Flamenco Dance Museum tickets & tours | Price comparison

Flamenco Dance Museum

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
Flamenco Dance Museum, also known as Museo del Baile Flamenco, turns a short stop in central Seville into both a live performance and a fast introduction to Andalusia's signature art. In an 18th-century palace-house on Calle Manuel Rojas Marcos, you move between interactive galleries, historic vaults, and a show shaped by the legacy of Cristina Hoyos.

Start with a combined museum-and-show ticket, because it gives first-time visitors the clearest context, the strongest payoff, and one easy booking for the full experience.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Combined museum + show tickets

Best for first-time visitors: one booking covers the museum and the one-hour Puro Flamenco performance, so you get context first and a much stronger live payoff after.
Combined ticket: Puro Flamenco Show + Flamenco Museum visit
4.8(562)
 
Go to offer
Seville: Puro Flamenco Show - Museo del Baile Flamenco
4.8(1488)
 
Go to offer
Skip the Line: Museo del Baile Flamenco Admission Ticket
4.1(83)
 
Go to offer
Live flamenco show and entrance tickets to Seville Flamenco Dance Museum
4.9(5)
 
musement.com
Go to offer

Puro Flamenco show tickets

Choose this if your priority is the live performance itself and you want one compact evening plan in Seville's old center.
Combined ticket: Puro Flamenco Show + Flamenco Museum visit
4.8(562)
 
Go to offer
Seville: Puro Flamenco Show - Museo del Baile Flamenco
4.8(1488)
 
Go to offer
Skip the Line: Museo del Baile Flamenco Admission Ticket
4.1(83)
 
Go to offer
Live flamenco show and entrance tickets to Seville Flamenco Dance Museum
4.9(5)
 
musement.com
Go to offer

Museum tickets

Pick this for a shorter cultural stop: you can move through the interactive rooms, gallery spaces, and historic vault areas at your own pace.
Combined ticket: Puro Flamenco Show + Flamenco Museum visit
4.8(562)
 
Go to offer
Seville: Puro Flamenco Show - Museo del Baile Flamenco
4.8(1488)
 
Go to offer
Skip the Line: Museo del Baile Flamenco Admission Ticket
4.1(83)
 
Go to offer
Live flamenco show and entrance tickets to Seville Flamenco Dance Museum
4.9(5)
 
musement.com
Go to offer

More tickets & tours

Use this section to compare the remaining marketplace variations if you want extra flexibility before you book.
Combined ticket: Puro Flamenco Show + Flamenco Museum visit
4.8(562)
 
Go to offer
Seville: Puro Flamenco Show - Museo del Baile Flamenco
4.8(1488)
 
Go to offer
Skip the Line: Museo del Baile Flamenco Admission Ticket
4.1(83)
 
Go to offer
Live flamenco show and entrance tickets to Seville Flamenco Dance Museum
4.9(5)
 
musement.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Flamenco Dance Museum

1
Choose the combined first
If this is your first flamenco stop in Seville, start with the combined ticket. You get the museum's context first, then the one-hour Puro Flamenco performance, which makes the live part easier to follow and much more memorable. That way you do not have to choose between culture and atmosphere.
2
Put the museum before the show
If you book the combined format, do the museum during the day and keep the show as the finish. The galleries are flexible, while the performance runs on a fixed clock, so this order removes time pressure and lets the evening feel cleaner. That way you do not start the music already rushed.
3
Pair it with one nearby icon
If you want a strong old-town route, pair this stop with just one major sight such as Giralda, Seville Cathedral, or Alcázar. Limiting yourself to one big neighbor keeps the day rich without turning central Seville into a sprint. So you can enjoy the show with energy left.
4
Use museum-only for a shorter day
If your priority is a shorter cultural stop, museum-only works well in the late morning or hot afternoon. You still get the interactive rooms, gallery spaces, and historic vault areas, but you keep the evening free for dinner or another plan. This avoids overcommitting your schedule.
5
Go earlier for quieter galleries
If you want the calmest museum pace, aim for daytime rather than the late-afternoon build into the 5 pm show. The museum and performances share the same central venue, so earlier hours usually feel less compressed. That way you can linger with the screens and gallery rooms instead of watching the clock.
6
Use it as a heat-break plan
On very hot Seville days, this is one of the easier old-center cultural stops to place between outdoor monuments. The museum is indoors, the route is compact, and the evening show gives you a seated finish, so the day feels much more manageable. That leaves more energy for the rest of the night.

