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Group of tourists on bikes in front of the Mezquita on a guided cycling tour of Córdoba
Guided Tour

Guided Cycling Tour of Córdoba

Tour en Bicicleta por Córdoba

2 hours
Daily, departures from 10 am to 6 pm (9:30 am–5:30 pm in high season)
Plaza de las Tendillas or in front of the tourist office depending on the operator
All activities

At a glance

Duration
2 hours
Price
From €29
Schedule
Daily, departures from 10 am to 6 pm (9:30 am–5:30 pm in high season)
Meeting point
Plaza de las Tendillas or in front of the tourist office depending on the operator
Languages
English, Spanish, German, Dutch
Group size
2 to 15 people depending on the operator
Availability
Year-round — Booking recommended 24 hours in advance
Accessibility
Not accessible for wheelchair users. Electric bikes available for reduced mobility (+€12.50). Child seats for ages 4–8 (+€5).

Seeing Córdoba by bike changes everything. You cover three times more ground than on foot without exhausting yourself, you dodge the cars in narrow lanes, and in summer the movement creates a welcome breeze when it's 40°C. For two hours you pedal 6 to 7 km through the historic quarters with a guide who knows the shortcuts and the stories you won't find in any brochure.

The classic route

The tour starts near the historic centre — often Plaza de las Tendillas or in front of the tourist office, depending on the operator. After adjusting saddle heights and testing the brakes, you head toward the Mezquita. No need to go inside. The guide explains the history outdoors: how this 8th-century mosque became a cathedral, why the bicoloured arches still fascinate architects, and what it means politically today.

Next stop: the Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos, where Isabella and Ferdinand planned the Reconquista and received Christopher Columbus before his voyage to the Americas. The terraced gardens with their Moorish pools are best seen from outside as you cycle along the ramparts.

Then you cross the Roman Bridge16 stone arches from the 1st century spanning the Guadalquivir. Classic city view, guaranteed photo stop, then into the Judería, the medieval Jewish quarter listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The lanes are narrow but flat, and the bike saves time between the Synagogue, the Maimonides statue and the Calleja de las Flores with its perfect frame of the bell tower.

The Fernandine churches everyone skips

This is where the cycling tour pulls ahead of standard walking tours. You ride out to the Fernandine churches — Gothic-Mudéjar churches built by Ferdinand III after the Reconquista of 1236 to replace the mosques. San Lorenzo has its Romanesque portal and a minaret-style bell tower that hints at its former life. Santa Marina towers over its working-class neighbourhood with a massive bell tower.

These churches sit on the edge of the tourist centre. On foot, nobody walks that far — it adds 3 km to the route. By bike, it's 10 minutes of easy pedalling through residential streets where you pass more locals than tourists.

Standard or electric bike

Two options are available. The standard bike is perfectly sufficient — Córdoba is flat, no serious hills. The bikes are comfortable city models with a basket, bell and gears. Helmets are provided for everyone (mandatory in Spain for under-16s).

Electric bikes cost €12.50 extra per person. Useful if you're less confident cycling, travelling with less sporty teenagers, or if the heat puts you off. The electric assist compensates for effort without changing the experience — you follow the same route at the same pace.

Children and accessibility

Child seats attach to the front or back of an adult bike for children aged 4 to 8. Let the operator know when booking — it costs an extra €5. Older children (from about 9–10 depending on height) ride their own bike.

The tour is not accessible for wheelchair users because part of the route uses narrow cobbled lanes and bridges without handrails. If you have mobility issues but can ride, electric models reduce the effort. Otherwise, tuk-tuk tours or carriage tours cover a similar circuit without pedalling.

Operators and booking

Cordoba Bike Tours employs certified local guides with year-round departures including low season. Baja Bikes caps groups at 15 people maximum, with English-speaking guides as standard. Elektrik Córdoba runs an all-electric fleet. Living Tours sometimes combines cycling and walking depending on the chosen option.

Most bookings go through GetYourGuide, Viator or Civitatis. Prices run around €29 for adults, €19 for children (generally 6–12), bike and helmet included.

Hours and departure times

Standard departures run every day from 10 am to 6 pm for group tours. In high season (April–October), some operators add 9:30 am and 5:30 pm slots for softer light. Private tours are arranged on request — useful if there are four or more of you.

