Alicante Travel Guide

A Moorish castle rising 166 metres above the Mediterranean. Spain's only inhabited marine reserve island — 40 minutes by boat. Sunset catamarans, mountain waterfalls, fire festivals, and some of the finest tapas bars on the Costa Blanca. Alicante is the south's most liveable city, and we have covered all of it.

8 Experience Guides
300+ Days of Sunshine / Year
4.8 Best Tour Rating
40min To Tabarca Island
Start with the Castle, Wine & Tapas →

Why Alicante?

Alicante sits on the Costa Blanca — Spain's White Coast — where the Segura mountain range meets the Mediterranean in a landscape of limestone cliffs, palm-lined promenades, and water that turns turquoise close to the shore. It is a city of just 330,000 people that punches far above its weight: one of the finest Moorish-era castles in Spain sits directly above the city centre, a UNESCO-protected marine reserve island is a 40-minute ferry ride away, and the old town's bar-to-street ratio is among the highest in the country.

What distinguishes Alicante from other Costa Blanca resorts is its dual identity. It is genuinely a city — with a working port, a proper covered market, neighbourhood tapas bars that open for lunch rather than tourists, and a cultural calendar anchored by the spectacular Hogueras de San Juan fire festival each June. But it is also a beach destination with direct access to mountain scenery, baroque villages, thermal swimming holes, and waterfalls within an hour's drive.

Alicante also produces its own wine in the Vinalopó valley, grows some of Spain's finest table grapes, and hides one of the country's most dramatic castle interiors — connected directly to the city by a lift cut through solid rock — inside a landmark that most visitors photograph from below without going up.

Best time to visitMarch–May and Sept–Nov · 18–25°C · fewer crowds than summer
Hogueras de San JuanJune 20–24 · fire festival · book accommodation weeks in advance
Getting thereAlicante–Elche Airport (ALC) · 12km from centre · TRAM line C-6 direct · 25 min
Getting aroundOld town walkable · promenade by bike · TRAM for beaches · taxis cheap
Days needed3–4 days for city highlights · 5–6 days to include day trips and nature
LanguageSpanish (Castilian) + Valencian · English widely spoken in tourist areas

All Alicante Experiences — Complete Guide

🏭
History · Wine · Tapas

Santa Bárbara Castle, Wine Tasting & Tapas

Alicante's defining experience: the Moorish hilltop fortress that has dominated the city since the 9th century, combined with a local wine tasting from the Alicante DO and a tapas session in the old town. The lift through the mountain rock brings you up — the views bring you back for more.

★★★★★ 4.8 · Skip the line
Castle, Wine & Tapas Guide →
🏝
Island · Boat · Marine Reserve

Roundtrip to Tabarca Island

Spain's only inhabited marine reserve — a tiny fortified island 40 minutes from the port with crystal-clear snorkelling water, a 18th-century walled village, and some of the freshest seafood on the coast. Complete guide to boat options, timings, what to do on the island, and how to avoid the crowds.

★★★★★ 4.7 · Multiple departures
Tabarca Island Guide →
Water · Sunset · Coast

Late Afternoon Catamaran Cruise

The Costa Blanca seen from the water at its most photogenic — the castle glowing on the hill, the city lights beginning to appear, and the Mediterranean turning orange and gold. Guided catamaran cruise departing late afternoon with swim stop, drinks, and the full panorama of the Alicante coastline.

★★★★★ 4.6 · Sunset sailing
Catamaran Cruise Guide →
🏔
Nature · Villages · Day Trip

Guadalest, Altea & Algar Waterfalls

The Costa Blanca's essential day trip circuit: the hilltop village of Guadalest (a Moorish castle balanced on a pinnacle of rock above a turquoise reservoir), whitewashed Altea on the sea, and the Algar waterfalls where you can swim in natural pools fed by mountain springs. All three in a single full day.

★★★★★ 4.7 · Full-day circuit
Guadalest & Algar Guide →
🍳
Food · Cooking · Market

Paella Cooking Class

The Valencian Community — and the tradition of rice cooked over wood fire — stretches all the way down to Alicante. Learn the authentic method: the sofrito base, the correct rice-to-water ratio, and the socarrat (the prized crispy bottom layer) that separates great paella from mediocre. Includes local market visit.

★★★★★ 4.8 · Hands-on class
Paella Cooking Class Guide →
🍻
Food · Wine · Local Culture

Tasting Tour — Eat Like a Local

Alicante's food culture is not tourist-facing — it happens in neighbourhood bars, covered markets, and wine shops that have served the same families for three generations. This guided tasting tour takes you through the best of it: local specialities, Alicante DO wines, and the tapas tradition called la picaeta.

★★★★★ 4.7 · Small groups
Tasting Tour Guide →
💓
Culture · Evening · Dinner

Flamenco Show

Alicante's flamenco scene combines the Andalusian tradition with the passion of the Levante coast. Full guide to the city's best tablaos and evening performances — from intimate venues in the old town with dinner included to standalone shows ideal for an atmospheric evening after a castle visit.

★★★★★ 4.5–4.8 · Multiple venues
Flamenco Show Guide →
🚲
Active · City Tour · Coast

Guided Bike Tour

Alicante's flat promenade, palm-lined coastal paths, and wide streets make it one of Spain's most enjoyable cycling cities. The guided bike tour covers the Explanada de España, the old town, the port, and the city's best viewpoints — with a local guide who knows where to stop for the best coffee and views.

★★★★★ 4.6 · All levels
Bike Tour Guide →

Book Top Alicante Tours

Powered by GetYourGuide

How to Use This Guide

Each card above links to a dedicated experience guide with full descriptions, verified ratings, practical tips, and direct booking links to GetYourGuide. Every recommended tour has been researched with real review data — ratings and review counts are current as of April 2026.

Planning your first visit? Start with the Santa Bárbara Castle, Wine & Tapas guide for the essential Alicante experience, then add the Tabarca Island boat trip and one evening experience (flamenco or tasting tour).

Staying 4+ days? The Guadalest–Altea–Algar waterfalls day trip and the late afternoon catamaran cruise provide the natural counterpoint to the city's cultural highlights.

Traveling with children? Prioritise the Tabarca Island trip (snorkelling in a marine reserve), the coastal bike tour, and the Algar waterfalls circuit.

Learning Spanish? All our experience guides connect to private Spanish lessons — understanding even basic phrases transforms what you hear and read on a guided tour of the Costa Blanca.

Scroll to Top