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The Córdoba–Granada Core Route

The guided route between Córdoba and Granada forms the structural spine of every Al Andalus journey. Browse upcoming curated departures below.

Al-Andalus from Madrid

Featured Trip

Al-Andalus from Madrid

Start date2026-05-26
Nights6
Price1310 EUR
Duration7 days
StatusJoinable
4 Days Al-Andalus From Málaga

Featured Trip

4 Days Al-Andalus From Málaga

Start date2026-08-31
Nights3
Price915 EUR
Duration4 days
StatusJoinable
4 Days Al-Andalus From Seville

Featured Trip

4 Days Al-Andalus From Seville

Start date2026-05-26
Nights4
Price840 EUR
Duration5 days
StatusJoinable
3 Nights in Granada

Featured Trip

3 Nights in Granada

Start date2026-05-26
Nights3
Price353 EUR
Duration4 days
StatusFeatured
Cordoba to Granada Roadtrip

Featured Trip

Cordoba to Granada Roadtrip

Start date2026-05-26
Nights2
Price430 EUR
Duration3 days
StatusJoinable


Trips Shared By Our Community

Join public departures shared by other travellers. As group sizes grow, shared-service economics improve for everyone.

5 Days Al-Andalus Express

Public Trip

5 Days Al-Andalus Express

Start date2026-05-26
Nights5
Price372 EUR
Duration6 days
StatusJoinable
Córdoba to Granada Core Journey

Public Trip

Córdoba to Granada Core Journey

Start date2026-06-11
Nights5
Price486 EUR
Duration6 days
StatusJoinable

More shared departures coming soon

Check back for new group departures



Design your trip with local experts. Share it with your guestlist, or with the world to join.

Choose your cities, dates, and travel style. We help with accommodation, transport, guided visits and booking assistance — so you get a complete itinerary without the stress of planning it alone.

  • Choose cities, dates, and route order
  • Set your pace, group size, and support level
  • Add stays, transport, and experiences only where they matter

Self-service or assisted

Start Planning Your Trip
Route
Trip

The Córdoba–Granada Core Route

The guided route between Córdoba and Granada forms the structural spine of every Al Andalus journey. Browse upcoming curated departures below.

Al-Andalus from Madrid

Featured Trip

Al-Andalus from Madrid

Start date2026-05-26
Nights6
Price1310 EUR
Duration7 days
StatusJoinable
4 Days Al-Andalus From Málaga

Featured Trip

4 Days Al-Andalus From Málaga

Start date2026-08-31
Nights3
Price915 EUR
Duration4 days
StatusJoinable
4 Days Al-Andalus From Seville

Featured Trip

4 Days Al-Andalus From Seville

Start date2026-05-26
Nights4
Price840 EUR
Duration5 days
StatusJoinable
3 Nights in Granada

Featured Trip

3 Nights in Granada

Start date2026-05-26
Nights3
Price353 EUR
Duration4 days
StatusFeatured
Cordoba to Granada Roadtrip

Featured Trip

Cordoba to Granada Roadtrip

Start date2026-05-26
Nights2
Price430 EUR
Duration3 days
StatusJoinable


Trips Shared By Our Community

Join public departures shared by other travellers. As group sizes grow, shared-service economics improve for everyone.

5 Days Al-Andalus Express

Public Trip

5 Days Al-Andalus Express

Start date2026-05-26
Nights5
Price372 EUR
Duration6 days
StatusJoinable
Córdoba to Granada Core Journey

Public Trip

Córdoba to Granada Core Journey

Start date2026-06-11
Nights5
Price486 EUR
Duration6 days
StatusJoinable

More shared departures coming soon

Check back for new group departures



Design your trip with local experts. Share it with your guestlist, or with the world to join.

Choose your cities, dates, and travel style. We help with accommodation, transport, guided visits and booking assistance — so you get a complete itinerary without the stress of planning it alone.

