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Beyond the beach: top mainland places to visit in Spain

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Last Updated: 23 Jun 2025

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When you picture a Spain holiday, chances are your mind goes straight to the coast. Maybe it’s Ibiza's beach clubs that you think of, or Costa del Sol's endless sunshine. But here's the thing: some of the most fascinating places in Spain are actually inland. This is the Spain of cobbled alleyways and hilltop towns, of wine poured straight from the barrel and cathedrals that took centuries to build.

So, let’s set the record straight today. In this blog, we explore places in Spain that deserve more attention. And yes, you can get there using British Airways Avios. These are exactly the kinds of trips Avios were made for.

 

 

Barcelona

Why Go:

  • Because nowhere else does architecture feel this alive. You can’t visit Barcelona without confronting Gaudí’s surrealist legacy, and not just at the Sagrada Família. His dreamlike architecture is everywhere, from the mosaic benches of Park Güell to the undulating balconies of Casa Milà and the underwater fantasy feel of Casa Batlló.
  • Climbing to the top of Montjuïc is a rite of passage. It’s the hill you go to when you want to look down at the city, see a castle, or breathe a little slower.
  • Even if you're not into football, standing in Camp Nou with 99,000 others changes your mind.
  • The Gothic Quarter is a rabbit warren of medieval alleys and Roman ruins. Look up and you’ll spot gargoyles. Look down and you’re probably walking over 2,000-year-old stones. Duck into Plaça del Rei and you're standing where Ferdinand and Isabella greeted Columbus.
  • The Museu Picasso houses one of the largest collections of Picasso’s early blue period, sketches, and studies.
  • The Boqueria Market off Las Ramblas is touristy, sure, but also essential. Stalls overflowing with jamón, seafood, olives, and juice stalls, this is Barcelona’s appetite on full display.
  • Barcelona has a proud, often fiercely independent identity, rooted in Catalan culture. That means a different language, festivals like La Mercè, and dishes like pa amb tomàquet (bread rubbed with tomato) served without fuss in every bar.
  • The city doubles as a natural amphitheatre: the Collserola hills in the background, the Mediterranean out front, and the whole urban grid visible from Bunkers del Carmel, a decommissioned anti-aircraft battery turned sunset lookout.
  • Nightlife is layered and late. You might start with cava in El Born, catch a live jazz set in a converted church in Raval, and end the night dancing in a repurposed warehouse in Poble Nou.
  • Despite being a major city, Barcelona is surprisingly bikeable. Dedicated lanes run through most neighbourhoods, and renting a Bicing e-bike is one of the best ways to see the city like a local.
  • You’re always a short trip from somewhere else. A 30-minute train gets you to Sitges for beach and art, or Montserrat for hiking and Benedictine monks. It’s a city that offers more than just itself.

The Vibe:

Barcelona has a restless kind of charm. You’ll hear Catalan shouted over cava glasses, pass skaters flying past Gothic cathedrals, and find modernist apartment blocks sitting comfortably next to laundry-strewn balconies. The city is a little rough around the edges, but all the better for it.

How to Use Avios: 

Off-peak return Economy BA reward flights from London start at 23,500 Avios plus £1. For a bit more comfort, Business Class return tickets cost 40,000 Avios and £25.

 

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Madrid

Why Go:

      • If you’re into art, Madrid is a must-visit. The Prado Museum houses over 8,000 works, including Spanish masterworks by Velázquez, Goya, and El Greco. Just across the boulevard, the Reina Sofía Museum showcases modern icons like Picasso’s Guernica, and the Thyssen-Bornemisza completes the Golden Triangle with everything from Van Eyck to Hopper.
      • Every neighbourhood is its little world. Malasaña has an indie edge, La Latina brings the old soul, and Chueca is always up for a party.
      • At El Sur on Calle de la Torrecilla, you'll get a plate of patatas bravas and a lesson in how seriously this city takes its tapas. 
      • Gran Vía is an architectural time capsule of 20th-century grandeur. It’s lined with Art Deco and Neo-Baroque buildings, theatres, rooftop bars, and cinemas and ends dramatically with the Metropolis Building, crowned by a winged statue.
      • The Royal Palace has over 3,400 rooms (no, that’s not a typo), and the armoury is one of the most important in Europe. 
      • The markets here still feel local. Mercado de la Cebada is loud and unfiltered, San Miguel is touristy but polished, while Antón Martín blends fresh produce, ramen bars, and art studios under one roof.
      • Madrid doesn’t have a beach, but it doesn’t need one. Head to Matadero Madrid, a former slaughterhouse turned cultural complex, for open-air cinema, exhibitions, and riverside drinks along the Madrid Río.

