Valencian Community
Mercado Central
How to visit Valencia's Mercado Central: opening hours, why entry is free, the best time to beat the tour groups, and whether the Modernista food market is worth your morning.
Where
Valencia, Spain
Opening hours
Monday to Saturday, about 07:30โ15:00. Closed Sundays and public holidays โ confirm your date, as some stalls wind down before the 15:00 close.
Tickets
Free. There is no entry ticket or booking for the market itself; you only pay for what you buy (tapas at the Central Bar run roughly โฌ3โโฌ12 a plate / about ยฃ2.50โยฃ10).
Time needed
30โ45 minutes to walk the building; allow an hour or more if you eat at the Central Bar or shop for picnic supplies.
In short
Visiting Mercado Central
Entry to the Mercado Central is free โ there's no ticket and no booking, so the only thing to plan is timing. It trades Monday to Saturday, roughly 07:30 to 15:00, and is shut on Sundays and public holidays, which catches a lot of weekend visitors out. Go before 10:00 to see it working rather than thinning out: stallholders restock, the fish counters are full, and the tour groups haven't arrived. Allow 30โ45 minutes to walk the aisles under the stained-glass domes, longer if you stop at the Central Bar for tapas.
How to visit without getting the timing wrong
The Mercado Central isnโt a ticketed sight โ itโs an 8,000-square-metre working food market under a 1928 iron-and-glass Modernista roof, and entry is free. Thereโs nothing to book; the only thing to get right is when you turn up. It trades Monday to Saturday, roughly 07:30 to 15:00, and is shut on Sundays and public holidays โ which is exactly when a lot of weekend visitors wander over and find the shutters down.
Go before 10:00 if you can. Early on, the 250-odd stalls are fully stocked, the fish and jamรณn counters look their best, and youโre sharing the aisles with locals doing their shopping rather than tour groups doing laps for photos. By lunchtime in high season the central crossing under the dome can feel like a slow-moving queue. Look up for the stained-glass cupola and the parakeet (cotorra) weathervane on top โ both are part of why the building is listed.
Where to eat, and is it worth it?
If you want more than a walk-through, head for the Central Bar by Ricard Camarena inside the market โ a counter run by one of Valenciaโs most decorated chefs, doing tapas and bocadillos built from the produce sold a few steps away. Plates run roughly โฌ3โโฌ12 (about ยฃ2.50โยฃ10), you usually queue for a stool, and itโs the single best reason to linger past the 30โ45 minutes the building itself needs.
Worth it, precisely because itโs free and central โ but treat it as a 45-minute working-market stop, not a half-day. The mistake is arriving at 14:30 expecting a buzzing hall and finding stalls already packing up. Combine it with the Llotja de la Seda (the UNESCO-listed Silk Exchange) directly across the square, both reachable on a short walk from the รngel Guimerร , Xร tiva or Colรณn metro stops.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Valencia city guide.