Skip to main content
San Sebastian · Monte Urgull & Port

Paseo Nuevo

Paseo Nuevo is San Sebastian's wildest waterfront walk, a concrete promenade that hugs the rocky base of Monte Urgull where the Atlantic meets the city head-on.

Paseo Nuevo, San Sebastian · Monte Urgull & Port
Category
Viewpoint
Duration
45 minutes
Best Time
Afternoon
Entry
The place

About Paseo Nuevo

Paseo Nuevo is San Sebastian's wildest waterfront walk, a concrete promenade that hugs the rocky base of Monte Urgull where the Atlantic meets the city head-on. You'll walk along massive seawalls built to absorb the ocean's punishment, and when conditions are right, waves explode over the barriers in spectacular displays that'll soak you if you're not paying attention. The 800-meter path connects the fishing port to Zurriola Beach, giving you front-row seats to the raw power of the Cantabrian Sea.

The walk feels completely different from the genteel curve of La Concha Bay. Here you're exposed to the elements, with salt spray in the air and the constant sound of waves hammering stone. When swells are up, locals gather to watch the show as water crashes over the walkway in dramatic bursts. The path is wide enough for joggers and cyclists, but everyone stops when a big set rolls in. You'll pass small rocky coves where brave swimmers take the plunge and fishermen cast lines into the churning water.

Most guides don't mention that this walk is completely weather dependent. On calm days it's pleasant but unremarkable, just another seafront stroll. You want some wave action for the real experience, but not so much that it's dangerous. The stretch nearest the port offers the best wave-watching spots, while the section approaching Zurriola gets tamer. Skip it entirely if there are storm warnings, the waves here can be genuinely hazardous and the city sometimes closes sections during rough weather.

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
Pasealeku Berria, 20003 Donostia / San Sebastián, Gipuzkoa, Spain
Neighborhood
Monte Urgull & Port
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Start from the port end near the aquarium where the waves hit hardest and the seawall is most dramatic, then work your way toward Zurriola Beach

Most visitors come during dead calm conditions and wonder what the fuss is about, check the surf forecast and aim for 1-2 meter swells for the best show without danger

The concrete benches about halfway along give you the perfect vantage point to watch waves crash while staying dry, locals know to sit here during the evening paseo when the light is best

Plan for about 45 minutes.

Paseo Nuevo is in the Monte Urgull & Port neighborhood of San Sebastian. The address is Pasealeku Berria, 20003 Donostia / San Sebastián, Gipuzkoa, Spain. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Check the weather forecast and dress in layers, especially in shoulder seasons.

Around the corner

Nearby in Monte Urgull & Port

Explore all →
Constitución Plaza
Landmark

Constitución Plaza

Constitución Plaza is the beating heart of San Sebastian's old town, a perfectly symmetrical square that started life as a bullring in 1817. You'll find yourself surrounded by elegant four-story buildings with pale yellow facades and continuous arcades at street level. The real charm is looking up: every single balcony still bears its original number (1 through 64), marking where spectators once paid to watch bullfights below. The atmosphere shifts dramatically throughout the day. Mornings bring a calm, almost residential feel as locals grab coffee under the arcades and elderly men read newspapers on benches. By evening, the terraces fill with pintxo hoppers and the square becomes animated with conversation spilling out from Bar Ganbara and other surrounding spots. The acoustics are remarkable: conversations echo off the enclosed walls, creating an intimate amphitheater effect. Most guides oversell this as a major destination, but it's really best appreciated as a pause between pintxo bars rather than a standalone attraction. The cafés here charge tourist prices (€3-4 for a cortado versus €1.50 elsewhere), so grab your drink from the arcade bars and sit on the free benches instead. Don't expect any shops or major activity, it's essentially a very pretty transit hub for exploring Parte Vieja.

30 minutesExplore
Pintxo Bar Crawl in Parte Vieja
Experience

Pintxo Bar Crawl in Parte Vieja

The Parte Vieja (Old Town) of San Sebastian is the densest concentration of pintxo bars in the world. A pintxo (pronounced "pincho") is a small portion of food served on a slice of bread or a skewer, arranged on the bar counter, and taken by hand. You eat what you want, keep track of your toothpicks, and pay at the end. A single pintxo costs EUR 2.50-4. A txakoli (the local Basque sparkling white wine, poured from height to aerate it and increase the bubble effect) costs EUR 3. An evening of bar-hopping through the Parte Vieja hitting 5-6 bars, eating 2-3 pintxos and a drink at each, costs EUR 20-35 and constitutes one of the best meals in Europe. The essential bars: Bar Nestor (Calle de la Pescaderia 11, the tortilla de patata, made to order and served at 1 PM and 8 PM only, get there 15 minutes early to put your name on the list, the queue is visible from the street), Gandarias (Calle 31 de Agosto 23, the steak pintxo and the anchovy on bread), La Cuchara de San Telmo (Calle 31 de Agosto 28, hot pintxos cooked to order at the counter rather than pre-prepared, the slow-cooked veal cheek and the foie with apple jam), A Fuego Negro (Calle 31 de Agosto 31, modern experimental pintxos, the gin and tonic prepared tableside).

