The Basque Country is Spain's most surprising region — and one of its greatest. It has the best food culture in the country (some would say in the world), a dramatic Atlantic coastline, a distinct language and identity that predate Spain itself, and two cities — San Sebastián and Bilbao — that punch well above their weight. Most visitors to Spain skip it entirely; those who come tend to return.
San Sebastián is, by almost any measure, one of the most beautiful small cities in Europe. It curves around the perfect horseshoe of La Concha bay, with the old town (Parte Vieja) at one end, the elegant Belle Époque resort at the centre, and Monte Urgull at the other. It has more Michelin-starred restaurants per capita than almost anywhere on earth. And it has pintxos.
Consistently voted one of the best city beaches in Europe — a perfect crescent of fine sand enclosed by two headlands, with calm, swimmable water even in summer. The promenade (Paseo de la Concha) is one of the great seafront walks in Spain: Belle Époque railings, the Santa Clara island in the middle of the bay, and the old casino building (now the town hall) at the western end. In July and August the beach is packed; early morning or September are the best times.
The medieval grid of streets behind the port is the pintxos heartland of the world. At evening aperitivo time, every bar along Calle Fermín Calbetón, Calle 31 de Agosto, and Plaza de la Constitución fills with locals drinking txakoli (a sharp, slightly sparkling local white wine) and eating pintxos from the counter displays. The etiquette: order a drink, eat whatever looks good on the counter, pay when you leave. Move between bars every 20–30 minutes. This is one of the world's great food rituals.
Monte Urgull rises directly behind the Parte Vieja — a 30-minute walk to the Christ statue at the summit, with views over the entire bay. Monte Igueldo on the western headland is accessed by a funicular (the amusement park at the top is charmingly dated) and has the most complete panoramic view of La Concha. Go at sunset.
Bilbao transformed itself in the 1990s from a declining industrial port to one of Europe's most talked-about cultural destinations — driven almost entirely by a single building.
Frank Gehry's titanium-clad building on the Nervión river is a genuine landmark of 20th-century architecture — the building that proved that architecture could regenerate a city. The permanent collection includes Richard Serra's enormous The Matter of Time sculptures (a room-sized installation of rusted steel curves that you walk through) and works by Koons, Bourgeois, and Basquiat. The exterior, especially at night and from the riverbank across the water, is extraordinary in itself. Even if you don't go in, the half-hour walk around the building is worth doing.
Bilbao's medieval old town — the Siete Calles (Seven Streets) — is compact, lively, and full of pintxos bars. The Mercado de la Ribera (Europe's largest covered market) is excellent for breakfast and ingredients. The Plaza Nueva is the classic afternoon-sun terrace. Bilbao's Casco Viejo is less polished than San Sebastián's Parte Vieja but more local and significantly cheaper.
The Rioja wine region begins just south of the Basque Country — the Rioja Alavesa subzone (technically within the Basque Country's Álava province) produces some of the most acclaimed wine in the region. The village of Laguardia is extraordinarily well-preserved medieval, perched on a hill above vineyards. Several major bodegas offer tours and tastings: Bodegas Ysios (the building alone, by architect Santiago Calatrava, is worth seeing), Marqués de Riscal (the Frank Gehry hotel and winery), and dozens of smaller producers. This is a half-day or full-day trip from either city.
The small fishing village of Getaria, 25km west of San Sebastián, is the birthplace of navigator Juan Sebastián Elcano (the man who completed Magellan's circumnavigation) and fashion designer Cristóbal Balenciaga. It's also the home of txakoli wine and the best grilled fish on the coast. The beachside restaurants grilling whole sea bass and turbot over open wood fires are a Basque institution — lunch here is a high point of any trip.
The Basque coast west of Bilbao has some of the best surf in Europe. Mundaka, in the Urdaibai Biosphere Reserve, produces a left-hand barrel wave considered one of the most perfect in the world. The surrounding estuary is beautiful regardless of the surf — medieval churches, fishing villages, and green hills running to the sea.
Pintxos (the Basque equivalent of tapas) are typically small pieces of bread with toppings — often anchovy, crab, salt cod, jamón, cheese — served at the bar. The quality in San Sebastián is extraordinarily high; even the humblest bar does things that would be considered fine dining elsewhere. Don't fill up at the first bar you visit.
The local wine — a sharp, low-alcohol, slightly sparkling white made from Hondarribia Zuri grapes — is the perfect match for pintxos. Traditionally poured from a height to aerate it (the theatrical splash from bottle to glass is a genuine technique, not just performance). It's local, distinctive, and not very good with rich food — for the white wine that goes with Basque cuisine, ask for Rioja blanco or Albariño.
San Sebastián and Bilbao are 100km apart on the A-8 motorway (1 hour, €8 toll). Both cities have good public transport internally; walking covers most of what you need in San Sebastián's centre. Bilbao has an excellent metro. For Rioja and the coastal villages, a car is essential.
The Basque Country is the wet corner of Spain — it receives more rain than anywhere else in the country. This is why it's so green. July and August are the best months: warm (22–26°C), mostly dry, and the sea is swimmable. Spring and autumn can be beautiful between showers. The beaches are magnificent in September, largely crowd-free. Don't come in November expecting Andalusian sunshine.
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