Museo Cuevas del Sacromonte
This hilltop museum recreates authentic Roma cave dwellings that housed Sacromonte's Gitano community for centuries.
About Museo Cuevas del Sacromonte
This hilltop museum recreates authentic Roma cave dwellings that housed Sacromonte's Gitano community for centuries. You'll walk through 10 reconstructed caves filled with period furniture, traditional tools, and domestic artifacts that show how families actually lived in these whitewashed spaces carved into the hillside. The ethnographic displays explain flamenco's origins, metalworking traditions, and the social dynamics of cave neighborhoods, while panoramic terraces offer sweeping views across Granada's red rooftops to the Sierra Nevada.
The visit flows naturally through interconnected cave rooms, each themed around different aspects of Sacromonte life: kitchens with ceramic cookware, bedrooms with iron beds, workshops displaying blacksmith tools and wicker baskets. The caves stay refreshingly cool even in summer, and the whitewashed walls create an almost mystical atmosphere. Detailed Spanish and English explanations accompany each room, though the free guided tours bring the displays to life with stories about specific families and cave construction techniques.
Most guides oversell this as essential Granada viewing, but it's genuinely worthwhile if you're curious about Roma culture or cave architecture. The €5 admission feels reasonable for 90 minutes of exploring, though the gift shop prices are inflated. Skip the ceramic demonstrations (they're brief and not particularly engaging) and focus your time on the living spaces and the panoramic terrace, which offers the best photography opportunities over the Albaicín and Alhambra.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.




