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Traditional Cordovan patio with red geraniums, whitewashed walls and central fountain
Guided Visit

Córdoba Patios Tour: UNESCO Courtyards & the Patio Festival Guide

Visita a los Patios de Córdoba

2 hours (guided tour) or flexible (self-guided)
Year-round. Patio Festival: 4–17 May 2026. Palacio de Viana: Tuesday–Sunday. San Basilio patios: daily 10:30 am–2 pm.
Variable depending on the guided tour chosen. Permanent patios accessible directly.
All activities

At a glance

Duration
2 hours (guided tour) or flexible (self-guided)
Price
Free (festival and San Basilio patios) from €5 (Palacio de Viana) or €16 (guided tour)
Schedule
Year-round. Patio Festival: 4–17 May 2026. Palacio de Viana: Tuesday–Sunday. San Basilio patios: daily 10:30 am–2 pm.
Meeting point
Variable depending on the guided tour chosen. Permanent patios accessible directly.
Languages
Spanish, English, French (some operators)
Group size
Guided tours: 2 to 20 people depending on operator. Self-guided: individual or group.
Availability
Year-round with reduced access outside the festival. Festival in May: extended free access to 50+ patios.
Accessibility
Most patios are accessible. Narrow cobbled lanes may present challenges for wheelchair users. Palacio de Viana partially accessible.

Córdoba's patios are not just flowering courtyards — they're an urban practice going back more than 2,000 years, inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2012. Red geraniums cascade down whitewashed walls, fountains murmur in shaded corners, and for two weeks each May, the whole city opens its doors.

The Patio Festival in May

The Festival de los Patios runs during the first two weeks of May (2026 dates: 4–17 May). More than 50 private patios open free of charge — houses where owners have been cultivating flowers for decades, communal courtyards where neighbours decorate together, former stables turned into hanging gardens. Queues reach 30 minutes for the prize-winning patios, which is the price for seeing spaces that stay closed the rest of the year.

The festival has existed since 1921, when the mayor launched a competition to beautify the city. Owners now compete across four categories — old vs modern architecture, private vs communal — with prizes from a jury scoring upkeep, floral composition and colour harmony. On festival evenings, flamenco shows and improvised concerts animate some patios. The energy is real, but so are the crowds.

Visiting year-round without the crowds

Outside the festival, the patios have a completely different quality. No queues, no tourists jostling for the same angle. You can stand in a courtyard for ten minutes watching how light filters through jasmine leaves.

Palacio de Viana: twelve patios at once

The Palacio de Viana is a 14th-century aristocratic palace with twelve patios spanning all eras and styles — Renaissance, Baroque, Romantic. Full entry costs €9 (patios + palace interior), or €5 for the patios only. Free on Wednesdays from 2 to 5 pm — arrive early because locals know this. Open Tuesday–Saturday 10 am–7 pm (9 am–3 pm in July–August), Sunday 10 am–3 pm, closed Monday.

Three free patios in San Basilio

The San Basilio neighbourhood, between the Alcázar and the old city walls, has three free patios open year-round:

Patio San Basilio 17 (Casa LONGA) — a small boutique hotel with an intimate patio in blue and white pottery. Open Monday, Thursday–Sunday 11 am–2 pm.

Patio San Basilio 20 — the La Plata Cordobesa silversmithing workshop, where you watch craftsmen working filigree silver. Every day 10:30 am–2 pm.

Patio San Basilio 44 — the largest, with craft shops around a central fountain and vine climbing to the first floor. Every day 10:30 am–2 pm.

All three are walk-in — no booking, no obligation to buy.

Guided tours: six patios in two hours

Several operators run 2-hour guided tours combining 6 to 8 patios across the Alcázar Viejo, Santa Marina, San Agustín and San Lorenzo neighbourhoods. The guide explains the historical arc: Romans importing the concept of a central courtyard, Arabs adding fountains and plants for cooling, and how the tradition formalised in the 20th century.

You visit private patios that open only for organised tours — usually modest homes where a family tends hundreds of pots. Owners often describe their routine: watering twice a day in summer, pruning geraniums after flowering, whitewashing walls each spring. Some families have been doing this for three generations.

Around €16 per person. Book the 2-hour patio tour on GetYourGuide from €18.83. In May, these tours let you skip the queues at the most popular patios through reserved time slots.

The architecture and plants you'll see

Cordovan patios follow a recognisable structure: whitewashed walls that reflect heat, cobblestone or hydraulic-tile floors, a central fountain or well, terracotta pots hung in quincunx patterns. Climbing plants (jasmine, honeysuckle, bougainvillea) cover trellises and create shade.

Geraniums dominate — scarlet red, soft pink, pure white. They flower from April to October, withstand the heat and are easy to maintain. Jasmine provides the scent that hits you the moment you cross the threshold. Some patios line up 200 to 300 pots in 30 m². It's dense and sometimes excessive, but that's the local aesthetic.

