REVIEW · SEVILLE
Combo: Hop on hop off + Flamenco Show & Walking tours
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by INTURSAFE · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Three hits in one Seville day. This combo stacks a hop-on hop-off bus with audio, a classic flamenco night, and guided neighborhood walking so you can see more without over-planning.
I especially like the Pathe Theatre flamenco show in a proper theater setting, timed so you can match it to your evening plans. I also like that the Triana and Santa Cruz walking tours run in both English and Spanish, letting you pick the language that fits you best.
One key drawback to plan around: the walking tours and flamenco have set start times (Triana at 13:00, Santa Cruz at 16:00, flamenco at 17:30 or 19:30). On top of that, bus frequency shifts with the season, so check hours before you rely on last-minute rides.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- A 1-Day Sevilla Plan: Bus Sightseeing, Flamenco, and Two Neighborhood Walks
- Hop-On Hop-Off Routes: Monumental by Day and Romantic by Night
- Where to Start: Ticket Exchange at Torre del Oro and Smart Time Use
- The 14 Bus Stops That Help You Cover More Ground
- Pathe Theatre Flamenco: Pick 17:30 or 19:30 and Reserve Your Slot
- Triana at 13:00 and Santa Cruz at 16:00: Two Neighborhoods, Two Moods
- Joining It All Together: A Realistic Flow for One Busy Day
- Price and Value: Why $52 Works for a Mixed-Day Combo
- Practical Tips That Make the Day Feel Easy
- Who This Combo Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Combo?
- FAQ
- What’s included in this Sevilla combo?
- How long is the experience and where is it located?
- What do I need to do to use the hop-on hop-off bus?
- Where is the flamenco show and what time choices do I have?
- What are the walking tour times and meeting points?
- Are the tours available in English and Spanish?
- Is the service wheelchair accessible and are pets allowed?
Key highlights at a glance

- Two bus lines with 14 stops across major areas, so you can hop on and off without guessing routes.
- Audio guide included with multiple languages, making the sightseeing easier if you don’t speak Spanish.
- One 1-hour flamenco show at Pathe Theatre, with a choice of 17:30 or 19:30.
- Two guided neighborhood walks: Triana and Santa Cruz, both in English and Spanish.
- Clear meeting point for the walking tours at Postigo del Carbón Street, 4 in Seville.
- Wheelchair accessible experience, plus practical guidance like comfortable shoes and water.
A 1-Day Sevilla Plan: Bus Sightseeing, Flamenco, and Two Neighborhood Walks

This is a sensible way to experience Seville in a single day because it mixes three different styles of getting around: bus for broad coverage, walking tours for the human scale, and flamenco for the evening mood.
You’ll spend the day moving through key parts of the city using the hop-on hop-off bus, then you’ll switch to guided walking for Triana and Santa Cruz. Finish with a 1-hour flamenco show at Pathe Theatre.
The big win here is pacing. You don’t need to set up a full private itinerary, and you also don’t need to choose between seeing sights and experiencing the local performing arts.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville
Hop-On Hop-Off Routes: Monumental by Day and Romantic by Night

The bus part uses two different lines. One is described as Monumental, and the other is Romantic by night. That naming matters because it hints you might prefer different times of day depending on the vibe you want.
The service includes an audio guide onboard, and the audio supports several languages: English, French, German, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, and Portuguese. For a city where announcements and signage can move fast, this kind of audio support makes the bus feel less like a random loop and more like real sightseeing.
You also get 14 bus stops total on the routes, so you can build your day around where you want to stand, not just around what time the bus passes.
Where to Start: Ticket Exchange at Torre del Oro and Smart Time Use

Your bus ticket exchange point is practical and easy to remember: Stop 1 at Torre del Oro. The instruction is straightforward: exchange your ticket at the first stop.
After that, you can hop on and off at all the scheduled stops listed for the service. Since the walking tours and flamenco have fixed times, I recommend you use the bus early to get your bearings and position yourself near the later meeting points.
A good planning trick: think of the bus as your “reset button.” If you’re running a bit late, the bus gives you a fast way to move between major areas without needing to map everything in the moment.
The 14 Bus Stops That Help You Cover More Ground
Here’s the full stop list you’ll see for the bus route system:
Torre del Oro, Acuario, Plaza de América, Plaza de España, Universidad, Plaza de Cuba, Triana San Jacinto, Castilla Street, Cartuja, Isla Mágica, Macarena, Alameda de Hércules, Plaza del Duque, Plaza de Armas.
In practice, this kind of spread is useful because it touches multiple neighborhoods and city “centers” in one day. You can:
- Use stops like Plaza de España and Plaza del Duque when you want big open spaces.
- Use stops like Triana San Jacinto if you want to reduce walking stress before the Triana walking tour.
- Use stops like Plaza de Armas or Alameda de Hércules as flexible points for breaks, photos, or just catching your breath.
One more small but important note: the bus schedule and frequency depend on the season. The service window is listed as 10:00–18:00 in low season and 10:00–21:00 in high season, so build your day with that in mind.
Pathe Theatre Flamenco: Pick 17:30 or 19:30 and Reserve Your Slot

The flamenco show is the heart of this combo, and it’s clearly built around a specific theater address: Pathe Theatre, Cuna Street, 15.
It’s a 1-hour show featuring a Spanish dance company style of flamenco performance. The show is described as combining different flamenco styles, led by well-known dancers and presented as choreography.
The timing is the part you must lock in. You choose between:
- 17:30
- 19:30
Reservation is required by phone or WhatsApp at +34 681 948 360. So don’t treat flamenco as a “maybe.” Treat it like your anchor event.
Planning tip: if you pick 19:30, you’ll have more breathing room after the Santa Cruz walking tour (which begins at 16:00). If you pick 17:30, you’ll want to move quickly after the walk so you aren’t rushing across town.
Triana at 13:00 and Santa Cruz at 16:00: Two Neighborhoods, Two Moods

