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Andalusia, Spain
Andalusia

Southern Spain

Andalusia

A first road-trip through Andalusia for UK travellers: the Seville–Córdoba–Granada loop, where to base yourself, real drive times, and whether you actually need a car.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

In short

Andalusia at a glance

Andalusia is the classic week-long Spanish road trip: fly into Seville or Málaga, loop Seville → Córdoba → Granada → the coast, and you've seen the Alcázar, the Mezquita and the Alhambra without backtracking. You don't strictly need a car — the AVE train links the big cities fast — but a hire car opens up the white villages and the coast. Allow 7 days for a relaxed loop, 5 if you skip the beach.

Andalusia is the part of Spain most people picture when they picture Spain: Moorish palaces, orange-tree courtyards, flamenco and white hill villages, packed into a region you can loop in a week. The classic first trip is a one-way arc — Seville, Córdoba, Granada, then down to Málaga and the coast — which strings together the three great sights (the Alcázar, the Mezquita and the Alhambra) without ever doubling back on yourself.

The question everyone asks is whether you need a car. Honestly, for the headline cities you don’t: the AVE high-speed train links Seville, Córdoba and Granada quickly and cheaply, and a car is a liability in their centres. Hire one only when you want what the train can’t reach — Ronda and the white villages, the Cabo de Gata coast, or the freedom to stop where you like. The route below assumes the relaxed week; drop the coast and it compresses to five days.

Towns & places in Andalusia

The route

A relaxed one-week loop that hits the three headline cities without a single day of backtracking. Drive times are motorway estimates; the AVE train covers Seville–Córdoba and Córdoba–Granada faster if you skip the car.

  1. Days 1–2

    Seville

    Base here first: the Real Alcázar, the cathedral and Giralda, and a flamenco night in Triana. Book the Alcázar online before you fly. No car needed in the city — park it on arrival or pick it up as you leave.

  2. Day 3

    Córdoba

    About 1h40 by car or 45 min by AVE from Seville. The Mezquita is the single reason to come and it's worth it; go early. Half a day is enough, then push on to Granada (around 2h30 drive).

  3. Days 4–5

    Granada

    The Alhambra is the highlight of the whole trip — book the timed Nasrid Palaces ticket weeks ahead, it sells out. Leave time for the Albaicín and the free-tapas bars. Two nights lets you slow down.

  4. Days 6–7

    Málaga & the coast

    Drop down to Málaga (about 1h30) for a city-plus-beach finish: the Alcazaba, the Picasso museum and a real city beach. Fly home from Málaga to close the loop without doubling back.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Seville (Santa Cruz / Alfalfa)

££ mid-range

The best first base: walkable old-town lanes, the Alcázar on your doorstep and the most direct flights from the UK. Atmospheric but can be noisy at night — pick a side street.

Best for: First two nights, flamenco, walkability

Browse hotels Loop start

Granada (Realejo / Albaicín edge)

££ mid-range

Stay within walking distance of the Alhambra shuttle and the Albaicín. The Realejo is quieter and better value than the very centre; the Albaicín is prettier but steep and taxi-only late at night.

Best for: Alhambra, tapas, two nights

Browse hotels Loop middle

Málaga (Centro Histórico)

££ mid-range

A proper city base for the beach finish — culture, a real old town and the airport 15 minutes away. Far better value and character than the resort strips further along the Costa del Sol.

Best for: City-plus-beach finish, flying home

Getting around Andalusia

The AVE high-speed train links Seville, Córdoba and Granada quickly and cheaply, so a car is optional for the cities. Hire one only if you want the white villages (Ronda, Arcos), the Cabo de Gata coast or rural flexibility — and remember city-centre parking is expensive, so pick the car up as you leave each city rather than keeping it parked.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

Compare car hirevia DiscoverCars

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo
See the full Spain guide

Andalusia FAQs

How many days do you need for Andalusia?
Seven days does the Seville–Córdoba–Granada–Málaga loop at a relaxed pace with two nights each in Seville and Granada. Five days works if you skip the coast and treat Córdoba as a half-day stop between the two big cities.
Do you need a car in Andalusia?
Not for the headline cities — the AVE train links Seville, Córdoba and Granada fast and cheaply. Hire a car only for the white villages, Ronda or the coast, and pick it up as you leave a city rather than paying for centre parking.
What is the best time to visit Andalusia?
May, June, September and early October: warm, walkable and well below the July–August peak, when inland cities like Seville and Córdoba routinely hit 40°C and the big sights grow long queues.

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