2-3 hoursExplore
Castillo de la Mota
Landmark

Castillo de la Mota

This 12th-century fortress sits atop Monte Urgull like a stone crown, offering the best panoramic views in San Sebastián without the tourist hordes of other viewpoints. You'll explore thick medieval walls, check out military exhibits in the old barracks, and stand beneath the Cristo de la Mota statue that watches over the bay. The real draw isn't the castle itself but what you see from it: La Concha's perfect crescent, the old town's terracotta maze, and the wild Basque coastline stretching toward France. The 20-minute uphill walk through pine forests feels like a proper adventure, passing old cannons and bunkers that most people barely notice. Inside the castle grounds, you can wander freely along the ramparts and peek into the small military museum (though it's pretty basic). The atmosphere is peaceful and contemplative, especially when clouds roll in from the Atlantic and you're literally above the city watching life unfold below. Most guides don't mention that the castle itself is underwhelming compared to the journey and views. Skip the small museum unless you're really into Basque military history, and don't bother with the Cristo statue up close. Focus your time on the southeastern ramparts for the money shot over La Concha, and bring water since there's nothing to buy up there. The walk down takes 15 minutes if you're not stopping for photos.

1-2 hoursExplore
Alderdi Eder parkea
Park & Garden

Alderdi Eder parkea

Alderdi Eder is San Sebastian's formal front garden, a pristine rectangle of manicured lawns and flower beds sitting between the old town and La Concha beach. You'll find geometric patterns of seasonal blooms, towering tamarind trees that provide natural air conditioning, and three ornate fountains that actually work. The park serves as the city's living room, flanked by the neoclassical Town Hall on one side and the belle époque casino on the other. The atmosphere here shifts throughout the day from morning joggers cutting through to reach the beach, to afternoon families letting kids run on the grass while parents claim shaded benches. The fountains provide white noise that drowns out traffic, and the mature trees create cool pockets even in summer heat. You'll notice locals treating this as their backyard, reading newspapers on benches or having quiet conversations while tourists rush past toward La Concha. Most guides make this sound grander than it is. It's lovely but genuinely small, maybe 10 minutes to walk the perimeter slowly. The real value is as a breather between beach time and exploring the old town, not a destination itself. Spring flower displays are genuinely spectacular, but in winter it's just well kept grass. Skip it if you're short on time, the beach views are better from the promenade anyway.

30 minutesExplore
Basílica de Santa María del Coro
Cultural Site

Basílica de Santa María del Coro

The Basílica de Santa María del Coro stands as San Sebastián's most impressive Baroque church, built in the mid-18th century on the site of a much older sanctuary. You'll find it right in the heart of the Parte Vieja, its imposing facade carved with detailed scenes of Saint Sebastian's martyrdom that took local artisans decades to complete. Inside, the main attraction is the revered statue of Santa María del Coro, the city's patron saint, surrounded by elaborate gilded altarpieces that represent the finest examples of Basque religious craftsmanship. Walking into the basilica feels like stepping from the narrow medieval streets into a golden jewel box. The interior is surprisingly intimate despite its grandeur, with afternoon light filtering through stained glass windows and illuminating the intricate woodwork. You'll hear the quiet murmur of locals lighting candles and saying prayers, creating an atmosphere that's genuinely peaceful rather than touristy. The baroque details are everywhere: twisted columns, cherub faces, and gold leaf that catches the light from every angle. Most guidebooks oversell this as a major attraction when it's really a lovely 15-minute stop while exploring the old town. The exterior is more impressive than the interior, so don't feel obligated to go inside unless you're interested in religious art. It's completely free to enter, but they appreciate small donations. Skip the crypt unless you're particularly interested in local history, it's not much to see down there.

20-30 minutesExplore
More on San Sebastian

From the blog

View all →
Ready for San Sebastian?

Let DAIZ plan your San Sebastian 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 San Sebastian tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your San Sebastian trip