Source Market: USA · Updated 13 May 2026

Spain for American Travellers — What to Know Right Now

Current, practical intelligence for Americans headed to Spain. No "magical" or "breathtaking." Just real conditions, specific itineraries, regional food that justifies its own trip, and honest answers to the five questions Americans ask most. Updated with official sources.

Spain Right Now — What American Travellers Should Know

Last checked: 13 May 2026. Here is the current lay of the land for Americans planning a Spain trip.

🛂 Entry: ETIAS Is Live

The European Travel Information and Authorisation System is operational. It is not a visa — it is a €7 online travel authorisation linked to your US passport, valid for three years (or until your passport expires). Apply via the official ETIAS website only — third-party sites charge unnecessary fees. Processing is usually minutes, but apply at least 72 hours before departure. Your passport must be valid for three months beyond your planned Schengen exit date.

Source: EU Frontex, ETIAS Central Unit. May 2026.

💵 Your Dollar in Spain — May 2026

€1 ≈ $1.10-$1.14 USD. That is a noticeable improvement on the near-parity of late 2022. Spain remains one of the best-value destinations in Western Europe: a menú del día (three-course lunch) in Madrid runs €13-18, a good bottle of wine in a restaurant €14-22, and a café con leche about €1.80. Practical tip: Use a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card (Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture, etc.). Decline dynamic currency conversion — always pay in euros. ATMs attached to banks (Santander, BBVA, CaixaBank) give better rates than standalone Euronet machines.

Source: XE.com rates, European Central Bank. May 2026.

☀️ Weather: Why May & October Are the Sweet Spot

Southern Spain (Seville, Córdoba, Granada) in May: 22-28°C. Warm terraces, wildflowers in bloom, and the Feria de Córdoba (May 23-30). October brings similar temperatures with harvest-season food and fewer crowds. July-August in Seville regularly hits 38-42°C. That is not "dry heat" romanticism — it is dangerous if you are not prepared. Plan indoor activities 14:00-17:00 and carry water. Northern Spain (Basque Country, Galicia, Asturias) stays 18-26°C all summer — far more comfortable for active travel.

Source: AEMET (Spanish Met Office) climate normals. May 2026.

✈️ Getting to Spain from the US — Current Route Map

Madrid (MAD): Iberia (JFK, MIA, ORD, LAX, BOS, DFW), American (JFK, MIA, DFW, CLT, PHL), Delta (ATL, JFK), United (EWR, seasonal IAD).
Barcelona (BCN): American (JFK, MIA), Delta (ATL), United (EWR), Level/IAG (JFK, BOS, LAX, SFO).
Peak-summer round-trip fares run $750-$1,400 depending on booking window and city pair. The cheapest window is typically 6-10 weeks before departure for shoulder season; 8-12 weeks for peak summer. Nonstop flights fill fastest — book those first.

Source: Airline route announcements, Google Flights price tracking. May 2026.

Bottom line for Americans right now: Your dollar holds good value. ETIAS is a minor administrative step, not a barrier. The real decisions are about when you go (May/October vs. July/August changes everything) and how long (see our itineraries below).

The Spain You Haven't Seen

Most Americans land in Barcelona and Madrid, hit the checklist, and leave. Spain is larger than California. Here are five specific experiences — with locations, seasons, and booking windows — that go beyond the obvious.

1. The White Villages of Andalusia — By Car

Where: The Pueblo Blanco route through Cádiz and Málaga provinces — Arcos de la Frontera, Grazalema, Zahara de la Sierra, Setenil de las Bodegas, Ronda.
Why: Whitewashed villages draped across limestone ridges, connected by winding roads through cork-oak forests. This is the Andalusia that exists outside the Alhambra queue. Ronda's bridge over the El Tajo gorge is the payoff, but Grazalema — with its mountain hiking and sheep's-milk cheese — is the surprise.
When: April-May and late September-October. Avoid July-August (heat) and January-February (some restaurants close).
Book: Car rental 3-4 weeks ahead for a manual transmission (automatics cost more and sell out). Accommodation in Ronda and Grazalema books 2-4 weeks ahead in peak spring. The route needs 3-4 days minimum.

