TripPick Spain Spain

Valencia 7-Day — Deep City, Coast & Countryside

The full city, Albufera, two day trips (Xàtiva, Sagunto), the Costa Blanca coast, and a slow finish

A week lets you really settle in. Days 1-3 cover the city core (Old Town, City of Arts, beach, Albufera). Day 4 is Xàtiva by train. Day 5 mixes markets, museums, and the Bioparc. Day 6 heads down the Costa Blanca coast (Gandia's beaches or the dramatic Peñíscola headland) or visits Sagunto's Roman ruins. Day 7 is a relaxed finish — a favorite neighborhood, a last paella, and the beach. Valencia is sunny most of the year, cheap by Spanish big-city standards, and an ideal base for both city and coast. Prices are in USD; €1 ≈ $1.08.

A full week is enough to actually understand Valencia. 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

$425

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$820

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$1,760

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Old Town — Cathedral, La Lonja, Mercado Central & Turia Gardens

Plaza de la Reina - Cathedral & Miguelete - La Lonja (UNESCO) - Mercado Central - El Carmen - Turia Gardens

Activities

  1. 09:30 Mercado Central — Art Nouveau food market 1 hour

    Start at the Mercado Central, Valencia's grand 1928 Art Nouveau market hall with around 400 stalls under stained-glass domes. Graze on jamón, cheese, and fruit, or grab a gourmet bocadillo at Central Bar by Ricard Camarena inside.

    Cost: Free entry; snacks €3-10 TIP: Come early when it's liveliest and least crowded. Free to enter and a sight in itself. Watch your bag in the crowds. Closed Sundays, so plan around that. Central Bar's bocadillos are an excellent cheap meal.
  2. 10:45 La Lonja de la Seda — UNESCO silk exchange 1 hour

    Across from the market, La Lonja de la Seda is a UNESCO-listed 15th-century Gothic silk exchange — its hall of spiraling stone columns is one of Valencia's finest interiors and a symbol of its medieval merchant wealth.

    Cost: ~€2 (free Sundays) TIP: Cheap and quick but architecturally stunning — don't skip it. Free on Sundays. The twisted columns and the orange-tree courtyard are the highlights. A 1-minute walk from the Mercado Central.
  3. 12:00 Valencia Cathedral & the Miguelete tower 1.5 hours

    Walk to the Cathedral via Plaza de la Reina. See the chalice the Catholic Church recognizes as a Holy Grail candidate, then climb the Miguelete bell tower (207 steps) for panoramic views over the Old Town's tiled roofs.

    Cost: Cathedral ~€9; tower ~€2 TIP: The Holy Grail chapel is the talking point. The Miguelete climb is steep and narrow but the rooftop view is the best in the Old Town. Combine the two. Plaza de la Virgen next door is a lovely square for a coffee.
  4. 14:00 Lunch — paella valenciana at La Riuà 1.5 hours

    Lunch is paella time in Valencia. La Riuà (since 1982, near Plaza de la Reina) serves traditional paella valenciana and Albufera dishes like all i pebre in a tile-lined Old Town dining room — a central alternative to the beach paella houses.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Order paella valenciana (rabbit, chicken, green beans) for the real thing — not a seafood-and-meat mix. It's cooked to order, so allow time and reserve. Paella is a lunch dish here; don't save it for dinner.
  5. 16:00 El Carmen neighborhood + Serranos & Quart towers 1.5 hours

    Wander El Carmen, the atmospheric medieval quarter full of narrow lanes, street art, and history. Climb the Serranos Towers (an old city gate) for views, and see the Quart Towers nearby — both surviving medieval gateways.

    Cost: Towers ~€2 each TIP: El Carmen is best on foot, with no fixed route — just wander. The Serranos Towers climb is cheap and rewarding. This area comes alive in the evening with bars, so note good spots for later.
  6. 18:00 Turia Gardens stroll + horchata break 1.5 hours

    Drop into the Turia Gardens, the 9km former riverbed turned linear park that loops around the Old Town. Walk a stretch of greenery, then break for horchata with fartons at Horchatería Santa Catalina back near Plaza de la Reina.

    Cost: Park free; horchata €3-6 TIP: The Turia is the city's green spine — flat, traffic-free, and great for a wander or a rented bike. Horchatería Santa Catalina (since 1928) is the classic spot for horchata and fartons. A relaxed end to the day before late Valencian dinner.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café / hotel breakfast

Old Town · €3-8

Coffee and tostada, or pastries at the Mercado de Colón.

