El Palacio Andaluz tickets & tours | Price comparison

El Palacio Andaluz

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El Palacio Andaluz, often styled in English as The Andalusian Palace, brings a bigger-stage flamenco night to Seville's Isla de la Cartuja, inside the old Cruzcampo pavilion from Expo '92. You get a 90-minute show, a free visit to the Flamenco Dress Museum, and a more theatrical feel than the city's smaller house-palace rooms.

Start with an only-show ticket for the clearest first visit, or move up to dinner if you want one complete evening booking and fewer decisions on the night.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Flamenco show tickets

Choose this if you want the core 90-minute performance, the free Flamenco Dress Museum visit, and the freedom to keep the night simple or add a cava-and-truffle upgrade.
Seville: Flamenco at El Palacio Andaluz with Optional Dinner
4.5(1476)
 
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El Palacio Andaluz Seville: Solo Flamenco
4.3(27)
 
tiqets.com
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El Palacio Andaluz - Flamenco Show
4.6(11)
 
headout.com
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El Palacio Andaluz Sevilla Flamenco Show + Glass of Cava or Dinner
3.8(10)
 
tiqets.com
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See all Flamenco show tickets

Show and dinner packages

Choose this if you want one complete evening: preferred seating, an Andalusian dinner with drinks, the museum visit, and the same 90-minute show in one booking.
Seville: Flamenco at El Palacio Andaluz with Optional Dinner
4.5(1476)
 
Go to offer
El Palacio Andaluz Seville: Solo Flamenco
4.3(27)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer
El Palacio Andaluz - Flamenco Show
4.6(11)
 
headout.com
Go to offer
El Palacio Andaluz Sevilla Flamenco Show + Glass of Cava or Dinner
3.8(10)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer
See all Show and dinner packages

6 tips for visiting the El Palacio Andaluz

1
Choose the right showtime
If you want a full sightseeing day first, the 9:30 pm show usually fits best after Seville Cathedral, Giralda, or Alcázar. The 7 pm slot works better when you want dinner elsewhere or you are keeping the evening simpler. Picking the time first stops the rest of the day from feeling rushed.
2
Arrive early for the museum
All current ticket types include the Flamenco Dress Museum, and the visit runs 30 minutes before showtime. If you arrive right on the dot, you will likely lose the museum part that gives the night extra context. Turning up early makes the whole experience feel smoother.
3
Match the ticket to your evening
If your priority is the performance itself, start with Only Flamenco. Choose the cava-and-truffle option when you want a small upgrade without turning the evening into dinner, and pick the full dinner package when you want one booking to cover the whole night. That way you pay for the kind of evening you actually want.
4
Use a taxi for the final leg
Because the venue sits on Isla de la Cartuja, the final leg is usually easiest by taxi or rideshare, especially after dark or after a long old-town day. This matters most if you are coming from the cathedral side of Seville. It cuts stress before the show starts.
5
Book family tickets by age band
If you are traveling with children, book by the published age bands rather than guessing at the door: ages 7 to 14 pay half price, and ages 6 and under are free. Sorting this before checkout keeps the booking clear and avoids awkward last-minute changes.
6
Keep the 24-hour window in mind
If your Seville day still depends on weather, queues, or how long you spend at the Alcázar, use the free-cancellation window. You can cancel up to 24 hours before the activity without charge. That gives you flexibility without waiting until the last second.

How to plan an El Palacio Andaluz evening in Seville

El Palacio Andaluz works best when you plan it as a real evening anchor, not as a loose afterthought at the end of an overloaded day. Choose the time and format first, then let the rest of your Seville route adjust around that decision.

Pick the showtime around your day

Best for full sightseeing days: choose the 9:30 pm show if you still want breathing room after Seville Cathedral, Giralda, or Alcázar. The 7 pm slot works better for families, earlier dinners, or anyone who does not want a very late finish after a 90-minute performance. Add the museum's 30-minute lead-in to your plan, and book now.

Choose the format that fits your evening

Choose Only Flamenco if you want the cleanest first visit and the lowest-friction booking. The cava-and-truffle format suits visitors who want a small celebratory touch without losing focus on the stage, while the dinner package is best when you want one reservation to cover food, drinks, and the full show. Decide by mood, not by marketing, and book now.

