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Granada, Spain
Granada
Andalusia

Granada

Book your timed Alhambra slot weeks ahead, base in the Centro or Realejo so you walk everywhere, and lean on the free-tapas habit across a tight two or three nights below the hill.

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

Best length

2-3 nights

Airport

Granada-Jaen (GRX), ~17km west โ€” limited UK flights

Common UK route

Fly Malaga (AGP), then ~90 min bus or drive to Granada

Best base

Centro for first-timers; Realejo for tapas and quiet

In short

Granada at a glance

Granada is a tight 2- to 3-night city break built around one unmissable sight: book a timed Alhambra and Nasrid Palaces slot weeks ahead, base yourself in the Centro or Realejo so you can walk everywhere, use the free-tapas habit to feed yourself cheaply, and plan your arrival early because direct UK flights are thin.

The short version

  • Book the Alhambra with a Nasrid Palaces timed slot first; it sells out 2-3 months ahead in spring and your half-hour window is enforced to the minute.
  • Stay in Centro or Realejo to walk to everything; the Albaicin is gorgeous but it's a steep cobbled climb with your luggage.
  • Order a drink and you get a free tapa โ€” three rounds across different bars is a cheap dinner, so don't book a sit-down restaurant every night.
  • There's no daily direct flight from most UK airports, so many travellers fly to Malaga (AGP) and take the 90-minute bus or hire car to Granada.
  • Two full days covers the Alhambra, the Albaicin viewpoints and the cathedral; add a third for Sacromonte flamenco or a Sierra Nevada day.

Granada is the rare city break that bends around a single building. The Alhambra โ€” the Nasrid palaces, the Alcazaba fortress and the Generalife gardens spread across the hill above town โ€” is why you come, and getting a timed Nasrid Palaces slot is the one piece of admin that decides whether the trip works. Book it from the official Patronato site weeks ahead (two to three months for spring mornings), because the palaces admit only a set number of people every half hour and the window printed on your ticket is enforced to the minute. Everything else here is flexible; that is not.

Around the Alhambra sits a compact, walkable old city. Stay in the flat Centro near the cathedral for an easy first trip, or in Realejo just below the hill for street art, leafy squares and the best free-tapas bars. The Albaicin opposite the Alhambra holds the famous Mirador de San Nicolรกs view and the most atmospheric places to sleep, but it is a steep cobbled climb โ€” beautiful to wander, hard work with a wheeled suitcase. Two full days covers the Alhambra, the viewpoints and the cathedral; a third buys you Sacromonteโ€™s cave flamenco or a run up to the Sierra Nevada.

The thing that makes Granada cheap is its tapas habit: order a โ‚ฌ2.50โ€“โ‚ฌ3.50 drink and a free plate of food arrives, getting more generous with each round. Three drinks across different bars in Realejo or the university quarter is a full dinner for under a tenner, so resist the urge to book a sit-down restaurant every night. The one wrinkle to plan for is arrival โ€” thereโ€™s no daily direct flight from most UK airports to Granadaโ€™s GRX, so many travellers fly into Mรกlaga and take the 90-minute bus or drive inland. The structured planning below โ€” Alhambra logistics, where to stay, how to get in, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Granada trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Granada

Alhambra

Book the General ticket online weeks ahead and only that ticket gets you into the Nasrid Palaces โ€” the carved-stucco rooms everyone comes for. Your ticket carries a fixed half-hourly slot for the palaces; miss it and you're refused entry, so build your day around that time, not the other way round. Allow 3 hours minimum for the whole site (Nasrid Palaces, Alcazaba fort and the Generalife gardens), and pick a morning slot so you finish before the Andalusian afternoon heat flattens the gardens.

3โ€“4 hours โ‚ฌ22

Generalife Gardens

The Generalife is the Nasrid sultans' summer garden on the hill above the Alhambra's palaces โ€” terraced courtyards, clipped myrtle and the long Patio de la Acequia pool fed by water channels. Decide first which ticket you need: the gardens-only ticket reaches the Generalife but not the Nasrid Palaces, while the full Alhambra general ticket covers both. Allow about an hour and a quarter for the gardens alone, and note they sit a 10โ€“15 minute walk uphill from the main palace area.

About 1.25 hours iโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ12.73

Granada Cathedral

Granada Cathedral and the Royal Chapel next door are sold as two separate tickets, and the Royal Chapel โ€” burial place of Isabella and Ferdinand โ€” is the one most people actually come for. Neither sells out the way the Alhambra does, so you can buy on the day, but the Cathedral only opens Sunday afternoons and the Royal Chapel keeps short Sunday hours, so check the day before. Allow about 90 minutes for the pair, and note the Royal Chapel bans photography inside.