  • Choose cities, dates, and route order
  • Set your pace, group size, and support level
  • Add stays, transport, and experiences only where they matter

Self-service or assisted

Start Planning Your Trip
Route
Trip

Cities & Timeline

Explore the route through its cities and history

Browse featured gateway cities across Iberia and Morocco, or follow the timeline to understand how Al-Andalus shaped each place.

Al-Andalus Gateway

Main arrival cities

Major airports and rail hubs where most journeys begin: Madrid, Málaga, Seville, Barcelona and Lisbon. Good starting points for connecting into the core route.

Madrid
City guide

Madrid

City of Madrid · 3.5M residents · 11.2M visitors in 2024

Madrid is not just Spain's capital. It is the route's strongest northern gateway: a city of water memory, fortification lines, museums, institutions, and high-speed departures south. For Al-Andalus Experience, Madrid works best as the place where travellers land, reframe the capital through Majrit and its Islamic origins, and begin reading Iberia with more depth before moving on to Toledo, Cordoba, or beyond.

Royal Palace edgeAlmudena and wall remainsLa Moreria
Open guide →
Málaga
City guide

Málaga

Costa del Sol · Ciudad de Museos

Málaga es la capital de la Costa del Sol. Cuna de Picasso, ciudad de museos, playas doradas y un casco histórico que respira pasado andalusí. 300 días de sol al año y una calidad de vida que atrae a todo el mundo.

Museo PicassoAlcazabaCatedral de Málaga
Open guide →
Sevilla
City guide

Sevilla

Capital de Al-Ándalus · Puerta de América

The Phoenicians arrived in this area first, establishing a number of trade colonies by the river. They taught the locals how to work with iron and created a new way of processing gold. The Romans came next and founded the town of Hispalis a few hundred years BC. Hispalis grew into a beautiful and prosperous city, but it never managed to emerge from the shadow of nearby Córdoba, until the Visigoths transformed Hispalis into a provincial seat and a centre of learning. Transliterated as Ishbiliya in Arabic, Seville took on a particular significance after the Almowahiddin berber sultanate had extended from North Africa making it the most northern representation, mirroring their capital Marrakech, to the south.

Giralda / CatedralReal AlcázarPlaza de España
Open guide →
Barcelona
City guide

Barcelona

Capital de Cataluña · Modernismo · Mediterráneo

Barcelona es la capital del modernismo, la ciudad de Gaudí, de las Ramblas, del Barça y de una cultura cosmopolita única. Entre el Mediterráneo y la montaña de Montjuïc, respira creatividad, diseño y una energía que no se detiene.

Sagrada FamiliaPark GüellLas Ramblas
Open guide →
Lisboa
City guide

Lisboa

Capital de Portugal · Cidade das Sete Colinas

Lisboa é a capital lusa, construída sobre sete colinas que miran al Atlántico. El fado, los pastéis de nata, la luz única del Estuario del Tajo y una energía creativa que la ha convertido en la capital tecnológica y cultural de la península ibérica.

Torre de BelémMosteiro dos JerónimosAlfama
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

From Iberia to Al-Andalus: Starting with Madrid and Toledo

Begin in Madrid and Toledo, then follow the historical road south toward Córdoba and Granada, entering Al-Andalus through its Iberian preludes.

Madrid
City guide

Madrid

City of Madrid · 3.5M residents · 11.2M visitors in 2024

Madrid is not just Spain's capital. It is the route's strongest northern gateway: a city of water memory, fortification lines, museums, institutions, and high-speed departures south. For Al-Andalus Experience, Madrid works best as the place where travellers land, reframe the capital through Majrit and its Islamic origins, and begin reading Iberia with more depth before moving on to Toledo, Cordoba, or beyond.

