The MexicoCassie guide to the best family friendly tours in Sevilla

Published by Cass on

green text box: best family friendly tours in Sevilla. 4 photos, one of kid facing away from camera in alcazar, 1 of 2 kids and adult on las setas, one of churros and one of plaza de españa

Tours can be really expensive when you’re travelling with the family so I thought it would be a good idea to take a look at the best tours available in Sevilla that are actually genuinely interesting for the kids too.

These tours are guaranteed to be good, to be enjoyed and not leave you mad at your kids or teens for ruining the day and wasting money when they haven’t enjoyed a tour.

🧒🏻 The tours are split by age recommendations – first we’ll look at the best tours for 4 – 12 year olds, and then we’ll take a look at tours for people travelling with their teens.

🎉 So let’s get on with ensuring everyone enjoys Sevilla and that there are no family rows here!

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Best tours for kids aged 4 – 12 in Seville

Private kid-friendly tour of the Alcázar

kid in grey tshirt with shoulder length hair standing facing away from the camera in the courtyard of the alcazar (water channel in front, building with arches all around, low green bushes

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (rated 6/5 by my 12 yr old)

⏱️ 2hr30

📍Pick up at your hotel

💶 Price varies depending on group size (but includes Alcázar entry tickets)

🛂 Please note that you will be required to give passport details when booking as everyone who visits the Alcázar is required to show their passport.

⬆️ The tour can be adapted for older kids, you just need to ensure the guides know in advance

Get more information now

My kids had both been to the Alcazar before I took ONLY the younger one on this tour. She absolutely loved this tour. She said it was fun, entertaining, way more fun than the school trip, and told me to tell everyone to take their kids. I also really enjoy the tour.

We visited the India Archives, the Alcázar and gardens and then took a stroll with our guide down to the river, learning about the city as we walked.

The guides leading the kid friendly tours are chosen specifically for their enthusiasm for working with kids and because of their ability to engage children through worksheets, games and quizzes.

The guide did a good job of engaging with my daughter at her level of interest in history, sharing cool facts, getting her to find interesting things, and she also listened and engaged with my kid’s random chatter (including when she basically told her I don’t clean the house enough 🧹 🤣)

🍬 And, as an absolute highlight, there is a small bag of candies for the kids.

Is it interesting for the adults? The tour itself is interesting for all ages, including the adults. I’ve taken a few tours of the Alcázar now and always learn something new. This tour was no different, and even though the focus was ensuring my daughter enjoyed herself, I also learned new facts and engaged with the building and its history in a new way.

👣 Book your Liv Tours kid friendly Alcázar tour

→ Read the full MexicoCassie guide to visiting the Alcázar

Private family walking tour of Sevilla

two kids and an adult walking on a walk way with shallow wide steps marked in yellow. pure blue sky

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (rated 6/5 by both of my kids, aged 12 and 14)

⏱️ 2.5 hours (morning tour)

📍 Meeting point Plaza de la Encarnación, in front of Las Setas

💶 Price varies depending on group size

⬆️ The tour can be adapted for older kids, you just need to ensure the guides know in advance

Get more information now

I took both of my kids on this tour (aged 12 and 14), and both really enjoyed themselves although the 12 year old was far more into filling in the worksheets than the teenager was. The teenager’s verdict is that the guide was excellent and really interesting but he didn’t love the worksheets. The 12 year old loved the competition to fill in the worksheets quicker than her sibling. Both give this a massive thumbs up and add that the churros are some of the best they’ve ever had.

The tour begins at Las Setas, where the kids are given their “Sevilla passport” workbook before you take a trip up to the top of the structure for a look at the city from above. Next it’s down the market for some games and healthy family competition and a look at the cool Roman ruins under the market.

Then (‘finally’, according to my son) it’s time for a churros breakfast stop with coffee for the parents. Once everyone has recovered and eaten their fill of churros it’s on to adventuring around the old city, learning about the history through stories, more games and some really very interesting facts. There’s one more stop for tapas and drinks (booze for the adults if they wish) before finishing up by the Alcázar.

Is it interesting for the adults? We’ve lived in Sevilla for four years and I absolutely learned plenty about the city on this tour. The guide (Anna) was an absolute delight, she was fun and silly just the right amount for the kids and informative enough that even we ‘locals’ came away with new knowledge.

👣 Book your Devour Tours family friendly walking tour of Sevilla now

Sweet stories of Sevilla with ice cream tasting

kid's hand holding purple and pink ice cream

⏱️ 1 – 1.5 hours

💶 €8/pp

📍Gracias, Calle Carlos Cañal

Get more information now

We haven’t yet taken this tour but we’re planning on it, because obviously, learning through ice cream is an amazing plan. On this tour you get to try eight different flavours, most of which are not ‘traditional’, as you learn about the history and traditional flavours of ice cream in Sevilla.

Of course, if you have a mix of ages, you can always speak with the tour providers to ensure that the tours you pick are right for your family. If you’re coming only with older kids, the following are some tours I highly recommend.

📲 Best tours for teens in Sevilla

Exclusive early access tour of the Alcázar

Maidens' Patio in the Seville Alcazar. Reflection of the building in the rectangular pond.

