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Discover Alicante And The Costa Blanca A Guided Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is AU$11 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 8h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Alicante's sun-drenched charm and Mediterranean soul with our self-guided tour, allowing you to explore Spain's Costa Blanca capital at your own pace. Begin in the palm-lined Explanada de España, then climb to Santa Bárbara Castle and wander through the lanes of Barrio Santa Cruz. Discover the Concatedral de San Nicolás and the Gothic Basílica de Santa María built atop the ruins of the old mosque after the Reconquista. Explore the MARQ archaeological museum's 60,000-artifact collection and the MACA contemporary art galleries housing Dalí, Miró, and Picasso originals. Cross to Tabarca Island where 17th-century fortifications and crystalline waters. Savour arroz a banda, paella, and fresh seafood in the parrillas and tapas bars along Calle San Francisco, then sip Fondillón wine from Alicante's DO region. Travel through the colourful fishing town of Villajoyosa, the cliffside village of Guadalest, and the palm forest of Elche, a UNESCO World Heritage site with 200,000 date palms.

Activity location

  • Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • Alacant, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Explanada de España
    • Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • 03002, Alacant, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain

Check availability

Discover Alicante And The Costa Blanca A Guided Tour

  • Activity duration is 8 hours and 30 minutes8h 30m
    8h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
AU$11.38 x 1 AdultAU$11.38
Total
Price is AU$11.38

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Digital Maps.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 50+ Alicante attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya

  • 1h
Alicante's iconic palm-lined promenade has been the heart of the city's waterfront since 1867, its undulating mosaic of 6.5 million red, cream, and black marble tiles creating the wave pattern that gives the boardwalk its distinctive identity. The 500-meter tree-shaded walk connects the port to Playa del Postiguet, passing terraced cafés, flower stalls, and the bandstand where summer concerts draw locals and visitors every weekend. This is where Alicantinos take their evening paseo, stopping for horchata, ice cream, and conversation beneath the 72 palm trees that have shaded the promenade for over 150 years.

Castillo de Santa Bárbara

  • 1h
The fortress atop Mount Benacantil rises 166 metres above the Mediterranean, offering panoramic views that span from the port to Playa de San Juan and the Sierra de Aitana beyond. Carthaginians, Romans, Moors, and Castilians each built and rebuilt the defensive position over 2,500 years, leaving layered remnants of towers, cisterns, dungeons, and chapels that tell Alicante's storey in stone. The castle is reached via a free lift tunneled 142 metres through the mountain from Playa del Postiguet, or by the winding road up through the Ereta Park for those who prefer a scenic approach.

Barrio Santa Cruz

  • 30m
Alicante's oldest area spreads across the steep hillside beneath Santa Bárbara Castle, its whitewashed houses, blue-tiled fountains, and cascading geraniums creating the atmospheric heart of the old city. Narrow stairways climb between terracotta rooftops and iron-wrought balconies where residents have hung colourful flowers for generations. The quarter hosts the Cruces de Mayo festival each May when neighbors decorate street altars with flowers, and comes alive during Hogueras de San Juan in June when locals gather in the small plazas for impromptu concerts and dancing.

Concatedral Sant Nicolau de Bari d'Alacant

  • 1h
The 17th-century Concatedral de San Nicolás rises where a mosque once stood, its austere Herrerian Renaissance facade concealing a gilded baroque interior and a cloistered courtyard with orange trees. A short walk away, the Gothic Basílica de Santa María (1,321 CE) is Alicante's oldest active church, built on the foundations of the main mosque after the Reconquista, its twin towers and rose window dominating Plaza de Santa María. Inside, a 17th-century altarpiece by Juan Bautista Borja and a baroque organ reward visitors who step inside from the sun.

Archaeological Museum of Alicante (Pass by)

The award-winning MARQ houses over 60,000 catalogued artefacts spanning from the Palaeolithic era through medieval Islamic Alicante, earning European Museum of the Year in 2004 for its immersive galleries that recreate the sounds, smells, and atmospheres of past civilisations. The museum's collection includes Iberian sculpture, Roman mosaics from nearby Lucentum, Visigothic jewellery, and Islamic ceramics, organised thematically across rooms representing archaeological methodology and period reconstruction. Three temporary exhibition halls regularly host international collaborations, with recent shows featuring treasures from the British Museum and the Louvre.

Mercat Central d'Alacant

  • 1h
The neo-Byzantine Mercado Central, completed in 1921, fills a striking yellow-tiled hall with 292 stalls where Alicantinos shop for fresh fish, Iberian hams, manchego cheese, olives, and Fondillón wines in an atmosphere unchanged for a century. Just outside, Calle San Francisco is lined with whimsical mushroom sculptures that have transformed the pedestrian street into one of Spain's most photographed food destinations, its tapas bars serving anchoas de l'Escala, esgarraet, and the local speciality coca amb tonyina from midday until well past midnight.

Platja del Postiguet

  • 30m
Alicante's city beach curves for 700 metres along the waterfront directly below Santa Bárbara Castle, its fine golden sand and gentle waves making it one of Europe's most accessible urban beaches. Blue Flag certified for water quality, the beach is walking distance from the old town and connected by the waterfront promenade to both the port and the tram line that continues north to the longer beaches of San Juan and El Campello. Lifeguards, showers, and chiringuito beach bars operate from April through October.

Marina Esportiva del Port d'Alacant

  • 1h
Alicante's port transformed from a commercial harbour into a Mediterranean yacht destination after hosting the Volvo Ocean Race start in 2008, its modern marina now lined with sailing superyachts, waterfront restaurants, and the iconic Panoramis entertainment complex. The port area connects to the Explanada via the palm-lined Paseo del Puerto, where locals pass evenings watching ferries departing for Tabarca Island and cruise ships calling from across the Mediterranean. The Volvo Ocean Race Museum documents the sport's history with interactive exhibits and archive footage from nine editions.

Isla de Tabarca (Pass by)

Spain's smallest inhabited island sits 22 kilometres southeast of Alicante, reached by a 45-minute ferry journey to a walled 18th-century fishing village that Carlos III built to protect liberated Genoese slaves from Barbary pirates. The island's crystalline waters became Spain's first marine reserve in 1986, making it a snorkelling destination where protected species thrive among seagrass meadows visible from the surface. The medieval stone walls, baroque church, and lighthouse can all be visited on a 90-minute walking loop, while caldero de Tabarca, the island's signature fish and rice dish, is best enjoyed at one of the harbor-side terraces.

Palmeral of Elche (Pass by)

The UNESCO-listed Palmeral of Elche is Europe's largest palm forest, containing over 200,000 date palms descended from trees planted by Phoenicians and Moors between the 7th and 10th centuries when the region was Islamic al-Andalus. The city of Elche lies 25 minutes southwest of Alicante and can be visited as a half-day trip, with the Huerto del Cura botanical garden and the Museo del Palmeral explaining the sophisticated irrigation system that has sustained the grove for over 1,200 years. Palm fronds harvested here supply Spain's Palm Sunday processions nationwide.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • Alacant, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Explanada de España
    • Passeig Esplanada d'Espanya
    • 03002, Alacant, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain

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