Semana Santa fills the streets in late March and early April, then the city empties and the Generalife erupts in wisteria and irises. April is the month Granada shows you two different versions of itself.
Seven years resident in Granada. Specialist in Nasrid architecture, Al-Andalus history, and Andalusian walking routes.
Published
April is the month Granada plays both ends of the spectrum. The first week — or the last days of March, depending on the year — brings Semana Santa: solemn processions of cofradías carrying elaborate floats through the old streets, incense hanging in the air, drums echoing off the walls of the Alhambra. Then Easter passes, the city exhales, and spring takes over properly. The Generalife gardens hit peak flower by mid-April — wisteria, irises, roses, the water channels running full with snowmelt. Afternoons reach 19–23°C. Long evenings stretch toward 9 PM.
One thing to know before you book: Easter 2026 falls on 5 April, which means most of Holy Week runs in late March. If you want the full Semana Santa experience in 2026, you need to arrive by 29 March. Easter 2027 is 18 April, putting the entire week in mid-April. The date shifts every year — always check before committing to flights.
This guide covers April's two personalities: the Semana Santa week and the quieter spring fortnight that follows. For the full month-by-month comparison, the best time to visit Granada guide has the complete picture. If you're planning around the spring season more broadly, spring in Granada covers April and May together.
Weather in April
Granada sits at 738 metres, which keeps temperatures a degree or two below the Andalusian coast. April is spring in full effect: highs of 19–23°C, lows of 8–11°C, and evenings that stretch noticeably longer as the month progresses — sunset is around 20:30 in early April and pushes past 21:00 by the last week. The city is genuinely pleasant to walk in.
Early April (1–10)
19°C
Semana Santa period in most years (in 2026, Easter falls on 5 April). Cooler mornings — around 8–9°C — warming quickly. Rain is possible, especially on the afternoons of Holy Week. A light layer is worth carrying.
Mid-April (11–20)
21°C
The post-Easter window. More reliable sun, lows lifting to 10–11°C. The Generalife gardens are at their peak — wisteria and irises in full colour. This is often the best two-week window of the entire month.
Late April (21–30)
23°C
Warmest stretch of the month. Long evenings — 21:00 sunset. Roses joining the wisteria in the gardens. Alhambra crowds building toward May levels. Accommodation prices begin their spring climb.
April averages eight to ten rainy days in Granada, concentrated in brief afternoon showers rather than persistent rain. The Alhambra closes its external terraces during heavy rainfall but the Nasrid Palaces stay open. After a shower in the Albaicín, the lanes drain quickly and the stone smells of wet rosemary and damp earth.
Sierra Nevada snow in April
The high peaks — Mulhacén at 3,479 m, Veleta at 3,396 m — carry substantial snow through April. The ski season sometimes runs into mid-April in good years. From the Mirador de San Nicolás and the Alhambra terraces, the contrast between the flowering Generalife gardens below and white peaks above is one of the cleaner images Granada offers all year. By May the snowline retreats above 3,000 m.
Semana Santa in Granada
Holy Week is the event that shapes April's character — and sometimes most of it falls in March, depending on the year. In 2026, Easter Sunday is 5 April, so the main processions (Palm Sunday through Holy Thursday) run in the last week of March. In 2027, Easter is 18 April and the full week lands mid-month. Wherever it falls, Semana Santa is the single biggest factor in how crowded and expensive the city gets during this period.
What Semana Santa involves
Granada's Holy Week is run by cofradías — brotherhoods of up to several hundred members who carry enormous floats (called pasos) through the city streets, usually in the late afternoon and evening. The floats carry carved religious figures, typically a Virgin and a scene from the Passion, and can take 50 or more people to move. The processions are solemn rather than festive — the sound is drums and saetas (improvised devotional songs sung from balconies as the float passes below).
The most atmospheric routes are through the Albaicín neighbourhood, where the streets narrow to single-file width and the float appears to brush the walls, and along the Carrera del Darro, where processions pass with the illuminated Alhambra above. These routes draw local spectators rather than tourist crowds.
For procession schedules, cofradía listings, and route maps, see the Semana Santa Granada event page. For where to stand and how to plan your viewing, the Semana Santa guide covers the practical detail.
What Semana Santa does to the city
This is the most crowded week Granada sees outside of summer. Hotels charge peak rates — expect 15–20% above standard spring prices, higher for properties close to the cathedral circuit. Alhambra tickets for Semana Santa week sell out three to four months ahead. Restaurants near the procession routes fill from early evening.
If you are coming specifically for the processions, plan well ahead. If you are coming for the Generalife gardens, the Albaicín, and comfortable spring temperatures, the two weeks after Easter are often better — flowers still out, crowds gone, prices softer.
The Alhambra in April
April is high season at the Alhambra. The gap between April and the summer crunch is narrower than it looks: you are already two to three months away from sold-out weeks in advance, not two to three weeks. Booking early is not optional advice — it is the practical requirement.