2. Pintxos Crawl in San Sebastián — With a Local Food Guide

Where: San Sebastián (Donostia), Basque Country. Specifically, the Parte Vieja (Old Town) — a tight grid of streets where pintxos bars are shoulder-to-shoulder.
Why: The highest concentration of Michelin-starred restaurants per capita in the world, but the real action is at the bar at 20:00, pointing at what looks good. A guided pintxos crawl with a Basque food guide (small-group, 3-4 hours, ~€95-130/person) teaches you how to order — which bars specialise in what, when to arrive for the best selection, and the unwritten rule that you don't linger at one bar for more than two pintxos.
When: May-June and September-October. July-August is crowded; November-March sees some bars reduce hours.
Book: Top food guides (Mimo, Eskerne, private guides recommended on food forums) book 2-4 weeks ahead. Accommodation in the Old Town books 1-3 months ahead for summer.

3. Hike the Caminito del Rey — Rebuilt and Controlled

Where: El Chorro gorge, Málaga province, about 60 km north of Málaga city.
Why: Once known as "the world's most dangerous walkway," the Caminito del Rey was fully rebuilt and reopened in 2015 — now a 7.7 km trail pinned to vertical gorge walls, with a suspended footbridge 105 metres above the river. The engineering is impressive, the views are genuine, and the controlled-access system (1,100 visitors/day, timed entry) means it never feels overcrowded.
When: Open year-round except Mondays and some holidays. Best: March-May and October-November. Summer heat (June-September) makes the exposed sections punishing.
Book: Essential: Tickets sell out 3-6 weeks ahead. Book through the official site (caminitodelrey.info). Combo with a guided tour (~€25-35) for context on the engineering and geology. You need to arrive 30 minutes before your slot. The walk takes 3-4 hours and is one-way.

4. Sleep in a Parador — Spain's State-Run Heritage Hotels

Where: 97 Paradors across Spain. Standouts for Americans: Parador de Granada (inside the Alhambra complex — a 15th-century convent), Parador de Santiago de Compostela (Hostal dos Reis Católicos, one of the world's oldest hotels, 1499), Parador de Cardona (9th-century castle in Catalonia), Parador de Ronda (modern building perched on the gorge edge).
Why: Paradors are publicly owned hotels housed in castles, monasteries, palaces, and historic buildings. They preserve heritage and fund conservation. Rates are surprisingly reasonable (€120-220/night for a standard double) compared to equivalent historic hotels elsewhere in Europe. The Granada Parador is the only hotel inside the Alhambra walls — the gardens are yours after the day-trippers leave.
When: Year-round, but the Granada and Santiago Paradors book 4-6 months ahead for peak periods (May-June, September-October). Off-season (January-February, November) offers better availability and lower rates.
Book: Direct via paradores.es. Join the Amigos de Paradores loyalty programme (free) for a 5-10% discount and early access to availability.

5. Galicia's Seafood Coast — The Rías Baixas

Where: The Atlantic inlets of Galicia's west coast — specifically the Ría de Arousa and Ría de Pontevedra. Base yourself in Pontevedra or Cambados.
Why: This is where Spain's best seafood comes from. Percebes (goose barnacles, harvested from wave-battered rocks), pulpo a la gallega (octopus with paprika and olive oil), zamburiñas (small scallops), and Albariño white wine grown in vineyards that run to the sea's edge. The coastline is a sequence of fishing villages, mussel platforms, and quiet beaches that look like Ireland or the Pacific Northwest. Almost no American tourists — the Camino de Santiago passes through, but most pilgrims walk through without stopping to eat properly.
When: June-September for the best weather (20-26°C). Seafood is year-round, but outdoor seafood festivals (fiestas gastronómicas) concentrate in July-August. Albariño harvest is late September.
Book: A rental car is essential. Book 2-3 weeks ahead. Top seafood restaurants (Casa Solla, a Michelin-starred classic near Pontevedra) book 2-4 weeks ahead.

One More Worth Mentioning: The Camino de Santiago — A Section, Not the Whole Thing

Americans increasingly walk the Camino, but the full 780-km French Way takes 30-35 days. A better entry for first-timers: the last 100 km from Sarria to Santiago de Compostela (5-7 days walking, qualifies for the Compostela certificate). Through Galician farmland, eucalyptus forests, and medieval villages. Best in May-June or September — July-August is busy and hot. Book albergues or small hotels along the route 4-8 weeks ahead. You don't need to be religious; roughly 45% of pilgrims walk for cultural or non-religious reasons.

