Poble Espanyol tickets & tours | Price comparison

Poble Espanyol

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Iconic Poble Espanyol, also known as the Spanish Village or Pueblo Español, turns a corner of Montjuïc into a walk through Spain. Built for the 1929 Barcelona International Exhibition, it fills more than 40,000 m² (430,556 ft²) with 117 full-scale streets, plazas, craft workshops, and a view from the monastery area.

Start with an entry ticket or skip-the-line option to save stress, then add a guided tour or flamenco dinner if you want a richer Montjuïc evening.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry Tickets and Audio Guides

Choose direct entry, often with skip-the-line or audio guide options, when you want to explore the open-air village at your own pace.
Barcelona: Poble Espanyol Entry Ticket
4.2(5102)
 
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Poble Espanyol Skip-the-Line Tickets
4.4(191)
 
headout.com
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Guided Tours

Use guided formats when you want context for the architecture, nearby Montjuïc sights, or a private art-focused route.
Barcelona: Gothic Quarter Walking Tour w/ Montjuïc Cable Car
4.5(564)
 
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Poble Espanyol Private Tour in Barcelona with Pick up and Drop off
4.0(2)
 
viator.com
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Skip-the-line National Art Museum and Poble Espanyol Tour
 
getyourguide.com
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Flamenco and Dinner Packages

Pick evening packages that combine Poble Espanyol entry with live flamenco and Spanish dining, ideal when you want one settled night plan.
Flamenco show with Spanish dinner and entry to Poble Espanyol
5.0(1)
 
musement.com
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Flamenco show with gourmet Spanish dinner and entry to Poble Espanyol
 
musement.com
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Montjuïc and Montserrat Day Trips

Choose broader day trips when you want Poble Espanyol as part of a planned Barcelona highlights route or a longer Montserrat excursion.
Panoramic Barcelona and Montserrat Excursion
4.1(312)
 
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6 tips for visiting the Poble Espanyol

1
Book before Montjuïc day
If Poble Espanyol is part of a packed Montjuïc route, book entry before you go. That way you can move from Plaça d’Espanya to the gate without stopping to compare prices on your phone.
2
Use the late afternoon
If you want softer light and a calmer pace, arrive in the late afternoon and stay for dinner or an evening show. The streets feel less like a checklist then, especially around the terraces.
3
Add the audio guide
If you like wandering without a group, the audio guide gives structure to the 117 replicas. Keep the deposit in mind at pickup, then let the route do the thinking while you enjoy the details.
4
Leave room for makers
Do not rush straight from façade to façade. The live craft workshops are part of the point here, and a short pause at a glass, leather, or ceramics bench makes the visit feel more local.
5
Pair nearby sights carefully
If your priority is art, pair Poble Espanyol with Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. If you want a compact architecture loop, add Mies van der Rohe Pavilion and keep the higher hill for another day.
6
Use buses for the hill
If uphill walking drains your energy, use the buses that stop at Poble Espanyol instead of treating the climb from Espanya as a warm-up. Save your legs for the open-air streets inside.

Ticket types for Poble Espanyol

Most bookable products start with entry, but the best choice depends on how much structure you want around your Montjuïc day.

Entry tickets and audio guides

Best for independent visitors who want the open-air streets, workshops, and Fran Daurel Museum without a fixed group pace. Add the audio guide if you want help turning 117 building replicas into a route rather than a wander. Book now.

Guided tours with city context

Choose this if you want Poble Espanyol explained alongside wider Barcelona themes, from old-town walks to Montjuïc viewpoints. It is especially useful on a first visit, when the hill can otherwise feel like scattered stops. Book now.

Flamenco and dinner evenings

Great when you want the village to become an evening plan, not just a daytime stop. These packages pair entry with live performance and Spanish dining, so you can stay on Montjuïc after the museums start winding down. Book now.

Day trips with Montserrat

Choose a wider day trip if your goal is one planned itinerary with Poble Espanyol, Montjuïc, and Abbey of Montserrat logistics handled together. It trades flexibility for an easier day across the city and mountains. Book now.

Architecture, craft, and art in the village

The magic of Poble Espanyol is that it looks like a village, works like a museum, and still behaves like a living cultural venue.

The 1929 idea

The project was built for the 1929 Barcelona International Exhibition after its creators studied more than 1,600 towns. It was meant to be temporary, but the mix of plazas, towers, arcades, and regional streets became too useful to lose.

