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Madrid to Barcelona: Cross-Country Through Spain’s Soul – A Vagabond Life

Madrid to Barcelona: Cross-Country Through Spain’s Soul

Spain is a country of shifting rhythms — the regal boulevards of Madrid, the Mudéjar courtyards of Seville, the Nasrid poetry of the Alhambra, and the avant-garde energy of Barcelona. This 10-day itinerary connects them all by AVE high-speed train, turning transit into one seamless journey through centuries of art, architecture, and food. You’ll visit Europe’s finest art museums, wander the whitewashed lanes of Andalusia, eat paella by the Turia riverfront, and stand beneath Gaudí’s impossible spires. Estimated budget: $1,000–1,600 per person.

10-Day Itinerary Overview

Route: Madrid (2) → Toledo day trip → AVE to Seville (2) → Córdoba day trip or train to Granada → Granada (1, Alhambra) → AVE to Valencia (1) → AVE to Barcelona (1, departure)

Best for: First-time Spain visitors, culture lovers, couples, anyone who wants to see the big four — Madrid, Seville, Granada, Barcelona — in a single well-paced trip

Budget: $1,000–1,600 per person (excluding international flights)

Direction: Madrid → south to Andalusia → east along the Mediterranean to Valencia → north-east to Barcelona

Getting There & Getting Around

Arriving in Spain

Most international flights arrive at Madrid-Barajas Airport (MAD). Direct flights from New York (7.5h), London (2.5h), and most European hubs. From the airport, take the Metro (line 8, €4-6, 20 min to Nuevos Ministerios) or a taxi (flat rate €30 to city centre).

Visa: Spain is in the Schengen Zone. US, UK, Canada, Australia, NZ, and most other non-EU visitors get visa-free stays up to 90 days. No visa needed for standard tourism.

Getting Around: AVE High-Speed Trains

Spain’s AVE network (operated by Renfe) is the backbone of this trip. Book ahead on renfe.com or the Renfe app for the best fares.

  • Madrid–Toledo: 30 min AVE, €12–20 one-way
  • Madrid–Seville: 2h40 AVE, €35–65 one-way
  • Seville–Granada: 2h30 AVE, €25–45 (via Antequera)
  • Granada–Valencia: 1h30 AVE, €20–40 (or 4h bus)
  • Valencia–Barcelona: 2h45 AVE, €25–55

Book standard/preferente class — the difference is marginal. AVE trains have strict luggage limits: one large case + one hand bag per person. No oversized luggage allowed in passenger carriages.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: Madrid — Art, Parks & the Heart of the City

☀️ Morning

Start your day at the Prado Museum (€15 entry, free 6-8 PM Mon-Sat). This is one of the world’s greatest art collections — don’t try to see everything. Focus on Goya’s Black Paintings, Velázquez’s Las Meninas, and the Bosch triptychs. Allow at least 3 hours.

🌆 Afternoon

Walk through the Real Jardín Botánico gardens and into Parque del Buen Retiro, Madrid’s sprawling central park. Rent a rowboat on the lake (€6/30 min), stroll past the Palacio de Cristal, and grab a drink at one of the park’s kiosk cafés.

🌙 Evening

Head to Puerta del Sol, the geographic heart of Spain — the famous Kilómetro Cero plaque is on the ground. Walk down Calle Mayor to Plaza Mayor, the grand Habsburg-era square. For dinner, wander the tapas bars of the La Latina neighbourhood — try Casa Lucio for huevos rotos (€12-15) or Mercado de San Miguel for gourmet tapas (€3-6 each).

Where to eat: Casa Lucio (Calle de la Cava Baja, €12-15 for huevos rotos). Mercado de San Miguel for oyster, jamón, and vermouth tapas (€3-6 each). Churrería de la Maestra for fresh churros con chocolate (€4).

Accommodation: Central Madrid (Sol, Huertas, or La Latina) — hostel €20-35, budget hotel €50-80, Airbnb €40-70.