This walking tour pair is scheduled with a practical gap, and that matters. You’ll do Triana at 13:00 and Santa Cruz at 16:00.
Both tours run in English and Spanish, so you can select the language that fits you without feeling left out. The focus is on the neighborhoods’ most popular quarters, including small corners and alleyways—exactly the kind of stuff a bus can’t show you well.
Your meeting point for both walking tours is the same: Postigo del Carbón Street, 4 (Seville) at the Tourist Information Office.
A helpful way to think about the day:
- The 13:00 Triana walk works like your “city side character.” You’ll get local-feeling streets and historic neighborhood vibes on foot.
- The 16:00 Santa Cruz walk shifts you back into a different atmosphere. Santa Cruz is the area many people imagine when they think of old Seville street life.
Because you have a three-hour gap between them, the bus is your friend here. You can use it to rest, snack, or simply reposition without turning the day into a long marathon of walking.
Joining It All Together: A Realistic Flow for One Busy Day
With fixed times, you’ll get the smoothest day if you build a simple rhythm.
A sensible flow looks like this:
- Late morning: hop on the bus and use the audio guide to connect the dots. This is when you can decide which stops you want to return to.
- Before 13:00: use the bus to get close to the Triana walking tour start (the meeting point is Postigo del Carbón).
- 13:00 Triana walk: enjoy the neighborhood at walking speed.
- After the walk: use the bus to reposition until 16:00.
- 16:00 Santa Cruz walk: switch neighborhoods again and slow down for alleys and corners.
- Evening: go to flamenco at your chosen time, either 17:30 or 19:30.
You’ll notice the addresses line up nicely for an evening plan. The flamenco is at Cuna Street, 15, while your walking meeting point is at Postigo del Carbón Street, 4. That makes it easier to wrap the day up without complicated logistics.
Price and Value: Why $52 Works for a Mixed-Day Combo
At $52 per person, you’re paying for three separate experiences rolled into one day: bus sightseeing with audio, two guided neighborhood walks, and a 1-hour flamenco show.
That can be good value if you’d otherwise buy these pieces separately or spend time trying to coordinate them. The bus alone can save time because it cuts down on navigation, and the walking tours give you structure where self-guided exploring can feel random.
The flamenco show is the most “destination” portion here. Since it’s a dedicated 1-hour event at a real theater, it’s also the piece with the biggest emotional payoff. In other words: you’re not just collecting photos—you’re getting the performing arts hit.
The main value tradeoff is timing. Because you’re combining fixed tours and a timed show, you don’t have much room for major delays. If you love tight planning, this combo shines. If you hate schedules, you’ll need extra buffer.
Practical Tips That Make the Day Feel Easy
A few simple things will make a real difference:
- Comfortable shoes are a must. You’re doing at least two guided walking segments.
- Bring water, especially if you’re out during hotter hours.
- Wear comfortable clothes and protect your skin for the sun. Seville can feel intense in midday.
- Save your ticket during the bus service.
- If you need wheelchair access, the experience is listed as wheelchair accessible, which is a big plus for planning.
Also, check the bus timetable on the provider site before you lock in your morning. Since the frequency shifts by season, a plan that works in one month might need adjusting in another.
Who This Combo Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
This combo is a great match if you want:
- A one-day plan that mixes bus sightseeing with guided walking.
- Flamenco as a planned evening event, not an afterthought.
- Tours offered in English and Spanish.
It’s less ideal if:
- You’re the type who needs spontaneity and hates set start times.
- You’re likely to lose time getting around and you don’t want to think about the 13:00 and 16:00 windows.
If you’re traveling solo or as a couple and you like clear structure, the flow is easy to understand. If your group has mixed energy levels, the bus segments help you regroup between the walks.
Should You Book This Combo?
Book it if you want one organized day that hits three key Seville experiences: city highlights by bus, neighborhood wandering on foot, and a staged flamenco show at Pathe Theatre.
Skip or rethink it if you need a fully flexible schedule. The Triana and Santa Cruz tours start at set times, and the flamenco requires choosing 17:30 or 19:30 and reserving your slot.
If you do book, give yourself buffer time around the meeting point at Postigo del Carbón Street, 4. Then let the bus audio guide do its job: use it to learn what you’re seeing as you move, and save your walking time for the streets where the city feels real.
FAQ
What’s included in this Sevilla combo?
You get a hop-on hop-off bus with audio guide (2 routes and 14 stops), a 1-hour flamenco show, and guided walking tours of Santa Cruz and Triana (both English and Spanish).
How long is the experience and where is it located?
It’s listed as a 1-day experience in Andalusia, Spain, focused on Sevilla.
What do I need to do to use the hop-on hop-off bus?
Exchange your ticket at the first bus stop at Torre del Oro (Stop n. 1). Then you can hop on and off at the scheduled stops.
Where is the flamenco show and what time choices do I have?
The flamenco show is at Pathe Theatre, Cuna Street, 15. You must choose either 17:30 or 19:30, and you need to reserve your spot by phone or WhatsApp at +34 681 948 360.
What are the walking tour times and meeting points?
Triana runs at 13:00, and Santa Cruz runs at 16:00. Both meet at the Tourist Information Office at Postigo del Carbón Street, 4, Seville.
Are the tours available in English and Spanish?
Yes. The walking tours are offered in English and Spanish, and the flamenco show info is provided in the same general format of guided experiences. The bus audio guide also offers multiple languages including English and Spanish.
Is the service wheelchair accessible and are pets allowed?
The experience is listed as wheelchair accessible. Pets are not allowed.





























