Climb Malaga's signature sight: a hilltop fortress-palace of horseshoe arches, courtyards, fountains and terraced gardens, crowned by the Gibralfaro castle ramparts with a 360-degree panorama over the city, the port and the Mediterranean. It is the one image a first-timer pictures when they think of Malaga, and it is a flat ~15-20 minute walk from the cruise terminal -- the perfect low-risk anchor for a port day. Buy at the gate, the ticket machines, or the official site on arrival.
What to expect
From the cruise terminal, a flat 15–20 minute walk brings you to the Alcazaba's gates, where you'll climb through a fortress-palace of horseshoe arches, fountains, and terraced gardens layered up the hillside. If you continue to the Gibralfaro castle ramparts at the summit, you'll stand under 360-degree views of Malaga's city, port, and Mediterranean shoreline—the iconic image that defines the destination. The rhythm is self-paced: wander the courtyards and gardens, rest on terraces, take time at the top, then walk back down; budget 2–3 hours total, all on foot, with no guides or fixed schedules to follow.
Direct wins overwhelmingly, and this is also your safety-net card. The ship's 'Malaga Overview' walking tour ($89.99 pp) only shows you the Alcazaba EXTERIOR plus a guided promenade stroll -- the old town is a 10-15 minute flat walk from the pier, so you are paying 2-4x for a guide to point at a fortress you can enter yourself for ~$11. Skip the ship tour and walk in. The only thing the ship adds is narration; an audio guide or a self-led visit gives you the same monument for a tenth of the price.
Good to know
Buy tickets on arrival at the gate, ticket machines, or the official website (EUR 7 for Alcazaba alone, EUR 10 for both Alcazaba + Gibralfaro); free entry every Sunday from 14:00 onward if your port day lands there. Summer hours are 9:00–20:00 (last entry 19:00), winter 9:00–18:00, so plan your walk to leave the ship by mid-morning in an 8-hour port window, giving you 2–3 hours inside, 45 minutes for transit to and from the terminal, and a safe 2-hour buffer to return before all-aboard. Bring water and comfortable walking shoes, as the climb to Gibralfaro is steady uphill terrain; no advance booking is needed for self-guided entry.