Entry: Prado €15, Retiro rowboat €6.

Pro Tip: The Prado’s free evening hours (Mon-Sat 6-8 PM) are genuinely useful but crowded — go at 5:45 PM and queue early. Alternatively, buy a combined Prado + Reina Sofía pass (€20) if you plan to see both.

Day 2: Madrid — Royal Palace, Plaza Mayor & Reina Sofía

☀️ Morning

Visit the Royal Palace of Madrid (€12 entry, guided tour €18), the official residence of the Spanish royal family used for state ceremonies. The Throne Room, the Gasparini Room’s stucco ceilings, and the Armoury are the highlights. Book tickets online to skip the queue. Allow 2-3 hours.

🌆 Afternoon

Walk across Plaza de Oriente to the Almudena Cathedral (free entry, €6 for the dome viewpoint) then follow Calle Mayor to Plaza Mayor. Grab a bocadillo de calamares (€3-5) from Casa Rúa — Madrid’s classic fried squid sandwich. Then head to the Reina Sofía Museum (€8, free 7-9 PM Mon-Sat) for Picasso’s Guernica — arguably the single most powerful painting of the 20th century.

🌙 Evening

Experience Malasaña, Madrid’s hipster neighbourhood. Bar-hop along Calle de la Palma for vermouth and creative tapas. Try Bodega de la Ardosa for authentic Spanish tortilla (€3) or La Musa for modern tapas (€3-7 each).

Where to eat: Casa Rúa (Plaza Mayor, €3-5 bocadillo de calamares). Bodega de la Ardosa (Calle de la Palma, tortilla €3). La Musa (Calle de la Palma, modern tapas €3-7). Evening drink at 1862 Dry Bar for excellent cocktails (€10-14).

Entry: Royal Palace €12, Almudena dome €6, Reina Sofía €8.

Pro Tip: The Reina Sofía’s free Monday-Saturday 7-9 PM slot is less crowded than the Prado’s. Guernica alone is worth the trip — give it 15-20 minutes of quiet attention.

Day 3: Toledo Day Trip — Three Cultures in One City

☀️ Morning

Take the 30-minute AVE train from Madrid’s Puerta de Atocha station to Toledo (€12-20, trains every 30-60 min). Toledo sits dramatically on a hill above the Tagus River — the approach from the train station is stunning. Walk up through the old town (or take the escalator that starts near the train station).

🌆 Full Day

Start at the Alcázar of Toledo (€5), the imposing fortress that dominates the skyline — now a military museum with panoramic views. Then visit the Primate Cathedral of Toledo (€10), a Gothic masterpiece with a stunning altarpiece and the Mozarabic Chapel. For lunch, try Adolfo Restaurante for traditional Toledan partridge (€18-25) or the more casual Casa Aurelio for roast lamb (€12-16).

After lunch, explore the El Greco Museum (€3), dedicated to the painter who made Toledo famous. The real showstopper is his The Burial of the Count of Orgaz in the Church of Santo Tomé (€3 entry). Before returning, walk through the former Jewish Quarter to see the Synagogue of Santa María la Blanca (€3) and the Monastery of San Juan de los Reyes (€3), a beautiful Franciscan monastery with a cloister full of orange trees.

🌙 Evening

Catch a late afternoon AVE back to Madrid (last trains around 9 PM). Have a farewell Madrid dinner at Taberna La Dolores (Calle de la Bolsa) for excellent tapas and local wines (€3-6 each).

Where to eat: Adolfo Restaurante (Calle de la Granada 6, €18-25 for partridge). Casa Aurelio (Plaza de la Magdalena, roast lamb €12-16). El Trébol (Calle de Santo Tomé, €8-12 menú del día). Mazapán de Toledo — buy the city’s famous marzipan from Santo Tomé artisan shops (€3-5 for a box).

Transport: AVE Madrid–Toledo €12-20 return. Walking is the best way to see the old town.