Royal Palace edgeAlmudena and wall remainsLa Moreria
Open guide →
Toledo
City guide

Toledo

Patrimonio de la Humanidad · Ciudad Imperial

Toledo es la memoria de España. Ciudad imperial, capital visigoda, crisol de culturas. Sus calles medievales guardan el legado de una convivencia que forjó la identidad del país. Ciudad de El Greco y de espadas.

Alcázar de ToledoCatedral PrimadaSinagoga del Tránsito
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Within the Heard of Al-Andalus: Córdoba and Granada

Córdoba and Granada: the two cities that most travellers mean when they say Al-Andalus. The mosque-cathedral, the Alhambra, and the lived texture between them.

Córdoba
City guide

Córdoba

Capital del Califato · 4x Patrimonio UNESCO

After 756 AC, with the rise of AbdulRahman I (ad-daher, the migrant/refugee) the Umayyad safeguarded a new state of Al-Andalus in Cordoba to be the capital and epicentre of one of the greater Civilizations in history. Beyond the inevitable warfare and political turbulence of the time, Iberia stepped from the dark ages to a brighter future becoming a bridge towards later technological, scientific and industrial revolutions in Europe and around the world.

Mezquita-CatedralAlcázar de los Reyes CristianosPatios de Córdoba
Open guide →
Granada
City guide

Granada

Patrimonio UNESCO · Último Reino Nazarí

Granada stands as a testament to the seamless weave of history and culture, a city where the echoes of its ancient origins blend with the vibrancy of modern life. As the last Muslim kingdom of Al-Andalus, Granada symbolizes a critical juncture in history — where the fragmentation of Al-Andalus gave rise to a kingdom renowned for its strategic and cultural significance. The Alhambra, with its stunning backdrop of the Sierra Nevada, epitomizes the harmonious relationship between nature and human ingenuity.

AlhambraGeneralifeAlbaicín
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Alpujarra Discovery

The mountain and valley corridor between Granada and the coast: villages, acequias, orchards, local services, nature routes, slower stays, and community-rooted discovery.

Alpujarra Discovery
Regional guide

Alpujarra Discovery

The Alpujarra Gateway · Nature, villages, and slower stays

The mountain and valley corridor between Granada and the coast: villages, acequias, orchards, local services, nature routes, slower stays, and community-rooted discovery.

VillagesNature routesLocal services
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Morocco

Cross the Strait and continue by rail, road, and medina rhythm from Tangier through the Rif, the imperial capitals, the Atlantic corridor, and Marrakech.

Tangier
Independent routes

Tangier

Gateway to Africa · Strait of Gibraltar

Tangier has always been a crossroads — of continents, cultures, and centuries. From the Phoenicians to the Beat Generation, this port city has lured writers, artists, and wanderers with its luminous light, labyrinthine medina, and the constant whisper of two seas. Today it remains Morocco's most cosmopolitan gateway.

Cap SpartelCaves of HerculesGrand Socco & Petit Socco
Open guide →
Chefchaouen
Independent routes

Chefchaouen

Blue Pearl · Rif Mountains · Andalusian Refuge

Chefchaouen is unlike any other city in Morocco. Every wall, every step, every alley is painted in shades of blue — from powder to cobalt to cerulean. Founded in 1471 by refugees from Al-Andalus, this mountain town has a peaceful energy that feels almost otherworldly. Wrapped in the misty Rif Mountains, Chaouen is a place to get lost in colour and calm.

Blue-Washed MedinaPlaza Uta el-HammamKasbah Museum
Open guide →
Fes
Independent routes

Fes

Spiritual Capital · Oldest Medina

Fes is Morocco's most complete medieval city — a living museum where donkeys still outnumber cars in the labyrinthine alleys of Fes el-Bali. Founded in 789, it is home to the world's oldest university, the most spectacular tanneries, and a spiritual depth that has shaped Moroccan identity for twelve centuries. Fes doesn't show you history — it immerses you in it.

