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International Destination

Seville, Spain

Business class roundtrip fares from 10 US hubs · Updated daily
$2,066
Lowest fare
$4,713
Average
10
US hubs
4
Below normal
All fares to Seville, Spain
BOS 13h $2,066 Low Book Search →
JFK 13h $2,146 Low Book Search →
ORD 13h $3,263 Typical Book Search →
ATL 12h $3,610 Typical Book Search →
MIA 12h $3,610 Low Book Search →
DFW 12h $3,968 Typical Book Search →
LAX 12h $4,884 Typical Book Search →
SFO 14h $4,934 Typical Book Search →
SEA 15h $5,347 Low Book Search →
SNA 15h $13,302 High Book Search →
About Seville, Spain

Seville is the kind of city that ruins other cities for you — a place where Moorish palaces hide behind unassuming walls, where the scent of orange blossoms follows you through cobblestone alleys, and where dinner doesn't start until 10 PM because nobody here is in a hurry to end a perfect evening. It's not trying to be Paris or Rome; it's older, stranger, and more sensual than both. For the luxury traveler, Seville rewards depth over breadth — skip the checklist tourism and you'll discover a city that feels like it was designed for people who actually know how to live.

6 Experiences Worth Flying Business Class For
1. A Private After-Hours Walk Through the Real Alcázar

The Real Alcázar is arguably more breathtaking than the Alhambra, but most tourists shuffle through it in a midday herd and miss everything....

Arrange a private evening visit through the Alcázar's own cultural program or a connected local fixer — standing alone in the Patio de las Doncellas as the tilework catches golden hour light is a core memory you cannot manufacture any other way. The gardens alone, with their Renaissance fountains and hidden grottos, deserve an unhurried hour that daytime crowds simply won't allow.

2
Flamenco at an Invite-Only Peña in Triana
Forget the tablao shows packaged for tourists along Calle Betis — real flamenco lives in the peñas of Triana, private clubs where local artists perform for audiences who understand the art form's ache. Peña Torres Macarena and Peña Flamenca Cultural are where you'll witness raw, unpolished duende that makes the hair on your arms stand up. Getting in requires knowing someone or working through a concierge at a hotel like Hotel Alfonso XIII; once you're seated on a folding chair with a glass of manzanilla, you'll understand why flamenco is classified as intangible cultural heritage.
3
The Sherry-and-Ibérico Pilgrimage at Eslava and Beyond
Seville's tapas culture isn't a cute add-on — it's the main event, and Bar Eslava on Calle Eslava in the San Lorenzo neighborhood is ground zero, where the slow-cooked egg with truffle and the foie gras with Pedro Ximénez reduction have earned a near-religious following. Follow it with a proper sherry education at Bodega Dos de Mayo or the impeccable wine list at Sobretablas, where palo cortado is poured with the reverence it deserves. This is not grazing; this is one of Europe's most sophisticated food cultures hiding behind a deceptively casual counter.
4
A Morning in the Metropol Parasol, Then Vanish into the Feria Market
The Metropol Parasol — locals call it Las Setas — is a polarizing wooden megastructure that happens to offer the single best panoramic view of Seville's skyline at sunrise, before a single tour bus has arrived. Walk directly from there to the Mercado de la Feria, a neighborhood market tourists never find, where fishmongers and old señoras argue over the best gambas blancas from Huelva. Buy whatever looks perfect, then have it prepared at one of the market's tiny bars — this is the Seville that Sevillanos actually live in.
5
Suite 200 at Hotel Alfonso XIII and the Art of Doing Absolutely Nothing
The Alfonso XIII isn't just Seville's grandest hotel — it's a Mudéjar fantasy built in 1928 that feels like sleeping inside an Alcázar annex, with hand-painted tiles, Moorish arches, and a courtyard where afternoon tea becomes a kind of theater. Request a suite overlooking the gardens, not the street, and spend at least one full afternoon by the pool ignoring every itinerary you've made. For a more intimate alternative, Casa del Poeta in Santa Cruz is a restored 17th-century casa palacio with just six rooms that makes you feel like you've been given keys to a private Sevillano mansion.
6
A Rooftop Sunset at EME Catedral, Then Dinner at Cañabota
The rooftop terrace at EME Catedral Hotel puts you so close to the Giralda bell tower that you could almost touch it — arrive at 8:30 PM in spring for a cocktail as the cathedral turns amber and the swifts begin their nightly spiral overhead. Then walk ten minutes to Cañabota, a seafood restaurant on Calle Orfila that serves what may be the best red prawn in Andalucía, treated with the precision of a Michelin kitchen but the soul of a Cádiz fishing village. This one evening alone — the light, the stone, the prawn — justifies the transatlantic flight.
When to Go Show ↓
Peak Season
March through May
Spring is Seville's undisputed glory — Semana Santa in late March or April transforms the city into an overwhelming, incense-filled religious spectacle, and the Feria de Abril two weeks later is the most glamorous party in Spain, full of private casetas, flamenco dresses, and fino sherry flowing at noon. Temperatures hover in the mid-70s, orange trees are in full bloom, and every courtyard in Santa Cruz looks like a painting. Book hotels six months out minimum, expect premium pricing everywhere, and know that the crowds are real — but so is the magic. This is the Seville that earns its reputation.
🌴
Shoulder Season
October through November and early March
This is when I tell every discerning traveler to go. October still delivers warm days in the low 80s, restaurant terraces are fully open, and the summer tourist crush has evaporated — you can walk into the Cathedral without a timed ticket and have the Alcázar practically to yourself on a Tuesday morning. Hotel rates at properties like the Alfonso XIII drop meaningfully, and the cultural calendar fills with film festivals and gallery openings that cater to locals, not visitors.
Plan your trip to Seville, Spain