Sources: Official Paradores de España (paradores.es), Caminito del Rey official ticketing (caminitodelrey.info), regional tourism boards (Junta de Andalucía, Basque Country Tourism, Turismo de Galicia), pilgrim statistics (Oficina del Peregrino, Santiago de Compostela). Updated 13 May 2026.

First Time in Spain? Start Here

Most Americans get one shot at Spain — maybe two weeks, maybe a summer. Here is how to spend that time without the common mistake of cramming six cities into ten days and remembering only train stations. These routes assume arrival at Madrid or Barcelona.

🇪🇸 7 Days: Two Cities + One Day-Trip

Best for: A one-week vacation. Enough for a real sense of two places, not a sprint.

Option A: Madrid + Toledo

  • Days 1-4 — Madrid: Prado Museum (book 2-3 days ahead for the Goya and Velázquez galleries), Retiro Park, the Royal Palace (book 5-7 days ahead for peak periods), the Lavapiés neighbourhood for tapas. One evening at a flamenco tablao — Casa Patas or Cardamomo are solid, book 3-5 days ahead.
  • Day 5 — Toledo day-trip: 30 minutes by AVE train (€13-18 each way, book 1-2 weeks ahead for best prices). The cathedral, the El Greco museum, the Santa María la Blanca synagogue. Walk the medieval streets. Lunch at a restaurant on a side street (avoid the Plaza Zocodover tourist traps).
  • Days 6-7 — Back in Madrid: Shopping in Salamanca district, the Reina Sofía (Picasso's Guernica), a proper long Spanish lunch, and departure.

Option B: Barcelona + Girona

  • Days 1-4 — Barcelona: Sagrada Familia (book tower access 5-7 days ahead), Park Güell (3-5 days ahead), the Gothic Quarter, the Boqueria market (go early, 08:00-09:00, before the crush). One evening in Gràcia — a neighbourhood of small squares and independent restaurants where Barcelonans actually live.
  • Day 5 — Girona day-trip: 38 minutes by AVE (€15-22 each way). The medieval Jewish Quarter (one of Europe's best preserved), the cathedral steps (used in Game of Thrones, but the city stands on its own), and lunch at a restaurant along the Onyar river.
  • Days 6-7 — Barcelona: Montjuïc, the beach at Barceloneta (or better, take a short train to Sitges or Castelldefels), a final dinner, and departure.

What to book ahead for 7 days: Sagrada Familia (Barcelona) or Prado (Madrid), AVE train tickets for day-trips, one or two standout dinners. Accommodation — central, well-reviewed hotels fill 2-4 weeks ahead in peak season.

🇪🇸 14 Days: The Classic Triangle

Best for: A two-week trip. Three stops with day-trips from each. This is the most common American itinerary length, and the route below delivers without burning you out.

Route: Barcelona → Madrid → Seville (or reverse)

  • Days 1-5 — Barcelona: Four full days plus arrival/departure buffers. Gaudí sites (Sagrada Familia, Park Güell, Casa Batlló — the latter can usually be booked same-week), the Gothic Quarter, the Born neighbourhood, Montjuïc. Day-trip to Girona or the Costa Brava (Tossa de Mar, Begur — rent a car for the day or take the bus from Barcelona Nord station, ~1.5 hours).
  • Days 6-9 — Madrid: AVE train from Barcelona (2.5 hours, €40-90, book 2-3 weeks ahead for best prices). The Prado, the Royal Palace, tapas in La Latina on Sunday morning (the Rastro market + cañas ritual), Reina Sofía. Day-trip to Toledo (30 min by AVE).
  • Days 10-14 — Seville: AVE from Madrid (2.5 hours, €35-75, book 2-3 weeks ahead). The Alcázar (book 1-2 weeks ahead — it is smaller than the Alhambra but sells out similarly), the Cathedral and Giralda, the Santa Cruz neighbourhood at dusk, flamenco in Triana (the neighbourhood across the river — less touristy than central tablaos). Day-trip to Córdoba (45 min by AVE, the Mezquita can be booked same-week except during the Feria in late May).

