Visiting Seville in August
Visiting Seville in August
# Seville in August: The Honest Version
Let’s get this out of the way immediately: August in Seville is genuinely, aggressively hot. We’re talking 38-42°C on a normal day, with heatwaves pushing it beyond that. The heat isn’t just a number on your phone either. It radiates off the stone streets, bounces off white walls, and hits you physically when you step outside. Rainfall is minimal to nonexistent. You will be dry, and you will be sweating.
Here’s the thing nobody tells you though: Seville in August has a strange, hollow quality that some people actually love. Many locals leave for the coast throughout July and August, so the city empties out in a way that feels almost eerie. Restaurants close. Some family-run tapas bars shut for weeks. The frantic energy that defines Seville during spring festivals simply isn’t there.
Crowds are a mixed picture. International tourists still come, so the Cathedral, the Alcázar, and the main sights aren’t empty. But compared to April or October, it’s noticeably quieter at major attractions. You won’t be fighting through tour groups on every corner.
Most big monuments stay open, though hours sometimes shorten. The Alcázar gardens are genuinely beautiful and the thick walls keep the interior cool. Museums provide blessed air-conditioned refuge. The real challenge is that spontaneous wandering, which is normally Seville’s greatest pleasure, becomes a tactical operation. You walk in the morning before 11am, disappear completely during early afternoon, then re-emerge around 7-8pm when the city slowly comes back to life.
Is it worth visiting? Honestly, if you’re heat-tolerant, budget-conscious (prices drop noticeably), and prefer a slower pace over a buzzing atmosphere, yes. If you’re someone who wilts above 28°C or you’re travelling with young children or elderly relatives, choose a different month without guilt.
**One practical tip:** Book accommodation with air conditioning confirmed in writing, not just listed as an amenity. In August Seville, a broken AC unit isn’t an inconvenience. It’s a genuine problem.
Plan Your Trip
- Hotels: Search accommodation in Seville on Booking.com
- Tours & Activities: Browse Seville experiences on GetYourGuide
- Day Trips: Find Seville tours on Viator