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Granada · Centro & Realejo

Bar Los Manueles

A traditional tapas bar on Calle Recogidas with bullfighting posters covering every wall and ceiling.

Bar Los Manueles, Granada · Centro & Realejo
Category
Restaurant
Duration
1 hour
Best Time
Evening
Entry
Rating
4.3 (19,477)
The place

About Bar Los Manueles

A traditional tapas bar on Calle Recogidas with bullfighting posters covering every wall and ceiling. Free tapas include classic dishes like migas, habas con jamon, and patatas a lo pobre. Three locations across Granada, but this original has the most atmosphere.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Reyes Católicos, 61, Centro, 18010 Granada, Spain
Neighborhood
Centro & Realejo
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Ask for habas con jamon if it's spring (March to June) - they use fresh broad beans instead of frozen.

Plan for about 1 hour. Evening visits offer a different atmosphere with softer light.

Bar Los Manueles is in the Centro & Realejo neighborhood of Granada. The address is Reyes Católicos, 61, Centro, 18010 Granada, Spain. The area is well-served by metro.

Evening visits offer a unique atmosphere. The light is softer, crowds thin out, and the experience feels more intimate.

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Free Tapas Bar Hopping in Granada

Granada remains the last Spanish city where proper free tapas automatically accompany every drink order, turning bar hopping into a full dinner experience. Order a beer for EUR 2.50 and a real plate arrives: croquetas, grilled prawns, mini paellas, or whatever the kitchen prepared that day. Work through 5-6 bars over an evening and you'll spend EUR 12-15 while getting completely satisfied on substantial portions. The ritual feels authentically Spanish once you grasp the rhythm: order your drink, accept whatever tapa appears within minutes, eat and chat, then move to the next bar for a different drink and completely different food. Calle Navas buzzes with energy but attracts tourists who get basic bread with tomato. The real magic happens in Realejo neighborhood south of the Cathedral, where locals demand generous portions and kitchens deliver accordingly. Most tourists cluster around Plaza Nueva and wonder why the system feels disappointing. The strategy that works: follow Spanish voices, not English ones, and never ask what's coming or try to modify your tapa. Two drinks maximum per bar, then move on for variety. Bars with English menus serve tourist portions, while Spanish-only spots in Realejo double the size and quality because locals won't tolerate less.

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Corral del Carbón

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