At serious shows, stay quiet during the cante (singing) and save 'olé' for the climaxes. Casa Anselma is a bar, not a stage — informal, cash-based, and very local. Don't film the whole performance.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Churros at Bar El Comercio

Alfalfa · €3-5

Thick churros with dense hot chocolate at a 1904 churrería.

Lunch

La Brunilda or La Azotea

El Arenal / Centro · €15-28

Creative modern Andalusian tapas — pork cheek, risotto, ceviche.

Dinner

Casa Ruperto (Triana)

Triana · €12-20

Triana's famous fried quail before a flamenco show.

Transit:

On foot, with a 10-15 min walk across the Isabel II bridge to Triana. Tussam buses (€1.40) or a short taxi/Bolt ride if it's hot or late.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $95 Mid $190 Luxury $430
DAY 3

Córdoba day trip — the Mezquita-Catedral

AVE train to Córdoba - Mezquita-Catedral - Jewish Quarter - Roman Bridge - return to Seville

Activities

  1. 08:30 AVE high-speed train to Córdoba 1h

    From Santa Justa station, the AVE reaches Córdoba in just 45 minutes (€25-45 round trip, roughly hourly). One of the easiest and most rewarding day trips in Spain.

    Cost: €25-45 round trip TIP: Book on Renfe 1-2 months ahead for the cheapest fares. Catch an early train to beat the heat and crowds at the Mezquita. The Córdoba station is a 20-minute walk or short taxi from the old town.
  2. 10:00 Mezquita-Catedral — the mosque-cathedral 2h

    Córdoba's UNESCO masterpiece — a forest of red-and-white striped double arches over hundreds of columns, with a Renaissance cathedral built inside the former Great Mosque. Around €13 entry.

    Cost: ~€13 TIP: Go early (it opens around 10am, with free early-morning access on some weekday mornings — check current hours). The striped arches are the iconic photo. Allow plenty of time to wander the vast hall.
  3. 12:30 Jewish Quarter (Judería) + flower-filled patios 1h30

    Wander the medieval Judería — narrow whitewashed alleys, the famous Calleja de las Flores, and Córdoba's signature flower-filled patios. The Synagogue and craft shops are along the way.

    Cost: Free (Synagogue small fee) TIP: Córdoba is famous for its patios — courtyards bursting with potted flowers (peak in the May Patio Festival). The lanes are tight and shaded. A good spot for a relaxed lunch of salmorejo (a Córdoba original) and Iberian ham.
  4. 14:30 Lunch in Córdoba + Roman Bridge 2h

    Lunch on Córdoba specialties — salmorejo (which originated here), rabo de toro (oxtail stew), and Montilla-Moriles wine — then walk the Roman Bridge over the Guadalquivir for the classic Mezquita-and-river view.

    Cost: €15-30 per person TIP: Salmorejo and rabo de toro are the local dishes to try. The Roman Bridge at golden hour, with the Mezquita behind, is the postcard shot. Stay hydrated — Córdoba is even hotter than Seville in summer.
  5. 18:00 Return AVE to Seville + farewell tapas 2h30

    Take the 45-minute AVE back to Seville. Round off the trip with a final tapas crawl and a glass of fino sherry in Santa Cruz or the Alameda.

    Cost: Train included + €15-25 tapas TIP: Confirm your return train time before lunch — services are roughly hourly but the last convenient ones fill up. Back in Seville, the city comes alive again in the cool of the evening for a final tapas night.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café breakfast

Santa Justa / Centro · €3-6

Coffee and a tostada before the early train.

Lunch

Córdoba tavern

Córdoba (Judería) · €15-30

Salmorejo and rabo de toro — Córdoba specialties.

Dinner

Farewell tapas crawl

Santa Cruz / Alameda · €15-25

A final round of tapas and fino sherry back in Seville.