Entry (total): Alcázar €5, Cathedral €10, El Greco Museum €3, Santo Tomé €3, Synagogue €3, Monastery €3 — about €27 total.

Pro Tip: Toledo has a Pulsera Turística (tourist wristband, €10-12) that covers 7 monuments including the Cathedral, Santo Tomé, the Synagogue, and the Monastery. It saves money if you plan to see 3+ sites. Buy it at the tourism office near the cathedral.

Day 4: AVE to Seville — Santa Cruz Evening

☀️ Morning

Take the 7:50 AM AVE from Madrid Puerta de Atocha to Seville Santa Justa (2h40, €35-65 booking ahead). The train cuts through La Mancha’s windmill-dotted plains and into the ochre hills of Andalusia. Arrive in Seville around 10:30 AM.

🌆 Afternoon

Drop bags at your accommodation and head straight to Barrio Santa Cruz, Seville’s old Jewish quarter. Get lost in the maze of whitewashed alleyways, flower-draped patios, and tiny plazas like Plaza de los Venerables and Plaza de Santa Cruz. The orange trees and wrought-iron balconies are pure Seville. Have a light lunch at El Pasaje (€10-14 for montaditos and wine).

🌙 Evening

Climb the Giralda bell tower (part of the Cathedral entry, €11, ramps not stairs — formerly a minaret designed for horse-riding) for sunset views. The square below — Plaza Virgen de los Reyes — is perfect for evening tapas. Try La Azotea (Calle Jesús del Gran Poder) for excellent modern Spanish food (€4-8 each) or Bodega Santa Cruz (Calle Santa Teresa) for classic jamón, cheese, and manzanilla sherry (€3-6 each).

Where to eat: El Pasaje (Calle de la Hermandad de la Santa Caridad, montaditos €10-14). La Azotea (Calle Jesús del Gran Poder, modern Spanish €4-8 each). Bodega Santa Cruz (Calle Santa Teresa, jamón + sherry €3-6). Before bed, try a Media Noche (half-bottle of wine + tapas for €6-8 at most bodegas).

Transport: AVE Madrid–Seville €35-65.

Accommodation: Seville city centre — hostel €18-30, budget hotel €45-70, Airbnb €35-60.

Entry: Giralda/Cathedral €11.

Pro Tip: The Santa Cruz neighbourhood is deliberately maze-like — that’s part of the charm. Don’t use Google Maps. Get lost on purpose. Every alley leads to a plaza with orange trees and a tapas bar.

Day 5: Seville — Alcázar, Plaza de España & Triana

☀️ Morning

Book the Royal Alcázar of Seville (€13.50) in advance — this is the essential Seville experience. The Mudéjar palace built by Pedro I is a masterwork of Islamic, Gothic, and Renaissance architecture. The Patio de las Doncellas, the Hall of Ambassadors (with its spectacular gold dome), and the sprawling gardens with peacocks and orange groves deserve 2-3 hours.

🌆 Afternoon

Walk along the Paseo de las Delicias gardens to Plaza de España — the breathtaking semi-circular building built for the 1929 Expo. Rent a rowboat in the canal (€4/20 min), walk across the bridges, and find your province’s tile alcove along the arcade. Then cross the Isla Mágica bridge or take the C1 bus to Triana neighbourhood across the Guadalquivir River.

🌙 Evening

Triana is Seville’s flamenco heart. Visit the Mercado de Triana for a look at the old ceramics market, then settle in for dinner at Casa Manolo León (Calle San Jorge, €15-20 for grilled fish and jamón) or Las Golondrinas (Calle de la Antigua Senda) for excellent tapas (€3-6 each). If you want a real flamenco show, Casa de la Memoria (Calle Cuna) offers intimate performances for €18 — book ahead.