Book at least 24 hours in advance, especially in May during the Festival de los Patios when everything fills up fast. Bring water, sunscreen between May and September, and clothing appropriate for two hours of gentle movement.

Alternatives

If cycling isn't appealing, the free walking tour covers the same highlights but skips the Fernandine churches and takes longer. The guided Mezquita tour goes deep inside the monument with skip-the-line access (€22). For a trip outside the city, the excursion to Medina Azahara pairs well — caliphal ruins in the morning, cycling around Córdoba in the afternoon. In May, the cycling tour combined with the patios visit covers Santa Marina and San Lorenzo on the route, then you walk the patios in the afternoon.

Cycling tours appear in our Top 10 Activities & Experiences in Córdoba — a complete ranking of the experiences most worth your time in the city.

Good for

Solo Couples Outdoor History Buffs History Nature Cultural

Highlights

  • 6–7 km route through historic quarters and UNESCO sites
  • Visit the Mezquita, Alcázar, Roman Bridge and Judería
  • Discover the Fernandine churches (San Lorenzo, Santa Marina) often overlooked
  • Expert local guide sharing the history of three civilisations
  • Comfortable bikes, helmets and rain ponchos included
  • Groups limited to 2–15 people depending on operator

Included

  • Comfortable city bike with basket and gears
  • Helmet provided for all participants
  • Expert local multilingual guide
  • Disposable rain poncho if weather is uncertain
  • Child seats available on request (+€5)

Not included

  • Entrance fees to paid monuments (Mezquita, Alcázar, Synagogue)
  • Food and drinks
  • Electric bike surcharge (+€12.50 per person)
  • Child seat (+€5)
  • Gratuity for the guide

Reporter notebook

Insider tips

Practical observations gathered the way a local journalist would keep them: short, specific, and more useful than brochure copy.

Best time

Book the earliest morning slot in summer — by noon it's too hot to enjoy

Between June and September, the 10 am departure is the only comfortable option. By noon the cobblestones radiate heat and even the breeze from cycling can't compensate. Spring and autumn afternoons are fine — the 4 pm slot catches lovely light on the monuments.

What to order

Pay the €12.50 extra for the electric bike — it's worth every cent

Córdoba is flat, but two hours of pedalling in the heat with photo stops and restarts drains you faster than expected. The electric assist keeps the experience enjoyable rather than athletic. Especially useful if you're cycling with children or less confident riders.

Crowd tip

The Fernandine churches section is the highlight most walkers never reach

San Lorenzo and Santa Marina sit outside the tourist core. Walking tours skip them because they add 3 km. By bike you reach them in 10 minutes through residential streets where locals outnumber visitors. This stretch justifies choosing the bike tour over a walking tour.

Good to know before booking

  • Ability to ride a bike (children from age 9–10 depending on height)
  • Arrive 10–15 minutes before departure to adjust bikes
  • Closed, comfortable shoes
  • Water and sunscreen (May–September)
  • Weather-appropriate clothing

Prices & Booking

From €29

Daily, departures from 10 am to 6 pm (9:30 am–5:30 pm in high season)

Related Tours

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need to book the cycling tour in advance?

Yes — book at least 24 hours ahead. In May during the Festival de los Patios, and throughout summer (June to September), tours fill up. Book through GetYourGuide, Viator, or Civitatis.

Is the cycling tour suitable for children?

Children aged 9 to 10 (depending on height) can ride their own bike. Children aged 4 to 8 can join in a child seat attached to an adult bike for an extra €5 — request this when booking. The 2-hour route is manageable for older children, particularly with the electric bike option.

What is included in the price?

The price (from €29 for adults, €19 for children) includes a city bike with basket and gears, a helmet for all participants, an expert local guide, and a rain poncho if needed. Entrance fees to paid monuments (Mezquita, Alcázar, Synagogue), food, the electric bike surcharge (+€12.50), and guide gratuity are not included.

Do I need cycling experience?

You need to be able to ride a basic bike. Córdoba is flat with no serious hills, so no special fitness is required. Electric bikes (€12.50 extra) are available for anyone who wants less effort. The tour is not suitable for wheelchair users.

In what language is the tour conducted?

Tours are available in English, Spanish, German, and Dutch depending on the operator. Confirm the language when booking — most operators offer English as standard.