REVIEW · SEVILLE
Los Gallos Flamenco Show Admission Ticket
Book on Viator →Operated by Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos · Bookable on Viator
Flamenco in Seville hits different. Los Gallos puts you in the middle of the action in a tiny, classic tablao in Barrio Santa Cruz, where the music and emotion come at you fast. The ticket is simple: one admission, and then you’re watching a full flamenco show in a venue that has been operating for decades.
Two things I really like about this experience are the sense of tradition and the practical setup. It’s staged at the tablao that has been active since 1966, and you’re choosing between two show times with an advance-purchase ticket. Another smart plus: the show is offered in English, which helps when you’re new to flamenco and don’t want the experience to feel totally out of reach.
One thing to consider: the room is small. Expect tight seating and a close-up atmosphere where the sound can feel loud in a confined space, and there’s limited room to comfortably stretch out if you’re taller or sensitive to volume.
In This Review
- Quick hits before you go
- Why Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos lives in Seville’s Santa Cruz
- The show format: 8 artists, two live performances nightly, and 75 minutes that move
- Price and value: what $45.97 buys you in an intimate Seville theater
- Two-time ticketing plus small group size: why logistics actually affect your seats
- Finding your seat in a small room: what to expect upstairs and in tight seating
- What you’ll actually see onstage: emotional intensity, choreography, and hands-on rhythm
- Drinks, staff, and atmosphere: the practical comforts in a no-frills venue
- Who this is perfect for, and who should think twice
- Should you book Los Gallos Flamenco Show Admission?
- FAQ
- How long is the Los Gallos flamenco show?
- What is the price of admission per person?
- Where does this experience take place?
- Is this show offered in English?
- Do I need hotel pickup for this admission ticket?
- How large is the group?
- Are children and babies allowed?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Quick hits before you go

- Classic Santa Cruz venue: Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos has been active since 1966.
- Small-group feel: Maximum of 15 travelers keeps it from feeling chaotic.
- 8 artists onstage: 3 bailaores, 3 cantaores, 2 guitarists deliver the core flamenco lineup.
- 75 minutes is the sweet spot: Enough time for variety without dragging.
- Pick your time: Advance tickets let you choose between two show options.
- Cozy, close, and loud-ish: Intimate seating is part of the charm, and also the tradeoff.
Why Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos lives in Seville’s Santa Cruz

If you want flamenco in Seville, you don’t just want performers. You want the right setting: a place where the walls, the layout, and the proximity help the art land hard. Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos is in Barrio Santa Cruz, and it’s been operating since 1966, which is a big deal for a city where flamenco has been performed for generations.
There’s also a useful marker of credibility: the venue received an International Flamenco Award in 2024 from the Fundación Manolo Sanlúcar. That doesn’t automatically make every seat perfect, but it does signal that the venue takes the craft seriously and is still pulling strong talent.
In plain terms, this is the kind of venue that works best when you’re ready to watch with your whole attention. Flamenco is physical, musical, and emotional, and the small scale here helps you feel it rather than just observe it from far away.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville
The show format: 8 artists, two live performances nightly, and 75 minutes that move

This isn’t a long, slow production with lots of speeches. It’s a focused flamenco show timed for maximum impact.
Here’s what’s built into the program you’re buying: 8 artists go onstage each night—3 bailaores (dancers), 3 cantaores (singers), and 2 guitarists. That mix matters. You get the full flamenco engine: the rhythm and intensity from the dancers, the raw storytelling from the singers, and the driving structure from the guitar.
The venue also runs two live performances each night, so you’re not watching a tired “same one forever” routine. Your show time is one of the two options, and that helps keep the energy up during the evening.
From the show variety described, you can expect a blend of styles and moments, including a sevillana (often with castañuelas) plus both male and female dance solos. One review even singled out that the show’s length felt right for a first-timer: not too short to feel incomplete, but not so long that you start checking out.
The best practical takeaway: plan your evening so you still have time afterward. The show is about 1 hour 15 minutes, so it’s a great centerpiece even if you’ve got dinner reservations or you want to keep your night open for walking the streets afterward.
Price and value: what $45.97 buys you in an intimate Seville theater

At $45.97 per person, this isn’t the cheapest thing on your Seville to-do list. But it also isn’t overpriced “tourist theater” pricing for something you’ll forget in a week.
The value is mostly in three places:
- You’re paying for real stage talent, not just a ticket to sit in a venue. The lineup is built around dancers, singers, and guitarists, and the show is specifically designed as a live flamenco performance.
- The venue is intimate, which can make a big difference for impact. In a larger hall, flamenco can feel distant; here, you’re close enough for the intensity to come through.
- The timing option matters. Since you can choose between two show times with an advance-purchase ticket, you can pick the slot that fits your schedule instead of scrambling.
One more practical point: the show is generally booked about 17 days in advance on average. That doesn’t mean you must book immediately, but it does mean the best times can fill up. If you want a specific evening flow—say, dinner first, then flamenco—you’ll be happier if you lock it in ahead.
Two-time ticketing plus small group size: why logistics actually affect your seats