Where to eat: Casa Manolo León (Calle San Jorge, Triana, grilled fish €15-20). Las Golondrinas (Calle de la Antigua Senda, tapas €3-6). Bar Alfafa (Calle Alfalfa, €4-7). For flamenco: Casa de la Memoria (€18, book ahead). For a budget dinner, the menú del día (€12-15) is lunch only — dinner in Seville is à la carte.

Entry: Alcázar €13.50 (book online), Plaza de España free, rowboat €4.

Pro Tip: The Alcázar was used as a filming location for Game of Thrones (Dorne). The gardens are especially magical in the late afternoon light. Book your slot for 9-10 AM to avoid the worst crowds.

Day 6: Option A — Córdoba Day Trip

☀️ Morning

Take an early AVE train from Seville to Córdoba (45 min, €15-25, trains every 30 min). Córdoba is compact and walkable — the entire historic centre is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Head straight to the Mezquita-Catedral (€13, one of Spain’s most extraordinary buildings), a mosque-cathedral with 856 alternating red-and-white arches. Book tickets online for the 8:30 AM opening to experience it nearly empty.

🌆 Afternoon

Walk through the Juderia (Jewish Quarter), stopping at the Sinagoga de Córdoba (€0.30 — one of only three pre-Expulsion synagogues in Spain). Visit the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos (€5), a castle with beautiful gardens where Columbus briefed the Catholic Monarchs. Have lunch at Bodegas Mezquita (Calle Céspedes, €12-18 for salmorejo and flamenquín) or Taberna El Burlaero (Calleja de la Hoguera, €3-5 tapas).

Take a late afternoon AVE back to Seville (45 min, last trains around 10 PM).

Day 6: Option B — Train to Granada (if skipping Córdoba)

☀️ Afternoon

Take the 2h30 AVE from Seville to Granada (€25-45, via Antequera). Arrive in Granada mid-afternoon. Check into your accommodation near the Albaicín, then spend the evening exploring the Alcaicería (the old Moorish silk market) and enjoying free tapas in the city centre — Granada is famous for giving a free tapa with every drink. Try Los Diamantes (Plaza Nueva) for fried fish tapas (€3-4 per drink with free tapa).

Where to eat: Bodegas Mezquita (Córdoba, €12-18). Taberna El Burlaero (Córdoba, €3-5 tapas). Los Diamantes (Granada, €3-4 drink + free tapa). Bar Europa (Granada, €3 drink + generous free tapa).

Transport: Seville–Córdoba AVE €15-25 return; Córdoba entry €13. Or Seville–Granada AVE €25-45.

Pro Tip: Córdoba’s Mezquita is best seen at opening time (8:30 AM) — the silence in the forest of arches is profound. By 10:30 AM it’s swarming with tour groups. The salmorejo (cold tomato soup) is Córdoba’s signature dish — it’s thicker than gazpacho and served with jamón and boiled egg.

Day 7: Granada — Alhambra Full Day

☀️ Morning

This is the must-book day of the entire trip. The Alhambra (€19 including the Nazrid Palaces) sells out days, sometimes weeks, in advance — reserve on ticketmaster.alhambra.org as early as possible, ideally 2+ months ahead. Your entry ticket gives a specific 30-minute slot for the Nasrid Palaces — don’t miss it.

🌆 Full Day

Enter through the Puerta de la Justicia and spend the morning exploring the Nasrid Palaces (Palacio de Comares, Palacio de los Leones with the famous Lion Fountain), the Generalife Gardens with their water channels and viewpoints over the city, and the Alcazaba fort for panoramic views of the Sierra Nevada. Allow 3-4 full hours. The quality of light in the morning makes a huge difference — you’ll see the intricate stucco work and muqarnas ceilings in their full glory.

🌙 Evening

Descend through the Albaicín neighbourhood to Mirador de San Nicolás for the classic postcard view of the Alhambra with the Sierra Nevada behind it at sunset. Arrive by 7:30 PM to claim a spot. Dinner at Taberna del 7 (€8-12) or Casa Molero (€4-6 tapas with drinks). Granada’s free tapa culture means a €3-4 caña (small beer) or glass of wine comes with a free tapa at almost every bar.

