REVIEW · SEVILLE
Seville: Flamenco Show at Tablao Los Gallos
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by TABLAO FLAMENCO LOS GALLOS · Bookable on GetYourGuide
This flamenco night feels inches from the stage. Tablao Los Gallos puts eight live artists in Seville’s Santa Cruz with dancers, singers, and two guitars working as one. I love the intimate theater size and the emotion in every stomp and chord, but the seating is tight.
I also like that the venue carries an International Flamenco Award (2024) from the Manolo Sanlúcar Foundation, so you’re not buying a gimmick. The show is just 75 minutes, which makes it an easy add-on to your Seville evenings.
One more practical note: food isn’t included, and the show isn’t for children under 5. If you’re coming with little kids, or hoping to eat at the venue, plan around that.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Entering Tablao Los Gallos in Seville’s Santa Cruz
- The 75-Minute Flamenco Format: 8 Artists, No Padding
- What the Award (and the Small Stage) Means for You
- The Singing and Guitar: Where the Emotion Starts
- The Dance Footwork: Up Close, Powerful, and Real
- Seating Reality: Tight Space, Best View, Better Timing
- Drinks, Food, and Making It an Easy Seville Night
- Who Should Book This Flamenco Show
- A few practical tips to make the night smoother
- Should you book Tablao Los Gallos?
- FAQ
- How long is the flamenco show at Tablao Los Gallos?
- How much does it cost?
- Who performs in the show?
- Is food included?
- Are drinks included?
- Is this show suitable for kids?
- Can unaccompanied minors attend?
- Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
- Where is Tablao Los Gallos located?
Key things to know before you go

- 8 performers on stage: 2 female dancers, 1 male dancer, 3 singers, and 2 guitarists
- Santa Cruz setting: the venue sits in Seville’s historic heart, near Plaza Santa Cruz energy
- Award-winning flamenco: recognized with an International Flamenco Award in 2024 by the Manolo Sanlúcar Foundation
- Close, up-front viewing: small room feel, so even seats farther back can work
- Singers + guitar stay front and center: you’ll hear inventive vocals and standout guitars, not just dance
- Plan your food elsewhere: drinks are optional, but the ticket is for the live show
Entering Tablao Los Gallos in Seville’s Santa Cruz

Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos is in the historic center of Seville, in and around the Santa Cruz neighborhood. That matters because flamenco works best when it feels like part of the city, not a separate “attraction box.”
The venue’s whole vibe is built around proximity. You’re watching a live performance in a small room, so the singers’ voices and the guitar’s rhythm land with more impact than they do in massive theaters.
You’ll also appreciate the setting in the Santa Cruz area and its connection to Plaza Santa Cruz atmosphere. Before the show, you’re in the right mood for Andalusian nights: walking streets, warm lighting, and that casual energy Seville does so well.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville
The 75-Minute Flamenco Format: 8 Artists, No Padding

The show runs about 75 minutes, and it’s structured around a full live flamenco lineup every night. You’ll see 8 artists total:
- 2 female dancers
- 1 male dancer
- 3 singers
- 2 guitarists
That lineup is a big deal for value. A lot of flamenco shows cut corners by reducing the musicians or simplifying the dance. Here, the rhythm section stays strong with two guitarists backing the singers, so you get more texture and more moments where the music drives the action.
The best part is that this doesn’t feel like a “tour-style demo.” The show is built to keep momentum: dancing, vocals, and guitar all contribute throughout the evening.
If you’re new to flamenco, the show length helps. You get a complete experience in just over an hour, without needing flamenco context before you walk in.
What the Award (and the Small Stage) Means for You

An International Flamenco Award in 2024 from the Manolo Sanlúcar Foundation is not just a badge on a website. It’s a helpful signal that the venue has serious standards and that the artists are operating at a professional level.
The award matters most because flamenco can be tricky to judge from the outside. Big marketing can hide average performers, but a recognized venue usually keeps its quality bar higher.
Then add the small-room setup. Reviews emphasize how close and intimate the performances feel, with many people saying this format beats larger shows. For you, that translates to a more direct experience: you’ll hear claps and footwork clearly, and you’ll see dancers’ expressions without straining your eyes.
The Singing and Guitar: Where the Emotion Starts

