Europe's Hardest Ticket
Alhambra Tickets 2026: Prices, How to Book When Sold Out
Granada's top attraction sells out 2-3 months ahead in peak season. Here is how to get a slot anyway.
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Why Alhambra Tickets Are Hard to Get
Sells Out 2-3 Months Ahead
Peak season (Apr-Oct) the Nasrid Palaces regularly sell out 8-12 weeks before arrival. Tickets are released on a rolling basis roughly 3 months out, so book as soon as your dates are confirmed or you will be chasing resellers at a premium.
Nasrid Palaces Need Timed Entry
Your ticket has a 30-minute window printed on it. Arrive 15 minutes early at the Nasrid Palaces entrance (not the main gate, which is a 10-minute walk away). Miss the window and staff will not let you in, no refunds, no exceptions.
Night Visits Book Separately
The night visit to the Nasrid Palaces (€10) and Generalife Gardens (€8) are sold as separate tickets and sell out fastest. Cheapest, most atmospheric way to see the palace without daytime crowds, but book 4+ months ahead in summer.
Real 2026 Alhambra Ticket Prices
Official prices from the Patronato de la Alhambra. USD is rough conversion and varies with your card's FX rate.
| Ticket Type | EUR | USD | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| General Ticket (Alhambra + Nasrid Palaces + Generalife) | €19 | ($21) | The complete experience, book first |
| Nasrid Palaces Only (PM 2pm+) | €16 | ($17) | Half-price afternoon entry, legit workaround |
| Gardens + Generalife Only | €10 | ($11) | No Nasrid Palaces included |
| Dobla de Oro (combo Granada Moorish houses) | €27 | ($29) | Adds 6 Moorish houses in the Albaicin |
| Night Visit Nasrid Palaces | €10 | ($11) | Most atmospheric, sells out fastest |
| Night Visit Generalife Gardens | €8 | ($9) | Gardens only, quieter slots available |
| Under-12 (free ticket required) | FREE | (FREE) | Still need to reserve a named ticket |
| Reduced 12-15 | €10-13 | ($11-14) | Varies by ticket type |
| Senior 65+ | €13 | ($14) | Only on official Patronato site |
| Guided Tour (2.5h reseller) | €45-55 | ($49-60) | Skip-line + English guide + context |
Where to Book Alhambra Tickets
Start with the official Patronato for the cheapest base price. Switch to resellers the moment it shows sold out.
GetYourGuide
Best When Official Sells Out
- ✓Usually has inventory when the official Patronato site is sold out
- ✓English-speaking customer support, 24/7 chat
- ✓Free cancellation up to 24 hours before your slot
- ✓Skip-line + English guide combos clearly priced
Viator
Tours + Skip-Line Combos
- ✓TripAdvisor-owned with thousands of verified reviews
- ✓30+ Alhambra tour listings with English guides
- ✓Strong choice for private and small-group tours
- ✓Skip-line access included in most guided options
Klook
Mobile-First Asian Market
- ✓Instant ticket confirmation in the app
- ✓Strong option for travelers from Asia and Oceania
- ✓Mobile QR tickets, no printing required
- ✓Occasional promo codes on bundled experiences
Alhambra Patronato (Official)
Cheapest Base + Fastest Release
- ✓Official base price at €19, no markup
- ✓First to release new inventory 3 months out
- ✓Tickets are ID-matched (must bring passport on the day)
- ✓Website is slow and often sells out fast, refresh 8am CET
Booking Strategy When Sold Out
- 1
3 months out: hit the official Patronato daily
Set a reminder for exactly 90 days before your visit and check tickets.alhambra-patronato.es at 8am CET. This is when new dates unlock on a rolling basis at the base €19 price.
- 2
If sold out on official: switch to resellers
Jump to GetYourGuide and Viator straight away. They hold allocation that the official site does not always show, and you will often find slots for sold-out dates at a €5-15 markup.
- 3
Last resort: book a guided tour
When both the official site and aggregators show sold out, a guided tour (€45-55) usually still has access because guides hold reserved group slots. You pay more but get skip-line entry + context.