Variation: If the Alhambra is non-negotiable, swap Seville for Granada. Fly into Madrid, train to Granada (AVE, 3.5 hours), then Barcelona, or vice versa. Know that the Alhambra requires booking 3-6 weeks ahead — plan around it, not the other way around.

What to book ahead for 14 days: All intercity AVE tickets (prices rise steeply closer to departure), Alhambra if Granada is on your route, Alcázar (Seville), Sagrada Familia, and accommodation in all three cities. Flamenco in Seville — book direct with the tablao, not via resellers.

🇪🇸 21+ Days: The Full North-to-South

Best for: Extended travel, sabbaticals, or the trip where you want to understand Spain, not just photograph it. This route pairs the Mediterranean, the interior, the Atlantic north, and Andalusia into one coherent journey.

Route: Barcelona → Basque Country → Madrid → Andalusia (or reverse)

  • Days 1-5 — Barcelona: As above. Add a day-trip to the Penedès wine region (cava country, 45 min by train from Barcelona — book tours at family-owned bodegas like Llopart or Gramona).
  • Days 6-10 — Basque Country (San Sebastián + Bilbao): Fly Barcelona to Bilbao (1 hour, ~€50-80, or drive 5.5 hours). Two nights in Bilbao: the Guggenheim (book same-week), the Casco Viejo for pintxos. Bus to San Sebastián (1 hour, €12-15). Three nights in San Sebastián: pintxos, the beach at La Concha, hike Monte Urgull for the view. Day-trip to the fishing village of Getaria (30 min by bus) for grilled turbot and Txakoli white wine at the harbour.
  • Days 11-15 — Madrid: Fly Bilbao to Madrid (1 hour, €50-80) or train (4.5 hours, scenic). As above, with day-trips to Toledo and Segovia (the Roman aqueduct, 28 min by AVE).
  • Days 16-22 — Andalusia (Seville → Córdoba → Granada or the White Villages route): AVE Madrid to Seville (2.5 hours). Seville (3-4 nights), Córdoba (2 nights — more if attending the Feria in late May), then either Granada (2 nights, Alhambra essential, book 3-6 weeks ahead) or the White Villages route by rental car (3 nights, see Section 2 above). Fly home from Málaga (many US connections via Madrid or direct seasonal to New York).

What to book ahead for 21+ days: All AVE intercity tickets, all internal flights, Alhambra and Alcázar, Sagrada Familia, standout restaurants in San Sebastián (some have three-month waiting lists — check), accommodation throughout. A rental car only for the Andalusia rural portion (pick up in Seville, drop at Málaga airport).

Itinerary logic: These routes are designed around the AVE high-speed network, which connects Madrid-Barcelona (2.5 hrs), Madrid-Seville (2.5 hrs), Madrid-Córdoba (1.75 hrs), and Madrid-Valencia (1.75 hrs). Spain's rail system is one of the best in the world for intercity travel — use it. The car is for rural areas only. Sources: Renfe (renfe.com), Iryo (iryo.eu), Ouigo España (ouigo.com). Updated May 2026.

Food Worth Traveling For

Spanish food is deeply regional. The dish you should order changes every 100 km. Here is the intelligence — what to eat, in which city, and when it's at its best. No generic "paella in Barcelona" advice.

🍖 Madrid — Cocido, Callos, and the Menú del Día

Dishes: Cocido madrileño (a three-course chickpea-and-meat stew, traditionally served in three vuelcos: broth, vegetables/chickpeas, then meats — mostly a winter dish), callos a la madrileña (tripe stew with chorizo and morcilla), bocadillo de calamares (fried squid sandwich — go to El Brillante outside Atocha station or La Campana in Plaza Mayor), huevos rotos (fried eggs over potatoes with ham or chorizo).
Where: For cocido, book at La Bola (a Taberna since 1870) or Malacatín. For a modern take, try Casa Carola in the Salamanca district. For callos, Casa Toni in the Huertas neighbourhood (no reservations, arrive early).
Season: Cocido and callos are cold-weather food (October-March). The rest are year-round.
Book: La Bola books 1-2 weeks ahead in winter. Most tapas bars are walk-in.

