Neighborhoods

Los Remedios Guide

A calm, residential grid across the river in southwest Seville: next door to the Feria fairground, walkable to Triana and the Guadalquivir, with everyday prices — and exactly when Los Remedios makes sense as a base.

·Updated Jun 20268 min read·7 sections
The short version
  • Los Remedios is an orderly, residential neighbourhood on the west bank of the Guadalquivir, just south of Triana.
  • It borders the Real de la Feria — the permanent fairground where Feria de Abril is held — making it the prime base during that festival.
  • It's quiet, leafy and local, with everyday shops, ordinary tapas bars and prices aimed at residents rather than tourists.
  • Triana, the river walks and the Plaza de Cuba crossing into the old city are all within easy reach on foot.
  • Outside Feria, it's a calm, good-value choice for travellers who don't mind a longer walk to the monuments.

A residential Seville across the river

Los Remedios is one of Seville's most purely residential neighbourhoods: a tidy grid of mid-20th-century apartment blocks, broad pavements, orange trees and local life, laid out on the west bank of the Guadalquivir just south of Triana. There are no must-see monuments here, no tour groups and very little that's curated for visitors — and that's precisely its character. This is where a large slice of middle-class Seville actually lives, shops and eats.

For a traveller, that makes it a calm, comfortable, unpretentious base with a strong sense of normal city life. The streets are quiet at night, the shops and bars are aimed at residents, and prices tend to follow suit rather than tracking the tourist core. It's not the choice for a first-timer who wants the cathedral on their doorstep — but for the right trip, its ordinariness is a genuine asset.

It's worth being clear about what Los Remedios is and isn't. It isn't picturesque in the postcard sense — there are no tiled patios to peer into or hidden plazas to stumble on — and it has very little nightlife of its own. What it offers instead is space, quiet, normality and value: larger, more modern apartments than the old town can usually provide, a genuine neighbourhood feel, and the reassurance of being among locals rather than tourists. Whether that's a virtue or a drawback depends entirely on the kind of trip you're taking.

The Feria connection

The single biggest reason to know Los Remedios is the Feria de Abril. The Real de la Feria — the vast permanent fairground where Seville's spring fair unfolds each year, a couple of weeks after Holy Week — sits on the neighbourhood's edge. For the run of the festival, the area is transformed: it becomes the natural staging ground for the fair, within walking distance of the casetas, the lights, the horses and the carriages.

That proximity is the whole game during Feria. Staying in or near Los Remedios means you can walk to the fairground and, crucially, walk home in the small hours when taxis are scarce and the whole city is converging on the same place. Demand and prices spike dramatically for those dates and rooms vanish months ahead, so if Feria is your reason for visiting, this is the neighbourhood to target — and to book very early. Confirm exact festival dates each year, as they shift with the calendar.

  • Borders the Real de la Feria, the permanent Feria de Abril fairground.
  • Walkable to and from the casetas — a major advantage during the fair.
  • Rooms book out months ahead and prices surge for Feria; reserve early.
  • Feria dates move each year (typically a fortnight after Holy Week) — verify before booking.

The river and the crossings

Los Remedios is bounded on the east by the Guadalquivir, which gives it easy access to one of Seville's loveliest free pleasures: the riverside walks. The promenades run along this stretch of the bank, and from here you can stroll north into Triana or cross into the old city. The Plaza de Cuba, at the neighbourhood's northeastern corner, sits beside the Puente de San Telmo, one of the main bridges back to El Arenal and the cathedral district.

That riverside edge softens the neighbourhood's otherwise workaday feel and makes for a pleasant daily commute on foot into the historic centre. An early-morning or evening walk along the water — when the heat eases and the light turns golden on the towers across the river — is the nicest thing the location offers, and it's free.

  • Bounded by the Guadalquivir, with riverside promenades on the doorstep.
  • Plaza de Cuba and the Puente de San Telmo link it to El Arenal and the old city.
  • An easy, pleasant walk north into Triana along the water.
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The grid: planned, leafy and easy to read

Los Remedios was largely developed from the mid-20th century onward as Seville grew across the river, and it shows in its layout: a regular grid of straight streets and rectangular blocks, quite unlike the tangled medieval lanes of the old town. That makes it one of the easiest neighbourhoods in the city to navigate — you can read it at a glance, and you won't get pleasantly lost the way you might in Santa Cruz or Triana. For some that orderliness is dull; for others, especially families with strollers or anyone wheeling luggage, it's a relief.

