
Portugal or Spain: Which One Should You Visit First?
Choose Portugal if you want a noticeably cheaper trip, smaller crowds at major sights, and a more laid-back pace โ especially outside peak summer. Choose Spain if you want bigger, more varied cities (Madrid, Barcelona, Seville), a wider range of iconic sights, and a livelier, later-night culture. Both are Schengen countries with the same visa rules, use the euro, and border each other directly, so combining both on a single longer trip is genuinely easy โ Lisbon to Madrid or Seville is a manageable train or short flight.
Portugal and Spain get lumped together constantly โ same peninsula, similar climate, easy to assume they're interchangeable. They're not, and picking between them (or figuring out how to combine both) is one of the most common questions travelers planning an Iberian trip actually have.
| Portugal | Spain | |
|---|---|---|
| Overall cost | Noticeably cheaper across hotels, food, and attractions | More expensive, especially Madrid and Barcelona |
| Crowd levels at major sights | Lighter, even in peak season | Heavier โ Barcelona and Madrid see some of Europe's biggest tourist crowds |
| Signature cities | Lisbon, Porto | Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Granada |
| Food identity | Bacalhau, pastรฉis de nata, port wine, seafood | Tapas, paella, jamรณn ibรฉrico, regional wine (Rioja, Cava) |
| Nightlife culture | Later than Northern Europe, still earlier than Spain | Famously late โ dinner at 9-10pm, bars well past midnight |
| Getting there | Good direct flight options to Lisbon/Porto from major hubs | Excellent direct flight options to Madrid/Barcelona from nearly everywhere |
If this is a shorter trip (under a week) and cost or a calmer pace matters, pick Portugal. If you want maximum iconic sights and don't mind bigger crowds and a higher budget, pick Spain. With 12+ days, combine both โ Lisbon connects to Madrid or Seville by a manageable train, bus, or short flight.
If budget is the deciding factor
Portugal wins clearly โ hotels, restaurants, and attraction pricing consistently run lower than Spain's equivalent cities, and that gap widens further once you compare Madrid or Barcelona specifically against Lisbon or Porto.
If you want fewer crowds
Portugal again โ Lisbon and Porto see real tourist volume, but nowhere near the density of Barcelona's Sagrada Famรญlia queues or Madrid's peak-season crowds. If overtourism fatigue is a genuine concern, Portugal is the calmer choice.
If you want maximum iconic sights
Spain has the edge on sheer volume and variety โ the Alhambra, Sagrada Famรญlia, the Prado, Seville's cathedral โ simply because it's a much bigger country with more major cities. Portugal's sights are excellent but fewer in number.
Can you combine both?
Yes, easily, and it's a genuinely popular route โ both countries share the Schengen Area (same visa rules, no border checks between them) and the euro. Lisbon to Madrid is about a 9-hour direct train or a 1.5-hour flight; Lisbon to Seville is closer, around 6-7 hours by train or bus. With 12+ days, splitting time between Lisbon/Porto and Madrid/Seville or Barcelona is very doable.












