🐟 San Sebastián — Pintxos, Turbot, and Txuleta

Dishes: Gilda (the original pintxo — olive, anchovy, guindilla pepper on a toothpick), txuleta (a massive dry-aged beef ribeye, cooked rare over wood fire — serves 2-3 people, €55-75/kg), rodaballo (grilled turbot, Getaria-style — whole fish, charred skin, simply dressed), kokotxas (hake cheeks in pil-pil sauce — gelatinous, intense, unlike anything in American seafood).
Where: For pintxos: Bar Goiz-Argi (the prawn brochette), La Cuchara de San Telmo (no bar, just a kitchen — the foie gras and risotto dishes), Ganbara (mushrooms and wild fungi in season). For txuleta: Casa Julián in Tolosa (25 min drive), or Bar Nestor in San Sebastián (only one txuleta per day — queue at 17:30 to reserve your portion). For grilled fish: Elkano in Getaria (book 2-4 weeks ahead; the turbot here is a destination meal).
Season: Pintxos are year-round. Turbot is best May-October. Txuleta has no season.
Book: Elkano: 2-4 weeks ahead. Bar Nestor: no reservations — physical queue system. San Sebastián accommodations fill 1-3 months ahead in summer.

🍊 Seville & Andalusia — Jamón, Gazpacho, and Fried Fish

Dishes: Jamón ibérico de bellota (acorn-fed Iberian ham — the real deal is from free-range black-hoofed pigs that eat acorns; a plate of hand-sliced bellota ham costs €18-25 and is worth every euro), gazpacho and salmorejo (cold tomato soups — gazpacho is thinner, salmorejo is thick and topped with hard-boiled egg and jamón), pescaíto frito (assorted fried fish — anchovies, baby squid, dogfish — served in paper cones at a freiduría), espinacas con garbanzos (spinach with chickpeas, cumin, and garlic — a Moorish-influence staple).
Where: For jamón, go to a dedicated jamonería — in Seville, Casa Ricardo (since 1903) in the Arenal neighbourhood. For pescaíto frito, Freiduría La Isla or Bar El Comercio (try the churros here too). For salmorejo, almost anywhere — it is the regional default.
Season: Gazpacho and salmorejo are summer food (May-September). Jamón is year-round but acorn-fed ham is richest in autumn and winter (the acorn season). Pescaíto frito is year-round.
Book: Most Sevillian tapas bars are walk-in. Standout restaurants (El Rinconcillo, since 1670) book 1-2 weeks ahead.

🍷 Barcelona & Catalonia — Pan con Tomate, Calcots, and Mar i Muntanya

Dishes: Pa amb tomàquet (bread rubbed with tomato, garlic, and olive oil — the base of every Catalan meal), escalivada (smoky grilled vegetables — aubergine, red pepper, onion — served with anchovies), suquet de peix (a fisherman's fish-and-potato stew with picada — ground almonds, garlic, and parsley), calcots (a variety of spring onion, grilled over an open fire until blackened, then peeled and dipped in romesco sauce — a winter ritual), mar i muntanya ("sea and mountain" — meat and seafood cooked together, like chicken with lobster or rabbit with prawns, a uniquely Catalan concept).
Where: For calcots (January-March): Can Travi Nou or a calçotada at a countryside masia (farmhouse restaurant) an hour from Barcelona. For suquet: Can Majó in Barceloneta (book 3-5 days ahead). For a modern Catalan tasting menu: Mont Bar or Suculent (both book 1-2 weeks ahead). Avoid paella in Barcelona — it is a Valencian dish, and the Barcelona versions are generally tourist-grade. If you want paella, go to Valencia or Alicante.
Season: Calcots: January-March only. Suquet and mar i muntanya: year-round. Escalivada: best in late summer when the vegetables are at their peak.
Book: Top Catalan restaurants book 1-4 weeks ahead. Calçotada reservations open in December for the January-March season.