Where to eat: Taberna del 7 (Calle Elvira 7, €8-12 main courses). Casa Molero (Plaza San Miguel Bajo, €4-6 drink + free tapa). Bar Poë (Calle Capuchinas, €3-4 drink + excellent free tapa). For something special, Los Maranjos in the Albaicín (€12-18 for Moroccan-style tagines).

Entry: Alhambra €19 (absolute must-book ahead).

Pro Tip: The Alhambra is spread over a large hillside — wear comfortable shoes. Your Nasrid Palace entry time is strict (you’ll be turned away if late). Arrive at the complex 30 min before your palace slot to walk through the Alcazaba first. And bring water — there’s little shade between buildings.

Day 8: AVE to Valencia — Old Town Evening

☀️ Morning

Take the 1h30 AVE from Granada to Valencia (€20-40, direct or via Madrid). The train crosses through the Jaén olive groves and into the fertile huerta of Valencia, Spain’s rice-growing region. You’ll arrive at Valencia Joaquín Sorolla station by late morning or early afternoon.

🌆 Afternoon

Drop bags and head into the El Carmen neighbourhood of Valencia’s old town. Visit the Central Market (Mercado Central) (free, open until 3 PM but worth seeing even closed) — one of Europe’s largest fresh food markets. Walk through Plaza de la Reina to Valencia Cathedral (€8, includes the climb up the Miguelete bell tower) and Plaza Redonda, a round plaza with lace shops and traditional stalls.

🌙 Evening

Experience Ruzafa, Valencia’s coolest neighbourhood — a hipster district full of independent bars, galleries, and restaurants. Try La Tasquita de Enfrente (Calle de Cádiz, €12-18 for rice dishes) or La Tasquita de Fuencaliente (€3-5 tapas). For a classic Spanish drink, order an agua de Valencia (cava, orange juice, vodka, gin — €5-8, essential Valencian cocktail).

Alternative budget option: Try the menú del día at any restaurant in Ruzafa for €12-15 — you’ll get a starter, main (usually rice or fish), dessert, and a drink.

Where to eat: La Tasquita de Enfrente (Calle de Cádiz, rice dishes €12-18). La Tasquita de Fuencaliente (Ruzafa, €3-5 tapas). Mercado de Tapinería (€6-10 for wine and tapas in a historic market). For agua de Valencia, try Café de las Horas (Calle de la Concepción, €7 — a beautifully moody bar with candles and bookshelves).

Transport: AVE Granada–Valencia €20-40.

Accommodation: Valencia centre or Ruzafa — hostel €18-30, budget hotel €40-65, Airbnb €35-55.

Pro Tip: The Mercado Central is a working market, not a tourist site. Arrive before 2 PM for the best atmosphere — the jamón counters, fresh olives, and horchata stalls are extraordinary. Try horchata de chufa (tiger nut milk, €2) at a local horchatería.

Day 9: Valencia — City of Arts, Turia Park & Paella

☀️ Morning

Walk or bike along the Turia Park, a 9-km-long green corridor built in a diverted riverbed. It’s Valencia’s most beloved public space — you’ll pass sports fields, gardens, playgrounds, and the spectacular City of Arts and Sciences (€8-32 depending on which buildings you visit). L’Oceanogràfic (€34, Europe’s largest aquarium) is fantastic if you have time, but even just walking the complex is free.

🌆 Afternoon

Paella lunch. Valencia is the birthplace of paella — this isn’t the place to skip it. Head to La Pepica (€18-22 for paella Valenciana, on the beachfront in the Cabanyal neighbourhood, open since 1898), or Casa Roberto (€16-20, a local favourite near the Plaza de la Reina). For a more authentic coastal vibe, take the tram to El Cabanyal and eat at Casa Carmela (€20-25, wood-fired paella cooked over orange-tree branches — you need to book days ahead).

