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Mezquita-Catedral de Cordoba, Spain
Mezquita-Catedral de Cordoba

Andalusia

Mezquita-Catedral de Cordoba

How to visit Cordoba's Mezquita-Catedral: the free early-morning hour, which ticket to book, when to go to beat the day-trip coaches, and whether the cathedral-inside-a-mosque is worth the entry.

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

Where

Cordoba, Spain

Opening hours

Monday to Saturday roughly 10:00-19:00 and Sunday around 08:30-11:30 then 15:00-19:00 (winter closes an hour earlier); the free visit runs Monday to Saturday 08:30-09:30, with last entry 30 minutes before closing. Always confirm your date on mezquita-catedraldecordoba.es.

Tickets

General admission โ‚ฌ15; โ‚ฌ12 for over-65s and students 15-26; โ‚ฌ8 for children 10-14; under-10s free. The bell-tower climb is a separate โ‚ฌ4. Free for everyone Monday to Saturday 08:30-09:30 (no groups). The 'Soul of Cordoba' night visit is โ‚ฌ25 (โ‚ฌ18 reduced).

Time needed

About 1.5 hours inside for the arches, mihrab and cathedral; add 30 minutes for the bell tower and its timed slot. In the free 08:30 hour you are moved along faster, so closer to 45-60 minutes.

In short

Visiting Mezquita-Catedral de Cordoba

The Mezquita-Catedral is the reason almost everyone comes to Cordoba: a vast 8th-century mosque with a full Renaissance cathedral built into its centre, and a hall of roughly 850 red-and-white double arches you walk through to reach it. Entry is free Monday to Saturday from 08:30 to 09:30, which is both the cheapest and the calmest way in โ€” get there or book a timed slot, because by 11:00 the day-trip coaches from Seville have filled it. Allow about an hour and a half inside, and add the โ‚ฌ4 bell-tower climb for the rooftop view over the old town.

How to visit without paying full price or fighting the crowds

The Mezquita-Catedral is the whole reason most people stop in Cordoba, and there are two ways to do it well. The first is to walk in free, Monday to Saturday between 08:30 and 09:30, before the standard โ‚ฌ15 ticket kicks in. You are kept moving and there are no tour groups in that hour, but you still get the prayer hall and the cathedral, and for a couple or a family it quietly saves the most expensive single ticket of a Cordoba day. The second is to book a timed online slot if you are visiting in spring or early autumn, when the on-the-day box-office queue in the Patio de los Naranjos can hit 30-45 minutes once the day-trip coaches from Seville roll in around 11:00.

Either way, go early. By late morning the hall of roughly 850 red-and-white double arches is shoulder-to-shoulder with day-trippers, and the thing you came to feel โ€” the strange, shadowy forest of striped horseshoe arches receding in every direction โ€” only really lands when it is half-empty. The gold-mosaic mihrab, added under al-Hakam II in the 960s by craftsmen sent from Constantinople, is the single most beautiful corner; the Renaissance cathedral dropped into the centre in the 1520s is the famous controversy that Charles V is said to have regretted authorising.

The bell tower, timings, and what to expect

The bell-tower climb is a separate โ‚ฌ4 and worth it if your knees are willing: about 150 winding steps and ramps up the old minaret to a 360-degree view over the Mezquitaโ€™s roof, the Guadalquivir and the whitewashed lanes, sold in timed 30-minute slots. Skip it if you have vertigo or heart or breathing trouble, or are travelling with under-7s, who are not allowed up. Allow around an hour and a half inside the main building, plus the tower slot; in the rushed free hour you will be closer to 45-60 minutes.

This is the rare blockbuster that earns the hype, because the wonder is the hall you cross rather than only the altar at the end. If you pay for one sight in Cordoba, make it this one. Pair it with the Roman Bridge two minutes away for the postcard view back at the building, and a wander through the Juderia lanes at dusk once the coaches have gone โ€” that quieter Cordoba is the one people remember.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Cordoba city guide.

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Mezquita-Catedral de Cordoba FAQs

Is the Mezquita-Catedral free in the morning?
Yes. Entry to the main prayer hall and cathedral is free Monday to Saturday from 08:30 to 09:30, before the standard โ‚ฌ15 ticket starts. There are no organised groups in that hour and you are kept moving, but for a couple or family it saves the single most expensive ticket of a Cordoba day. The bell tower and night visit are never free.
Do you need to book Mezquita-Catedral tickets in advance?
Not always, but it helps in spring and early autumn. You can buy at the Patio de los Naranjos box office on the day, yet the midday queue routinely hits 30-45 minutes once the Seville coaches arrive around 11:00. Book a timed online slot if you are visiting April to June or in September, or simply use the free 08:30 hour and skip the question.
Is the Mezquita-Catedral worth it?
Yes โ€” it is genuinely one of a kind, and unlike many cathedrals the wonder is the hall you cross to reach it, not just the altar. The forest of striped horseshoe arches and the gold-mosaic mihrab are the bits people remember; the Renaissance cathedral dropped into the middle is the famous controversy Charles V is said to have regretted. If you pay for one sight in Cordoba, make it this.
Is the bell-tower climb worth the extra โ‚ฌ4?
If your knees are fine, yes. It is about 150 winding steps and ramps up the old minaret to a 360-degree view over the Mezquita's roof, the Guadalquivir and the whitewashed old town, in timed 30-minute slots. Skip it if you have vertigo, heart or breathing problems, or are travelling with under-7s, who are not allowed up.

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