🦞 Galicia — Pulpo, Percebes, and Albariño

Dishes: Pulpo a la gallega (octopus slices on a wooden plate, dressed with olive oil, paprika, and coarse salt — boiled in copper cauldrons at the pulperías), percebes (goose barnacles — harvested by hand from wave-battered rocks, steamed briefly, served as is — they look prehistoric and taste like the concentrated essence of the sea), empanada gallega (a large pie filled with tuna, cod, or meat, baked in a wood-fired oven), tetilla cheese (a mild, creamy cow's-milk cheese shaped like a breast — best with quince paste), Albariño (the crisp, mineral white wine from the Rías Baixas — Spain's best white wine region).
Where: For pulpo: A Taberna do Bispo in Santiago de Compostela or any pulpería in O Carballiño (the self-proclaimed octopus capital). For percebes: the seafood restaurants along the Ría de Arousa — D'Berto in O Grove or the market at A Guarda. For Albariño: visit the bodegas around Cambados — Martín Códax, Paco & Lola, and small producers.
Season: Pulpo is year-round. Percebes are best December-March and June-September (they have two harvest windows). Albariño harvest is late September — the Fiesta del Albariño in Cambados is the first week of August.
Book: A rental car is essential for Galicia. Book seafood restaurants 1-2 weeks ahead in summer. Bodega visits: book 1-2 weeks ahead — many are small operations.

🥘 Valencia — The Real Paella

The truth about paella: Paella is a Valencian dish. The original is paella valenciana — rabbit, chicken, green beans, garrofó beans, sometimes snails, with saffron and rosemary. Never chorizo (that is a British invention that triggers actual anger in Valencia). Seafood paella is a coastal variation but the real-deal traditional paella is a meat dish. Rice is the star, not the protein — the socarrat (the caramelised, slightly burnt rice crust at the bottom of the pan) is the prize.
Where: For authentic paella, you need to go to Valencia or the Albufera rice-growing region just south of the city. Casa Carmela (since 1922, on the beach at Malvarrosa — book 2-3 weeks ahead), Restaurante Levante (in the city), and the paella restaurants along the Albufera lagoon (Nou Racó, El Palmar — book 1-2 weeks ahead).
Season: Year-round. The paella is cooked to order (30-40 minute wait — that's a good sign). If paella arrives in 10 minutes, it is from a freezer and was microwaved.
Book: The best paella restaurants book 1-3 weeks ahead, especially for Sunday lunch (the traditional paella day for Spanish families).

How to not eat badly in Spain: (1) Eat lunch at 14:00-15:30 and dinner at 21:00-23:00. Restaurants are often closed between 16:00 and 20:00. (2) The menú del día at lunch is the best value in Spanish food — three courses, bread, drink, and dessert for €12-18. It is what Spanish workers eat. Look for hand-written menus in Spanish, not laminated ones in six languages. (3) Avoid restaurants directly on large plazas or with picture menus — walk two streets in. (4) Tipping: not required but 5-10% is appreciated for good service. Round up to the nearest euro in casual bars. (5) Coffee culture: a café solo is espresso, cortado is espresso with a splash of milk, café con leche is half coffee/half milk (closest to a latte). Ordering a "latte" will get you a glass of hot milk.

Questions Americans Actually Ask

Do Americans need a visa for Spain in 2026?

No visa for tourist stays up to 90 days. ETIAS (€7 online travel authorisation) is now operational — apply at least 72 hours before departure through the official EU website. Your passport must be valid for three months beyond your planned Schengen exit date. Note: the 90-day limit applies to the entire Schengen Area, not just Spain. If you spend two weeks in France before Spain, that counts toward your 90 days.

What are the best flight routes from the US to Spain?

Madrid (MAD) and Barcelona (BCN) are the main transatlantic gateways. Iberia, American, Delta, and United all serve Madrid with year-round nonstops from major US hubs. Barcelona has fewer US nonstops but Level (IAG's low-cost arm) flies year-round from JFK, BOS, LAX, and SFO. Consider open-jaw tickets: fly into Madrid and out of Barcelona (or vice versa) to avoid backtracking. Some travellers save money by flying to Lisbon or Paris and connecting via low-cost European carriers, but factor in the extra travel day and the risk of separate-ticket connections.

How many days do I need for a first trip to Spain?

Seven full days is the realistic minimum — enough for two cities with a day-trip from one. Fourteen days is the sweet spot: three stops (e.g., Barcelona-Madrid-Seville) with day-trips. Twenty-one days opens up a full north-to-south route. Avoid trying to see Barcelona, Madrid, Seville, Córdoba, and Granada in ten days — you will spend 40% of your trip in transit and remember very little of each place. See our itineraries above for exact day-by-day allocations.