🌙 Evening

Walk along the Malvarrosa Beach promenade for a sunset ice cream or horchata. For a final Valencia dinner, try La Marítima (€12-18, excellent grilled fish and seafood). Or head back to Ruzafa for experimental tapas at Ubik Café — a bookshop-bar-gallery hybrid (€4-8 tapas, great wine list).

Where to eat: La Pepica (Paseo de la Neptuno 6, paella Valenciana €18-22). Casa Roberto (Calle del Pintor Sorolla 19, €16-20). Casa Carmela (Calle d’Isabel de Villena, €20-25 wood-fired paella — book ahead). Ubik Café (Calle Literato Azorín 13, Ruzafa, €4-8 tapas).

Entry: Turia Park free. City of Arts: walk the complex free; individual buildings €8-34.

Pro Tip: Real paella Valenciana has rabbit, chicken, snails, and green beans — never seafood. Seafood paella is “paella de marisco” and is a coastal adaptation. Valencia locals fiercely defend this distinction. And real paella is eaten for lunch, never dinner.

Day 10: AVE to Barcelona — Gaudí, Gothic Quarter & Departure

☀️ Morning

Take the 2h45 AVE from Valencia Joaquín Sorolla to Barcelona Sants (€25-55, trains every 60-90 min). Arrive by mid-morning. Store luggage at the station (€5-8 for 24h) or at your hotel.

🌆 Full Day

If you have a full day before departure: head straight to Sagrada Família (€26, book online at least 3 days ahead — Gaudí’s unfinished masterpiece is the single most spectacular building in Spain). The Nativity Façade, Passion Façade, and the interior forest of columns are breathtaking. Allow 1.5-2 hours. If you can’t get Sagrada tickets (they sell out far in advance), explore the Gothic Quarter instead — Barcelona Cathedral (€9 includes rooftop access), the Arc de Triomf, and the narrow medieval streets around Plaça del Rei.

For a quick Barcelona hit: walk La Rambla (touristy but worth seeing once), pop into the Boqueria Market (free, €3-8 for fresh juices and tapas counters), and end at the Mirador de Colom (Columbus Monument, €6 elevator to the viewpoint).

🌙 Evening

Final dinner at El Quim de la Boqueria (inside the market, €12-18 for excellent seafood) or Can Culleretes (€15-20, Barcelona’s oldest restaurant, founded 1786, near the Gothic Quarter). For a memorable last drink, book a sunset cocktail at the Barceloneta rooftop bar at Hotel Arts (€15-20).

Departure: Barcelona El Prat (BCN) airport is 20 min from the city centre via Aerobús (€7, every 5 min) or train (€4.60, R2 line). Allow 2.5-3 hours before your flight for international departures.

Where to eat: El Quim de la Boqueria (La Boqueria market, €12-18). Can Culleretes (Calle de Quintana 5, €15-20). La Boqueria juice bar — €2 for fresh orange, mango, or papaya juice. Cremeria Toscana (Calle de la Palla, €3-5 for excellent gelato).

Transport: AVE Valencia–Barcelona €25-55. Aerobús to airport €7.

Entry: Sagrada Família €26 (book ahead), Barcelona Cathedral €9, Mirador de Colom €6.

Pro Tip: If your flight is in the evening, store your luggage at Sants station and use the Aerobús from Plaça de Catalunya — it’s cheaper than taxis and runs 24/7. For a quick Sagrada Família view without a ticket, cross the street to the small park at Plaça de la Sagrada Família — the angle from across the road is excellent for photos.

Practical Information for Spain

Visas & Entry

Spain is part of the Schengen Area. Citizens of the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and most other non-EU countries can visit visa-free for up to 90 days within a 180-day period. Your passport must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your departure date from Schengen. Always check the latest rules — ETIAS (a new travel authorisation) is expected but currently delayed.

