Two icons, two very different experiences
The Alhambra is a walled palace city: gardens, a fortress, royal palaces and viewpoints spread over a hilltop. The Cordoba Mezquita is one building, but what a building, a vast hall of striped horseshoe arches with a Renaissance cathedral grafted into its center. Comparing them is comparing a city to a cathedral.
Head to head
| Alhambra (Granada) | Mezquita (Cordoba) | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Palace city + gardens + fortress | Mosque-cathedral, one building |
| Ticket | 18 EUR general | 13 EUR |
| Time needed | 3-4 hours | 1.5-2 hours |
| Booking | Timed slot, book weeks ahead | No slot, rarely sells out |
| Crowds | Very high, capped entry | High but flows better |
| Best for | Gardens, palaces, views | One jaw-dropping interior |
Choose the Alhambra if
- You want the single most famous monument in Spain.
- You love gardens, fountains and panoramic views.
- You have half a day and can book ahead for a Nazaries slot.
- You want variety in one visit: palace, fortress and garden.
Choose the Mezquita if
- You are short on time and want maximum impact per hour.
- You are fascinated by the layering of Islamic and Christian architecture.
- You missed Alhambra tickets and want a sold-out-proof alternative.
- You are already routing through Cordoba between Madrid and Seville.
How to do both
With three or more days, see both. Granada and Cordoba are about two hours apart by car or by the fast Avant and AVE trains. The classic plan: a full Alhambra day in Granada (book the guided tour early), then move to Cordoba for the Mezquita, the Roman bridge and the flower-filled patios of the Juderia. A day trip works too if you start early.
Make your Granada day count
A skip-the-line guided tour gives you guaranteed Nazaries entry and the full story, so the Alhambra side of your Andalusia trip is sorted.
Frequently asked questions
Neither is objectively better, they are different. The Alhambra is a sprawling palace city with the Nazaries Palaces, Generalife gardens and Alcazaba fortress, needing half a day. The Mezquita is one extraordinary building, the famous forest of red and white arches with a cathedral built inside, seen in 1.5 hours. For a single must-see icon, most travelers rank the Alhambra first.
Yes, easily, if you have at least three days in Andalusia. Granada and Cordoba are about 2 hours apart by car or fast train. A common plan is the Alhambra over a full day in Granada, then a day trip or overnight in Cordoba for the Mezquita and the old Jewish quarter.
The Mezquita costs 13 EUR for the main visit, with a free early-morning window on weekdays (around 8:30 to 9:30, no group access). The Alhambra general ticket is 18 EUR. The Mezquita needs no strict time slot and rarely sells out, while the Alhambra requires booking weeks ahead for its timed Nazaries entry.
Plan a full half-day (3 to 4 hours) for the Alhambra given its size and the timed Nazaries slot. The Mezquita needs about 1.5 hours, or 2.5 hours if you also climb the bell tower and wander the surrounding patios. The Alhambra is the bigger time commitment by far.