Is Spain expensive for Americans right now?

Spain remains one of the best-value Western European destinations for US travellers. The euro trades at $1.10-$1.14 as of May 2026. A three-course lunch with wine runs €13-18. A good hotel in a central neighbourhood costs €110-180/night. High-speed train tickets are €40-90 between major cities when booked in advance. The splurges — Michelin-starred restaurants (tasting menus €120-250), Paradors (€150-300/night), and private guides (€200-400/day) — are comparable to US fine-dining and boutique-hotel prices, but the value is stronger. Use a no-foreign-transaction-fee credit card and always pay in euros when prompted.

Should I rent a car or take trains?

For a first trip focused on cities: trains. Spain's AVE high-speed network connects Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Córdoba, Valencia, and Málaga faster than driving, with city-centre-to-city-centre convenience and no parking nightmares. Parking in Spanish city centres costs €20-35/day and spaces are tight. Rent a car only if your itinerary includes rural Andalusia (the White Villages route), the Basque Country interior, Galicia's coast, or the Picos de Europa — places where public transport is sparse. If renting a car: book an automatic transmission 3-4 weeks ahead (they are less common in Spain and sell out), get full insurance (CDW with zero excess — Spanish roads are narrow and parking dings are common), and know that an International Driving Permit is not required for US licence holders renting in Spain (a valid US driver's licence is sufficient, though having an IDP as backup is recommended by the US State Department).

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Sources & Methodology

This page is based on current, publicly available official sources. We do not publish generic travel advice. Every factual claim is traceable to the sources below. Information current as of 13 May 2026.

SourceWhat We Used It ForLast Checked
EU ETIAS Central Unit / FrontexEntry requirements, ETIAS procedures, fee structure, passport validity rules13 May 2026
US Department of State — Spain Travel AdvisoryPassport validity, safety guidance, International Driving Permit recommendations13 May 2026
XE.com / European Central BankEUR-USD exchange rates, currency guidance13 May 2026
AEMET (Spanish Meteorological Agency)Climate normals, regional temperature ranges, seasonal weather patterns13 May 2026
Renfe / Iryo / Ouigo EspañaAVE train routes, travel times, fare ranges, booking windows13 May 2026
Iberia, American Airlines, Delta, United, LevelDirect US-Spain flight routes, seasonal schedules, fare ranges13 May 2026
Paradores de España (paradores.es)Parador locations, heritage status, rate ranges, booking lead times13 May 2026
Caminito del Rey (caminitodelrey.info)Ticket availability, booking windows, visitor caps, trail logistics13 May 2026
Regional tourism boards — Andalucía, Cataluña, Euskadi, Galicia, Comunitat ValencianaAttraction information, event calendars (Feria de Córdoba, Fiesta del Albariño), regional food traditions, booking guidance13 May 2026
Alhambra official ticket portal (tickets.alhambra-patronato.es)Ticket availability, booking lead times, Nasrid Palaces time-slot sell-out patterns13 May 2026
Booking.com / Google HotelsAccommodation availability patterns, price ranges, booking lead times across Spanish cities13 May 2026
Oficina del Peregrino (Santiago de Compostela)Camino de Santiago pilgrim statistics, route data, Compostela certificate requirements13 May 2026

About This Page

Updated: 13 May 2026. Next update: When conditions change materially (new flight routes, ETIAS changes, major event dates) or at minimum quarterly.

Methodology: We cross-reference official sources (government agencies, attraction ticket systems, airline route announcements, meteorological data, regional tourism boards) with real-time availability checks on booking platforms. This is not AI-generated filler — it is sourced intelligence compiled by humans who track Spain daily.

For Americans specifically: This page was created because US travellers search differently, travel at different times, and need different practical answers than European or UK travellers. American questions centre on flight routes, dollar value, ETIAS anxiety, and how to maximise a shorter trip with limited PTO. This page answers those questions directly.

Affiliate disclosure: Travel in Spain Today may earn a commission from select links on this page, at no extra cost to you. We only link to services we've verified and would recommend without compensation.

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