Planning your visit

During the festival in May, allow at least a half-day for 8–10 patios at a comfortable pace. Download the official interactive map at patios.cordoba.es, which shows all participating patios with opening times. Go early in the morning (10 am) or late afternoon (5 pm) to avoid peak crowds.

Outside the festival, combine the Palacio de Viana (allow 1h30) with the three free San Basilio patios (30–45 min) for a solid patios morning. The guided tour of the Mezquita or Jewish Quarter free walking tour in the afternoon work well — everything is within 10 minutes on foot.

The cycling tour passes through Santa Marina and San Lorenzo where you glimpse patios from the street. And for a monumental-scale comparison, the excursion to Medina Azahara shows how the 10th-century caliphs organised their own palatial courtyards — the same architectural logic at a completely different scale.

Why UNESCO recognised this tradition

In December 2012, UNESCO inscribed the Feast of the Patios of Córdoba on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Not for the architecture itself — that's material heritage — but for what the tradition represents: a collective way of life where neighbours share maintenance, gather in shared space and pass down gardening knowledge across generations.

Cordovans continue to open their patios, plant geraniums and whitewash their walls each spring. Not because tourists come to watch, but because that's how life has been lived here for as long as anyone can remember.

Good for

Photographers Couples History Buffs Art Lovers Architecture Architecture Art Cultural History

Highlights

  • UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2012
  • Patio Festival in May: 50+ private patios open free of charge
  • Palacio de Viana: 12 patios from the 14th to the 20th century (€9 or free Wednesday 2–5 pm)
  • Three permanent free patios in San Basilio
  • 2,000-year architectural tradition (Roman, Arab, Christian)
  • Whitewashed architecture with geraniums, jasmine and fountains
  • 2-hour guided tours covering 6–8 traditional patios (€16)
  • Far fewer crowds outside the festival for a contemplative visit

Included

  • Free access during the Patio Festival (May)
  • Free entry to the three permanent San Basilio patios
  • Guided tour with expert guide (depending on package)
  • Entry to private patios open only for organised tours
  • Official interactive map at patios.cordoba.es

Not included

  • Entry to Palacio de Viana (€5–9 depending on option)
  • Transport
  • Food and drinks
  • Gratuities

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

Visit at 10 am or after 5 pm during the May festival to halve the queues

Prize-winning patios draw 30-minute queues at peak hours. Early morning and late afternoon cut that to 10 minutes or less. Download the official map from patios.cordoba.es and plan a route through the less-visited neighbourhoods like San Agustín before hitting the popular Alcázar Viejo patios.

Money tip

Palacio de Viana is free on Wednesday afternoons — twelve patios for nothing

The aristocratic palace with twelve distinct patios charges €9 normally, but every Wednesday from 2 to 5 pm it's free. Arrive at 1:45 pm because locals know this deal. Outside May, you can see the patios in peace and then walk to the three free San Basilio patios — a full morning of courtyards without spending a euro.

Local custom

On the guided tour, talk to the patio owners — their stories are the real attraction

The guided tours visit private homes where families have tended hundreds of pots for three generations. The owners are often present and happy to explain their routine: watering twice daily in summer, pruning geraniums after flowering, whitewashing walls each spring. These conversations make the visit memorable in a way that just looking at flowers cannot.

Good to know before booking

  • Comfortable shoes for cobbled lanes
  • Respect residents' privacy in inhabited patios
  • No flash photography if requested by owners
  • Hat and sunscreen recommended (May–September)
  • Booking advised for guided tours and Palacio de Viana in high season

Prices & Booking

Free (festival and San Basilio patios) from €5 (Palacio de Viana) or €16 (guided tour)

Year-round. Patio Festival: 4–17 May 2026. Palacio de Viana: Tuesday–Sunday. San Basilio patios: daily 10:30 am–2 pm.

Frequently asked questions

When is the Patio Festival and are there any costs?

The Festival de los Patios runs 4–17 May 2026. More than 50 private patios open free of charge during the festival. Outside the festival, the San Basilio patios are free year-round (10:30 am–2 pm), and Palacio de Viana costs €5–9 (or free Wednesday 2–5 pm). Guided tours (€16 per person) run year-round.

Do I need to book a guided patios tour?

Booking is advised for guided tours, especially during the May festival when demand is high. Palacio de Viana should be booked in advance in high season (April–October). The three free San Basilio patios are walk-in with no booking.

Are the patios suitable for children?

Yes. The free San Basilio patios and Palacio de Viana are family-friendly. The guided tours visit private homes where children can learn about the gardening tradition. The May festival often has flamenco and music events that appeal to families.

What should I wear or bring?

Comfortable shoes for cobbled lanes are essential. Hat and sunscreen are recommended, especially May–September when the sun is intense. Respect residents' privacy and ask before photographing. Never use flash photography in private patios without permission.

Can I visit the patios year-round, or only in May?

Patios are accessible year-round, but the May Patio Festival opens 50+ private courtyards that stay closed otherwise. Outside May, visit Palacio de Viana (€5–9, free Wednesday 2–5 pm) or the three free San Basilio patios. Guided tours covering 6–8 patios run year-round for €16.