
8 Best Seville City Pass Tips and Comparisons
Compare the best Seville city pass options for 2026. Includes price breakdowns, skip-the-line tips for the Alcázar, and transport card advice.
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8 Best Seville City Pass Tips and Comparisons
Updated June 2026. The Seville City Pass is worth it for most first-time visitors — but only if you plan to visit both the Real Alcázar and the Seville Cathedral, and intend to use the hop-on hop-off bus. If you are skipping the bus or have already booked individual tickets, buying a pass adds no value. This guide gives you the full comparison across every available Seville tourist card, worked savings math, and an honest skip-it-or-buy-it verdict for each type of traveler.
The Real Alcázar and Seville Cathedral both sell out weeks in advance during high season. The biggest practical advantage of any Seville pass is not the price savings — it is the guaranteed timed-entry slot you secure at checkout. Showing up without a pre-booked slot between April and October can mean a two-hour queue or a sold-out board at the gate.
Free guide: Is the City Pass Worth It?
Our quick-decision checklist for European city passes — the value math, what to watch for in the fine print, and when paying per attraction beats the pass.
Key Takeaways
- The Seville Pass (Tiqets) costs €48 in 2026 and saves at least €12.50 versus buying the Alcázar, Cathedral, and bus tour separately.
- Both the Alcázar (€15.50) and Cathedral (€13.00) require timed-entry slots — all visitors, not just pass holders, must book in advance.
- Seville buses (TUSSAM) now accept contactless EMV tap-and-go, so the 3-day transport add-on is rarely worth adding for casual users.
- The Seville Super Combi drops the hop-on hop-off bus but adds the Iglesia del Salvador, making it the better pick for a single full day in the historic center.
Is a Seville City Pass Worth It? (Honest Verdict)
The short answer is yes — for a standard two-to-three-day trip where you plan to visit both UNESCO monuments and ride the sightseeing bus. The short answer is no if you are doing a single-day sprint and already know which monuments you want, or if you are a budget traveler comfortable booking the Alcázar and Cathedral directly from their official websites (alcazarsevilla.org and catedraldesevilla.es). Direct booking costs the same as the pass but removes the bus and audio guide from the bundle.
The honest case where the pass loses money: if you skip the hop-on hop-off bus, you eliminate roughly €27 of the €60.50 face value. The remaining two monument tickets cost €28.50 at the door versus €48 for the pass — a clear loss of €19.50. The pass math only works when you use all three core inclusions.
EU residents aged under 18 get free entry to the Real Alcázar. If you are traveling with children under 12, Alcázar tickets are also free. In both cases, factor the reduced household total before buying the family pass tier — the savings shift significantly.
What Is the Seville City Pass?
The "Seville City Pass" is a broad term covering several distinct products sold by different operators — most commonly the Tiqets-distributed pass, the Sevilla Digital Card (sold via citypasses.eu), and the Seville Super Combi. All of them bundle skip-the-line entry to the Real Alcázar and Seville Cathedral with varying extras. None of them is an official city-government card in the way that the Barcelona Card is issued by Turisme de Barcelona.
The most widely reviewed version is the The Seville Pass sold via Tiqets. It is 100% digital, delivered instantly to your email as a QR code, and requires no physical pickup anywhere in the city. You select your Alcázar and Cathedral time slots during the checkout process, which is the key practical advantage over booking separately.
The pass is not time-based in the way a Rome 48-hour card is. You are not racing a countdown clock once activated. Instead, you receive individual dated tickets for each attraction, plus a 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus voucher that starts from your first scan. This structure means you can spread the Alcázar and Cathedral across two different days if your schedule requires it.
Worked Savings Math: 2026 Ticket Prices
Here is the exact à-la-carte breakdown we priced in June 2026 against the standard Seville Pass at €48:
- Real Alcázar (adults, timed entry): €15.50
- Seville Cathedral and Giralda Tower (adults): €13.00
- Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour (24 hours): €27.00
- Seville Audio Guide App: €5.00
- Total à-la-carte: €60.50
- Seville Pass price: €48.00
- Immediate saving: €12.50
The pass also includes a 10% discount code on other Seville bookings. If you use it on one evening flamenco show (typically €30–€35), that adds another €3.00–€3.50 in real savings. Combine two extras — say a flamenco show and a Doñana excursion — and total savings reach €20–€25.
Scenario 1 — Two adults, full day: Both use the Alcázar, Cathedral, and bus. Savings: €25.00 total. Verdict: buy.
Scenario 2 — Solo traveler, Cathedral-skip day trip: Only wants the Alcázar (€15.50) and the bus (€27.00). Total à-la-carte: €42.50 vs €48.00 pass. Verdict: skip the pass, buy directly.
