Revelers watching fireworks at New Year.

Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

There’s something truly special about spending New Year’s Eve abroad. It’s a great opportunity to get to know the end-of-year quirks and customs of other cultures. Like, sure, linking arms and singing Auld Lang Syne is fun and all, but have you ever attempted to eat twelve grapes in twelve seconds as the clock strikes midnight? There are oodles of fun things to do on New Year’s Eve in Madrid as you count down to the big moment (and beyond), and we've put together a guide to the must-dos that will make your Madrid New Year celebrations go with a bang. Read on for grapes, gambas, chocolate, chestnuts and more...

A Spot of Sightseeing

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

A Spot of Sightseeing

First things first: you’re in for the long-haul. Madrid’s New Year celebrations don’t really start until midnight, so it’s critical you take it a little easy on New Year’s Eve if you want to avoid wearing yourself out. So: spend some time in quiet contemplation at the stunning Temple of Debod, an ancient Egyptian shrine transplanted to the heart of Madrid. Or get your culture fix at the Prado, Reina-Sofia or any number of world-class museums. See the city sights at your own pace on a hop-on hop-off bus tour. Cruise the sights of the stunning Retiro Park by Segway, or via a gentle bike tour that takes in must-see landmarks including the Crystal Palace, Fountain of the Fallen Angel and rose gardens. But above all: don’t overdo it. The last thing you want is to end up zonked by 9PM just because you couldn’t resist that (admittedly marvelous) day trip to Toledo (pictured).

Take a Nap

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Take a Nap

One surefire way of preserving energy is to make like the Madrileños and have a siesta in the afternoon. Ok, ok, so not many Madrileños actually do this – most run errands, take long leisurely lunches or go to the gym instead. But no-one is going to sneer at you for taking this deep-seated Spanish tradition at face value and getting a spot of pre-emptive shut-eye in the afternoon, when you’ll find a number of shops, bars and restaurants have already closed down for the impending New Year party anyway. So go on: draw the blinds, put the phone on silent and crawl under the duvet for a revitalizing afternoon snooze. Zzzzz.

Churros con Chocolate on the Square

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Churros con Chocolate on the Square

If you’re in the market for some easy-going sightseeing in Madrid on New Year’s Eve (and you should be), then look no further than the rather splendid Plaza Mayor, with its elegant arches, soaring statues and stately Baroque architecture. The central square’s strategically positioned cafés and benches provide ample opportunity for casual people-watching over a café con leche or three, while munching classic churros con chocolate here is practically a rite of passage. Hit up the legendary Chocolatería San Ginés for some of the finest in town. This old-school haunt has been serving up its delectable dough sticks since 1894, so you can be confident they’re the real deal. One mouthful of these crispy sugar-coated treats dipped in their accompanying dark chocolate sauce will confirm it.

Chestnuts in the Park

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Chestnuts in the Park

Prefer your snacks a little more savory? Winter is chestnut season in Madrid, and what could be more festive than strolling streets and squares still bright with Christmas lights, or finding a quiet spot in one of Madrid’s many beautiful parks, hands warmed by a bag of these freshly roasted beauties? You’ll find street vendors scattered throughout the city, with bags of chestnuts available from as little as €2. Still hungry? Some stalls will also offer roasted corn and sweet potatoes, and sticky autumnal toffee apples. Yum.

Have a Nice Dinner

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Have a Nice Dinner

At the risk of coming across as a little... food obsessed, we’d recommend booking well in advance if you’re hoping for a slap-up New Year’s Eve meal. The vast majority of Madrid eateries are closed by early evening on December 31st, leaving (mostly) only hotel restaurants open for business. This is because New Year’s Eve dinner in Spain tends to be a family affair, with lavish feasts served at home to kick off the festivities.

So, you basically have three options: book a restaurant in advance (note that the popular ones fill up fast), make friends with a Madrid family and bag yourself an invite or – and this is perhaps your safest bet – stock up on market-fresh produce from somewhere like Mercado de San Miguel. After all, even the most inept of chefs can surely unwrap some cured meat and salty manchego and fry up some garlicky gambas and chili padron peppers for a super-speedy tapas banquet in the comfort of your own holiday apartment.

Take in a Flamenco Show

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Take in a Flamenco Show

When it comes to flamenco, Madrid is the next best thing to Andalusia, which is where this intense, colorful dance originated. There are all sorts of shows available around the city, from free sidewalk performances to lavish dinners accompanied by some of the country’s finest flamenco dancers and musicians. This show at the Torres Bermejas – with interiors designed to resemble the Alhambra in Granada – is one of the very best. Highly rated alternative options include ​​Corral de la Morería (the oldest flamenco tablao in town), and the lively Casa Patas.