Fes el-BaliAl Quaraouiyine UniversityChouara Tannery
Open guide →
Meknes
Independent routes

Meknes

Imperial City · UNESCO · Ismaili Capital

Meknes is the forgotten imperial city — the Versailles of Morocco, built by Sultan Moulay Ismail with the ambition to rival the greatest courts of Europe. Its massive walls, monumental gates, and vast granaries speak of a ruler who built an empire from the Atlantic to Timbuktu. Quiet, dignified, and rich with history, Meknes rewards the traveller who takes the road less travelled.

Bab MansourMausoleum of Moulay IsmailDar Jamai Museum
Open guide →
Rabat
Independent routes

Rabat

Capital of Morocco · UNESCO Heritage

Rabat is Morocco's capital and its most underrated gem. A UNESCO World Heritage city where wide boulevards meet ancient kasbahs, where the Atlantic breeze sweeps through tranquil gardens, and where the Hassan Tower stands as a monument to ambition. It's the quiet heart of the kingdom — elegant, walkable, and effortlessly cool.

Hassan TowerMausoleum of Mohammed VKasbah of the Udayas
Open guide →
Casablanca
Independent routes

Casablanca

Economic Capital · Hassan II Mosque

Casablanca is not the city of the film — it's something bigger. Morocco's economic capital is a sprawling metropolis of Art Deco architecture, the breathtaking Hassan II Mosque, and a restless energy that defines modern Africa. It's chaotic, cosmopolitan, and utterly captivating. A city that rewards those who dive in.

Hassan II MosqueOld MedinaQuartier Habous
Open guide →
Marrakech
Independent routes

Marrakech

Red City · Imperial City · UNESCO

Marrakech is the most intoxicating city in North Africa — a swirling kaleidoscope of colour, sound, and scent. From the snake charmers and storytellers of Jemaa el-Fna at dusk to the serene beauty of the Majorelle Garden, from labyrinthine souks to the snow-capped Atlas Mountains on the horizon, Marrakech is a city that seizes every sense and never lets go.

Jemaa el-FnaBahia PalaceKoutoubia Mosque
Open guide →

Cities & Timeline

Explore the route through its cities and history

Browse featured gateway cities across Iberia and Morocco, or follow the timeline to understand how Al-Andalus shaped each place.

Al-Andalus Gateway

Main arrival cities

Major airports and rail hubs where most journeys begin: Madrid, Málaga, Seville, Barcelona and Lisbon. Good starting points for connecting into the core route.

Madrid
City guide

Madrid

City of Madrid · 3.5M residents · 11.2M visitors in 2024

Madrid is not just Spain's capital. It is the route's strongest northern gateway: a city of water memory, fortification lines, museums, institutions, and high-speed departures south. For Al-Andalus Experience, Madrid works best as the place where travellers land, reframe the capital through Majrit and its Islamic origins, and begin reading Iberia with more depth before moving on to Toledo, Cordoba, or beyond.

Royal Palace edgeAlmudena and wall remainsLa Moreria
Open guide →
Málaga
City guide

Málaga

Costa del Sol · Ciudad de Museos

Málaga es la capital de la Costa del Sol. Cuna de Picasso, ciudad de museos, playas doradas y un casco histórico que respira pasado andalusí. 300 días de sol al año y una calidad de vida que atrae a todo el mundo.

Museo PicassoAlcazabaCatedral de Málaga
Open guide →
Sevilla
City guide

Sevilla

Capital de Al-Ándalus · Puerta de América

The Phoenicians arrived in this area first, establishing a number of trade colonies by the river. They taught the locals how to work with iron and created a new way of processing gold. The Romans came next and founded the town of Hispalis a few hundred years BC. Hispalis grew into a beautiful and prosperous city, but it never managed to emerge from the shadow of nearby Córdoba, until the Visigoths transformed Hispalis into a provincial seat and a centre of learning. Transliterated as Ishbiliya in Arabic, Seville took on a particular significance after the Almowahiddin berber sultanate had extended from North Africa making it the most northern representation, mirroring their capital Marrakech, to the south.