Availability in April
Semana Santa week (late March/early April): Book three to four months ahead. The 90-day booking window opens for these dates in late December or early January — morning slots go within days. In 2026, that means booking by early January for the 29 March–5 April period.
Mid-April (post-Easter): Two to three months out gives good choice of entry time. Morning slots (9:00 AM and 10:00 AM) are still the fastest to go. If you have flexibility on exact date, a Tuesday or Wednesday morning in the second week of April is the least-pressured window of the month.
Late April (21–30): Three months ahead is safer than two. The month ends heading into May, and the summer surge is already beginning to affect late-April demand. Avoid late-afternoon slots — the light inside the Nasrid Palaces is flat after 3 PM.
The Generalife gardens in April
Mid-to-late April is the year's best window for the Generalife gardens. The Patio de la Acequia — the long reflecting pool flanked by jets fed directly by Sierra Nevada snowmelt — runs at its fullest in April. The upper terraces carry wisteria climbing over stone archways, irises along the lower borders, and the first roses of the season on the upper banks.
Inside the Nasrid Palaces, spring morning light is kinder than summer's overhead glare. The carved stucco reads more clearly, and the muqarnas in the Sala de los Abencerrajes catch shadow in a way that photographs differently from the flat light of July. A 10:00 AM April entry is close to the best the complex offers.
For the full booking process — how the 90-day release schedule works, which ticket types cover which parts of the complex, and what to do when your preferred slot is gone — see the Alhambra tickets guide.
Sierra Nevada and spring outdoors
April is a transition month on the mountain. The ski season often runs into mid-April — in good snow years, the Pradollano resort keeps lifts running until after Easter. Once it closes, the access road stays open and the mountain shifts to hiking mode. Trails above 1,500 m are still carrying patches of snow on north-facing slopes through most of April, but the lower routes are fully walkable from the start of the month.
Hiking conditions in April
The best April hiking is on the lower Alpujarras routes rather than the high Sierra Nevada. The Acequia del Gran Capitán path above Órgiva, the circular loop above Pampaneira, and the terraced trails around Capileira are all reliable in April — wildflowers on the margins, views across the valley, and temperatures that stay cool enough to move comfortably. These routes sit between 1,000 and 1,400 m, where the snow has already cleared.
Above 1,800 m, expect residual snow and wet ground through most of April. The summit road to Veleta may still be gated in early April depending on snow conditions — check the Parque Nacional Sierra Nevada website before planning anything above 2,000 m. By May those high routes open fully; in April the Alpujarras are the better bet. The Sierra Nevada guide has trail conditions by season.
The Albaicín in April
April mornings in the Albaicín are the best time to walk the neighbourhood. The whitewashed lanes stay cool until 10 AM, jasmine is beginning to spill over walls in the carmenes (private garden-houses), and the Mirador de San Nicolás has not yet filled with tour groups. On a clear day, the Sierra Nevada behind the Alhambra still carries significant snow — more than in May, more contrast, better photographs.
Avoid the Albaicín on Semana Santa evenings unless you specifically want to watch the processions — the streets fill and movement slows to foot traffic only. In the mid-April window, the neighbourhood returns to its quieter rhythm: a few tea houses on Calle Calderería Nueva, cats on walls, the sound of water in hidden garden patios.
Practical planning
April has two distinct booking profiles. Semana Santa week is effectively peak season. The rest of the month is high season but workable if you plan ahead.
When to book
Semana Santa (late March/early April): Book accommodation 3+ months ahead, Alhambra 3–4 months ahead. In 2026, this means booking in December or January. The city runs at capacity during this period.
Mid-April (post-Easter): Accommodation 6–8 weeks ahead is usually enough for good availability. Alhambra 2–3 months ahead. This is the most rewarding window of the month for most visitors.
Late April (21–30): Prices begin climbing toward May levels. Book accommodation 6–8 weeks ahead. Alhambra 2–3 months. Late April is busier than mid-April but still below summer pressure.
What to pack
Layers — afternoons reach 23°C but mornings start at 8–9°C; a light jacket for early starts
Comfortable shoes with grip for the Albaicín cobbles, which can be slick after morning showers
A packable waterproof — April showers are short but real
Sun protection for Alhambra terraces — the spring sun at 730 m altitude is stronger than it feels
If hiking in the Alpujarras: a mid-layer for the shade sections and wind above 1,200 m
What you will pay
April pricing breaks into two clear tiers:
Semana Santa week: 15–20% above standard spring prices for accommodation. Some Albaicín properties price higher. Not summer-peak but well above the shoulder-season rates.
Mid-to-late April (post-Easter): 10–15% below May peak. Mid-range hotels in the centre available for €65–100. This is genuine spring value before the tourist surge arrives in force.