Have a Grape Time

 Things to do on New Year's Eve in Madrid

Have a Grape Time

Grapes are to Spanish New Year as turkeys are to Thanksgiving in the US: your celebration simply wouldn’t be complete without them. A long-held tradition sees thousands of revelers descend on Madrid’s Puerta del Sol before midnight, then guzzling 12 grapes in rapid succession as the Real Casa de Correos clock strikes the hour – at a rate of one grape per strike.

This is more difficult than it sounds, so we recommend getting your hands on a smaller seedless variety if you don’t want to end up looking like a hamster-cheeked loon. Don’t forget to secure your bunch early in the day (you’ll need 12 grapes per person), before stores start shutting down for the celebrations. Your midnight snack is traditionally followed by a kiss for your significant other, and a glass of cava raised to new friends on the square, who should be greeted with a jolly ‘Feliz Ano Nuevo!’ Clubs keep the New Year party going until dawn and beyond, but the appeal of heading exhausted to bed at this point should also not be understated.

Save on things to do in Madrid

Save on admission to Madrid attractions with Go City. Check out @GoCity on Instagram for the latest top tips and attraction info. So grab a Madrid attraction pass and have a new year to remember!

Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
Freelance travel writer

Stu caught the travel bug at an early age, thanks to childhood road trips to the south of France squeezed into the back of a Ford Cortina with two brothers and a Sony Walkman. Now a freelance writer living on the Norfolk coast, Stu has produced content for travel giants including Frommer’s, British Airways, Expedia, Mr & Mrs Smith, and now Go City. His most memorable travel experiences include drinking kava with the locals in Fiji and pranging a taxi driver’s car in the Honduran capital.

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Madrid skyline.
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Free Things to do in Madrid

Madrid isn’t exactly renowned as a budget holiday spot, but that doesn’t mean you have to break the bank to have fun once you’re there. In fact, there are stacks of free things you can do in Madrid, from visiting world-class museums and royal palaces to browsing flea markets, picnicking in the parks, and simply enjoying the city’s elegant architecture. Check out our selection of the best free things to do in Madrid, including: Plaza Mayor Cibeles Palace Retiro Park Prado and Reina Sofia museums Almudena Cathedral El Rastro flea market Gran Via Temple of Debod Plaza Mayor A stroll around this most elegant of Madrid plazas is essential and, crucially, will cost you absolutely nada. Plaza Mayor is the city’s beating heart, a grand square that’s accessed via nine monumental arches. Grab a selfie by the extremely photogenic Arco de los Cuchilleros then take in the intricate mythological murals that adorn the Casa de la Panadería and say hola to King Philip III sitting astride his trusty steed (albeit in statue form). Pro tip: there’s no better way to people-watch in Madrid than by grabbing a cone of hot, sugary churros with chocolate dipping sauce and finding a seat beneath one of the plaza’s ornate towering lamp posts. Enjoy! Cibeles Palace The crowning glory of the already magnificent Plaza de Cibeles, Cibeles Palace is a glorious architectural confection complete with Neoplateresque facade and great wedding-cake turrets. There’s no charge for admiring its extraordinary exterior, taking a peek inside and filling your Insta feed with #humblebrag snaps galore but, if your budget will stretch to it, it’s worth paying the €3 fee to ascend the tower for 360-degree city views that take in the 11-kilometer-long Calle Alcalá, the Colon Towers and, of course, Plaza de Cibeles itself, with its iconic marble fountain depicting the goddess Cybele on a lion-drawn chariot. Retiro Park There’s more than enough free eye candy in Retiro Park to fill a day’s sightseeing (or more). Don’t-miss landmarks include the glass-and-cast-iron masterpiece that is the Crystal Palace, once a hothouse showcasing local flora and fauna; now an exhibition space for the Reina Sofia Museum. Feast your eyes on the Fountain of the Fallen Angel, a monumental sculpture depicting Lucifer’s fall from grace, stop to smell the roses in the formal gardens, and marvel at the epic