Giralda / CatedralReal AlcázarPlaza de España
Open guide →
Barcelona
City guide

Barcelona

Capital de Cataluña · Modernismo · Mediterráneo

Barcelona es la capital del modernismo, la ciudad de Gaudí, de las Ramblas, del Barça y de una cultura cosmopolita única. Entre el Mediterráneo y la montaña de Montjuïc, respira creatividad, diseño y una energía que no se detiene.

Sagrada FamiliaPark GüellLas Ramblas
Open guide →
Lisboa
City guide

Lisboa

Capital de Portugal · Cidade das Sete Colinas

Lisboa é a capital lusa, construída sobre sete colinas que miran al Atlántico. El fado, los pastéis de nata, la luz única del Estuario del Tajo y una energía creativa que la ha convertido en la capital tecnológica y cultural de la península ibérica.

Torre de BelémMosteiro dos JerónimosAlfama
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

From Iberia to Al-Andalus: Starting with Madrid and Toledo

Begin in Madrid and Toledo, then follow the historical road south toward Córdoba and Granada, entering Al-Andalus through its Iberian preludes.

Madrid
City guide

Madrid

City of Madrid · 3.5M residents · 11.2M visitors in 2024

Madrid is not just Spain's capital. It is the route's strongest northern gateway: a city of water memory, fortification lines, museums, institutions, and high-speed departures south. For Al-Andalus Experience, Madrid works best as the place where travellers land, reframe the capital through Majrit and its Islamic origins, and begin reading Iberia with more depth before moving on to Toledo, Cordoba, or beyond.

Royal Palace edgeAlmudena and wall remainsLa Moreria
Open guide →
Toledo
City guide

Toledo

Patrimonio de la Humanidad · Ciudad Imperial

Toledo es la memoria de España. Ciudad imperial, capital visigoda, crisol de culturas. Sus calles medievales guardan el legado de una convivencia que forjó la identidad del país. Ciudad de El Greco y de espadas.

Alcázar de ToledoCatedral PrimadaSinagoga del Tránsito
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Within the Heard of Al-Andalus: Córdoba and Granada

Córdoba and Granada: the two cities that most travellers mean when they say Al-Andalus. The mosque-cathedral, the Alhambra, and the lived texture between them.

Córdoba
City guide

Córdoba

Capital del Califato · 4x Patrimonio UNESCO

After 756 AC, with the rise of AbdulRahman I (ad-daher, the migrant/refugee) the Umayyad safeguarded a new state of Al-Andalus in Cordoba to be the capital and epicentre of one of the greater Civilizations in history. Beyond the inevitable warfare and political turbulence of the time, Iberia stepped from the dark ages to a brighter future becoming a bridge towards later technological, scientific and industrial revolutions in Europe and around the world.

Mezquita-CatedralAlcázar de los Reyes CristianosPatios de Córdoba
Open guide →
Granada
City guide

Granada

Patrimonio UNESCO · Último Reino Nazarí

Granada stands as a testament to the seamless weave of history and culture, a city where the echoes of its ancient origins blend with the vibrancy of modern life. As the last Muslim kingdom of Al-Andalus, Granada symbolizes a critical juncture in history — where the fragmentation of Al-Andalus gave rise to a kingdom renowned for its strategic and cultural significance. The Alhambra, with its stunning backdrop of the Sierra Nevada, epitomizes the harmonious relationship between nature and human ingenuity.

AlhambraGeneralifeAlbaicín
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Alpujarra Discovery

The mountain and valley corridor between Granada and the coast: villages, acequias, orchards, local services, nature routes, slower stays, and community-rooted discovery.

Alpujarra Discovery
Regional guide

Alpujarra Discovery

The Alpujarra Gateway · Nature, villages, and slower stays

The mountain and valley corridor between Granada and the coast: villages, acequias, orchards, local services, nature routes, slower stays, and community-rooted discovery.