A common mistake is treating flamenco like it’s only about dancing. At Tablao Los Gallos, the singers and guitarists do heavy lifting, and they stay compelling the whole time.
I love that the show is built with three singers, which gives the vocals more presence and variety. In the material you provided, people describe vocals as inventive and full of intensity, including gypsy-influenced touches. That’s exactly what you want if you’re chasing the sound of flamenco, not just the visuals.
The two guitarists also get real spotlight. Multiple accounts highlight phenomenal guitar work and guitar solos, with rhythm and syncopation that feels sharp and musical rather than generic background. If you know even a little about flamenco, you’ll catch how the guitar patterns lock in with the singers and then feed the dancers’ timing.
For most people, the guitar is the bridge between emotion and rhythm. Even if dance is your main interest, listen closely here. The music often explains the mood before the dancers fully commit to it.
The Dance Footwork: Up Close, Powerful, and Real
Flamenco dance is all about timing, tension, and control. At Tablao Los Gallos, the dancing has a physical immediacy because the room is small and the stage is close.
You’ll see two female dancers and one male dancer, and the mix matters. It keeps the performance dynamic, with different styles of movement and different ways of shaping a moment. Reviews repeatedly call out dramatic, impressive movements and intense footwork.
Costumes also play a role. Even when you’re focused on technique, costume details help define the character of each segment—so you read the performance faster, even if you don’t speak flamenco lyrics.
Practical note: if you’re sensitive to crowds, be ready for intensity. Some reviews mention the venue can feel tight and very close to the stage. That closeness is part of what makes the show feel intense, but it also means you should pick your seat carefully.
Seating Reality: Tight Space, Best View, Better Timing

This is the one area where you should go in with eyes open. Reviews highlight that seating is tight and very close, especially for front-row or near-front tables.
The upside is obvious: close access means you can see technique clearly, hear the footwork, and feel the rhythm in your chest. Multiple accounts mention that even seats farther back still offer a good view and solid audio.
The trade-off is comfort. If you don’t love cramped spaces, you might want to arrive early so you can choose a better spot. One review specifically suggests arriving earlier for better seat options.
Also worth knowing: the bathroom is reported as upstairs. That’s not a dealbreaker, but it’s good to plan so you don’t have to do mid-show logistics when the pace gets intense.
Drinks, Food, and Making It an Easy Seville Night
Your ticket covers the live flamenco show. Drinks are optional, and food is not included.
That means you’ll want to eat beforehand or plan a light snack. Since you’re in Santa Cruz, it’s a good chance to do tapas dinner in the neighborhood, then come in refreshed. This setup keeps the show focused on performance instead of turning into a meal event.
Some people mention sangria, and drinks are described as reasonably priced in at least one case. Still, treat the drinks part as flexible: if you want alcohol, check what’s available when you arrive, and pace yourself so you can enjoy the full 75 minutes.
One small thing from the reviews: a few people noted not being asked about drinks in the moment. So if drinks matter to you, be ready to order on arrival rather than assuming service will happen automatically.
Who Should Book This Flamenco Show
This is a strong choice for you if:
- You want a live, full show with singers, guitarists, and dancers together
- You like small-room performances where sound and emotion feel close
- You’re comparing flamenco nights and want something that feels authentic rather than staged for tourists
It may not be ideal if:
- You need lots of personal space in seating
- You’re traveling with very young kids (children under 5 aren’t suitable)
- You’re bringing minors without an adult (unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed)
If you’re a music-first traveler, the two-guitar and three-singer setup is a big win. If you’re a dance-first traveler, the footwork and expression are the focus—and the close viewing helps.
A few practical tips to make the night smoother

- Arrive early to improve seat choice in a tight room.
- Be ready for closeness: this is a small venue, so don’t expect theater-style comfort.
- Keep quiet once the show starts. One review complains about talking taking away from the performance. Save the conversation for before lights dim.
- Plan food ahead since it’s not included.
- Use the venue stairs if needed since the bathroom is reported upstairs.
- If you need wheelchair access, the venue is described as wheelchair accessible, which is a big plus for planning.
Should you book Tablao Los Gallos?
I’d book this if you want an evening that feels like flamenco practice and performance, not just a “watch-and-leave” spectacle. For the price point—about $45 for a 75-minute show—you’re paying for a full live lineup with 8 artists and award recognition, plus that intimate sound and stage proximity.
If tight seating is a concern, arrive earlier and choose carefully. If you want a spacious, cushy night out, you may prefer a larger theater elsewhere. But if your goal is real flamenco energy in a small room, Tablao Los Gallos is a very solid bet.
FAQ
How long is the flamenco show at Tablao Los Gallos?
The experience lasts about 75 minutes.
How much does it cost?
The price is listed as $45 per person.
Who performs in the show?
You’ll see 8 artists on stage: 2 female dancers, 1 male dancer, 3 singers, and 2 guitarists.
Is food included?
No. Food is not included.
Are drinks included?
Drinks are optional, so they’re not automatically included with the ticket.
Is this show suitable for kids?
It’s not suitable for children under 5.
Can unaccompanied minors attend?
Unaccompanied minors are not allowed.
Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the activity is listed as wheelchair accessible.
Where is Tablao Los Gallos located?
It’s in the Santa Cruz neighborhood in the historic center of Seville, near the Plaza Santa Cruz area.


