Lunch

La Riuà — paella valenciana

Old Town · €20-40

Traditional paella valenciana and Albufera classics.

Dinner

El Carmen tapas bars

El Carmen · €15-30

Tapas and agua de Valencia in the medieval lanes (from ~21:00).

Transit:

The Old Town is entirely walkable — no transport needed. The metro reaches the center (Xàtiva/Colón). Consider a rented bike for the Turia Gardens.

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

Budget $55 Mid $105 Luxury $240
DAY 2

City of Arts and Sciences + Malvarrosa beach

Turia Gardens cycle - City of Arts and Sciences - Oceanogràfic - Malvarrosa beach - beachfront paella

Activities

  1. 09:30 Cycle the Turia Gardens to the City of Arts 1 hour

    Rent a bike (Valenbisi or a shop) and ride the flat, traffic-free Turia Gardens from the Old Town to the City of Arts and Sciences at its eastern end — one of the best urban rides in Spain, through 9km of greenery.

    Cost: Bike rental €5-15/day TIP: The Turia ride is a highlight in itself. If you'd rather not cycle, bus or metro reach the City of Arts. Go in the morning before the heat in summer. The Gulliver playground in the park is a fun stop.
  2. 10:30 City of Arts and Sciences — Calatrava architecture 1.5 hours

    Explore Santiago Calatrava's white futuristic complex beside reflecting pools — the Hemisfèric IMAX, the Príncipe Felipe Science Museum, the Palau de les Arts opera house, and the Umbracle promenade. The exteriors are free to walk and photograph.

    Cost: Exteriors free; buildings ticketed TIP: Even without entering, the architecture and reflecting pools are stunning — allow time for photos. The combo ticket (Hemisfèric + Science Museum + Oceanogràfic) saves money if you'll do the interiors; buy online.
  3. 12:00 Oceanogràfic — one of Europe's largest aquariums 2.5 hours

    Visit the Oceanogràfic, the standout interior at the City of Arts — a huge aquarium with sharks, dolphins, beluga whales, and an underwater restaurant tunnel, laid out as marine ecosystems across several domes.

    Cost: ~€35 (cheaper online) TIP: The priciest single sight in Valencia but the big family draw — book online to save and skip the queue. Allow at least two hours. If traveling without kids and on a budget, the exteriors plus the Science Museum may be enough.
  4. 15:00 Lunch + tram to Malvarrosa beach 1.5 hours

    Grab a light lunch near the City of Arts, then take the tram (line 4/6) to Malvarrosa, Valencia's wide city beach — golden sand, a long promenade, and the Mediterranean a short ride from the center.

    Cost: Lunch €10-20; tram €1.50 TIP: The tram to the beach is scenic and cheap. Malvarrosa is wide and sandy with a lively promenade. In summer the sea is warm (June-October); off-season it's still a great walk. Sunscreen and water in summer.
  5. 17:00 Malvarrosa beach time 2 hours

    Relax on Malvarrosa beach — swim in summer, walk the promenade, and explore the colorful tiled streets of the El Cabanyal fishermen's quarter just behind the seafront.

    Cost: Free TIP: El Cabanyal's tiled houses are a photogenic, less-touristy contrast to the promenade. Swimming season runs June-October (sea warmest July-September). Don't leave belongings unattended on the sand.
  6. 20:00 Beachfront paella dinner at La Pepica or Casa Carmela 2 hours

    Dinner by the sea at a historic beach paella house — La Pepica (since 1898, served Hemingway) or Casa Carmela (since 1922, wood-fired). Note these center on lunch, so confirm dinner service or shift this to a beach lunch.

    Cost: €20-45 per person TIP: These beach institutions are best at lunch (Casa Carmela is lunch-only) — if dinner isn't available, do this paella as a midday meal instead and eat tapas in the evening. Reserve either way. Order paella valenciana for the traditional dish.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café / hotel breakfast

Old Town · €3-8

Coffee and tostada before cycling out.

Lunch

Light lunch near City of Arts

City of Arts · €10-20

Tapas or a bocadillo between sights.

Dinner

La Pepica / Casa Carmela

Malvarrosa beach · €20-45

Historic beachfront paella valenciana (ideally at lunch).

Transit:

Cycle or bus to the City of Arts (eastern end of the Turia Gardens). Tram line 4/6 reaches Malvarrosa beach. A SUMA 10 card is good value for multiple rides.

