More than half the visitors who get turned away from the Alhambra failed at the same step: they assumed they could buy a ticket on the day. The Alhambra caps daily entry at around 6,600 visitors and the Nasrid Palaces are subdivided into 30-minute timed slots that sell out months in advance. This is the post we wish someone had handed us before we booked. Read it before you choose your travel dates.
Most major European monuments either let walk-ins through with a 30-minute queue or release tickets a few weeks ahead. The Alhambra does neither. UNESCO conservation rules cap the daily total. The Nasrid Palaces — the centrepiece — accept visitors in 30-minute waves of about 300 people each, and Spanish tourism has roughly doubled since 2019. The result: spring weekends sell out within a few hours of release.
The good news: if you understand the system, getting a ticket is straightforward. The system just doesn't forgive improvisation.
The official booking system releases tickets exactly 90 days before the visit date, at 08:00 Spanish time (Europe/Madrid timezone). That's CET in winter (UTC+1) and CEST in summer (UTC+2).
The only official site is tickets.alhambra-patronato.es. Bookmark it directly. Many search results for "Alhambra tickets" lead to lookalike reseller sites that charge a 30–80% markup or — worse — sell tickets that won't work at the gate (more on this below).
At 08:00 Madrid time, the new date opens. For Saturday/Sunday slots in April–June or September–October, expect the most popular Nasrid Palaces timeslots (morning entries 09:00–11:30) to be gone within 2–4 hours. Weekday tickets last longer — sometimes days. Off-season (November, January, February) you can usually book a few weeks ahead with no drama.
The Alhambra sells six different ticket types. Pick the wrong one and you'll either pay too much or miss the part of the complex you actually wanted to see.
| Ticket Type | Price (€) | Includes Nasrid Palaces? | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| General | 19.09 | ✓ Yes (timed slot) | First-time visitors. This is the default — what 90% of travelers want. |
| Gardens, Generalife & Alcazaba | 10.61 | ✗ No | Repeat visitors or anyone who saw the Nasrid Palaces last time. Still gets you onto the most beautiful gardens in Spain. |
| Night Visit — Nasrid Palaces | 10.61 | ✓ Nasrid only | The atmospheric option: palaces lit at night, far fewer crowds. Tuesday–Saturday only, ~10pm slot. |
| Night Visit — Gardens | 7.42 | ✗ No | Friday and Saturday only, late spring/summer. The gardens are floodlit and largely empty. |
| Dobla de Oro (General) | 27.57 | ✓ Yes | Combines Alhambra General + 6 Moorish monuments in the Albaicín (the Bañuelo, Dar al-Horra, etc.). Worth it if you have a full day. |
| Experiences (guided / behind-the-scenes) | varies | varies | Niche tours, often released last. Skip on a first visit. |
If your trip is less than 90 days away, you've already missed the official release for your dates. Skip to the "Plan B" section below. Otherwise, identify the exact date you want to be at the Alhambra.
Subtract 90 days from your visit date. That's the day tickets drop. The release happens at 08:00 Europe/Madrid time. Use a phone calendar with explicit timezone, or a site like timeanddate.com to convert.
Open tickets.alhambra-patronato.es. Have your passport details ready (full name, document number — exactly as written on the passport). The site asks for these per visitor and you cannot proceed without them. Use a desktop or laptop if possible — mobile checkout is functional but slower under load.
Refresh the page. Select your date, then your ticket type (General). The system will then show available Nasrid Palaces timeslots — pick one. The earliest morning slots disappear first; don't waste 30 seconds debating between 09:30 and 10:00.
Card payment only. You'll receive a confirmation email with a PDF ticket containing a QR code. Save the PDF to your phone, your laptop, and your email — phone signal at the Alhambra entrance is unreliable.
If you're reading this less than 90 days before your trip and the date you want is already booked, here are the realistic options, ranked by reliability.
The official site genuinely does release cancellations and returned tickets — usually 7–14 days before any given visit date, and on the morning of the visit. Set a daily alarm; check at 08:00 Madrid time AND at random intervals. People cancel constantly.
Licensed tour operators hold a separate ticket allocation that the public booking system cannot see. Even when the official site says "sold out," tours often have inventory. The trade-off: you pay 2–3× the face value (typically €55–75 vs €19) and travel in a group of 15–25 with a guide. For many travelers this is actually a feature — Alhambra context is dense, and a good guide is worth the price.
A small number of tickets are released at the box office at 08:00 on the day of visit. You need to arrive at the Alhambra ticket office (not the entrance — different building) by 06:30, queue, and hope. This works in November–February. It almost never works April–October. Don't structure your trip around it.
The Alhambra refuses entry to roughly 1–2% of ticket holders. Almost all the rejections come down to four mistakes.
The ticket bears your full name as entered at booking. Security checks it against your passport or government ID. If you mistyped your name when booking, even by one letter, you can be refused. Same goes for buying for a friend with a different name. The fix at booking time: triple-check every character before paying.
Your Nasrid Palaces entry is a 30-minute window (e.g., "10:00–10:30"). Arrive after the window closes and you're locked out — there are no exceptions and no refunds. Plan to be at the Nasrid entrance (Palacios Nazaríes) 15 minutes before your slot opens, ideally even earlier. The walk from the main entrance takes 10–15 minutes.
Passport (non-EU) or national ID (EU citizens). A driver's license is NOT enough. A photo of your passport on your phone is NOT enough. Bring the physical document.
There are two: the Pabellón de Acceso (main entrance, at the top of the hill — this is where you go) and the Puerta del Vino (an internal gate further inside, sometimes confusingly used in Google Maps). Use the Alhambra's official directions, not a generic map pin.
Got your Alhambra ticket time? Let our planner build the rest of your trip around it.
Plan My Granada Trip →Licensed operators hold a separate inventory the public booking system can't see. Useful when the official site shows zero availability for your dates. Includes Nasrid Palaces entry plus a guide for context.
The Realejo and Albaicín neighbourhoods put you within a 15–20 minute walk of the entrance. The Parador de Granada inside the complex itself books up months ahead and is worth a stretch budget.