Alhambra general admission is the same year-round — verify the current price on the official booking site before purchasing. Restaurants do not price seasonally.
Easter date shifts every year
Holy Week in Granada can fall anywhere from late March to late April, depending on when Easter falls. In 2026, Easter is 5 April (Holy Week: 29 March–5 April). In 2027, Easter is 18 April (Holy Week: 12–18 April). Always verify the specific year before booking, because the difference between arriving 10 April 2026 versus 10 April 2027 is the difference between a quiet post-Easter city and a city mid-procession.
Frequently asked questions
Frequently asked questions
When is Semana Santa in Granada in 2026?
Easter Sunday 2026 falls on 5 April, which means Holy Week runs 29 March to 5 April. Most of the processions — the Palm Sunday opening, the major floats on Holy Wednesday and Holy Thursday — take place in late March. Only Holy Saturday and Easter Sunday itself land in April. If you want to catch the full week in 2026, plan to arrive by 29 March. In 2027, Easter moves to 18 April, putting the entire Holy Week (12–18 April) fully in the month — a very different arrival window. Always confirm the specific year before booking. Full logistics on the Semana Santa Granada event page.
Is April too crowded to enjoy Granada?
It depends on which April. During Semana Santa — and in 2026 that means the last days of March and the first few days of April — the city is at its busiest. Hotels price up, the streets around the cathedral fill with spectators, and Alhambra tickets are long gone unless you booked three to four months ahead. But once Easter passes, the crowds fall away sharply. The two weeks after Easter are often quieter than March and significantly cheaper than May. The best time to visit Granada guide covers the full seasonal picture, but mid-to-late April is one of the more underrated windows in the calendar.
How far ahead do I need to book the Alhambra in April?
For Semana Santa week — in 2026 that is 29 March to 5 April — book three to four months ahead. Tickets for the Nasrid Palaces are typically gone within days of the 90-day booking window opening for those dates. For the rest of April, two to three months gives you solid choice of morning entry slots. The full booking process — how the release schedule works, which ticket types cover what — is in the Alhambra tickets guide.
What is Granada's Semana Santa like compared to Seville's?
Seville's Holy Week is a spectacle on an international scale — vast floats, enormous crowds, commercial infrastructure built around it. Granada's is more intimate. The processions wind through tighter streets, the Albaicín hillside routes are genuinely atmospheric at night, and the crowds are largely local rather than tourist. You can stand near the cofradías without a reserved seat. That said, "intimate" does not mean uncrowded during the main evenings of Holy Week — the cathedral circuit and Gran Vía still fill. The difference is that Granada has neighbourhoods — the Albaicín, the Realejo — where you can watch the processions at close range without being penned in. The Semana Santa guide covers where to stand and which evenings matter most.
Are the Generalife gardens at their best in April?
Yes. By mid-April the upper terraces of the Generalife are carrying wisteria, irises, and the first roses of the season. The water channels in the Patio de la Acequia run full from Sierra Nevada snowmelt, and the fountains are at their most vigorous. The gardens were built around water and fragrance rather than just colour — April is when both are working together. September has good roses too, but the wisteria and iris combination is specific to spring. Visit early morning if you can: the light is better in the Nasrid Palaces and the garden terraces are quieter before 11 AM.
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
The two weeks after Easter are often better than Easter itself
The Semana Santa crowds clear within a day of Easter Sunday. Prices soften — hotels that charged peak rates for Holy Week drop back toward standard spring pricing, sometimes 20% lower. The Generalife gardens are still in full flower. Alhambra tickets become bookable two to three weeks out rather than three to four months. If your trip is flexible and you care about atmosphere over watching the processions, arriving on the Tuesday after Easter and staying through to late April gives you a quieter, more affordable version of the same city.
Local custom
Where to stand for the Albaicín processions
Most visitors follow the official procession routes along the Gran Vía and around the cathedral — the busiest stretches, with the worst sightlines. The evening processions that pass through the Albaicín are different: narrower streets, torchlight, the sound of drums reverberating off whitewashed walls. The stretch along Carrera del Darro, where cofradías cross the river and pass the Alhambra walls overhead, is the most atmospheric position in the city. Arrive 30 minutes before the procession is scheduled to pass and stand near the Paseo de los Tristes. You will be close enough to smell the incense.
Booking tip
Book the Alhambra for April in January
The Alhambra releases tickets on a rolling 90-day window. That means April slots open in January. For Semana Santa dates specifically (29 March–5 April in 2026), the popular morning entries fill within days of the 90-day release. Log into the official booking site on the exact day the window opens for your target date — typically at midnight Spanish time. If you miss that window, check back daily for cancellations. Late April slots are easier, but January booking still gives you the best choice of entry time.
Considering the month before or after? The May in Granada guide covers the Cruces de Mayo flower festival, ideal Alhambra conditions, and Sierra Nevada hiking at its best.