 

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The Vibe:

Madrid is a capital city with a big heart. It wins you over with its tiled taverns, second-hand bookstores, and sunsets over the rooftops. The city wears its culture on its sleeve with music in the squares, art in the streets, and traditions that are still part of everyday life. 

How to Use Avios: 

Off-peak return BA reward flights from London to Madrid start at 23,500 Avios and £1 in Economy, while Business Class returns cost 40,000 Avios and £25.

 

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Seville

Why Go:

      • Seville Cathedral is one of the largest Gothic churches in the world. You could spend hours just tracing the flying buttresses, but don’t miss climbing the Giralda bell tower, which was originally a 12th-century minaret.
      • Next to the cathedral, the Archivo General de Indias houses centuries of documents from Spain’s colonial past. If you want to understand Seville’s place in global history, this is where to start.
      • The Alcázar of Seville is a stunning example of Islamic architecture, Gothic expansions, and Renaissance additions all meshed together in tiled courtyards and vaulted halls. And yes, it really was a Game of Thrones filming location.
      • Tapas in Seville are a way of navigating the city. Head to El Rinconcillo, the oldest bar in town (dating back to 1670), for crispy cod fritters and jamón ibérico carved by hand.
      • You’ll hear flamenco before you see it. From spontaneous guitar riffs in Triana to intimate tablaos like Casa de la Memoria, this is where flamenco still feels close to the bone and is less performance, more lived experience.
      • Plaza de España in María Luisa Park looks like something out of a fairytale with mosaics for every Spanish province, horse-drawn carriages, and couples lazily rowing through the manmade canal.
      • Triana used to be the neighbourhood of potters and flamenco singers. Now it’s one of the best places to wander aimlessly, watching ceramic workshops, riverside cafés, and some of the best tapas bars without the central crowds.
      • Seville has the hottest summers in Europe, but it's also the birthplace of the patio, hidden interior courtyards filled with shade, fountains, and plants. You can see the best of them during the Festival de los Patios in May.

The Vibe:

Seville is lively, lived-in, and unapologetically local. The same families have run the same bars for decades, and life slows down when the sun gets too hot. The streets aren’t perfect, but they’re full of life; scooters zipping past, kids kicking footballs, someone blasting music from a balcony. 

How to Use Avios: 

Off-peak return Economy reward flights from London to Seville start at 23,500 British Airways Avios plus £1. Prefer to fly Business Class? That's 40,000 Avios and £25. 

 

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Valencia

Why Go:

      • Forget what you've heard; Valencia isn't just a beachy detour between Barcelona and Madrid. It's got its own thing going on, and it's well worth the detour.
      • It’s the birthplace of paella, and they take that responsibility seriously. Head to Albufera Natural Park, just south of the city, where the dish was born among rice paddies and fishing huts, and order the original: rabbit, chicken, and snails cooked over orange-wood fire.
      • Designed by Santiago Calatrava, the City of Arts and Sciences looks like it landed from the future. The complex houses a planetarium, opera house, and Europe’s largest aquarium, the Oceanogràfic, where you can walk beneath sharks and belugas in a submerged tunnel.
      • Valencia’s Turia Riverbed Park turned a problem into the city’s best idea. What used to be a flood-prone river is now a 9-kilometre-long green ribbon through the city, lined with playgrounds, rose gardens, cycle paths, and outdoor gyms.
      • The Fallas Festival is held every March. Giant papier-mâché sculptures take over the streets for a week, only to be torched in one night of glorious, anarchic fire. Loud but unforgettable.
      • Valencia’s beaches are proper city beaches and accessible by public transport. Playa de la Malvarrosa is perfect for lazy days and long lunches with sea views.
      • The Central Market (Mercado Central) is one of the oldest and largest in Europe. Housed in a Modernist glass-and-tile building, you can buy everything from just-caught octopus to saffron and turrón here.
      • It’s an ideal city for cycling with over 150 km of bike lanes, and the Valenbisi system makes renting bikes easy and cheap.

The Vibe:

Valencia feels like the middle child of Spain’s big cities, in the best possible way. Less intense than Madrid, less showy than Barcelona, but endlessly liveable. It’s warm, creative, and fiercely proud of its roots. If you want beaches, food, festivals, and futuristic architecture, all wrapped into one easy-going package, Valencia’s your place.

How to Use Avios: 

Off-peak return flights from London start at 23,500 Avios and £1 in Economy. Business Class returns go for 40,000 Avios and £25. 