Build one manageable Seville pairing

Great when you want a coherent route: pair the evening with the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville, Maestranza, or, for more flamenco context, the Flamenco Dance Museum. First-time visitors can still come here after one big old-town icon, but trying to stack three major sights before a night show usually drains the fun. Keep it to one strong pairing, and book now.

Inside El Palacio Andaluz on Isla de la Cartuja

This venue feels different not only because of the dancing. Its setting on Isla de la Cartuja, its big-stage scale, and the museum add-on create a flamenco night with more sweep and structure than Seville's smaller room-first venues.

A stage shaped by Expo '92

The show takes place in the old Cruzcampo pavilion on the Expo '92 site, on Isla de la Cartuja. That 1992 setting helps explain why the venue feels broader and easier to access than many old-center tablaos: this is flamenco with event-scale bones, not a hidden room down a narrow lane.

A Seville flamenco venue since 1995

The official site dates El Palacio Andaluz's flamenco evenings to 1995, and the current venue still leans into scale: a large stage, a broad cast, and a performance style built for visitors who want sweep as well as detail. If your idea of the perfect night is bigger-stage energy rather than hushed intimacy, this difference matters.

From the cafés cantantes to today's show

The house explicitly looks back to the old Sevillian cafés cantantes that flourished in the mid-19th century and helped shape the first flamenco tablaos. You feel that heritage less as museum nostalgia and more as design logic: direct views of the stage, a room built around performance, and an evening centered on voice, guitar, rhythm, and costume.

Why the museum and Carmen sequence matter

Current tickets include the Flamenco Dress Museum, which turns the 30-minute pre-show window into more than waiting time by linking the night to Seville's Feria de Abril visual culture. On stage, the program also folds in a flamenco take on Carmen, rooted in Georges Bizet's 1875 opera set in Seville. Those two details give the evening stronger local texture than a generic dance show.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does the experience last?

The show itself runs about 90 minutes. If your ticket includes the museum, arrive 30 minutes early.
Read more.

What times do the shows start?

Published standard starts are 7 pm and 9:30 pm.
Read more.

What is the difference between the main ticket types?

Only Flamenco is the stripped-back 90-minute show. The cava option keeps the same performance and adds a glass of cava plus a chocolate truffle, while the dinner package adds an Andalusian meal with drinks and suits visitors who want one-booking ease.
Read more.

Is the Flamenco Dress Museum included?

Yes. The venue's current published ticket pages include a complimentary visit to the Flamenco Dress Museum with all three main booking formats.
Read more.

Are children allowed?

Yes. Published pricing gives half-price entry for children ages 7 to 14, and children ages 6 and under go free.
Read more.

Can I cancel my booking?

Yes. You can cancel free of charge up to 24 hours before the activity. Later cancellations, late arrivals, and no-shows are not refunded.
Read more.

How do I get there from central Seville?

The venue is on Calle Matemáticos Rey Pastor y Castro on Isla de la Cartuja. From central Seville, most visitors treat it as a short taxi or rideshare transfer, especially in the evening.
Read more.

Is this a good first flamenco show in Seville?

Yes, especially if you want a bigger staged production with clear ticket formats and less guesswork about the evening plan. If you also want daytime flamenco context, pair it with the Flamenco Dance Museum.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Published standard starts are 7 pm and 9:30 pm daily, and the show lasts about 90 minutes. If your booking includes the Flamenco Dress Museum, plan to arrive 30 minutes before showtime.

tickets

Published prices checked in March 2026 are:
- Only Flamenco: from €32 adults / €16 ages 7 to 14 / free ages 6 and under
- Show with cava and chocolate truffle: from €54 adults / €27 ages 7 to 14 / free ages 6 and under
- Show and dinner: from €86 adults / €43 ages 7 to 14 / free ages 6 and under
Current published formats include the Flamenco Dress Museum visit and free cancellation up to 24 hours before the activity.

website

address

El Palacio Andaluz
Calle Matemáticos Rey Pastor y Castro, 4
41092 Seville
Spain

how to get there

The venue sits on Isla de la Cartuja, west of Seville's historic core. From the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville or Maestranza, the transfer is straightforward; from Seville Cathedral or Alcázar, most visitors prefer a short taxi or rideshare rather than leaving the final leg to chance. Treat it as an evening transfer, not a last-minute old-town detour.
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