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Interior of the Mezquita illuminated during The Soul of Córdoba night tour with artistic lighting
Guided Visit

The Soul of Córdoba – Mezquita Night Tour

El Alma de Córdoba

1 hour
Variable by season: 8–9:30 pm (winter), 10–11:30 pm (summer)
Patio de los Naranjos (Orange Tree Courtyard)
All activities

At a glance

Duration
1 hour
Price
From €20
Schedule
Variable by season: 8–9:30 pm (winter), 10–11:30 pm (summer)
Meeting point
Patio de los Naranjos (Orange Tree Courtyard)
Languages
French, Spanish, English, German, Italian, Portuguese, Japanese, Arabic, Russian
Group size
Maximum 80 people per session
Availability
Jan–Feb: Fri–Sat only. Mar–Oct: Mon–Sat. Nov–Dec: Fri–Sat only
Accessibility
Limited access for people with reduced mobility due to steps and uneven floors

The Soul of Córdoba opens the Mezquita after 8 pm for a one-hour night circuit with lighting, projections and a soundscape created specifically for the monument. Without the 2 million annual tourists, the architecture breathes differently.

How it works

It starts at the Patio de los Naranjos with a short film on the building's history. Then an audioguide (nine languages) and entry into the prayer hall. Subdued lighting brings out the red and white arches, the Byzantine mosaics of the mihrab. The shadows between the 856 columns shift constantly. Unsettling in the best way.

Why the evening is different

The audioguide covers 1,300 years of history, from mosque to cathedral. Projections reveal details you'd miss in daylight — recycled Roman capitals, Kufic inscriptions, Christian modifications layered onto the original mosque. The silence matters. No school groups, no tour guides shouting. Just the building and you.

What to know before booking

80 people maximum per session. Still a crowd, but nothing like the morning queues. Book ahead — it fills fast, especially Fridays and Saturdays between April and October. Price: from €20. Session times shift by season: 8–9:30 pm (winter), 10–11:30 pm (summer). Closed Mondays outside March–October.

Building an evening around it

In the Judería, several natural combinations emerge. Night tour at 10 pm, then a flamenco show at a tablao at 11:30 pm — or the reverse. The tablaos are five minutes on foot. For a different perspective on the same monument, the daytime guided tour in the morning lets you compare the two atmospheres.

Good for

Couples Photographers History Buffs Architecture History Religious Architecture Nightlife

Highlights

  • Special lighting that transforms the perception of the architecture
  • Audioguides in 9 languages with detailed commentary
  • Groups limited to 80 people
  • Introductory film at the Patio de los Naranjos
  • Projections and soundscape created for the visit
  • Access after normal opening hours

Included

  • Entry to the Mosque-Cathedral
  • Audioguide in French, Spanish, English, German, Italian, Portuguese, Japanese, Arabic or Russian
  • Audiovisual projection at the Patio de los Naranjos
  • One-hour tour with special lighting

Not included

  • Transport to the monument
  • Bell tower climb Torre Campanario (not available in the evening)
  • Food and drinks

Reporter notebook

Insider tips

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

Booking tip

Book at least two weeks ahead — only 80 tickets per session

With a strict 80-person cap, Friday and Saturday sessions sell out fast, especially April through October. Weeknight sessions are slightly easier to get. Book directly through the cathedral's website for the most reliable availability.

Best time

The summer 10 pm session is the most atmospheric — warm air, empty streets

Winter sessions start at 8 pm when there's still ambient noise from the city. In summer, the 10 pm start means you enter when the Judería has gone quiet. Walking out after the show into the lit courtyard of the Patio de los Naranjos at 11 pm is genuinely moving.

Photo spot

The mihrab under the special lighting reveals mosaics invisible during the day

The night lighting isolates details that get lost in daytime crowds and flat overhead light. The Byzantine mosaics around the mihrab, the Kufic inscriptions, and the recycled Roman capitals all become visible in a way that the regular visit simply cannot match. Photography is allowed — no flash.

Good to know before booking

  • Booking strongly recommended (limited places)
  • Arrive 10–15 minutes before the start time
  • Respectful dress code: shoulders and knees covered
  • Silence requested during the tour
  • Not accessible for pushchairs

Prices & Booking

From €20

Variable by season: 8–9:30 pm (winter), 10–11:30 pm (summer)

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to book the Mezquita night tour in advance?

Yes. Each session admits a maximum of 80 people and tickets sell out fast, particularly on Fridays and Saturdays from April to October. Book at least two weeks ahead for weekend slots. Weeknight sessions are slightly easier to secure. Book directly at mezquita-cathedraldecordoba.es.

Is the night tour suitable for children?

Children can attend, but the tour involves standing for one hour in low light with audioguide commentary. The experience works best for children old enough to follow the audioguide quietly. Pushchairs are not admitted. The session runs late (8 pm in winter, 10 pm in summer), which is worth considering for young children.

What is included in the ticket price?

The price (from €20) includes entry to the Mosque-Cathedral, an audioguide in your choice of nine languages, the audiovisual projection at the Patio de los Naranjos, and the one-hour circuit with special lighting. Transport to the monument, the bell tower climb, and food are not included.

What is the dress code?

The same dress code applies as during the day: shoulders and knees must be covered. Silence is requested throughout the tour out of respect for the building. Arrive 10 to 15 minutes before your session time.

How does the night tour differ from the daytime guided tour?

The night tour uses purpose-designed lighting and projections to reveal details that are invisible during the day — Byzantine mosaics around the mihrab, Kufic inscriptions, the recycled Roman capitals. The crowd is much smaller (80 people maximum versus 2 million annual daytime visitors) and there is no ambient noise. The [daytime guided tour](/activity/mezquita-guided-tour) offers skip-the-line access and a certified expert guide, which allows for proper questions and answers — the two visits complement rather than duplicate each other.