About 45 minutes tโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ10

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Centro (Sagrario)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The flat historic core around the cathedral and Gran Via. Best for a first, short trip: you can walk to the cathedral, the tapas streets and the Alhambra path without a hill, and the airport bus stops here.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, no-car trips

Browse hotels City centre

Realejo

ยฃ value

The old Jewish quarter below the Alhambra: street art, leafy squares and some of the best free-tapas bars around Campo del Principe. Quieter and better value than Centro, still walkable.

Best for: Tapas-led trips, value, repeat visitors

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk from centre

Albaicin

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The medieval Moorish hillside with the famous viewpoints. The most atmospheric place to sleep in Granada, but it's a steep maze of cobbled lanes โ€” wheeled luggage and late-night walks are hard work, and parking is a nightmare.

Best for: Atmosphere, views, light packers

Browse hotels Uphill, 10-20 min walk

Around Plaza Nueva

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Right at the foot of the Alhambra walk and handy for sightseeing, but it's the most touristed strip โ€” this is where some bars charge for tapas instead of giving them free. Convenient, not the best value.

Best for: Alhambra-first, convenience

Browse hotels Old-city edge

Airport to city centre

Granada airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
ALSA airport bus (GRX) to Gran Via / Cathedral ~45 min about โ‚ฌ3 single Timed to flight arrivals; no booking needed
Taxi from GRX ~25-30 min usually โ‚ฌ30-โ‚ฌ35 Fine for late arrivals or with luggage
Bus from Malaga airport (AGP) to Granada ~1h 45m about โ‚ฌ13-โ‚ฌ15 single Common route when GRX has no direct UK flight
Hire car from Malaga (AGP) ~1h 30m drive motorway tolls free; petrol only Useful only if pairing Granada with the coast
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: April-May and late September-October are the sweet spot: mild walking weather for the Alhambra and Albaicin hills, and Sierra Nevada often still snow-capped in spring for the famous viewpoint shot. Spring is also peak demand, so book the Alhambra well ahead.

July and August are genuinely too hot for comfortable midday sightseeing inland, and the Alhambra offers little shade; winter is quiet and cheap but cold, with the bonus that you can ski Sierra Nevada and visit the city in the same trip. Whatever the season, Nasrid Palaces slots sell out before the rest of the city does.

What it costs

There is no daily direct UK flight to Granada; easyJet flies Gatwick and (seasonally) Manchester to GRX only a few days a week, often ยฃ60-ยฃ155 return when booked ahead. Most UK travellers instead fly into Malaga, where fares are cheaper and more frequent, and take the bus or drive 90 minutes inland.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Granada break for one person is roughly ยฃ320-ยฃ480 before flights vary: ยฃ150-ยฃ260 hotel share, ยฃ50-ยฃ80 food and drink (the free-tapas habit keeps this low), about โ‚ฌ22 for the Alhambra, and ยฃ20-ยฃ40 for the cathedral, a flamenco show or a guide.

Granada is the cheapest of the big Andalusian cities to eat in, because a โ‚ฌ2.50-โ‚ฌ3.50 drink comes with a free tapa. Three rounds across Realejo or the university bars is a full meal for under ยฃ10 โ€” booking a formal restaurant every night is the easy way to overspend here.

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Where to stay

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Tours & tickets

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Airport transfers

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Trains & rail passes

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Also in Spain

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Granada FAQs

How many days do you need in Granada?
Two full days is the practical minimum: one for the Alhambra and Generalife, and one for the Albaicin viewpoints, the cathedral and tapas. A third day lets you add Sacromonte flamenco, a longer tapas crawl or a Sierra Nevada trip without rushing the Alhambra.
How do you get an Alhambra ticket, and do you need to book ahead?
Yes โ€” book the general ticket with a Nasrid Palaces timed slot from the official Patronato site weeks in advance, two to three months ahead for spring mornings. The Nasrid Palaces only admit a set number every 30 minutes and your printed half-hour window is enforced; miss it and you forfeit the palaces.
Is there a direct flight from the UK to Granada?
Only a limited one. easyJet flies Gatwick (and seasonally Manchester) to Granada GRX a few days a week, not daily. If those don't suit, the standard workaround is to fly into Malaga and take the 90-minute ALSA bus or hire a car inland to Granada.

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