- 4
AVOID street vendors in Granada
People near Plaza Nueva and along the Cuesta de Gomerez offering cheap Alhambra tickets are running scams. Tickets are named and ID-matched, so a resold ticket will be rejected at the gate.
Nasrid Palaces: the Timed-Entry Trap
30-minute window, printed on your ticket
Your ticket shows a specific 30-minute window for Nasrid Palaces entry. This is the only part of the Alhambra that enforces timed entry. The Alcazaba fortress and Generalife gardens are open access for the full day.
Arrive 15 minutes early, at the right gate
The Nasrid Palaces have their own entrance, roughly a 10-minute walk from the main Alhambra gate (Puerta del Generalife). Walk there immediately after entering. Miss the window and you lose the Nasrid visit entirely, with no refund.
Non-transferable and ID-matched
Tickets are printed with your full name and passport or ID number. Staff scan the ticket, then check your ID against it. You cannot give an unused ticket to a friend. This is why the secondary market for Alhambra tickets does not work.
Night Visits Explained
Nasrid Palaces at Night
€10 ($11)
The most atmospheric way to see the Alhambra. Crowds drop by 70%, the palace is lit in warm amber, and the Court of the Lions feels completely different. Offered Tue-Sat.
Books out fastest, aim for 4+ months ahead in summer.
Generalife Gardens at Night
€8 ($9)
Quieter alternative that opens only on select dates in summer and autumn. You get the gardens and summer palace lit up, but no Nasrid Palace access. Pair it with a morning visit the next day.
Shorter season and fewer slots, but easier to score than Nasrid night.
Half-Price Afternoon Nasrid Ticket
From 2pm onwards in summer (and 2pm onwards year-round, with earlier cutoffs in winter), the Patronato sells a Nasrid-only ticket at €16. You still get the full Nasrid Palaces experience, which is what most travelers come for.
Trade-off: You lose the Alcazaba fortress and the Generalife gardens. If you just want to see the Court of the Lions and Hall of the Ambassadors, this is the cheapest legitimate way in.
Bonus: Afternoon slots are also less contested than 8:30am slots, so availability is often better 4-6 weeks out when peak morning slots are gone.
Best Time to Visit Alhambra
May + September
Ideal temperature 22-28°C, gardens in bloom, still very crowded
July + August
Hot 35-40°C, aim for 8:30am slot or evening night visit only
November to February
Cheap, wide availability, cold marble mornings, snowy Sierra Nevada backdrop
Morning 8:30am slot
Cooler temps and best Nasrid Palace interior light for photos
Afternoon 2pm+
Qualifies for the €16 half-price Nasrid ticket
Night visit
Most atmospheric, shortest crowds, palace lit in warm light
Getting There from Granada Center
Bus C3 or C4 from Plaza Nueva (recommended)
The C3 microbus leaves Plaza Isabel la Catolica every 10 minutes, costs €1.40, and drops you at the main Alhambra entrance in about 12 minutes. The C4 is slower but also works. Buy a single ticket or a Credibus card for multi-use.
Walking up Cuesta de Gomerez (20-25 minutes)
Scenic but steep cobblestone climb through a wooded park from Plaza Nueva. Pleasant in spring and autumn, brutal in July-August afternoon heat. Skip if you have mobility issues or bad knees.
Taxi (€8-12)
Fine if you are running late for your Nasrid slot. Drops you at the upper parking area near the main gate, 5-minute walk to the Nasrid entrance. Uber is not widely available in Granada but Cabify works.
What to Bring
Passport or ID
Must match the name on your ticket, non-negotiable.
Water bottle
Refill at fountains, very limited shop options inside.
Light jacket
Nasrid Palaces marble stays cold even in summer.
Good walking shoes
2-3 hours on uneven cobblestones, avoid new shoes.
Audio guide (€5 extra)
Highly recommended if you are not on a guided tour.
Hat + sunscreen (summer)
Alcazaba and Generalife have minimal shade.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 1Showing up without the passport or ID used at booking, which triggers an automatic rejection at the Nasrid Palaces gate.