SIM Card & Internet

Buy an Orange or Vodafone prepaid SIM at any Spanish airport or mobile shop. Tourist packages start at €10-20 for 10-15 GB. Alternatively, use an eSIM from Airalo or Holafly (€5-15 for 1-2 weeks). Free WiFi is available in most cafés, hotels, and train stations. Spain has excellent 4G/5G coverage in all cities and most rural areas.

Money & ATMs

Spain uses the Euro (€). ATMs are everywhere in cities and accept Visa/Mastercard. Cards are accepted almost everywhere — you can go days without cash. Carry some cash for small tapas bars and market stalls. Most banks charge €2-5 ATM fees for foreign cards; use a fee-free travel card (Revolut, Wise) if possible. Tipping is not expected but rounding up is appreciated — €1 for a coffee, €2-3 for a meal.

Language & Communication

Spanish (Castellano) is spoken everywhere. In Catalonia (Barcelona), both Spanish and Catalan are official. English is widely understood in tourist areas, less so in smaller towns. Learn a few words: Hola (hello), Gracias (thank you), Por favor (please), La cuenta, por favor (the bill, please), Dos cañas, por favor (two small beers, please). Spanish people appreciate the effort enormously.

Best Time to Visit

March–May and September–November are the sweet spots — warm but not scorching, fewer crowds, lower prices. Summers (June–August) are brutally hot in Andalusia (40°C+ in Seville) and packed with tourists. Winters (December–February) are mild in the south (10-15°C) and cold in Madrid (0-10°C), with much lower prices.

Seasonal note: If visiting in spring, book the Alhambra and Sagrada Família at least 2-3 months ahead. Autumn offers harvest season — try the vendimia wines from Ribera del Duero or Rioja. July brings San Fermín (running of the bulls in Pamplona) and packed beaches on the Costa del Sol.

Health & Safety

No mandatory vaccinations for Spain. EU citizens can use their EHIC card; non-EU visitors need travel insurance. Tap water is safe to drink in most of Spain, though locals often buy bottled. The summer sun in Andalusia is fierce — SPF 50+, a hat, and water bottle are essential. Spain is one of the safest countries in Europe for travellers; the main risk is pickpocketing in tourist crowds (La Rambla in Barcelona, Puerta del Sol in Madrid, Plaza de España in Seville). Keep valuables zipped, bags front-facing, and never leave phones on café tables. Emergency number: 112.

Budget Summary: 10-Day Spain Itinerary

Estimated Total: $1,000–1,600 per person

  • Accommodation (9 nights): €180–400 ($200–450)
  • AVE high-speed trains (5 routes): €130–250 ($145–280)
  • Daily meals (breakfast, lunch, tapas dinner): €90–180 ($100–200)
  • Entry fees (Prado €15, Reina Sofía €8, Royal Palace €12, Toledo sites ~€27, Alcázar €13.50, Mezquita €13, Alhambra €19, Sagrada Família €26, Cathedral entries): €150–210 ($170–235)
  • Flamenco show in Seville: €18 ($20)
  • Toledo day trip: €35–55 ($40–60)
  • Local transport (metro, bus, taxi): €30–60 ($35–65)
  • SIM card & miscellaneous: €20–40 ($25–45)

Best Season: March–May or September–November

Recommended For: First-time Spain visitors, culture and art lovers, couples and solo travellers wanting a broad cross-country experience

Money-Saving Tip: Use the free evening hours at the Prado (Mon-Sat 6-8 PM) and Reina Sofía (Mon-Sat 7-9 PM). Eat the menú del día for lunch (€12-15) instead of dinner à la carte. Book AVE trains at least 3-4 weeks ahead for the cheapest fares. Granada’s free tapa culture can feed you for €4-5 per drink.

Disclaimer: Prices are estimates in EUR and may vary by season. Alhambra tickets (€19) and Sagrada Família tickets (€26) must be booked well in advance. AVE train fares are dynamic — book at least 3 weeks ahead for the best prices. This itinerary is for general reference only. Always check current visa requirements and travel advisories before booking.