Scenario 3 — Family of two adults and two children under 12: Children enter Alcázar free. Adult monuments + bus = €55.50 à-la-carte × 2 adults = €111.00 vs two passes at €96.00. Verdict: buy the adult passes, the child discount makes it worthwhile at scale.
Break-even rule of thumb: you need to use at least the Alcázar, the Cathedral, and the bus to break even. If any one of those three drops out of your itinerary, do the arithmetic before buying.
Seville City Pass Comparison Table (2026)
Three passes dominate the Seville tourist card market. Here is the full side-by-side for 2026:
| Pass | Price (€, 2026) | Validity | Type | Key inclusions | Transport incl.? | Digital? | Our rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seville Pass (Tiqets) | €48 | Dated tickets + 24h bus | Attraction bundle | Alcázar ✓, Cathedral ✓, Giralda ✓, Hop-on Hop-off 24h ✓, Audio guide ✓ | No (TUSSAM/Metro separate) | Yes — no pickup | ★★★★☆ — Best overall |
| Sevilla Digital Card (citypasses.eu) | €45–€65 (varies by add-ons) | Dated tickets + 24h bus | Attraction bundle | Alcázar ✓, Cathedral ✓, Giralda ✓, Hop-on Hop-off 24h ✓, Audio guide ✓ | Optional 3-day add-on (€extra) | Yes — no pickup | ★★★☆☆ — Good if you need transport add-on |
| Seville Super Combi | ~€35–€40 | Dated tickets | Attraction bundle | Alcázar ✓, Cathedral ✓, Giralda ✓, Iglesia del Salvador ✓, Audio guide ✓ | No | Yes — no pickup | ★★★★☆ — Best for 1-day historic-center focus |
| MegaPass Classic | ~€50 | Dated tickets | Attraction bundle | Alcázar ✓, Cathedral ✓, Walking tour ✓, Audio guide ✓ | No | Yes | ★★★☆☆ — Good if you want a guided tour included |
| MegaPass Premium | ~€150+ | Multi-day | Attraction bundle | Alcázar ✓, Cathedral ✓, Alhambra (Granada) ✓, Tours ✓ | No (transport to Granada not usually included) | Yes | ★★★☆☆ — Only if you plan a Granada day trip |
The Seville Pass via Tiqets consistently wins on ease-of-use: slot selection happens during checkout, customer support is responsive in English, and the cancellation policy gives you free cancellation up to 24 hours before your visit. The Sevilla Digital Card's main advantage is the optional three-day TUSSAM and taxi transfer add-on — useful if you are arriving at SVQ airport and want a single purchase that handles everything from arrival.
Seville Pass (Tiqets) vs. Sevilla Digital Card vs. Super Combi
The Tiqets pass and the Sevilla Digital Card (citypasses.eu) include the same core three attractions — Alcázar, Cathedral, Giralda, and the 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus. The key difference is the optional transport upgrade on the Digital Card. If you pay extra, the Digital Card adds a three-day TUSSAM bus and tram pass plus a private taxi transfer from Seville airport. The Tiqets version does not offer this bundle. Check the seville city pass price 2026 page for the latest pricing on both.
The Seville Super Combi is the compact alternative. It drops the hop-on hop-off bus entirely but adds the Iglesia Colegial del Salvador — Seville's second major church, often overlooked by first-timers. The Super Combi is priced lower and is the smarter buy for visitors who want to spend a full day on foot in the historic center without needing the bus circuit. It also includes skip-the-line access to all four sites plus the audio guide app.
Most visitors find the Tiqets interface easier to navigate, particularly when selecting the Alcázar time slot. The Digital Card requires a separate email step after purchase to confirm your monument entry times, which some visitors find confusing. Both deliver all tickets digitally with no physical pickup required in the city.
MegaPass Options: Classic, Deluxe, and Premium
The MegaPass is a tiered product aimed at visitors who want guided tours included alongside monument access. The Classic tier (around €50) covers the Alcázar, Cathedral, and at least one guided walking tour of the historic center, plus the audio guide app. It does not include the hop-on hop-off bus, which separates it from the Tiqets pass at a similar price point.
The Deluxe tier adds further walking tours and local experiences, typically targeting visitors spending four or more days in Seville who want structured daily programming. The Premium tier (€150 or more) bridges Seville with the Alhambra in Granada, bundling monument access with a day-trip component. Note that transport to Granada is not always included in the Premium price — always verify this before purchase, as train and bus fares add €30–€50 round trip.