⏱️ 1.5 hours (early morning)

💶 Depends on the date but prices start at €79 (small group tour)

📍Meet on Plaza de Triunfo

🛂 Please note that you will be required to give passport details when booking as everyone who visits the Alcázar is required to show their passport.

Get more information now

I have not taken my kids on this tour but I have done it alone. If your teens are at all interested in the Alcázar, this tour is one of the best I’ve ever taken.

Not only is it fascinating, but the opportunity to be alone inside the Alcázar is truly phenomenal – around 7,000 people visit every day, so being inside with a maximum of 40 others totally changes the experience from one of frustrations of trying to keep with your group, ensure your kids aren’t wandering off or being moody, and forgetting to marvel at 1000 years of history, to one of quiet contemplation, privacy and even the chance for your kids to basically have their own photo shoot time in one of Spain’s most iconic buildings.

👣 Book your Exclusive Alcázar tour now

→ Read the full MexicoCassie guide to visiting the Alcázar

Herstory – women of Sevilla

flamenco dancer on the street in Sevilla - black dress, red fan

⏱️ 3 hr

💶 Base price of €399 (private tour), includes Alcázar access

📍Pick up from your hotel

🛂 Please note that you will be required to give passport details when booking as everyone who visits the Alcázar is required to show their passport.

Get more information now

This tour of Sevilla focuses on the lives of the women of Sevilla throughout the ages, an absolute must both for your loudly feminist girls, and for your still learning boys 😉. Women played an important part in Sevilla’s history (obviously) and this tour, which I’m excited to take, will bring that to life as you explore the streets of the Old City, the famous gardens and, of course, the Alcázar.

👣 Book your feminist tour of Sevilla now!

Sevilla Negra

tower at the plaza de españa on a sunny day - reflected in the water

⏱️ 2hr

💶 €25 /pp

📍Monument Milla Cero de la Primera Vuelta al Mundo, Plaza de Cuba

Get more information now

(note that I don’t have an adequate photo of this tour because I haven’t yet taken it but I can’t wait to do so)

Help your teens get a wider perspective on Spanish and Sevillana history with the tour of Sevilla focusing on the Black population of the city during the 16th and 17th centuries.

“During the 16th and 17th centuries, 10% of Seville’s population was Black or of mixed race, which earned it the nickname “the chessboard.” These people lived in extreme conditions, forming part of the lowest stratum of society. Participants will visit nine stops related to the lives of the Black and mixed-race population of the era.”

👣 Book your Sevilla Negra walking tour now

Flamenco & tapas introduction

man and woman dancing flamenco on wooden stage. woman in black dress with red scarf. man in black. both with right arm raised

⏱️ 3 hrs (evening)

💶 €99 /pp (small group tour)

📍Mercury fountain in front of Banco de España building, Plaza de San Francisco

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I took this tour when my kids were a bit young to take it with me but there were two teens in my group and they thoroughly enjoyed themselves, throwing themselves into trying all the different tapas we were given, asking questions about the food and the flamenco we were going to see.

The tour includes enough tapas and drinks that everyone will be replete, even the greediest boy-teen 😉. When I took it we ate tapas after tapas before the flamenco performance and then went for a large meal with wine and dessert afterwards. Everything is delicious and plentiful.

And the guide, of course, makes a great effort to chat with everyone, ensuring that everyone is engaged in the history of the food, the city and flamenco (honestly, I’d been fairly ambivalent about flamenco prior to this experience. Now? I’m obsessed).

👣 Book your flamenco and tapas adventure now

→ Read the full MexicoCassie guide to flamenco in Sevilla

Escape room tour

large ball shaped feature against blue sky

⏱️ 2hrs

💶 €15/pp

Get more information now

If your kids are anything like mine, they love an escape room, so what a great way this would be to explore Sevilla! The adventure is solved as you explore the city, walking around 2km (so don’t forget your water!).

Step back in time to a world of mystical trolls and mythical beasts, separated from humankind via a series of magic portals, each guarded by a trusted goblin Gatekeeper. Rumour has it that one of the portals has broken after the Gatekeeper fell into a deep sleep. Mystical creatures have escaped and are roaming the streets, wreaking havoc, and getting up to no good. According to an ancient legend, the power of three magic crystals is the only thing strong enough to fix a broken portal.

👣 Book your escape room style adventure tour now

Kayaking tour

Cassie on a paddle board on the river in front of the Torre del Oro

⏱️ 2 hrs

💶 €39 / pp

📍Club Deportivo RemoSevilla

Get more information now

For any sporty families, this is a great way to get to know Sevilla. After a quick safety briefing, your guide takes you kayaking on the river, sharing secrets of the city’s history and the importance of the Guadalquivir River throughout Sevilla’s long history.

Book your kayaking tour now

Categories: SevillaSpain

Cass

Cass is a British-born travel writer who lives in southern Spain. Prior to moving to Spain, Cass and her family lived in Yucatán, Mexico for many years. Something of a self-confessed-all-round travel-nerd, Cass has a deep love of adventure, and of learning as much as possible about every place visited. This blog is testament to that. All writing and photos on this website have been certified AI free by ProudlyHuman.