A walk through Spanish regions

The route moves from Andalusian whitewashed lanes to Catalan Romanesque echoes, Galician stone, central Spain, and northern arcades. Treat it like a compressed road trip: look for changes in balconies, rooflines, doorways, and shaded squares.

Working artisan houses

This is where the village becomes more than scenery. More than 15 artisans work inside the precinct, so you may catch glass, jewelry, leather, ceramics, or textile techniques in progress while you move between the regional streets.

Fran Daurel Museum and Fiesta space

Since 2001, the Fran Daurel Museum has added a modern-art layer with works by artists such as Picasso, Dalí, and Miró. The wider visit also uses audiovisual spaces to explain festivals and regional culture, so the indoor stops balance the open-air wandering.

Montjuïc pairings near Poble Espanyol

The location is one of the biggest practical advantages: you are already in the lower Montjuïc culture cluster, close to museums, viewpoints, and evening stops.

A compact art and architecture loop

For a dense but manageable half day, pair Poble Espanyol with Mies van der Rohe Pavilion and Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. The trio keeps you close to Avinguda de Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia and avoids wasting energy crossing town.

Views higher on the hill

If your priority is the skyline, continue toward Montjuïc Cable Car or Montjuïc Castle. This is best when you still have energy for slopes; limited-mobility visitors may prefer keeping the day around the lower cluster and using transport between stops.

Evening without crossing town

For an easy finish, stay near Poble Espanyol for terraces, dinner, or a flamenco package, then walk back toward Magic Fountain of Montjuïc and Plaça d’Espanya. It keeps the night simple after a museum-heavy day.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for a visit?

Plan around 2 to 3 hours for the architecture streets, workshops, and Fran Daurel Museum. Add more time if you book flamenco, dinner, or a guided Montjuïc combination.
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Is it mainly indoors or outdoors?

It is mainly outdoors, with streets, plazas, terraces, and open-air viewpoints. Indoor stops such as the Fran Daurel Museum, exhibitions, shops, and workshops make good breaks in hot or wet weather.
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What is included with general admission?

General admission covers the main Poble Espanyol precinct and includes the Fran Daurel Museum. Audio guides, workshops, special activities, and evening shows may need separate booking.
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Is it good for families?

Yes. Open-air lanes, family activities, craft stops, and the scavenger-hunt style add-ons make it easy to adapt the visit to children. Children under 4 enter free with base admission.
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Is it accessible for wheelchair users?

Wheelchair users enter free, and reduced rates are available for some disability-card holders. Because this is an open-air village on Montjuïc, confirm step-free routing if slopes or surface changes affect your visit.
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Can I bring a dog?

Yes, dogs may enter the precinct if they stay on a leash. It is a practical choice for a Montjuïc walk, but bring water on warm days because much of the visit is outdoors.
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What is the best time to visit?

Late afternoon works well if you want softer light, dinner options, and a smoother link into evening activities. Morning is better if your priority is craft workshops and a less rushed family route.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The main precinct is open Monday from 10 am to 8 pm and Tuesday to Sunday from 10 am to 12 midnight. From January 7 to February 5, winter hours run Monday to Thursday from 10 am to 8 pm and Friday to Sunday from 10 am to 12 midnight. Shops and the Fran Daurel Museum keep shorter hours, so check the same-day schedule if those are your priority.

tickets

Advance online admission starts at €13.50 for adults and €9 for children ages 4 to 12; same-day tickets are €15 and €10. A family pack for 2 adults and 2 children is €40, and children under 4 enter free. Audio guide rental is €3.50 with a €20 deposit.

address

Poble Espanyol
Av. de Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia, 13
08038 Barcelona
Spain

website

how to get there

Use Espanya station for Metro L1/L3 and FGC trains, or take bus 13, 23, or 150 to the Poble Espanyol stop. Sants Estació is the listed Renfe and Rodalies rail connection. The site sits on Montjuïc, so build a short uphill section into your timing if you walk from Plaça d’Espanya.

accessibility

Wheelchair users enter free, and reduced onsite rates apply for some visitors with disability cards. Because the visit uses open-air streets and historic-style surfaces, confirm route details before arrival if step-free access is essential for your day.

lockers

A free locker service is available. Use it for small day items before you start the open-air route, especially if you plan to stop for food or workshops.

wifi

Free Wi-Fi is listed among the onsite services. It is handy for opening mobile tickets, checking the day’s activities, or coordinating a meeting point in the village.
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