- 2Missing the 30-minute Nasrid Palaces timed window because you arrived at the wrong gate (main entrance is 10 minutes from Nasrid entrance).
- 3Buying the Gardens + Generalife ticket thinking it includes the Nasrid Palaces. It does not, and they are a completely separate €16 ticket.
- 4Buying tickets from street vendors near Plaza Nueva or the Cuesta de Gomerez. These are either fake or named to someone else.
- 5Underestimating the hill walk from Plaza Nueva, which is 20-25 minutes uphill on cobblestones, brutal in July.
- 6Booking a hotel far from the city center without knowing about the C3 microbus, which is the only cheap way up the hill.
Combining with Sacromonte + Flamenco
Morning Alhambra + evening Sacromonte flamenco
If you have the 8:30am or 10am Nasrid slot, you are out by noon. Lunch in the Albaicin with Alhambra views, rest in the afternoon, then head to Sacromonte for a cave-venue flamenco show at 8pm or 10pm. Most zambras include dinner and cost €30-45.
Afternoon Alhambra + late dinner
With the €16 half-price 2pm Nasrid ticket, you finish around 5-6pm and can walk down through the Albaicin at golden hour, which is a world-class sunset photo spot. Dinner after 9pm is the local norm.
Night visit + early morning Generalife
If you scored the Nasrid night visit, book a Generalife-only Gardens ticket for the next morning at €10. You cover both the interior and gardens experience at different times of day without paying for the €19 General Ticket twice.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much are Alhambra tickets in 2026?+
The General Ticket covering the Nasrid Palaces, Alcazaba and Generalife costs €19 for adults on the official Patronato site. Gardens-only is €10, the afternoon half-price Nasrid ticket is €16, night visits are €8-10, and guided tours through GetYourGuide or Viator run €45-55. Under-12s are free but still need a named ticket.
How far in advance should I book Alhambra tickets?+
Book at least 2-3 months in advance for April through October. Tickets are released on a rolling basis roughly 90 days out on the official site. For night visits and peak summer dates, aim for 4 months ahead. In winter (November to February) you can often book a week out, though not same-day.
What if Alhambra tickets are sold out?+
When the official Patronato site shows sold out, check GetYourGuide, Viator and Klook immediately. Resellers hold allocation that is not visible on the official site and often have slots available at a €5-15 markup. If those are also sold out, a guided tour (€45-55) almost always has access because guides reserve group slots separately.
Do I need ID to enter the Alhambra?+
Yes. All Alhambra tickets are named and ID-matched. You must bring the passport or ID document you used at booking. Staff check IDs at the Nasrid Palaces entrance and will refuse entry if the name does not match, with no refund. This is why street-vendor tickets (named to someone else) do not work.
What is the difference between Nasrid Palaces and Generalife?+
The Nasrid Palaces are the stunning 14th-century Moorish royal residence with the Court of the Lions, Comares Palace and Hall of the Ambassadors. The Generalife is the separate summer gardens and villa 10 minutes walk up the hill. The General Ticket covers both, but there are also cheaper Gardens-only (€10) and half-price Nasrid-only (€16) tickets.
Is the Alhambra night visit worth it?+
For most travelers, yes. The Nasrid Palaces night visit (€10) shows the palace lit in warm amber with far smaller crowds than daytime, and the acoustics are haunting. You do not see the exterior views as well and the Generalife is not included, so a night visit is best as a second visit or pair it with a morning Gardens ticket the next day.
Is the €16 afternoon half-price ticket worth it?+
If you are on a budget and do not mind seeing the palaces at 2pm+ in summer heat, yes. You get the full Nasrid Palaces experience at a €3 saving over the General Ticket, but you lose access to the Alcazaba fortress and Generalife gardens. It is also easier to book than morning slots because fewer tour groups compete for these windows.
Can I visit Alhambra with kids?+
Yes, and under-12s are free, but they still need a named ticket reserved at booking. The site involves 2-3 hours of walking on uneven cobblestones, so strollers are awkward. Bring water and a hat in summer. Older kids enjoy the Alcazaba fortress towers and the Gardens, while the Nasrid Palaces work better for ages 8+.
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