Skip to main content
Granada · Centro & Realejo

Cafetería Alhambra

A classic cafe on Plaza de Bib-Rambla serving churros con chocolate, coffee, and pastries since 1930.

Cafetería Alhambra, Granada · Centro & Realejo
Category
Cafe
Duration
30 minutes
Best Time
Morning
Entry
€€
Rating
4.0 (6,852)
The place

About Cafetería Alhambra

A classic cafe on Plaza de Bib-Rambla serving churros con chocolate, coffee, and pastries since 1930. The large terrace overlooks the fountain and flower stalls. Churros cost EUR 4 for a portion with thick hot chocolate for dipping.

Book ahead

Book Tickets

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The place

Getting there

Address
Pl. de Bib-Rambla, 27, Centro, 18001 Granada, Spain
Neighborhood
Centro & Realejo
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Come at 9 AM when the churros are freshest and before the plaza fills with tour groups.

Plan for about 30 minutes. Morning visits are typically less crowded.

Cafetería Alhambra is in the Centro & Realejo neighborhood of Granada. The address is Pl. de Bib-Rambla, 27, Centro, 18001 Granada, Spain. The area is well-served by metro.

Morning visits, especially early, mean fewer crowds and better light for photos. Weekdays are significantly quieter than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Parts are outdoors, so bring a light layer.

Around the corner

Nearby in Centro & Realejo

Explore all →
Free Tapas Bar Hopping in Granada
Experience

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.

2-3 hoursExplore
Corral del Carbón
Landmark

Corral del Carbón

Corral del Carbón is Spain's only surviving caravanserai, a 14th-century Nasrid warehouse where merchants stored goods and slept with their animals during trading journeys. You'll walk through a stunning horseshoe-arched entrance into a rectangular courtyard surrounded by two-story galleries with wooden balconies. The building shows you exactly how medieval Islamic commerce worked: animals and goods stayed on the ground floor while merchants slept upstairs. The visit feels like stepping into a medieval trading post that somehow survived Granada's Christian conquest in 1492. The courtyard stays cool even on hot days, and you can climb wooden stairs to the upper galleries for a bird's eye view of the stone-paved central area. It's remarkably quiet despite being 100 meters from Granada Cathedral, and you'll often have the place to yourself. The Alhambra orchestra offices occupy part of the building now, so you might hear musicians practicing. Most tourists walk right past this place because it looks unremarkable from the street. Entry is completely free, making it Granada's best value alongside the Alhambra views. Don't expect detailed explanations inside: there's minimal signage, so read up beforehand or you'll miss the historical significance. Skip it if you're rushing between major sights, but it's perfect for a quiet 10-minute break from Granada's crowded center.

15 minutesExplore
More on Granada

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Granada?

Let DAIZ plan your Granada days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Granada tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Granada trip