For a standard three-day Seville stay, the Classic MegaPass represents reasonable value if guided tours are a priority. If you prefer to explore independently, the Tiqets pass at €48 covers the same core monuments with a bus tour at a lower price, making the MegaPass Classic harder to justify unless the guided experience is specifically what you are after.
How the Digital Seville Pass Works
Every current Seville pass operates as a fully digital product. After purchase, your pass and attraction tickets are sent to your email as QR codes. There is no physical card to collect, no voucher exchange desk, and no tourist office visit required. You show the QR code on your phone at the entrance to each attraction.
For the Alcázar and Cathedral, you select your timed-entry slot during the checkout process — this is a requirement for all visitors, not just pass holders. This is the single most important thing to understand: the slots sell out. In April, May, and September, preferred 10:00–12:00 slots at the Alcázar can be gone three weeks in advance. If you buy your pass late and are left with a 16:00 Alcázar slot, you will need to sequence your Cathedral visit before lunch, which is manageable but requires planning.
The hop-on hop-off bus voucher starts its 24-hour clock from your first scan with the driver, not from the time you received the QR code. This means you can buy the pass days in advance and only activate the bus ticket on the day you want to use it. Plan to do your hop-on hop-off circuit on a separate day from your monument visits — the bus covers Plaza de España, Triana, and the Torre del Oro circuit efficiently, while the Alcázar and Cathedral are better explored on foot and take at least six combined hours to do properly.
Always arrive 15–20 minutes before your timed slot. If you miss it, staff at the Alcázar and Cathedral will not allow you in on a late pass — you would need to purchase a new timed-entry ticket at the door, subject to availability.
Seville Public Transport: Do You Need the Card?
This is the most commonly misunderstood aspect of Seville transport planning. Seville's TUSSAM buses and trams now accept contactless EMV tap-and-go payments — you can simply tap your Visa, Mastercard, or Apple Pay at the reader on any bus. This means most visitors no longer need a dedicated transport card for casual city use. The EA Airport bus (€4 one-way) also accepts contactless. The Seville Public Transport Card only makes financial sense if you are riding the bus more than four times per day for multiple days.
The Seville Metro is a separate system entirely and does not accept TUSSAM cards or contactless in the same way. You buy Metro tickets at vending machines inside stations. The Metro serves areas outside the main tourist zone — most first-time visitors never need it, as the historic center, Triana, and Plaza de España are all walkable or connected by tram.
The Sevilla Digital Card offers an optional three-day TUSSAM transport add-on that also includes a private taxi transfer from SVQ airport to your hotel. If you are arriving at the airport and want a single purchase handling arrival logistics plus your monument access, this bundle is worth considering. For everyone else, tap-and-go is simpler and cheaper than adding the transport card to any pass.
The 72-hour card question that comes up frequently in search: there is no standalone "Sevilla 72-hour tourist card" that covers all transport and monuments in one purchase. The 72-hour references in search results typically describe the duration of the TUSSAM transport add-on available on the Sevilla Digital Card, not a standalone all-in-one city card. This is a common source of confusion.
Alternatives to the Seville City Pass
Booking individually is the most straightforward alternative. The Real Alcázar website (alcazarsevilla.org) and the Cathedral booking platform both sell timed-entry tickets directly at the same prices as the pass — €15.50 and €13.00 respectively. The process takes about ten minutes per site. If you are comfortable managing two separate booking emails and do not need the bus tour, this route saves €19.50 versus the pass for the same monument access.
Free entry options are worth knowing about. The Real Alcázar offers free entry to Seville residents and EU under-18s. The Cathedral offers no regular free-entry window for tourists. The Plaza de España — one of Seville's most photogenic landmarks — is entirely free, as is the Torre del Oro exterior and most of the Barrio Santa Cruz neighborhood. A well-planned day of free sightseeing is viable for budget travelers: morning walk through Santa Cruz, midday at Plaza de España, afternoon Triana neighborhood, evening by the river. The pass adds little value on a day structured around free sights.
GetYourGuide and Viator both sell skip-the-line Alcázar and Cathedral tickets as standalone products, often with guide options. If you want a guided tour of just the Alcázar, a guided entry ticket via GetYourGuide (typically €25–€30) may be better value than the full pass if the bus and Cathedral are not on your list.
Who Should Buy the Seville City Pass?
Buy it if: You are visiting both the Alcázar and the Cathedral, you want to use a hop-on hop-off bus for city orientation, and you are making your first visit to Seville. The time savings at the gate are real, particularly from April through September. The 10% discount code on extras adds measurable value if you plan a flamenco show or a day trip to Córdoba or Ronda.