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

Budget $70 Mid $130 Luxury $270
DAY 3

Albufera paella heartland + Russafa neighborhood

Albufera Natural Park - lagoon boat ride - El Palmar paella lunch - Russafa cafés and tapas

Activities

  1. 10:00 Travel to Albufera Natural Park 1 hour

    Head south to Albufera Natural Park, the wetland and rice-paddy area where paella was born. Take EMT bus 25 from the center (about 45 minutes), drive, or join a half-day tour that bundles the boat ride and lunch.

    Cost: Bus €1.50; tours vary TIP: Albufera is about 10-15km south. The bus is cheapest; a tour is easiest as it packages the lagoon boat and a paella lunch. The rice fields and birdlife make a complete change from the city.
  2. 11:30 Lagoon boat ride on the Albufera 1 hour

    Take a flat-bottomed boat ride on the Albufera lagoon — Spain's largest freshwater lagoon, ringed by reeds and rice paddies, rich with birdlife and beautiful light over the water.

    Cost: ~€4-15 per boat/person TIP: Sunset is the classic time for the boat, but a late-morning ride before lunch works well on a day trip. Bring a hat and water in summer. The boats leave from El Palmar and the lagoon shore near El Saler.
  3. 13:00 Paella lunch in El Palmar — where it all began 1.5 hours

    Lunch on traditional paella valenciana in El Palmar village, the birthplace of the dish, at a classic rice house like Casa Ángel or Bon Aire — cooked over wood, beside the rice paddies that supply it.

    Cost: €20-45 per person TIP: This is the pilgrimage paella — eating it where it originated. Reserve at weekends. Order paella valenciana (rabbit, chicken, beans) and try all i pebre (eel stew) if you're adventurous. Cooked to order, so relax into the meal.
  4. 15:30 Return to the city + rest 1.5 hours

    Head back to the center (bus 25 or your tour), with time to rest at the hotel or stroll before the evening. Albufera is a relaxed half-day, leaving the afternoon free.

    Cost: Bus €1.50 TIP: After a big paella lunch, an easy afternoon suits the rhythm. If you skipped Day 1 or 2 sights, this is a buffer to catch up (the Museo de Bellas Artes is free and excellent).
  5. 18:00 Russafa (Ruzafa) neighborhood — cafés and culture 1.5 hours

    Explore Russafa, Valencia's trendiest neighborhood — independent cafés, vintage shops, street art, the Russafa market, and a buzzing bar and restaurant scene south of the center.

    Cost: Coffee/snacks €3-10 TIP: Russafa is the city's coolest district and a foodie hub. Wander, have a coffee, and pick a spot for dinner. It's a short walk or metro ride from the Old Town. Lively in the evening with a young, local crowd.
  6. 20:30 Dinner in Russafa + agua de Valencia 2 hours

    Dinner in Russafa — modern Valencian tapas at Canalla Bistro (chef Ricard Camarena's casual bistro) or another neighborhood spot — finished with an agua de Valencia, the local cava-and-orange cocktail.

    Cost: €20-45 per person TIP: Canalla Bistro is a great-value taste of a top chef's cooking; reserve ahead. Agua de Valencia comes by the jug and is stronger than it tastes. A fitting last evening in the city's best dining neighborhood.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café / hotel breakfast

Old Town · €3-8

A light breakfast before the Albufera trip.

Lunch

El Palmar paella (Casa Ángel / Bon Aire)

El Palmar (Albufera) · €20-45

Wood-fired paella valenciana in its birthplace.

Dinner

Canalla Bistro / Russafa tapas

Russafa · €20-45

Modern Valencian tapas + agua de Valencia.

Transit:

EMT bus 25 reaches Albufera/El Palmar (~45 min), or join a tour. Russafa is a short walk or metro ride south of the Old Town.

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

Budget $60 Mid $115 Luxury $250
DAY 4

Day trip — Xàtiva castle town (or Sagunto)

Cercanías train - Xàtiva old town - hilltop castle - back to Valencia for tapas

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train to Xàtiva 1 hour

    Take the Cercanías commuter train (line C2) from Valencia to Xàtiva — about 40 minutes for a few euros — a historic hilltop town south of the city, famous for its long castle ridge and old quarter.

