By train
The main train station in Seville is the Estacion de Santa Justa in the Avenida de Kansas City. The Spanish rail network is operated by RENFE (www.renfe.es, Tel.: 0034 902 240 202). But there is also a high speed service (AVE) which links Seville and Madrid in only 2.30 hours. There are 15 trains on this tour stopping in Córdoba and Ciudad Real.
Estación de Santa Justa
Avenida de Kansas City
Tel.: +34 95 45 40 202 (from 7 am to 11 pm)
AVE Information:
Tel.: +34 95 45 37 828
RENFE: www.renfe.es
Calle Zaragoza, 29
Tel.: +34 95 42 22 693
Estación de Santa Justa
Avenida de Kansas City
Tel.: +34 95 45 40 202 (from 7 am to 11 pm)
AVE Information:
Tel.: +34 95 45 37 828
RENFE: www.renfe.es
Calle Zaragoza, 29
Tel.: +34 95 42 22 693
By car
Well constructed and completed motorways and highways connect Seville with most of Spain’s bigger cities. The use of the Spanish Autovía is free of charge, the bigger and well completed Autopista are chargeable. This applies to the part of the A4 that connects Seville with Cádiz which are also connected by the highway N-IV which leads from Andalucia to Madrid. Granada and the Costa del Sol are reachable via A92. Coming from Portugal you reach Seville via A49 passing Huelva. All drive-ways to highways and motorways in Seville go from the SE-30, which is a circular road around the city with many exists to the city centre.
By air
Seville’s airport was established in 1914 for the first flights between Europe and Africa and for an air show. The actual terminal which was opened in 1989 combines different traditional components of Seville’s culture: a mosque, the palace and orange trees that are on the grounds of the airport. The airport is located 10 km outside of the city between Cordoba and Madrid at km 533 on A4 (previously NIV). There are regular flights going to many Spanish cities such as Madrid, Barcelona, Bilbao, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Palma de Mallorca, Valencia and many more. International flights go to Amsterdam, Brussels, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, London Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Lisbon, Milan, Munich and Paris. Airlines such as Iberia, Air Europa, British Airways, Air France, SN Brussels Airlines, LTU, Transavia, Spanair y Air Berlin, Vueling us the airport.
From the Airport there is a bus service every half hour between 6.15 am and 11 pm to the Santa Justa railway station in the city centre. A single ticket costs € 2.30. But there are also many taxis outside of the terminal building. The costs for one way lie at € 20. People who want to be flexible can hire their own car as most of the common car hiring companies have an office over there. People going from Seville have the opportunity to park their cars opposite the terminal for € 1.05 per hour or € 6.95 for each 24 hours.
From the Airport there is a bus service every half hour between 6.15 am and 11 pm to the Santa Justa railway station in the city centre. A single ticket costs € 2.30. But there are also many taxis outside of the terminal building. The costs for one way lie at € 20. People who want to be flexible can hire their own car as most of the common car hiring companies have an office over there. People going from Seville have the opportunity to park their cars opposite the terminal for € 1.05 per hour or € 6.95 for each 24 hours.
By bus
The best way to travel in Andalucia is by coach or bus. There are frequent services between the main locations in Andalucia and also to and from Madrid. The cheapest way for the latter is with the company Socibus www.socibus.es (€ 16.95 for a return ticket), although the journey takes about 6 hours. Busses go 8 times a day.
Busses are sometimes the only possibility to go from one village to the other. The bus and coach services are organised by different private bus companies which operate from the main bus terminals. Tickets can be purchased from the bus companies directly. The tickets are also valid as a reservation for the bus. On shorter journeys or when boarding between towns it is custom to pay the driver.
Seville’s main bus stations are at Plaza de Armas and Prado de San Sebastián. From the first one busses go to Madrid, the south of Portugal, Lisbon, Huelva, coast of Huelva, Barcelona, Valencia, Alicante, Mérida, Province of Seville, Asturia, Galicia, north of Spain, foreign countries. The second operates on the following routes to the Province of Seville (Utrera, Morón, Estepa, Carmona, Alcalá de Guadaíra, Écija), Córdoba, Granada, Cádiz, Jaén, Málaga, Almería, Jerez de la Frontera, Algeciras, Ronda, Marbella, etc.
Busses are sometimes the only possibility to go from one village to the other. The bus and coach services are organised by different private bus companies which operate from the main bus terminals. Tickets can be purchased from the bus companies directly. The tickets are also valid as a reservation for the bus. On shorter journeys or when boarding between towns it is custom to pay the driver.
Seville’s main bus stations are at Plaza de Armas and Prado de San Sebastián. From the first one busses go to Madrid, the south of Portugal, Lisbon, Huelva, coast of Huelva, Barcelona, Valencia, Alicante, Mérida, Province of Seville, Asturia, Galicia, north of Spain, foreign countries. The second operates on the following routes to the Province of Seville (Utrera, Morón, Estepa, Carmona, Alcalá de Guadaíra, Écija), Córdoba, Granada, Cádiz, Jaén, Málaga, Almería, Jerez de la Frontera, Algeciras, Ronda, Marbella, etc.