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Destinations in Spain — where to go

Where to base yourself, for how long, and what each city actually feels like.

Spain's big four have four very different personalities: Madrid (grand boulevards, world-class art, real Spanish life, 3 days), Barcelona (Gaudí, beach-in-a-city, Mediterranean energy, 3–4 days), Seville (flamenco, orange-blossom streets, the most 'this is what I pictured' city in the country, 2–3 days), and Granada (the Alhambra, tapas that come free with your drink, 2 days). A first-timer route strings together Madrid, then Andalusia (Seville + Granada), then Barcelona — or the reverse — over 10–14 days.

Here's the thing nobody tells you before a first Spain trip: it's not one country's worth of sightseeing, it's at least three. Castilian Madrid, Catalan Barcelona, and Andalusian Seville and Granada don't just look different — they eat dinner at different times, speak with different accents, and will each insist their region is the 'real' Spain. Good news: you don't have to referee that argument, you just have to see enough of each to understand why they're all a little bit right.

Questions people actually ask

What's the best first-time Spain itinerary?
Madrid (3 days) → Seville (2–3 days) → Granada (2 days) → Barcelona (3–4 days), connected by Spain's excellent high-speed AVE trains. Over 10–14 days it flows well without feeling rushed, and you get all four completely different sides of the country.
Which Spanish city is cheapest?
Seville and Granada generally run noticeably cheaper than Madrid or Barcelona — expect lower prices on hotels, tapas, and museum tickets. Granada in particular is a genuine bargain: many bars still serve a free tapa with every drink.
Madrid or Barcelona — which is better?
Depends what you want: Madrid for grand architecture, the Prado, and a more purely 'Spanish' feel; Barcelona for Gaudí, beach access, and Mediterranean energy. See our full head-to-head comparison for a direct breakdown by travel style.