    Cost: Train ~€4-6 each way TIP: Trains run regularly from Valencia Nord station. Xàtiva is an easy, cheap day trip. Alternatively, Sagunto (30 min north) offers a Roman theatre and hilltop castle — pick one. Bring water and sun protection for the castle climb.
  2. 10:30 Xàtiva old town + Collegiate Basilica 1.5 hours

    Wander Xàtiva's atmospheric old quarter — Gothic and Renaissance buildings, fountains, churches, and the imposing Collegiate Basilica (La Seu) — before heading up toward the castle.

    Cost: Mostly free TIP: The old town is compact and easy to explore on foot. Xàtiva was a major medieval town and birthplace of two Borgia popes. Cafés in the squares are good for a coffee before the climb.
  3. 12:30 Xàtiva Castle — the hilltop fortress 2 hours

    Climb (or take the tourist train) to Xàtiva Castle, a long fortress strung along the ridge above town with layers of Iberian, Roman, and medieval history and sweeping views over the plain and rice fields.

    Cost: ~€6 admission TIP: One of the most impressive castles in the region, with two connected fortresses along the ridge. Wear good shoes and bring water — it's exposed. A tourist train runs up from the town if you don't want to walk the steep approach.
  4. 15:00 Lunch in Xàtiva + return to Valencia 2 hours

    Lunch on local Valencian dishes in Xàtiva (the town is known for arnadí, a pumpkin-and-almond sweet, among other specialties), then take the train back to Valencia in the late afternoon.

    Cost: €15-30 lunch TIP: Eat where the locals do in the old town rather than near the station. Try arnadí if you see it. Trains back to Valencia run regularly; you'll be in the city with time to rest before a late dinner.
  5. 20:30 Dinner — El Carmen or Russafa tapas 2 hours

    Back in Valencia, an evening of tapas crawling — work through small plates and wine in El Carmen's medieval lanes or Russafa's buzzing bars, finishing with an agua de Valencia.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Tapas hopping is the ideal relaxed evening after a day trip. Both El Carmen and Russafa are lively after 21:00. Try patatas bravas, pimientos de Padrón, and esgarraet alongside the agua de Valencia.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café / hotel breakfast

Old Town · €3-8

Coffee and tostada before the train.

Lunch

Xàtiva old-town restaurant

Xàtiva · €15-30

Local Valencian dishes; try arnadí for dessert.

Dinner

El Carmen / Russafa tapas

Valencia · €20-40

A tapas crawl + agua de Valencia.

Transit:

Cercanías train (line C2) Valencia ↔ Xàtiva, ~40 min each way from Valencia Nord. Sagunto (~30 min north) is the alternative day trip.

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

Budget $60 Mid $115 Luxury $240
DAY 5

Markets, museums, Bioparc & beach to finish

Mercado de Colón - Museo de Bellas Artes - Bioparc - more beach or neighborhoods - last paella

Activities

  1. 09:30 Mercado de Colón + breakfast 1 hour

    Start at the Mercado de Colón, a restored early-1900s Modernista market hall now full of cafés and counters — breakfast on coffee and pastries, or horchata, under its iron-and-glass architecture.

    Cost: €5-12 TIP: A beautiful, relaxed spot for breakfast and a contrast to the busy Mercado Central. Good for an horchata or oysters-and-wine later too. A short walk from the Old Town.
  2. 11:00 Museo de Bellas Artes (free) or the Bioparc 2 hours

    Choose your morning: the Museo de Bellas Artes (one of Spain's best fine-arts collections, with Goya, Velázquez, and Sorolla — free entry), or the Bioparc, an immersive African-themed zoo near the Turia Gardens' western end.

    Cost: Bellas Artes free; Bioparc ~€25 TIP: The Bellas Artes is excellent and free — a great rainy-day or art-lover's pick. The Bioparc is a top family choice with its barrier-free 'zoo-immersion' design. Both sit near the Turia Gardens.
  3. 14:00 Last paella lunch + a final neighborhood 2.5 hours

    Have a final paella or rice lunch — revisit a favorite or try a new one — then spend the afternoon in whichever neighborhood you liked best (El Carmen, Russafa, or El Cabanyal by the beach).

    Cost: €20-40 lunch TIP: Five days is enough to have a favorite rice spot — go back, or try fideuà (the noodle paella) for variety. Use the afternoon to shop, relax, or revisit a sight you rushed earlier.
  4. 17:30 Beach sunset or Turia Gardens cycle 2 hours

    Wind down with a Malvarrosa beach sunset and promenade walk, or a final cycle along the Turia Gardens — both are quintessentially Valencia and a relaxed way to close the trip.