The grid is also greener and more open than the historic core. Wide pavements, lines of orange and jacaranda trees, small squares and the long Parque de los Príncipes on the southern edge give the area room to breathe. The Avenida de la República Argentina, its main commercial spine, gathers most of the shops, banks and cafés, while the side streets stay residential and calm. It's a comfortable, low-friction place to base yourself, even if it never sets the pulse racing.

  • A planned 20th-century grid — straightforward to navigate, unlike the old town's lanes.
  • Leafy, with wide pavements, orange and jacaranda trees and the Parque de los Príncipes nearby.
  • Avenida de la República Argentina is the main commercial street; the rest stays residential.

Everyday eating and shopping

Don't come to Los Remedios for the city's headline tapas crawl — come for honest, everyday Seville food at local prices. The neighbourhood has plenty of solid bars, bakeries, ice-cream stops and restaurants serving residents rather than visitors, including some long-standing local favourites. It's the kind of place where you eat well without queueing, paying a premium or competing with tour groups for a table.

It's also a practical base in the dull-but-useful sense: proper supermarkets, pharmacies, shops for daily needs and a relaxed, family-friendly atmosphere. For travellers who value comfort, calm and self-catering — families and longer stays especially — that everyday infrastructure can matter more than being steps from a monument. And for the real foodie highlights, Triana's market and bars are a short walk north.

  • Local bars, bakeries and restaurants at resident prices — no tourist premium.
  • Practical for daily life: supermarkets, pharmacies and everyday shops.
  • Triana's market and tapas are a short walk north for the food highlights.

Staying in Los Remedios: the trade-offs

Los Remedios makes most sense in a few specific cases. It's the obvious pick if you're here for Feria de Abril and want to walk to the fairground. It's a smart, calmer, better-value choice for families and longer stays who'll appreciate the quiet, the everyday amenities and the larger apartments. And it appeals to repeat visitors who already know central Seville and want a more residential, less touristy base with the river and Triana close by.

The trade-off is distance and atmosphere. The cathedral and the monumental core are a genuine walk away — over a bridge and across to the old town — or a short taxi or bus ride, and the neighbourhood itself is pleasant but unremarkable to look at: there's no old-town charm or nightlife buzz here. For a short, first, sightseeing-led trip, a central base usually wins. For Feria, calm or value, Los Remedios earns its place. Check walking times and bridge distances when you book, as the neighbourhood is larger than it looks.

  • Best for: Feria de Abril, families, longer stays, value, repeat visitors wanting calm.
  • Less ideal for: short first-time trips that revolve around the monuments and old-town atmosphere.
  • Pros: quiet, residential, good value, river and Triana close, walkable to the fair.
  • Cons: a longer walk to the cathedral; no monuments or nightlife in the neighbourhood itself.

How to use Los Remedios as a base

If you do stay here, lean into the rhythm the location offers. Start the day with a riverside walk north into Triana while it's cool, taking in the market, the ceramics and the bridge before the heat builds. Cross into the old city for the monuments in the morning, retreat to your quiet apartment for the worst of the afternoon, and head back out in the evening for tapas — either locally or, more excitingly, in Triana or across the river.

During Feria, the script flips entirely: the neighbourhood becomes the centre of your world, and the short walk to and from the fairground is the reason you chose it. The rest of the year, treat Los Remedios as a calm, well-priced home base — a place to sleep, self-cater and decompress, with the river, Triana and the whole of Seville an easy stroll or quick ride away.

  • Riverside walk into Triana in the cool morning, monuments before the heat.
  • Quiet afternoons in the apartment, evenings out in Triana or the old city.
  • During Feria, the fairground next door is the whole point.
Guide notes· Last reviewed

We keep big-picture advice stable (routes, neighborhoods, pacing). For time-sensitive details like opening hours or ticket rules, double-check official sources close to your travel dates.