How to plan a Flamenco Dance Museum stop in central Seville

This stop works best when you treat it as one focused cultural anchor in Seville's old center, not as an extra squeezed between too many monuments. Choose the format first, then let that decision shape the rest of the day.

Choose the format before the route

Best for first-time visitors: pick the combined museum-and-show ticket if you want context plus a live payoff in one place. If your day is already full, take museum-only for a shorter cultural stop; if you mainly want the performance, go straight to the one-hour Puro Flamenco show. Starting with the format removes guesswork from the rest of the day. Book now.

Build one strong old-town pairing

Great when you want one efficient route: pair Flamenco Dance Museum with just one nearby icon such as Giralda, Seville Cathedral, or Alcázar. Repeat visitors who want a calmer art-heavy day can swap in the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville or Maestranza. One pairing keeps the day enjoyable instead of overpacked. Book now.

Use the museum as the daytime half

If you booked the combined option, do the museum during the day and keep the fixed-time show for later. The galleries are flexible, the performance is not, and this order is especially useful for families, couples, and first-time visitors who do not want their evening to start rushed. Book now.

Know who this stop suits best

This venue is strongest for travelers who want flamenco in a compact, culture-led format near the cathedral core. First-time visitors get a clear introduction, repeat visitors get a tighter museum+show package than a full dinner night, and travelers with limited stamina avoid long cross-city transfers. Book now.

Ticket types at Flamenco Dance Museum

The mapped offers split into clear experience modes, and the right choice depends less on price than on what kind of Seville day you are building. Think in terms of payoff: full context, live intensity, or a shorter museum stop.

Combined museum and show tickets

Best for first-time visitors and short stays: one booking gives you the museum plus the live Puro Flamenco performance. It is the simplest way to understand what you are seeing before the musicians and dancers take over, and it usually delivers the clearest value for one focused stop. Book now.

Puro Flamenco show tickets

Choose this if your priority is the performance itself and you do not need the daytime exhibition layer. It works especially well after a monument-heavy day, when you want one seated evening plan in the old center without committing extra time to galleries. Book now.

Museum-only tickets

Great when you want culture without locking your evening. The museum format lets you move through audiovisual rooms, gallery spaces, and historic zones at your own pace, and it is the easiest version to pair with lunch, shopping, or one more nearby monument. Book now.

More tickets and tours

Use this section when the marketplace listings do not fit neatly into the main groups or when you want to compare the remaining formats before deciding. In practice, it is the place to check if flexibility matters more to you than the cleanest first-pick category. Book now.

History and spaces inside Flamenco Dance Museum

The venue matters almost as much as the performance. This is not a neutral black-box theater, but a restored palace-house with older buried layers, contemporary screens, and rooms that help explain why flamenco feels inseparable from Seville.

The idea took shape in 2001

The project began in 2001, when its creators wanted a place that would explain flamenco as more than a performance sold to visitors. With the artistic weight of Cristina Hoyos behind it, the museum was conceived as a serious cultural space for dance, song, and guitar, not just a pre-show waiting room.

An 18th-century palace-house became the venue

The team found an 18th-century palace-house a short distance from the cathedral area, began remodeling it in 2004, and opened the museum in April 2006. That matters because the visit still feels rooted in a specific piece of old Seville, not in a purpose-built entertainment box on the edge of town.