    Cost: Free; bike €5-15 TIP: Sunset over the beach or a golden-hour Turia ride are both lovely. In summer, an evening swim is perfect. A calm end before the late Spanish dinner.
  5. 20:30 Farewell dinner + agua de Valencia 2 hours

    A last dinner — seafood in El Cabanyal, tapas in Russafa, or a sit-down meal in the Old Town — toasted with a final agua de Valencia at a characterful bar like Café de las Horas.

    Cost: €20-45 per person TIP: Café de las Horas, near Plaza de la Virgen, is a memorable spot for agua de Valencia. Pick the food you most want to repeat. Valencia eats late, so a 20:30-21:00 start is normal.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Mercado de Colón

Eixample · €5-12

Coffee, pastries, or horchata in a Modernista hall.

Lunch

Final paella / fideuà

Your choice · €20-40

A favorite rice spot, or try fideuà for variety.

Dinner

Farewell dinner + Café de las Horas

Old Town / beach · €20-45

Seafood or tapas + a final agua de Valencia.

Transit:

Walkable center plus tram to the beach and metro to outer areas. The Bioparc sits at the western end of the Turia Gardens (bus or metro).

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

Budget $60 Mid $120 Luxury $260
DAY 6

Coast day — Sagunto Roman ruins or a Costa Blanca beach town

Train north - Sagunto Roman theatre & castle - or south to Gandia/Peñíscola beaches

Activities

  1. 09:00 Travel along the coast 1 hour

    Choose a coast day: north to Sagunto (~30 min by train) for Roman ruins, or further south down the Costa Blanca to a beach town like Gandia (~1 hour by Cercanías) for wide sandy beaches.

    Cost: Train ~€4-8 each way TIP: Sagunto is the culture-and-castle pick; Gandia is the beach pick. Both are easy by train. For Peñíscola (a striking walled headland to the north, where parts of Game of Thrones were filmed), you'd need a longer trip or a car — better as a half-day with wheels.
  2. 10:30 Sagunto Roman theatre & castle (or beach) 2.5 hours

    At Sagunto, explore the restored Roman theatre carved into the hillside and the long castle above town with Iberian, Roman, and Moorish layers and coastal views. Or, if you chose Gandia, settle in for a beach morning.

    Cost: Sagunto sites ~free-€5; beach free TIP: Sagunto's theatre and ridge castle are an under-visited highlight close to the city. The climb is exposed — water and a hat help. If beaching at Gandia, its wide sands and promenade are among the region's best.
  3. 14:00 Lunch by the coast 1.5 hours

    Lunch on rice or seafood by the coast — Sagunto's port (El Puerto de Sagunto) has seafood spots, and Gandia is known for fideuà, the noodle dish said to have been invented in nearby Gandia.

    Cost: €15-35 per person TIP: Try fideuà if you're near Gandia — this stretch of coast claims its invention. Eat where the locals do rather than the most touristy seafront spots. A relaxed coastal lunch is the heart of the day.
  4. 16:00 Beach or old town time, then return 2 hours

    Spend the afternoon on the beach or wandering the coastal old town, then take the train back to Valencia in the early evening.

    Cost: Free; train ~€4-8 TIP: Trains back to Valencia run regularly. A swim or a sea walk caps the day. You'll be back in the city with time to rest before a late dinner.
  5. 20:30 Dinner in Valencia 2 hours

    An easy evening back in the city — tapas in Russafa, seafood in El Cabanyal, or a sit-down dinner in the Old Town, with an agua de Valencia to finish.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: After a coast day, pick whichever neighborhood you enjoyed most. Valencia's late dining (from ~21:00) gives plenty of time to get back and freshen up first.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café / hotel breakfast

Old Town · €3-8

Coffee and tostada before the train.

Lunch

Coastal seafood / fideuà

Sagunto or Gandia · €15-35

Fideuà near Gandia, or seafood at the port.

Dinner

Valencia tapas / seafood

Russafa / El Cabanyal · €20-40

A relaxed city dinner + agua de Valencia.

Transit:

Cercanías trains run north to Sagunto (~30 min) and south down the Costa Blanca to Gandia (~1 hour). Peñíscola is better with a car.