Skip it if: You are skipping the hop-on hop-off bus, you have already booked individual monument tickets, you are visiting with children under 12 (Alcázar entry is free for them — recalculate the math), or you are comfortable booking directly via the official Alcázar and Cathedral websites. The pass is also less compelling in November through February, when queues are manageable and you can often buy a same-day timed slot at the door.
Best alternative: Book the Alcázar and Cathedral directly online (total: €28.50 per adult) and use the contactless tap-and-go on TUSSAM buses as needed. You lose the bus tour but save €19.50 per person. Reinvest that into a quality evening flamenco show at Casa de la Memoria or a Guadalquivir river cruise.
The best months to visit are October and November — mild weather, lower crowds, and no need to book Alcázar slots three weeks in advance. The pass is most valuable in April through September when sold-out slots force you to plan well ahead anyway.
Tips to Get the Most From the Seville Pass
Book your Alcázar slot first, before selecting your Cathedral time. The Alcázar has fewer available slots per hour and sells out faster. Once you have a confirmed Alcázar time, build the rest of your day around it — the Cathedral and Giralda are immediately adjacent and easy to pair in the same afternoon.
Use the hop-on hop-off bus on your first full day in the city, before the monument visits. Doing the full circuit — typically 60–90 minutes without stops — gives you a useful spatial understanding of where everything is. On day two, walk to the Alcázar and Cathedral with your pre-booked slots. This sequencing makes the pass feel efficient rather than rushed.
Download the audio guide app to your phone before you leave home and cache it for offline use. The Alcázar has patchy Wi-Fi in the gardens and you do not want to be hunting for signal during the guided route. The app covers over 100 points of interest across the city, not just the pass inclusions, making it a standalone planning tool.
The Giralda tower is included with the Cathedral ticket, but many visitors run out of time for the climb. It is 35 ramps (no stairs — it was designed for horses), and the queue inside the tower moves slowly. Allow at least 45 minutes from entry to the top and back. Book your Cathedral slot for the morning when energy is higher and the light for photographs is better from the tower terrace.
Deciding between cities? Compare them all in our guide to the best city passes in Europe in 2026.
More on the Seville City Pass & Nearby Cities
Dig deeper into Seville: is the seville city pass worth it · seville city pass price 2026.
Comparing other destinations? See the best city passes in Europe, or compare Barcelona city pass · Madrid city pass · Valencia city pass.
See all passes in this country: city passes in Spain.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Seville City Pass worth it?
Yes, for most first-time visitors who plan to visit both the Real Alcázar and the Seville Cathedral and use the hop-on hop-off bus. You save at least €12.50 compared to buying those three separately at 2026 prices. The pass loses value if you skip the bus or either monument.
Does the pass include the Giralda tower?
Yes, the Giralda bell tower is included within the Cathedral ticket in every Seville pass. You access it from inside the Cathedral. Allow 45 minutes for the tower climb on top of your Cathedral visit time.
How do I receive my Seville Pass?
The pass is delivered instantly to your email as a digital QR code after purchase. You show it on your smartphone at each attraction entrance. There is no physical card to collect and no tourist office visit required.
Is there a 72-hour Seville tourist card?
There is no single all-in-one 72-hour card covering all transport and attractions in Seville. The "72-hour" references you see in search results typically describe the three-day TUSSAM transport add-on available with the Sevilla Digital Card — it is a transport option, not a standalone monument pass.
Can I cancel the Seville Pass?
Yes. Tiqets (the main seller) offers free cancellation up to 24 hours before your first attraction visit. Always confirm the exact cancellation conditions on the booking page for your specific dates, as terms can vary by season.
Does the Seville Pass include public transport?
The standard Seville Pass (Tiqets) does not include TUSSAM buses or the Metro. It includes only the 24-hour hop-on hop-off tourist bus. The Sevilla Digital Card offers an optional three-day TUSSAM transport add-on. For most visitors, TUSSAM buses now accept contactless card payment, making a separate transport card unnecessary.
The best seville city pass for most first-time visitors is the Seville Pass via Tiqets at €48 — it combines the two UNESCO monuments, the hop-on hop-off bus, and an audio guide into one digital purchase that saves you at least €12.50 over individual tickets. Book your Alcázar time slot as early as possible during peak season, use the bus on day one for orientation, and take the cathedral climb in the morning when the light is best. If you are traveling on a budget or skipping the bus, book the Alcázar and Cathedral directly for €28.50 per person and tap-and-go the TUSSAM buses. Either way, pre-booking a timed entry slot is non-negotiable at Seville's most visited monuments.
Free guide: Is the City Pass Worth It?
Our quick-decision checklist for European city passes — the value math, what to watch for in the fine print, and when paying per attraction beats the pass.
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