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Seville Cathedral & Giralda, Spain
Seville Cathedral & Giralda

Andalusia

Seville Cathedral & Giralda

How to visit Seville Cathedral and climb the Giralda: one ticket covers both, the tower is a ramp not stairs, and the best light is the last hour before closing.

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

Where

Seville, Spain

Opening hours

Monday–Saturday 11:00–19:00, Sundays 14:30–19:00; last entry is 18:00 and the visit begins at the Giralda. Closed or with cut hours on major religious holidays — confirm your date on catedraldesevilla.es.

Tickets

General admission about €13 online (£11) or €14 at the door, and it includes the Giralda climb. Reduced ~€7 for over-65s, students under 25 and large-family members; under-13s with an adult go free. Audio guide is an extra €5.

Time needed

About 75 minutes for the cathedral and tower together; the Giralda ramp itself takes 15–20 minutes up at a steady pace.

In short

Visiting Seville Cathedral & Giralda

Buy one general-admission ticket online (£11/€13) and it covers everything — the world's largest Gothic cathedral, the gold Retablo Mayor, the disputed Columbus tomb, and the climb up the Giralda. The tower is a 34-section ramp, not a staircase, so it suits almost everyone. Go for the last entry slot around 17:00–18:00 to climb in cooler air with the low sun over the rooftops, and skip the on-the-door queue by booking ahead.

One ticket, the cathedral and the tower

The thing to know before you book is that everything is on one ticket. General admission — about €13 online, roughly £11 — covers the cathedral interior and the climb up the Giralda, with no separate tower charge. There’s no upsell to weigh up the way there is at the Sagrada Família; you buy the standard entry and you’ve got the lot. Children under 13 with an adult go free, and over-65s and students under 25 get in for around €7.

Inside, head first for the Retablo Mayor behind the Capilla Mayor — the world’s largest altarpiece, a wall of gilded carving that’s genuinely hard to take in — and the Columbus tomb by the south door, where four pallbearers representing Castile, Aragón, Navarre and León carry the coffin shoulder-high. The provenance of the bones is famously disputed (Santo Domingo claims them too), which is worth knowing before you stand there expecting certainty. The Patio de los Naranjos, the orange-tree courtyard left over from the mosque that stood here, is a cool spot to pause on the way out.

The Giralda climb, and is it worth it?

The Giralda is a ramp, not a staircase. It was the mosque’s minaret, built so the muezzin could ride a horse to the top, so you walk up 34 gently sloping sections rather than spiralling up worn steps. That makes it one of the easiest big-tower climbs in Europe — fine for older visitors and anyone who dislikes tight stairwells — and the reward at the top is a clean 360 over the Santa Cruz rooftops, the Alcázar gardens and the Torre del Oro by the river. Reckon on 15–20 minutes up at a steady pace, and around 75 minutes for the whole visit.

Time it for the last entry, roughly 17:00–18:00 on a weekday. The midday crowds clear, the ramp is cooler than the Andalusian afternoon heat, and the low sun lights the rooftops far better than flat midday glare. Book a timed ticket online and you skip the on-the-door queue — which in spring and at weekends can run 30–45 minutes — by using the pre-booked entrance. Our verdict: among Seville’s big three, do the Alcázar for the rooms and gardens and the cathedral for the scale and the Giralda view; they sit two minutes apart, so pair them across a morning and afternoon rather than rushing both before lunch.

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

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Seville Cathedral & Giralda FAQs

Is the Giralda climb included in the Seville Cathedral ticket?
Yes. The standard general-admission ticket (about €13 online) covers both the cathedral interior and the climb up the Giralda — there is no separate tower ticket. The visit even starts at the Giralda's own access control before you walk through the cathedral.
Is the Giralda tower stairs or a ramp?
It's a ramp, not stairs. The minaret was built so the muezzin could ride a horse up, so you walk 34 gently sloping sections rather than a spiral staircase. That makes it far easier than most cathedral towers — manageable for older visitors and anyone who dislikes tight stair climbs.
Do you need to book Seville Cathedral tickets in advance?
In spring and on weekends, yes — the on-the-door queue can run to 30–45 minutes and slots sell through. Book a timed online ticket and you use a separate pre-booked entrance with almost no wait. Out of season midweek you can usually walk up.
What is the best time to visit Seville Cathedral?
Aim for the last entry around 17:00–18:00 on a weekday: the crowds thin, the climb is cooler than the midday heat, and the low sun over the Santa Cruz rooftops makes the Giralda view far better than flat midday glare.

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