This experience is set up for convenience. You meet directly at Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos, and there’s no hotel pickup and drop-off. That sounds basic, but it’s useful: you’re not stuck waiting for a vehicle or trying to coordinate timing with a group bus.
The ticket booking also has two structural advantages:
- Advance purchase, with two time options
If you’re deciding between shows, you can align it with the rest of your day. And if one time doesn’t work for dinner, you’ve got a backup.
- Maximum 15 travelers
A small group cap usually means less back-and-forth at the venue. It also nudges the experience toward a calmer, more controlled feel when you arrive.
Now the reality check: the venue is described as cozy and intimate, and that can mean tighter seating. Multiple people pointed out that it’s easy to end up with a less ideal view if you arrive late, and one practical tip stood out: doors open around 6:30 if you want a better seat. If you care about viewing angles, don’t stroll in at the last second.
Finding your seat in a small room: what to expect upstairs and in tight seating

This is the part that can make or break the experience for comfort.
The venue is small, and the show is staged so you’re visually close to the action. That’s why many people call it authentic, emotional, and intense. But it’s also why you should mentally prepare for a few physical realities:
- Tight seating: Some reviewers noted that the accommodations are packed in.
- Sound can feel loud: In a small space, singing and clapping can hit harder.
- Upstairs seating can be tricky: One review specifically mentioned that upstairs is high up, which might affect your viewing if you prefer eye-level sightlines.
What you can control is simple: arrive early, and once you’re inside, settle in quickly. Don’t treat it like a movie where you can sit wherever—flamenco in a tiny room rewards good positioning.
Also, if you’re sensitive to sound, keep your mindset ready. Flamenco is meant to be powerful. If loud, close-range singing isn’t your thing, you might still enjoy the dancing, but the overall volume is part of the format.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville
What you’ll actually see onstage: emotional intensity, choreography, and hands-on rhythm

The heart of flamenco is emotion plus craft. And here, the program is built around the classic components: dancers, singers, guitarists, and a strong rhythm structure.
From the details described, the show includes:
- A sevillana with castañuelas, which often brings a bright, recognizable pulse.
- Flamenco dances with solos, including both male and female dancers.
- Two guitarists, which can make the music feel fuller and more layered.
- Singers driving the vocal intensity, where you might not understand every word, but you can still feel what’s happening.
That last part matters for first-timers. One review mentioned that they didn’t understand the words but still got blown away by how expressive the dancing and singing were. That’s a good reminder that flamenco isn’t only language. It’s tone, timing, posture, and response.
If you’re the type who wants meaning explained, there’s a catch: you may find the show doesn’t provide much in-the-moment explanation about what each dance means. One review specifically wished for English descriptions of the dances to add context. If that’s important to you, consider doing a bit of reading before you go—so when a style or moment hits, you’ll know what you’re looking at.
Drinks, staff, and atmosphere: the practical comforts in a no-frills venue

You’re going to a show, not a luxury lounge, but the small venue still aims to keep things smooth.
A few practical notes stand out from the experience details and feedback: the venue feels cozy, and the staff is described as friendly and accommodating. People also mentioned that drinks were great and that the facilities were decent, which is helpful if you’re pairing this with dinner and want something to sip before the performance starts.
Even better: the atmosphere is described as intimate rather than staged. That’s important. Flamenco thrives on closeness—on the way performers can react to the room’s energy. In a small setting, your attention becomes part of the performance’s pulse.
Who this is perfect for, and who should think twice

This is a strong fit if you want an authentic, classic Seville flamenco night without turning it into a big production.
It’s especially good for:
- First-time flamenco watchers who want the full lineup—dancers, singers, and guitarists—rather than just one element.
- People who like intimate venues where you can feel the rhythm and intensity.
- Anyone who wants a manageable time commitment (about 75 minutes) that fits an evening without hijacking your whole night.
It may be less ideal if:
- You’re sensitive to loud sound in small rooms.
- You’re picky about seating height/view, especially if you want a straightforward eye-level perspective.
- You strongly prefer English explanations of what each dance means during the show. English is offered, but you may still wish for more detailed on-the-spot context.
There’s also a family reality to plan around: babies aged 0–5 aren’t allowed, and children must be accompanied by an adult. If you’re traveling with kids, make sure the age rules work for your group.
Should you book Los Gallos Flamenco Show Admission?
I’d book it if your goal is a classic Seville flamenco night in a small room with serious performers. The combination of a long-running tablao (since 1966), a strong talent lineup (3 dancers, 3 singers, 2 guitarists), and a tight 75-minute format is exactly the kind of experience that tends to feel memorable.
I’d think twice if you’re uncomfortable with close seating, tight accommodations, or powerful, loud singing in a confined space. Also, if you want detailed English meaning for each dance, plan to do a little prep so you don’t feel lost.
If you can handle a cozy, emotionally intense setting and you want a show that fits neatly into an evening, Los Gallos is a very sensible choice for Seville.
FAQ
How long is the Los Gallos flamenco show?
The show runs about 1 hour 15 minutes.
What is the price of admission per person?
The ticket price is $45.97 per person.
Where does this experience take place?
It takes place at Tablao Flamenco Los Gallos in Seville, Spain, in the Santa Cruz area.
Is this show offered in English?
Yes, the show is offered in English.
Do I need hotel pickup for this admission ticket?
No. You meet directly at the venue, and hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
How large is the group?
This experience has a maximum of 15 travelers.
Are children and babies allowed?
Children must be accompanied by an adult. Babies aged 0–5 years old are not allowed.
What is the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is allowed up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.






