 

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Ronda

Why Go:

      • Ronda is one of Spain’s oldest towns, founded in the 9th century BC by the Celts, with visible layers of Roman, Moorish, and Christian history woven through its streets. It's built on both sides of a gorge so deep it makes your stomach drop.
      • The Puente Nuevo is Ronda’s most famous icon for a reason. This jaw-dropping 18th-century stone bridge spans a 120-metre-deep gorge known as El Tajo that splits the town in two. It’s dramatic and oddly peaceful at sunset. (Tip: walk the Camino de los Molinos trail for unreal views of the bridge from below.)
      • The Plaza de Toros is one of the oldest in Spain and a museum that showcases a deep (and sometimes difficult) dive into the history of Spanish bullfighting. Hemingway and Orson Welles were both obsessed with the place.
      • Ronda’s views are their own kind of theatre. You’re looking out over rolling hills, olive groves, and vineyards from nearly every vantage point. 
      • Local wines are gaining traction. The Serranía de Ronda wine route includes boutique vineyards producing bold reds and mineral-rich whites, often set against rugged mountain backdrops.
      • Ronda isn’t just for day-trippers. Spend a night and you'll have the winding lanes, cliffside views, and sleepy plazas almost to yourself once the tour buses leave.

The Vibe:

Ronda feels like a town on the edge of the world, both literally and emotionally. It’s built for quiet mornings, long walks, and surprise viewpoints. It can feel touristy in daylight, but stick around past sunset, and you'll find a quieter version of the town that locals slip back into. You feel small here, but in the best way possible: watching mist settle in the valley, sipping wine on a quiet terrace, or tracing centuries of history with your feet. 

 

 

How to Use Avios: 

Ronda doesn’t have its own airport, so the easiest way in is to fly to Malaga. It’s about a 90-minute drive from there, and the route takes you through some stunning Andalusian countryside. Off-peak reward flights to Malaga start at 23,500 Avios and £1 in Economy, or 40,000 Avios and £25 in Business.

 

Córdoba

Why Go:

      • Because any city that has changed hands between Romans, Visigoths, Moors, and Christian monarchs, and still manages to feel whole, is worth your time.
      • La Mezquita is one of the most stunning religious buildings in the world. Originally a mosque, then converted into a cathedral, its forest of candy-cane arches and layered history hits you like a quiet revelation.
      • Córdoba once rivalled Baghdad and Constantinople as the intellectual heart of the Islamic world. In the 10th century, it was one of the most advanced cities on the planet, home to libraries, philosophers, and scientists.
      • The old Jewish quarter is a maze of whitewashed lanes, flower-filled courtyards, and historic synagogues. Visit if you want a quieter corner of Córdoba.
      • Córdoba’s Patios Festival opens the city’s private homes to visitors every May. Visitors can step inside and see the courtyards, which are usually hidden behind closed doors, full of flowers, fountains, and colourful tiles.
      • The Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos is an underrated gem: fortress, palace, garden, and all-around haven. Walk the citrus-scented gardens, climb the towers, and imagine Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand holding court here during the Reconquista.
      • Córdoba has its own culinary personality. Try salmorejo, a richer, creamier cousin of gazpacho, and pair it with local jamón or berenjenas con miel (fried eggplant with honey).
      • The Roman Bridge and the old water mills on the Guadalquivir River feel like they're lifted from a fantasy novel. Walk across the bridge at dusk and watch the Mezquita glow in the fading light.
      • The Zoco Municipal de Artesanía is one of the few places where you can see local artisans at work: leatherworkers, potters, and silversmiths keeping traditions alive without the tourist kitsch.

 

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The Vibe:

For a place so layered in history, Córdoba is surprisingly low-key. Locals go about their day while you’re busy photographing archways or chasing the scent of jasmine in the air. It’s not polished like Seville or as busy as Madrid, but that’s the charm. You’ll find orange trees lining the streets, tiled courtyards behind plain doors, and quiet corners that haven’t changed in decades. 

How to Use Avios: 

The closest airport to Cordoba is Seville, about 90 minutes away. You can fly there for 23,500 British Airways Avios and £1 in Economy or 40,000 Avios and £25 in Business on off-peak flights from London.

 

San Sebastián

Why Go:

      • San Sebastián has one of the highest concentrations of Michelin-starred restaurants per capita in the world. That said, some of the best bites still come on toothpicks in old-town taverns.

