Best things to do in Seville, where to stay, what to eat and how to plan your visit
SeviQ is now built first as a practical Seville travel guide in English. The goal is simple: help visitors make better decisions about landmarks, opening hours, food, hotels, neighbourhoods and the local experiences that shape a short stay in the city.
Instead of forcing everything through a quiz-first lens, the site now brings the most useful planning content to the front: Seville Cathedral, the Royal Alcazar, Plaza de Espana, flamenco, tapas, hotels and the practical logic of how to move through Seville well.
Where to start if you are visiting Seville for the first time
Most visitors to Seville are trying to solve the same questions in roughly the same order. First come the landmark decisions: Cathedral, Giralda, Alcazar, Plaza de Espana, Santa Cruz, Triana and flamenco. After that, people usually need a practical base: where to stay, which neighbourhood fits best and where to eat without wasting a meal in the wrong part of the centre.
That is exactly the order this site is now following. The strongest pages are designed to answer the real visitor question quickly, not just describe Seville in abstract terms.
The three pages most first-time visitors need first
- Best things to do in Seville for the basic route through the city
- Best areas to stay in Seville for the quickest neighborhood decision
- Best flamenco show in Seville for an evening plan that adds personality
Landmark guides
Plan your stay
- Best things to do in Seville
- Best areas to stay in Seville
- Where to stay in Seville by area
- Best hotels in Seville and where to stay by area
- Seville city centre hotels
- Hotels in Seville old town
- Best boutique hotels in Seville
- Seville hotels with pool
- Where to eat in Seville
- Best tapas bars in Seville
- Best restaurants in Seville
- Best traditional restaurants in Seville
Tourism in Seville is stronger when it is organised by intent
Someone searching for Seville Cathedral opening hours does not need the same page as someone searching for best tapas bars in Seville. Someone comparing hotels in Santa Cruz is not in the same mindset as someone trying to decide whether to see an evening flamenco show near Las Setas or in the Arenal.
That is why SeviQ now keeps each guide focused on one visitor decision at a time. The clearer each page is about its own purpose, the easier it becomes to plan the city quickly and confidently.
Seville by theme
Best things to do
A compact route through the landmarks, neighbourhoods and cultural experiences that usually matter most on a first visit.
Where to stay
A practical way to think about Santa Cruz, Triana, the Arenal, Alameda and the hotel styles that fit each kind of visitor.
Boutique hotels
Smaller palace houses, roof terraces and design-led stays are one of the most distinctive hotel layers in Seville, especially around Santa Cruz and the old town.
Eat and drink well
Tapas bars and traditional restaurants work differently in Seville, and treating them as the same thing usually gives weaker recommendations.
Rooftop bars
Skyline drinks work best in Seville when you match the rooftop to the kind of evening you want: Cathedral views, river perspective or a late city-centre terrace.
Classic dining
For longer meals, old-school dining rooms and deeper Andalusian cooking, the restaurant logic is slightly different from the tapas crawl.
Seasonal Seville and live tools
Holy Week remains important in Seville, but it now sits behind the main tourism layer rather than defining the whole site. If you are visiting specifically during Holy Week, these are the pages that matter most.
The interactive layer now comes second
The quiz still exists and still gives SeviQ personality. But it no longer needs to carry the whole home page. It works better as an extra layer for visitors who want to play with Seville culture after reading the practical guides.