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The Alhambra palace complex viewed from the Albaicín, Granada
Tourist pass guide

Granada Card: is it worth it?

It bundles the Alhambra, Cathedral, Royal Chapel, buses, and more. Whether you save money or pay a premium for convenience depends entirely on how you plan to spend your days.

The Granada Card is a city tourist pass sold at granadacard.com and the local tourist office. It combines entry to the Alhambra, several other monuments, and a multi-day city bus pass into a single purchase. The appeal is obvious: one payment, no queuing at each ticket desk, and a slight discount against paying for everything individually.

Whether that discount is real depends on what you actually visit. This page runs the numbers honestly and tells you which travellers genuinely save money, which break even, and which would be better off buying tickets separately.

Three passes exist: the Granada Card Basic (~€37), the Granada Card Plus (~€47), and the Dobla de Oro (~€35–42), which is Alhambra-focused rather than city-wide. Each suits a different type of trip.

What's included in each tier

The three passes serve different itineraries. The Basic and Plus cards are for visitors who want the full Granada monument circuit. The Dobla de Oro is for anyone who wants to spend serious time at the Alhambra specifically.

Prices change annually — verify before buying

The figures below were accurate as of early 2026. The Patronato de la Alhambra reviews Alhambra entry prices each year, which affects the value calculation for all three passes. Always check current prices at granadacard.com before purchasing.

Granada Card Basic

~€37
  • Alhambra General ticket — Nasrid Palaces + Alcazaba + Generalife (one visit, timed entry for the Palaces)
  • Granada Cathedral — full entry including the Capilla Mayor
  • Royal Chapel (Capilla Real) — tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, the royal collection
  • Monasterio de San Jerónimo — 16th-century Renaissance monastery, west of the centre
  • Parque de las Ciencias — Granada's science museum, full day's worth on its own
  • 3-day unlimited city bus travel — covers the C3/C4 lines to the Alhambra hill

Granada Card Plus

~€47

Everything in the Basic card, plus:

  • Albaicín guided walking tour — organised tour of the historic Moorish quarter with a licensed guide

The tour runs on fixed days and times, not on demand. Check the schedule at granadacard.com before choosing Plus over Basic — if the dates don't align with your trip, you pay €10 for nothing.

Dobla de Oro

~€35–42

Alhambra-focused pass. No city buses, no Cathedral or other monuments. Designed for people who want to spend more than one session at the complex:

  • Nasrid Palaces — day visit with timed entry
  • Nasrid Palaces night visit — separate evening session (Thursday–Saturday)
  • Alcazaba and Generalife — multiple visits permitted
  • Alhambra museums — Museo de la Alhambra and Museo de Bellas Artes inside the complex

The Dobla de Oro is not a general city pass. If you want the Cathedral and Royal Chapel on the same trip, you'll need separate tickets for those regardless.

The honest calculation

Here is the arithmetic for the Basic card against paying individually, as of early 2026:

Attraction / service Individual price
Alhambra General (Nasrid Palaces + Alcazaba + Generalife) ~€19
Granada Cathedral ~€5
Royal Chapel (Capilla Real) ~€5
City bus — 4 single rides (2× return to Alhambra) ~€8
Parque de las Ciencias ~€9
Monasterio de San Jerónimo ~€4
Total individual ~€50

The Basic card at ~€37 saves roughly €13 against that full list — but only if you visit everything. The savings are in the bus pass and the Parque de las Ciencias. If you skip both, you are paying €37 for €29 worth of monument entries. That's a loss.

Buy the Basic card if:

  • You're staying 3+ days and want the Alhambra, Cathedral, and Royal Chapel
  • You plan to use the city bus at least twice (Alhambra return trip)
  • You want to visit Parque de las Ciencias — it's a solid half-day on its own
  • You'd rather pay once and not think about ticket desks

Skip it if:

  • You're visiting for 1–2 days with the Alhambra as the sole priority
  • You plan to walk everywhere and won't use the bus
  • You have no interest in the Cathedral, Royal Chapel, or science museum
  • You want the Nasrid Palaces night visit — the Basic card doesn't cover that; the Dobla de Oro does

The Dobla de Oro calculation

The Dobla de Oro (~€35–42) makes financial sense only if you want both a daytime and a night visit to the Nasrid Palaces. A daytime Alhambra General ticket (~€19) plus a Nasrid Palaces night ticket (~€8) bought separately would total ~€27 — less than most Dobla de Oro prices. The pass earns its premium if you add the extended museum access and plan multiple Generalife sessions. For a single visit to the Alhambra, buy the General ticket directly.

What the card does not sort for you

Buying the Granada Card does not mean your Alhambra visit is confirmed. The Nasrid Palaces operate on a timed entry system — every visitor needs a specific entry slot, whether they hold a card or an individual ticket. The card gives you the right to enter; it does not assign you a time.

After you buy the card

  1. Go to tickets.alhambra-patronato.es — this is the only official booking portal
  2. Select the Nasrid Palaces timed entry option and enter your Granada Card reference number
  3. Choose a date and time slot — slots open up to four months in advance
  4. Your confirmation email contains the QR code for the Alhambra turnstile

Slots sell out weeks or months ahead from late March through October. Buy the card and book the Alhambra slot as early as possible — ideally on the same day, immediately after purchase. Waiting until the week before your trip is a gamble.

For the Cathedral, Royal Chapel, Parque de las Ciencias, and Monasterio de San Jerónimo, no advance booking is needed — present the card or the card's QR code at the entrance. The bus pass activates on your first journey.

For a detailed walkthrough of the Alhambra booking system — including how to navigate the portal, what to do if slots are sold out, and how far ahead to book by season — see the Alhambra tickets guide.