Transit:

AVE high-speed train Seville (Santa Justa) ↔ Córdoba, 45 min each way (€25-45 round trip, roughly hourly). On foot within both old towns.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $100 Mid $200 Luxury $440
DAY 4

Seville → Granada + the Albaicín

Train/bus to Granada - Albaicín Moorish quarter - Mirador San Nicolás sunset - Sacromonte cave flamenco

Activities

  1. 09:00 Seville → Granada (train or bus) 3h30

    Travel to Granada (about 3 hours by train or bus). Check into a hotel in or near the Albaicín or the center, dropping bags before exploring. This is an overnight, so pack light.

    Cost: €30-60 round trip TIP: Granada is too far for a comfortable day trip — one night lets you enjoy the Alhambra unrushed. Book transport ahead. The Alhambra ticket for tomorrow must already be reserved (they sell out 2-3 months out).
  2. 13:30 Lunch + free tapas (a Granada tradition) 1h30

    Granada is famous for free tapas — order a drink and a tapa comes with it, unlike Seville. Lunch in the center or Realejo on the local custom of drink-plus-free-tapa.

    Cost: €8-15 per person TIP: The free-tapa tradition is a real difference from Seville — a couple of drinks can become a light meal. Calle Navas and the Realejo district are good hunting grounds.
  3. 16:00 Albaicín — Moorish old quarter 2h

    Wander the Albaicín, Granada's hilly UNESCO Moorish quarter of narrow white-walled lanes, cármenes (walled gardens), and tea houses, with the Alhambra rising across the valley.

    Cost: Free TIP: The lanes are steep and cobbled — wear good shoes. Stop at a teteria (Moroccan-style tea house) on Calle Calderería. Keep an eye on the time for the sunset viewpoint.
  4. 19:30 Mirador San Nicolás — Alhambra sunset 1h

    The famous viewpoint over the floodlit Alhambra with the Sierra Nevada behind — Granada's classic sunset panorama, with buskers playing flamenco guitar.

    Cost: Free TIP: Arrive 30-40 minutes before sunset for a spot at the wall — it gets crowded. The Alhambra glows gold then floodlit as the light fades. Watch your belongings in the crush.
  5. 21:00 Sacromonte cave flamenco (optional) + dinner 1h30

    Optional zambra flamenco in the Sacromonte cave houses — a Granada gypsy tradition distinct from Seville's. Or simply dinner in the Albaicín with Alhambra views.

    Cost: €25-30 (cave show) / dinner extra TIP: Sacromonte's cave flamenco (zambra) is a different style from Seville's — book ahead. If you've already seen flamenco in Triana, a relaxed Albaicín dinner is just as good. Early night before the Alhambra.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Seville café breakfast

Seville · €3-6

Coffee and tostada before travelling to Granada.

Lunch

Granada free-tapas bar

Granada centre / Realejo · €8-15

Drink-plus-free-tapa, the Granada custom.

Dinner

Albaicín restaurant or Sacromonte show

Albaicín / Sacromonte · €20-30

Dinner with Alhambra views, or cave-house zambra flamenco.

Transit:

Seville → Granada about 3 hours by train or bus (€30-60 round trip). In Granada, walking plus the small Albaicín minibuses (C1/C2) up the steep lanes.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $120 Mid $230 Luxury $500
DAY 5

The Alhambra + return to Seville

Alhambra (Nasrid Palaces + Generalife) - Granada centre - return to Seville

Activities

  1. 08:30 The Alhambra — Nasrid Palaces & Generalife 3h30

    Granada's UNESCO Moorish palace-fortress complex (around €20) — the intricate Nasrid Palaces, the Generalife gardens, and the Alcazaba ramparts, all overlooking the city. The highlight of any Andalusia trip.

    Cost: ~€20 (book months ahead) TIP: Your Nasrid Palaces entry is for a strict timed slot — don't be late, or you forfeit it. Tickets sell out 2-3 months ahead via the official site. Go early to beat heat and crowds. Allow at least 3 hours for the whole complex.
  2. 12:30 Lunch + Granada centre (Cathedral, Capilla Real) 2h

    Lunch in the centre, then see Granada Cathedral and the Capilla Real (Royal Chapel), the burial site of the Catholic Monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand.

    Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: The Capilla Real holds the tombs of Isabella and Ferdinand — a key piece of Spanish history. Granada's free-tapa tradition makes lunch good value. Leave time to collect your bags.
  3. 16:30 Granada → Seville (train or bus) 3h30

    Return to Seville (about 3 hours), arriving in the evening for a final night in the city.

    Cost: Round trip included TIP: Book the return ahead. Back in Seville, the evening is perfect for a last tapas crawl in the cool of the night.
  4. 21:00 Final Seville tapas + sherry 2h

    A last evening of Seville tapas and a glass of cold fino sherry — Las Golondrinas in Triana or El Rinconcillo in the center make a fitting send-off.

    Cost: €15-25 per person TIP: Keep it relaxed and local — a couple of bars, a few plates, a glass of sherry. Dinner runs late, so 9-11pm is normal. A gentle finish to the Andalusia loop.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Granada hotel breakfast

Granada · €5-10

An early breakfast before the Alhambra slot.

Lunch

Granada centre tapas

Granada · €15-25

Free-tapa lunch near the Cathedral.

Dinner

Farewell Seville tapas

Triana / Centro · €15-25

A final tapas crawl and fino sherry.

Transit:

Granada → Seville about 3 hours by train or bus. Walking within both centres.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $110 Mid $220 Luxury $490
DAY 6

Ronda + a white village (pueblo blanco)

Ronda - Puente Nuevo gorge bridge - oldest bullring - a white village - return to Seville

Activities

  1. 08:30 Seville → Ronda 2h30

    Travel to Ronda (about 2 hours by guided tour, car, or train/bus), a dramatic clifftop town split by the El Tajo gorge. The journey passes through rolling Andalusian countryside.

    Cost: Tour €50-70 / car or transit varies TIP: A guided day tour is the easiest way (often combining Ronda with a white village). Self-driving gives flexibility for the pueblos blancos. Public transit works but is slower and less frequent.
  2. 11:00 Ronda — Puente Nuevo & El Tajo gorge 1h30

    Ronda's icon — the Puente Nuevo, an 18th-century stone bridge spanning the 100m-deep El Tajo gorge that splits the town. Walk both rims for the famous views down the cliff.

    Cost: Bridge interior small fee TIP: The viewpoints from the Alameda gardens and the path below the bridge give the best gorge photos. The clifftop setting is the whole appeal. Mind the heat and the edges.
  3. 13:00 Plaza de Toros + lunch in Ronda 2h

    Visit Ronda's bullring (Plaza de Toros, ~€9), one of Spain's oldest and a cradle of modern bullfighting, then lunch on rustic mountain cuisine — local stews and game.

    Cost: Bullring ~€9 + lunch €15-25 TIP: Whatever your view on bullfighting, the historic ring and its museum are an interesting piece of Andalusian heritage. Ronda's inland food is heartier than the coast or Seville. A relaxed lunch suits the pace.
  4. 15:30 A white village (pueblo blanco) 1h30

    Stop at a pueblo blanco such as Setenil de las Bodegas (houses built into rock overhangs) or Zahara de la Sierra (whitewashed lanes under a hilltop castle) — quintessential white Andalusia.

    Cost: Free (tour or car) TIP: Setenil's rock-overhang streets are a standout photo stop. The white villages are scattered, so a tour or car makes the difference. A short visit captures the atmosphere before the drive back.
  5. 18:00 Return to Seville 2h30

    Drive or ride back to Seville (about 2 hours), arriving for a relaxed final evening in the city.

    Cost: Included in tour / car TIP: Most guided tours return to central Seville by early evening. Back in the city, the cool of the night is the time for a last unhurried tapas crawl.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Seville café breakfast

Seville · €3-6

Coffee and tostada before the Ronda trip.

Lunch

Ronda mountain cuisine

Ronda · €15-25

Hearty inland stews and game with a gorge view.

