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San Sebastian · Parte Vieja

San Sebastian Pintxos and Txakoli Tour

Tour

San Sebastian Pintxos and Txakoli Tour, San Sebastian · Parte Vieja
Category
Tour
Duration
2h 45m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
€€€
Rating
5.0 (112)
The place

About San Sebastian Pintxos and Txakoli Tour

A guided pintxos tour with a local guide is the best way to navigate the Parte Vieja if you find standing at packed bars confusing or if you want context for what you are eating and drinking. A good guide knows the rotation: which bars have the best hot pintxos cooked to order versus the pre-prepared counter variety, when Bar Nestor's tortilla list opens, and which txakoli producers are worth asking about. Tours run EUR 70-95 per person with 5-6 bars, 3-4 pintxos at each, and a glass of txakoli or local wine at every stop. The guide pays for the food and drink: you tip at the end. Evening tours (7:30-8 PM start) align with the real eating habits of San Sebastian: the evening paseo, the pre-dinner pintxo round, and the streets filling with people who eat standing up and consider it dinner.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Terraza de Hotel Maria Cristina, Okendo Kalea, 1, bajo Acceso bajo, 20004 Donostia / San Sebastián, Gipuzkoa, Spain
Neighborhood
Parte Vieja
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Book the evening tour (7:30-8 PM): this is when the Parte Vieja is at its most atmospheric and the pintxo counters are freshest. EUR 70-95 all-inclusive. Do not eat before. Ask the guide the key question: which bar has the best tortilla this week. The answer changes based on who is making it.

Plan for about 2h 45m.

San Sebastian Pintxos and Txakoli Tour is in the Parte Vieja neighborhood of San Sebastian. The address is Terraza de Hotel Maria Cristina, Okendo Kalea, 1, bajo Acceso bajo, 20004 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. Parts are outdoors, so bring a light layer.

Around the corner

Nearby in Parte Vieja

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La Concha Beach
Beach

La Concha Beach

La Concha is a perfectly curved crescent of pale sand stretching between two green hills, with a small island floating in the middle of the bay like a postcard come to life. The water's bracingly cold but swimmable in summer, and the Belle Epoque promenade behind you feels like stepping into a 19th century novel. You'll spend hours here switching between swimming, sunbathing, and people watching as half the city treats this beach like their outdoor living room from June through September. The beach fills up in concentric circles: locals claim the prime spots facing the island by 9 AM, families spread out toward the western end where the water's shallower, and tourists cluster near the rental huts. The atmosphere shifts throughout the day from peaceful morning swims to afternoon family chaos to evening strolls along the illuminated promenade. You can take a small boat to Isla de Santa Clara for 4 EUR return, where you'll find the city's best photo angle and a surprisingly decent restaurant. Most guides won't tell you that the center gets uncomfortably packed by 11 AM in July and August, so arrive early or head to the western end near Ondarreta instead. Beach chair rental costs 12 to 15 EUR per day from the service huts, but honestly, most locals just bring towels. Skip the boat to the island unless you're desperate for Instagram shots, the beach itself is the real attraction here.

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Catedral del Buen Pastor
Cultural Site

Catedral del Buen Pastor

Catedral del Buen Pastor towers over San Sebastian with its 75-meter neo-Gothic spire, the tallest in the city. You'll find it just outside Parte Vieja in the Centro district, a five-minute walk from the old town's edge. The cathedral's most striking feature is its collection of stained glass windows that transform the interior into a kaleidoscope of colored light. Built in 1897, it's relatively young for a European cathedral but makes up for it with impressive scale and surprisingly peaceful acoustics. Stepping inside feels like entering a different world after the lively streets outside. The soaring vaulted ceilings and stone columns create natural quiet zones where locals come to sit and reflect. The afternoon light streaming through those famous windows creates constantly shifting patterns on the floor and walls. You'll notice the church isn't packed with tourists like some European cathedrals, giving you space to actually appreciate the architecture without crowds. Honestly, this isn't Spain's most spectacular cathedral, but it serves a purpose if you need 20 minutes of quiet between pintxos bars. The exterior is more impressive than the interior, so don't feel obligated to spend ages inside. Entry is free, which is refreshing compared to Barcelona or Seville's paid cathedral visits. Most people photograph it from the street and move on, which is probably the right call unless you're particularly drawn to neo-Gothic architecture.

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Mimo San Sebastián Cooking Class
Experience

Mimo San Sebastián Cooking Class

This isn't your typical tourist cooking class where you roll out pasta for Instagram. Mimo focuses exclusively on hot pintxos, the cooked-to-order bar snacks that separate real Basque cuisine from the cold stuff sitting on counters. You'll master three cornerstone techniques: the perfect tortilla de patatas with its creamy center, traditional croquetas with proper bechamel, and grilled prawns that actually taste like the sea. Each dish comes with wine pairings that make sense, not just whatever's open. The class happens in an actual residential kitchen, not some sterile cooking school setup. You're working alongside other food lovers, sleeves rolled up, while your instructor explains why temperature matters more than timing for tortilla and how to tell when croqueta batter is ready. The wine flows throughout, and you eat everything you make while it's still hot. The whole experience feels like cooking with friends who happen to know what they're doing. Most cooking classes in San Sebastian teach you dishes you'll never make at home. This one teaches techniques you'll actually use, especially if you plan to eat pintxos later. The €85 price includes all ingredients and wine, which is fair for three hours of hands-on instruction plus a proper meal. Skip the afternoon slot if you can, morning classes get better ingredients since they shop that day. Book directly through their website to avoid booking fees.

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