Monument to Alfonso XII from a prime position on the tranquil boating lake. See it all on a guided bike tour or take it easy – a lazy picnic of Spanish cheeses, cured meats and still-warm bread, scoffed on the lawns by the kitschy Fisherman’s House, is just about as good as life gets. Free Museums Madrid has more world-class art museums than you can shake a paintbrush at. Chief among these are the Prado and Reina Sofia which, between them, cover the history of (mostly) Spanish and European art from the 12th Century to the present day. We’re talking masterpieces by the likes of Picasso, El Greco, Goya, Velázquez, Dalí, Miró, Bosch, Raphael and van Dyck, to name just a few. You’ll find some of their best-known works here. Hit up Reina Sofia for a close-up look at Picasso’s Guernica, one of the most powerful anti-war statements ever committed to canvas, and head over to the Prado for Velázquez’ illusory Las Meninas, Bosch’s enigmatic Garden of Earthly Delights triptych and other bucket-list pieces. Entry to the both museums is free during the last two hours of opening. Reina Sofia is completely free to enter on Sundays and holidays. You can also save money on guided tours at both (and access to many other Madrid attractions) with a Madrid pass from Go City. El Rastro Market The picturesque old neighborhood of La Latina is worth a visit any day of the week (top tip for foodies: it’s where you’ll find some of the best tapas in town), but Sundays are particularly enjoyable thanks to the vast El Rastro, Spain’s biggest open-air flea market. It’s great fun just browsing the hundreds of stalls in the streets and lanes around Calle de la Ribera de Curtidores, all piled high with antiques, retro fashions, kitsch kitchenware, vintage vinyl records and, well, pretty much anything else you can think of. It’s free to look, and free to take Insta-worthy snaps galore. But bring your best haggling game, too: there’s no way you’re walking out of here without being tempted by a phrenological head, old street map, Spanish Civil War medal, or some such other souvenir curio... Gran Vía Sticking with the shopping theme, the Gran Vía is Madrid’s most famous shopping boulevard, a long, elegant stretch of capitalist excess with hundreds of stores, malls, bars and restaurants in which to splash the cash. But resist the lure of Mango and Massimo Dutti and there’s plenty of gratis fun to be had here, by simply admiring the eclectic architecture and soaking up the lively atmosphere. Look out for the landmark Metropolis building, topped with its gilded cupola and winged goddess, snap a selfie beneath the Capitol building’s old-school Schweppes sign and – oh, go on then – treat yourself to a refreshing Seville orange sorbet from one of the many fine gelato joints. Almudena Cathedral This glorious 19th-century confection at the bottom of Calle Mayor (and right next door to the Royal Palace) is free to enter. The neo-gothic interior’s clean lines, vivid stained glass windows and, yes, even pop-art decor, set it apart from other European cathedrals of this era, lending a strikingly modern look that surprises and delights in equal measure. Look out for statues of contemporary artists, painted icons by Spanish legend Kiko Argüello and a neo-romanesque crypt that houses the mortal remains of several Spanish royals and other dignitaries. There’s a €7 fee to enter the cathedral museum, which contains effigies of the city’s patron saints. Temple of Debod Last but by no means least, you simply must enjoy a sunset from the atmospheric environs of the Temple of Debod in Oeste Park. Dating from the 2nd Century BC, this sacred Egyptian shrine found its way to Madrid in 1968 and has been a favorite with locals, tourists and hopeless romantics ever since. Comprising of a small temple and several stone arches, set over tranquil pools amid beautiful gardens, the temple is pretty special at any time of day or night, but rarely more so than at sundown, when the whole place seems to glow a fiery orange. Cost of this unforgettable Madrid experience? Precisely zero Euros. Heavenly. Save on things to do in Madrid Save on admission to Madrid attractions with Go City. Check out @GoCity on Instagram for the latest top tips and attraction info.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
The Crystal Palace in Retiro Park, Madrid.
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4 Days in Madrid