The basement vault reaches much further back

During the restoration, Roman and Ibero-Roman ashlars dating from the 5th century BC to the 3rd century AD came to light in the barrel-vault area. That older stonework gives the museum one of its strongest contrasts: contemporary performance and deep urban history in the same stop.

What you actually see in the museum

The main route uses five rooms and the cloister for an audiovisual walk through flamenco dance, while the upper exhibition level adds a three-room gallery with temporary and permanent displays. One of the memorable details is the large semicircular screen with choreography by the Cristina Hoyos Ballet and music by Manolo Sanlúcar. If you want a practical micro-hack, slow down here instead of racing straight to the show. This is where the stop becomes place-specific.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between the main ticket types?

Museum-only gives you the galleries and historic spaces during daytime hours. The Puro Flamenco ticket covers the live 1-hour performance, while the combined ticket gives you both in one booking and is the strongest first-time choice.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the combined visit?

The Puro Flamenco show itself lasts 1 hour. For the combined format, most visitors do best when they leave roughly 1.5 to 2 hours overall so the museum never feels rushed.
Read more.

What are the current opening hours?

The museum is currently published from 11 am to 6:45 pm, with last entry at 6 pm. Standard showtimes are 5 pm, 7 pm, and 8:45 pm, and the first Monday of each month opens later at 2:30 pm for the museum.
Read more.

Is this a good first flamenco experience in Seville?

Yes, especially if you choose the combined ticket. You get a practical museum introduction first, then a live performance in the same venue, which makes this one of the easier first flamenco stops to understand and enjoy.
Read more.

Can I visit only the museum during the day?

Yes. Museum-only tickets are sold separately, and daytime entry is flexible within the published museum hours. This works well if you want culture in the old center without committing your evening.
Read more.

Which nearby sights pair best with this stop?

For a first visit, pair it with one major nearby icon such as Giralda, Seville Cathedral, or Alcázar. If you want a calmer repeat-visitor day, the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville or Maestranza fit better.
Read more.

Where exactly is the museum in Seville?

It is at Calle Manuel Rojas Marcos 3 in the historic center. From Giralda or Seville Cathedral, it is an easy walk through the old streets.
Read more.

Are reduced or child prices available?

Yes. Current published rates list reduced prices for student / disability categories on the show and combined options, plus child prices for ages 6 to 12. The museum's standalone general admission is currently published at €6.
Read more.

What makes the building itself worth noticing?

This is not a neutral venue. The museum occupies an 18th-century palace-house, and restoration work revealed Roman and Ibero-Roman stonework dating from the 5th century BC to the 3rd century AD in the vault area.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current official opening times are:
- Museum: from 11 am to 6:45 pm, last entry 6 pm
- First Monday of each month: museum opens at 2:30 pm
- Standard showtimes: 5 pm, 7 pm, and 8:45 pm
Other showtimes may appear on request or for special dates.

tickets

Current published prices retrieved on March 11, 2026 are:
- Museum admission: €6
- Puro Flamenco Show: adult €29, reduced (student / disability category) €22, children ages 6 to 12 €15
- Combined museum + Puro Flamenco Show: adult €33, reduced €26, children ages 6 to 12 €19

website

address

Flamenco Dance Museum (Museo del Baile Flamenco)
Calle Manuel Rojas Marcos 3
41004 Seville
Spain

how to get there

The museum sits in Seville's old center, about a 5-minute walk from Giralda, 5 to 10 minutes from Seville Cathedral, and around 10 minutes from Alcázar. If you use tram or metro, Puerta de Jerez is the simplest major access point; from there, walk into the old center rather than planning to drive through it.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Compare prices for more top sights in Seville:
Itálica22 tickets & guided tours
Seville Aquarium5 tickets & guided tours
Maestranza4 tickets & guided tours
Museum of Fine Arts of Seville1 tickets & guided tours
Estadio Benito Villamarín0 tickets & guided tours
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.