Where to buy and how the card works

Buy online at granadacard.com before your trip. This is the most reliable route — you get the card reference immediately, which you need to book the Alhambra slot, and you avoid any availability risk at physical outlets.

In-person purchase points

  • Granada Tourist Office — Calle Santa Ana 1, at the foot of the Albaicín. Open Monday–Saturday.
  • Alhambra ticket office — available, but often sold out during peak season and the queues are long. Not recommended as your primary purchase route.
  • Some hotels — a minority of central hotels stock the pass; ask at check-in.

How the card is used

  • The card delivers as a QR code (email or app). Show it at each venue entrance.
  • The Alhambra requires an additional timed-entry booking at tickets.alhambra-patronato.es — the card code is entered during that booking flow.
  • The Parque de las Ciencias and Monasterio de San Jerónimo are walk-up entries: scan the QR, go in.
  • The city bus pass activates on your first scan. The 3 days run consecutively from that first journey.

If you're undecided about how many days to spend in Granada, the best time to visit Granada guide covers seasonal considerations, crowd levels, and which months give the best value for time — useful context before committing to a pass.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Is the Granada Card worth buying?

It depends on your itinerary. The Basic card (~€37) makes sense if you plan to visit the Alhambra, the Cathedral, the Royal Chapel, and take at least four bus rides. Those four items alone cost roughly €37 if paid separately — meaning the Parque de las Ciencias and Monasterio de San Jerónimo entries are essentially free on top. For a 1–2 day trip focused only on the Alhambra, skip the card and book the Alhambra General ticket directly. For 3+ days hitting multiple monuments, the Basic card is worth it.

Does the Granada Card include the Alhambra?

Yes — the Basic and Plus cards include the Alhambra General ticket (Nasrid Palaces + Alcazaba + Generalife). The Dobla de Oro pass is Alhambra-focused and covers multiple visits across all areas of the complex, including Nasrid Palaces night visits. That said, the card does not reserve your timed entry slot automatically. You still need to log in to tickets.alhambra-patronato.es and book a specific time slot for the Nasrid Palaces after purchasing. See the Alhambra tickets guide for the full booking process.

What is the difference between the Granada Card and the Dobla de Oro?

Different purposes. The Granada Card (Basic/Plus) is a city-wide pass — Alhambra plus Cathedral, Royal Chapel, Parque de las Ciencias, Monasterio de San Jerónimo, and city buses. Good for visitors who want the full monument circuit. The Dobla de Oro is Alhambra-only but deeper — it covers all areas of the complex including the Nasrid Palaces night visit and multiple-entry privileges for the gardens and museums. If you plan to spend two days exploring the Alhambra in detail and have little interest in the city's other monuments, the Dobla de Oro may be the better fit.

Where can I buy the Granada Card?

The official website is granadacard.com. Cards are also sold at the Granada Tourist Office (Calle Santa Ana), at the Alhambra ticket office (though availability there is unreliable during peak season), and through some hotels. Buying online in advance is strongly recommended — it avoids queues and guarantees you have the card before attempting to book the Alhambra time slot.

How does the bus pass in the Granada Card work?

The Basic and Plus cards include 3 days of unlimited city bus travel on Granada's urban network. This covers the C3 and C4 lines that run between the city centre and the Alhambra hill — the most useful routes for tourists. A single bus ride costs around €2; the Alhambra round trip alone is €4 per day. If you are making two Alhambra visits or combining with trips to the bus station or outlying areas, the 3-day pass quickly earns its keep. The days are calendar days, not 72-hour periods — activate it on your first bus journey.

Reporter notebook

Insider tips

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

Money tip

The card breaks even only if you use the bus — check your itinerary first

Run the numbers before you buy. Alhambra General ticket: ~€19. Cathedral: ~€5. Royal Chapel: ~€5. That's €29 of monuments. Add four bus rides (two return trips to the Alhambra) at €2 each and you're at €37 — exactly the Basic card price. The Parque de las Ciencias (€9 on its own) and Monasterio de San Jerónimo are then free extras. If you're not using the bus at all (walking up to the Alhambra, say) and only visiting two or three sites, buying tickets individually is cheaper.

Local custom

Cathedral and Royal Chapel close for Mass on Sunday mornings

Both the Cathedral and Royal Chapel are included in the Granada Card, but on Sundays they close to general visitors during the 10:30 AM Mass — typically for 45 minutes to an hour. Visitors who turn up at 10:15 AM expecting to walk straight in get turned away until it ends. Locals who attend these churches know the schedule; out-of-towners regularly do not. If Sunday is your day for the monument circuit, arrive before 9:30 AM or plan to arrive after 11:30 AM. The Royal Chapel also closes on the main Catholic feast days — check the posted schedule outside.

Best time

The Plus card Albaicín tour runs on fixed days — check before committing

The Granada Card Plus (~€47) adds an organised Albaicín walking tour to the Basic package. The tours run on specific days and times set by the operator — they are not on-demand. If your travel dates do not align with the scheduled departure, you get the Basic card value at a €10 premium. Check the current schedule at granadacard.com before choosing Plus over Basic.

Crowd tip

Royal Chapel and Cathedral are quickest mid-morning on weekdays

Both the Cathedral and Royal Chapel are included in the Granada Card and genuinely worth the visit — the Royal Chapel holds the tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, and the Cathedral's sacristy is one of the finest Renaissance interiors in Andalusia. Crowds are thinnest on Tuesday to Thursday mornings, from opening until about 11 AM. School groups arrive around 10 AM in term time; tour buses typically at 11 AM. A 45-minute circuit of the Royal Chapel followed by 30 minutes in the Cathedral works cleanly in that window.