VillagesNature routesLocal services
Open guide →

Al-Andalus Gateway

Morocco

Cross the Strait and continue by rail, road, and medina rhythm from Tangier through the Rif, the imperial capitals, the Atlantic corridor, and Marrakech.

Tangier
Independent routes

Tangier

Gateway to Africa · Strait of Gibraltar

Tangier has always been a crossroads — of continents, cultures, and centuries. From the Phoenicians to the Beat Generation, this port city has lured writers, artists, and wanderers with its luminous light, labyrinthine medina, and the constant whisper of two seas. Today it remains Morocco's most cosmopolitan gateway.

Cap SpartelCaves of HerculesGrand Socco & Petit Socco
Open guide →
Chefchaouen
Independent routes

Chefchaouen

Blue Pearl · Rif Mountains · Andalusian Refuge

Chefchaouen is unlike any other city in Morocco. Every wall, every step, every alley is painted in shades of blue — from powder to cobalt to cerulean. Founded in 1471 by refugees from Al-Andalus, this mountain town has a peaceful energy that feels almost otherworldly. Wrapped in the misty Rif Mountains, Chaouen is a place to get lost in colour and calm.

Blue-Washed MedinaPlaza Uta el-HammamKasbah Museum
Open guide →
Fes
Independent routes

Fes

Spiritual Capital · Oldest Medina

Fes is Morocco's most complete medieval city — a living museum where donkeys still outnumber cars in the labyrinthine alleys of Fes el-Bali. Founded in 789, it is home to the world's oldest university, the most spectacular tanneries, and a spiritual depth that has shaped Moroccan identity for twelve centuries. Fes doesn't show you history — it immerses you in it.

Fes el-BaliAl Quaraouiyine UniversityChouara Tannery
Open guide →
Meknes
Independent routes

Meknes

Imperial City · UNESCO · Ismaili Capital

Meknes is the forgotten imperial city — the Versailles of Morocco, built by Sultan Moulay Ismail with the ambition to rival the greatest courts of Europe. Its massive walls, monumental gates, and vast granaries speak of a ruler who built an empire from the Atlantic to Timbuktu. Quiet, dignified, and rich with history, Meknes rewards the traveller who takes the road less travelled.

Bab MansourMausoleum of Moulay IsmailDar Jamai Museum
Open guide →
Rabat
Independent routes

Rabat

Capital of Morocco · UNESCO Heritage

Rabat is Morocco's capital and its most underrated gem. A UNESCO World Heritage city where wide boulevards meet ancient kasbahs, where the Atlantic breeze sweeps through tranquil gardens, and where the Hassan Tower stands as a monument to ambition. It's the quiet heart of the kingdom — elegant, walkable, and effortlessly cool.

Hassan TowerMausoleum of Mohammed VKasbah of the Udayas
Open guide →
Casablanca
Independent routes

Casablanca

Economic Capital · Hassan II Mosque

Casablanca is not the city of the film — it's something bigger. Morocco's economic capital is a sprawling metropolis of Art Deco architecture, the breathtaking Hassan II Mosque, and a restless energy that defines modern Africa. It's chaotic, cosmopolitan, and utterly captivating. A city that rewards those who dive in.

Hassan II MosqueOld MedinaQuartier Habous
Open guide →
Marrakech
Independent routes

Marrakech

Red City · Imperial City · UNESCO

Marrakech is the most intoxicating city in North Africa — a swirling kaleidoscope of colour, sound, and scent. From the snake charmers and storytellers of Jemaa el-Fna at dusk to the serene beauty of the Majorelle Garden, from labyrinthine souks to the snow-capped Atlas Mountains on the horizon, Marrakech is a city that seizes every sense and never lets go.

Jemaa el-FnaBahia PalaceKoutoubia Mosque
Open guide →