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

Budget $65 Mid $120 Luxury $250
DAY 7

Slow finish — favorite neighborhood, last paella & beach

Lazy morning - Turia Gardens or beach - last paella - shopping - departure

Activities

  1. 10:00 Lazy morning + favorite café 1.5 hours

    A slow start on the last day — coffee and pastries at a favorite café (the Mercado de Colón, a Russafa spot, or your neighborhood) with no rush.

    Cost: €5-12 TIP: After a busy week, an unhurried morning suits Valencia's relaxed pace. Pick a café you enjoyed and linger over breakfast and the morning.
  2. 12:00 Turia Gardens or beach + any last sight 2 hours

    Spend late morning on whatever you most want to repeat — a final Turia Gardens cycle, a beach walk, or a sight you rushed (the Serranos Towers, the Ceramics Museum, La Lonja again).

    Cost: Free-€10 TIP: Use this flexible window to revisit a highlight or catch one you missed. The Turia and the beach are the most quintessentially Valencia ways to spend it.
  3. 14:00 Last paella lunch 1.5 hours

    A final paella or rice lunch — your favorite rice house, a beach paella, or one more El Palmar-style dish in the city. The perfect Valencia farewell meal.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Make the last lunch the dish that defines the city — paella valenciana, cooked to order. Reserve if it's a popular spot. A fitting end to a week in the birthplace of paella.
  4. 16:00 Souvenir shopping 1.5 hours

    Pick up souvenirs — saffron, paella pans and rice (bomba or Calasparra), Lladró-style ceramics, horchata, and Agua de Valencia kits make good takeaways from the markets and Old Town shops.

    Cost: Shopping extra TIP: A paella pan plus bomba rice and saffron is the classic Valencia souvenir — buy rice in the Mercado Central. Ceramics and the local turrón and horchata products are also good. Pack a pan carefully or check a bag.
  5. 18:00 Airport transfer + departure 1.5 hours

    Head to Valencia Airport (VLC) — Metro lines 3/5 reach it from the center in about 25 minutes (~€4.90), or a taxi/rideshare is €20-25 in 15-20 minutes. The airport is only ~8km west.

    Cost: Metro ~€4.90 or taxi €20-25 TIP: The metro is cheap and quick; a taxi is easy with luggage. Arrive 2 hours before a Schengen flight, 3 for long-haul. If your trip continues in Spain, the AVE train reaches Madrid in 1h45 and Barcelona in ~3 hours from Valencia Nord.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Favorite café

Your choice · €5-12

A relaxed last breakfast — coffee, pastries, or horchata.

Lunch

Last paella

Your choice · €20-40

A final paella valenciana — the city's signature.

Dinner

In-flight or onward

Airport / en route · Varies

Eat at the airport or on your onward journey.

Transit:

Metro lines 3/5 connect the center to Valencia Airport (~25 min, ~€4.90). Taxi/rideshare €20-25. AVE trains to Madrid/Barcelona from Valencia Nord.

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

Budget $60 Mid $115 Luxury $250

Book Valencia Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Valencia 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is a week too long in Valencia alone?
It's generous but workable if you like a relaxed pace, beach time, and day trips. A week lets you cover the city deeply plus Albufera, Xàtiva, Sagunto, and a Costa Blanca beach day. If you'd rather see more of Spain, split the week — for example 4 days in Valencia plus Madrid (1h45 by AVE) or a coastal hop — since Valencia is a great-value, well-connected base.
What are the best coastal day trips?
Sagunto (~30 min north) for Roman ruins and a castle; Gandia (~1 hour south) for wide beaches and fideuà; and Peñíscola, a dramatic walled headland to the north (better with a car or a longer trip). Albufera, just south, is the nature-and-paella half-day. Most are easy by Cercanías train without renting a car.
What souvenirs should I buy?
A paella pan with bomba or Calasparra rice and saffron is the classic Valencia souvenir — buy the rice at the Mercado Central. Also good: ceramics, horchata products, turrón, and agua de Valencia kits. Pack the pan carefully or check a bag. The Old Town and the markets are the best places to shop.
How do I get to the airport?
Valencia Airport (VLC) is only about 8km west of the center. Metro lines 3 and 5 reach it in around 25 minutes for about €4.90 (an airport supplement applies); a taxi or rideshare is €20-25 in 15-20 minutes. Allow 2 hours before a Schengen flight. If continuing in Spain, AVE high-speed trains run from Valencia Nord to Madrid (1h45) and Barcelona (~3 hours).

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Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

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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