About the publication

About Travel in Spain Today

Current, practical Spain travel intelligence — built on official sources, updated when conditions change, and written for people planning real trips.

Travel in Spain Today exists because most Spain travel advice online is either outdated, recycled from other English-language sites, or written by people who visited once five years ago. Spain changes every month. The light in January isn't the light in June. The town that was quiet in March is alive by May. A generic guide can't capture that.

We check Spanish-language official sources — AEMET for weather, Renfe for trains, regional tourism boards, official attraction ticket systems — and update when conditions change, not when a content calendar says to publish. Every page carries a last-updated date so you know when the intelligence was current.

The publication is a work in progress. New regions deepen over time. New intelligence arrives weekly. The goal is to become the most alive-feeling, practically useful Spain resource available — one where you can feel the country before you arrive, and make better decisions because of it.

What we do.

Current intelligence. Not recycled travel advice. Not SEO-optimized listicles. Not summaries of other English-language articles. Every piece of information is checked against official Spanish sources — weather from AEMET, trains from Renfe, tickets from official attraction portals, events from regional tourism boards.

We publish a weekly briefing (Spain Right Now), a monthly deep-dive (Spain This Month), practical guides (Spain by Train, What to Book, 7 Days Without a Car), and growing regional coverage across Andalusia, Catalonia, Basque Country, Madrid, and Valencia.

When something is personally observed, we say so. When information comes from an official source, we link to it. No fake firsthand stories. No pretending to be local. Just honest, useful, verified intelligence.

Full source policy → · Spain Right Now →

Spain This Week

What changed, what to book, what to avoid — every Monday, based on current conditions.