      • La Concha Bay might just be the most elegant beach in Europe: a perfect curve of golden sand backed by Belle Époque buildings and framed by green hills. Locals swim year-round.
      • The Parte Vieja (Old Town) is where it all happens, pintxos-hopping, cider-pouring, midnight chatter. 
      • At the base of Monte Urgull, there’s a 12th-century castle, a giant statue of Christ, and panoramic views that make the climb feel shorter than it is.
      • The annual San Sebastián International Film Festival turns the city into a cinematic hub each September with red carpets and A-listers in a place that still feels delightfully local.
      • San Sebastián doesn’t feel like “Spanish Spain.” The Basque identity can be felt in the language, the cuisine, the festivals, the flag. 
      • You can go from the old town to Monte Igueldo, past beaches, sculptures, and the Comb of the Wind in a single day without feeling exhausted.

The Vibe:

San Sebastián feels like a small city that knows exactly what it does best and doesn’t try to do more. The beaches are clean, the streets are quiet, and everyone seems to have strong opinions about anchovies.

How to Use Avios: 

You can fly from London to San Sebastian on off-peak return Economy reward seats for 18,500 Avios plus £1 and off-peak return Business Class reward seats for 30,000 Avios plus £30

 

Bilbao

Why Go:

      • The Guggenheim Museum put Bilbao on the global culture map. Frank Gehry’s undulating titanium masterpiece is as much a sculpture as the art inside it. Think Jeff Koons, Jenny Holzer, and Rothko under one massive roof.
      • There’s a giant flower-covered dog guarding the Guggenheim entrance that changes colours with the seasons and has become as much a city symbol as any cathedral.
      • Basque cuisine goes beyond pintxos here. Try a bowl of marmitako (a tuna and potato stew) or bacalao al pil-pil (salt cod in garlic oil). The city’s restaurants rival those in San Sebastián, with fewer crowds.
      • The Ribera Market is Europe’s largest covered food market. Part produce hall, part tapas wonderland, and entirely Bilbao — come hungry.
      • Take the Artxanda Funicular to the top of the hillside for a panoramic view over the city and Nervión River, then walk back down through leafy trails to earn your lunch.
      • The Azkuna Zentroa was a former wine warehouse redesigned by Philippe Starck, which has now been turned into a cultural centre with a library, cinema, exhibitions, and even a swimming pool with a glass-bottomed floor (yes, you can see people swimming overhead).
      • The city’s old town is full of narrow medieval streets, family-run shops, and pintxos bars where the counter is the menu. Come at night when the locals reclaim it.

The Vibe:

Bilbao has a gritty grace with former shipyards and steel mills now sitting alongside art galleries and riverfront parks. You’ll arrive with low expectations and leave wondering why you didn't come sooner.

How to Use Avios: 

You can fly directly from London to Bilbao with British Airways. Off-peak return Economy reward seats from London cost 18,500 Avios plus £1 while off-peak return Business Class reward seats cost 30,000 Avios plus £30.

 

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La Rioja

Why Go:

      • La Rioja is Spain’s answer to Burgundy or Napa, with over 500 wineries, many family-run and generations-deep.

      • You’ve likely tasted Rioja wines without realising it. Names like Muga, Ramón Bilbao, and La Rioja Alta are staples on wine lists around the world and visiting their bodegas provides a whole new appreciation.

      • The town of Haro is the epicenter of it all. You can walk from one legendary winery to the next, tasting reds that were aged while you were still in school.
      • Every June, Haro throws one of Spain’s most joyful festivals, the Batalla del Vino (Wine Battle), where locals drench each other in red wine before dancing in the streets. Bring a white shirt you never want to see again.
      • The capital, Logroño, is criminally underrated. Its Calle Laurel is an entire neighbourhood devoted to pintxos bars, each with a signature dish. Bar-hop like a local with a glass of Rioja in one hand and a forkful of mushrooms or grilled pork in the other.
      • Wine aside, La Rioja is rich with history. The monasteries of Suso and Yuso in San Millán de la Cogolla are considered the birthplace of written Spanish and are both UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
      • Briones, Sajazarra, and Viniegra de Abajo are officially listed among Spain’s most beautiful villages. Think cobblestones, vineyards, and sunset light that feels like it was made for postcards.
      • La Rioja is best explored by car, bike, or even on foot; many sections of the Camino de Santiago wind through this region, connecting you to Spain’s oldest stories and newest discoveries.

The Vibe:

La Rioja is slow in the best way. It’s built for long lunches, wine-fuelled afternoons, and golden-hour strolls through vineyard towns that haven’t changed in centuries. Come for the wine, stay for the sunsets that make every glass of wine taste better.

How to Use Avios: 

There are no direct flights to La Rioja, but the region is an easy drive from Bilbao (90 minutes away). Off-peak return Economy reward seats from London cost 18,500 Avios plus £1, while Business Class seats cost 30,000 Avios plus £30.

 

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