Dinner

Seville tapas crawl

Santa Cruz / Alfalfa · €15-25

A relaxed final-stretch tapas night.

Transit:

Seville ↔ Ronda about 2 hours each way. A guided day tour (€50-70) or a one-day rental car is easiest for combining Ronda with a white village; public transit is slower.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $120 Mid $240 Luxury $520
DAY 7

Slow Seville morning + departure

Metropol Parasol or a missed sight - Triana market - last tapas - SVQ departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 A final Seville sight or a slow morning 2h

    Catch anything missed earlier — the Casa de Pilatos (an Andalusian palace), the Hospital de los Venerables, the Plaza de Toros de la Maestranza bullring, or just a relaxed Santa Cruz breakfast.

    Cost: €6-12 (sight) or breakfast TIP: Casa de Pilatos is an underrated Mudéjar palace with fewer crowds than the Alcázar. Or simply enjoy a final coffee in a quiet plaza. Keep it light on a departure day.
  2. 12:00 Mercado de Triana — final lunch 1h30

    Cross to Triana for a last graze through the Mercado de Triana — fried fish, oysters, jamón, and a glass of vermouth at the market bars on the riverbank.

    Cost: €10-20 per person TIP: Stall-hopping is the way to do it — a little of everything. Midday is liveliest. A fitting, atmospheric last meal before heading to the airport.
  3. 14:00 Souvenir shopping (ceramics, sherry, ham) 1h30

    Pick up Triana hand-painted ceramics, a bottle of fino or manzanilla sherry, Iberian ham, or olive oil — Andalusian specialties that travel well.

    Cost: Shopping extra TIP: Triana's ceramic shops are the best for hand-painted tiles. Vacuum-packed jamón ibérico travels fine in checked luggage. Sherry and olive oil are easy, characterful gifts.
  4. 16:30 Seville Airport (SVQ) departure 1h30

    Head to the airport by the EA bus (€4, ~35 min) or a flat-rate taxi (~€23-25, ~20 min). SVQ is about 10km northeast of the center.

    Cost: Bus €4 / taxi ~€25 TIP: Arrive 2 hours before a Schengen flight, more for connections. SVQ has limited long-haul direct service, so many travelers connect via Madrid or Barcelona. The EA bus runs every 20-30 minutes.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Santa Cruz café

Santa Cruz · €3-6

A final tostada and café con leche.

Lunch

Mercado de Triana

Triana · €10-20

Market stall-hopping — fried fish, oysters, vermouth.

Dinner

In-flight or airport dining

SVQ / en route · €8-15

A light bite at the airport before departure.

Transit:

On foot in the center; EA airport bus (€4, ~35 min) or flat-rate taxi (~€23-25, ~20 min) to SVQ.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $85 Mid $170 Luxury $400

Book Seville Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Seville 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long for Andalusia?
No — seven days lets you do Seville, Córdoba, Granada (Alhambra), and Ronda with the white villages without rushing. It's the sweet spot for the region's three great cities plus a mountain-town day. If you only have the cities, 5 days works; 7 adds Ronda and a slower final day.
How do I get to Ronda from Seville?
Ronda is about 2 hours each way. A guided day tour (€50-70, often combining Ronda with a white village) is the easiest and most popular option. A one-day rental car gives flexibility for the scattered pueblos blancos. Train and bus work but are slower and less frequent.
Which white village should I visit?
Setenil de las Bodegas, with houses built into rock overhangs, and Zahara de la Sierra, whitewashed under a hilltop castle, are two of the most striking and commonly paired with Ronda. Most guided Ronda tours include one. They capture the white-Andalusia look in a short stop.
Should I rent a car for the whole trip?
Not for the cities — Seville, Córdoba, and Granada are best by AVE train and on foot, and old-town driving and parking are a hassle. A car only earns its keep for the Ronda/white-villages day. Many travelers do the cities car-free and add a single day tour or one-day rental for Ronda.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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