So you’ve packed your passport, your sunscreen and your Spanish phrasebook. Now you’re all set for that much-needed Madrid break. Or are you? This, after all, is a city with more excellent attractions than you can shake a great big stick at. So, if you’re planning four days in Madrid, it pays to do just that: plan. After all, a well-researched itinerary can help you avoid the three cardinal holiday sins: aimless wandering, sore feet, and heated street arguments with your other half. Luckily for you, we’ve done the hard work so you don’t have to. Check out our easy-going guide to spending four days in Madrid, including royal palaces, world-class museums, foodie fave markets, picture-perfect parks, and some of the sweetest treats in town. Day 1: Fine Art, Edible Art, and the Best Park in Town OK, let’s start with the Madrid essentials. And by ‘essentials’ we specifically mean sweet, doughy and oh-so-irresistible churros con chocolate. If you’ve never tasted these sugary little sticks of joy, first of all what have you been doing your whole life? Secondly, prepare to have your mind (and taste buds) blown! These crispy sugar-coated dough sticks are served warm with a tub of oozy, super-sweet-and-sticky dark chocolate for dipping, and can be found in just about any Madrid café worth its salt. But if you want to sample what are widely considered the best churros in town, hit up Chocolatería San Ginés, a legendary haunt complete with old-school tiled counters and white marble tables that has been serving up churros con chocolate since 1894. So you can bet these are the real deal. And trust us: four days in Madrid? You’re guaranteed to be back here for more. Ride your sugar high over to the Prado Museum, where a different kind of art form awaits. Here, in one of the world’s top art museums, you’ll find sculptures and paintings galore, with masterpieces by some of Europe’s biggest names. We’re talking Raphael, El Greco, Goya, Titian, Rembrandt and Bosch, to name-drop just a few. Book a guided tour to get the lowdown on world-famous pieces including Bosch’s mind-boggling Garden of Earthly Delights, Rubens’ Three Graces and Velázquez’s illusory Las Meninas. After all that culture (and chocolate), you’ll want a bit of nature to restore equilibrium. Step forward the Retiro Park’s 350 verdant acres, chock-full of stately gardens, monumental statues and fountains, picture-perfect hothouses and elegant palaces to explore. Pootle around the tranquil lake in a rowboat, in the shadow of the frankly epic Monument to Alfonso XII, and grab a selfie at the Fountain of the Fallen Angel, an extraordinary depiction of Lucifer’s descent from heaven inspired by Paradise Lost. See it all (and be the scourge of jogging locals) on a self-guided Segway tour! Day 2: Almudena Cathedral and the Royal Palace One of the (many) great things about Madrid is that most of the big-ticket attractions are practically next door to one another. Even the laziest tourist should be capable of strolling from Plaza Mayor to Almudena Cathedral and onwards to the Royal Palace without troubling the local Uber drivers. And that’s precisely what we suggest you do on day two of your Madrid adventure. Start on Plaza Mayor, a huge and typically elegant Madrid square where the Casa de la Panadería’s intricate murals and huge equestrian statue of King Philip III (and his horse) are highlights. Not to mention proximity to the aforementioned Chocolatería San Ginés (go on, you know you want to). From here, a short walk along Calle Mayor takes you straight to the cathedral, a grand modern confection of dreamy domes and baroque bell towers that’s known as ‘the biggest crypt in Spain’ due to the number of royals and other dignitaries interred within. Speaking of royalty, the palace is right next door. The gardens alone are manna for photography fanatics, all soaring cypresses, perfectly manicured box hedges and monumental neoclassical fountains. Indeed, the view back to the palace from the exquisite Sabatini Gardens is considered one of the finest in town. Take a peek inside on a guided tour that takes in the ceiling frescoes by Giaquinto and Tiepolo, paintings by Velázquez and Caravaggio, and splendid throne room, armory and royal chapel. Day 3: Toledo and Tapas Sure, there’s loads more you could see and do in Madrid on day three of your getaway. But what could be more decadent than taking a break from your break? Toledo, just 35 minutes’ train ride from the city center, is one of Madrid’s most popular day trips. And it’s not difficult to see why. Here, in this ancient medieval city, tiny cobbled alleyways and shady lanes meander past beautiful old synagogues and churches, its atmospheric cobbled streets eventually leading to the gothic grandeur of St Mary’s Cathedral, and the Alcázar of Toledo, a formidable 16th-century fortress at the very top of the town. There’s oodles more eye candy to ogle in this Unesco World Heritage Site. We’re talking grand 10th-century city gates, ancient crypts, Roman baths, haunted castles and fairytale medieval bridges that look good enough to eat. But if ancient stonework sounds a bit too crunchy for your liking, opt instead for Toledo’s most famous export: squishy little marzipan shapes so good you’ll want to take sackloads of them home for everyone you know. Back in Madrid, work up an appetite (you’ll need it) with an evening stroll through the lively streets and squares of La Latina. Not only is it the city’s oldest (and arguably most photogenic) neighborhood, it’s also where you’ll find the best tapas joints and beer bars in town – ideal, in other words, for that quintessentially Spanish night out. Go seriously old-school at the legendary Sobrino de Botín, which has been operating since 1725 (making it the longest-running restaurant in the world, fact fans) and which once employed Goya as a waiter! Day 4: Shopping for Souvenirs You’ve made the memories; now take a slice of Madrid home with you. Souvenirs of this fine city run the gamut from tacky toreador snow globes to official Atlético and Real Madrid merch, but you’ll find the very best goodies to take home in Madrid’s markets and museums. Calle Mayor is as good a place to start as any. Here’s where you can fill your boots (and bags) with classic tourist tat like Spanish fans, cathedral fridge magnets and mugs, kids’ flamenco dresses and more. Scoot just off the main drag tor the twin joys of the Mercado de San Miguel and Mercado de la Cebada. These cool and colorful covered markets are chock-full of Spanish delicacies: velvety olive oils, moreish cured meats, and fine wines, as well as handmade soaps, clothing and local art. For yet more unique gift ideas, hit up the shops at Madrid’s top galleries. We’re talking decorative lampshades, dish towels, tote bags, jewelry and more, as well as prints of some of Spain’s most famous artistic masterpieces. So, if you’ve ever wanted to hang a Picasso in your kitchen, now’s your chance! You’ll find the very finest of these in the magnificent Prado, Reina Sofia and Thyssen-Bornemisza galleries. Save on things to do in Madrid Save on admission to Madrid attractions with Go City. Check out @GoCity on Instagram for the latest top tips and attraction info.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak

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