REVIEW · SEVILLE
Paranormal Seville Tour in Spanish
Book on Viator →Operated by Naturanda Turismo Ambiental · Bookable on Viator
Seville turns spooky after dark. This Paranormal Seville Tour in Spanish sends you through Seville’s older streets with a guide who’s a paranormal researcher and published author, pointing you to sites tied to unsettling historical events and unexplained activity.
Two things I really like: you don’t just get legends told at you, you get audiovisual clues like recordings and images; and the route is tight and doable, about two hours at night. You’ll hear psychophonies recorded by the guide at the last stop, which is when the atmosphere tends to sharpen.
One possible drawback: if you want hard, courtroom-style proof, this tour may feel more like storytelling with documented paranormal material than like a scientific investigation. It’s still spooky and safe, but it leans into mystery and interpretation.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- A ghost tour that stays practical: what the experience feels like
- Starting in Plaza Nueva: where the tour clicks into place
- Stop 2 at Ayuntamiento de Sevilla: paranormal stories with a real centerpiece
- Fundación Cajasol: modern walls with inexplicable-phenomena energy
- The last stop with psychophonies: where the tour gets its teeth
- The guides matter: what I’d look for in a great session
- What kind of history you’ll hear (and why it works at night)
- Timing, walking, and who should book
- Price and value: is $14.22 worth it?
- Practical tips to help you enjoy it more
- Should you book the Paranormal Seville Tour in Spanish?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- Is the Paranormal Seville Tour led in Spanish?
- How long is the tour?
- Where do I meet the guide, and where does the tour end?
- What will I see or hear during the tour?
- What is included, and what is not included?
- What’s the maximum group size?
- Does the tour depend on weather?
- What is the cancellation policy for a full refund?
Key things to know before you go

- Spanish-led narration from a paranormal researcher and published author
- Recorded evidence: you’ll hear recordings and see images tied to each stop
- A short, night-friendly route designed to stay under about two hours
- Four main stops around the historic center, starting in Plaza Nueva
- A group capped at 30 (small enough to feel personal, not crowded)
- Mobile ticket and an end point that stays in the city center
A ghost tour that stays practical: what the experience feels like
This isn’t the kind of tour where you wander with vague vibes and a flashlight. It’s organized like a guided walk with specific locations, timed explanations, and paranormal-style evidence presented along the way. The pitch is simple: Seville’s darker past meets audiovisual material, and you follow the thread from one stop to the next.
You’ll appreciate that the format fits a normal travel day. It’s an evening activity with a clear start and finish inside the old core. And because the guide is Spanish-speaking, you won’t have to work through language gaps to get the story beats and the details behind each location.
One more thing: the tour’s safety is part of the design. You’re outdoors at night, yes, but it’s a guided group walk between points, not a free-for-all through alleys. That matters in Seville, where the best streets can also be the trickiest ones after dark.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville.
Starting in Plaza Nueva: where the tour clicks into place

Your night begins at Ayuntamiento de Sevilla in Plaza Nueva, 1 in the casco antiguo. Plan to arrive a bit early so you’re not rushed when the group gathers. The first segment is short, about 10 minutes, and it sets the tone—what you’re going to hear, what kind of material you’ll be shown, and how the guide connects the locations.
This first stop also helps you get your bearings fast. Plaza Nueva is central and easy to orient around, so even if you’re new to the city, the tour doesn’t demand that you already know Seville’s layout. If you’re the type who likes a plan before night walking, this start works well.
Also note the pacing: because each later stop is longer, that initial meetup phase keeps the tour from feeling like it starts late. You should feel the momentum right away.
Stop 2 at Ayuntamiento de Sevilla: paranormal stories with a real centerpiece

The second stop is the Ayuntamiento de Sevilla itself. Here, you’ll learn about paranormal events tied to this famous building. It’s not just a photo op. The guide uses this setting to anchor the stories—so the place feels like more than a backdrop.
Why it’s a smart choice: city halls and major civic buildings often collect layered history. Even when a tour focuses on the supernatural, those kinds of landmarks carry a sense of authority and weight. That’s the mood the guide leans into as you move from general introduction into the more specific claims.
The time at this stop is about 30 minutes. That’s long enough for the explanation to breathe, without turning into a lecture that loses the group.
Fundación Cajasol: modern walls with inexplicable-phenomena energy
Next you head to the Fundación Cajasol for another 30-minute stop. This is where the tour changes texture. The guide points to phenomena you might not expect in a building like this, and the story keeps moving like a case file that won’t close.
Even if you’re not fully buying paranormal claims, you can still enjoy the method: the guide links the locations into a narrative chain, instead of treating each site as a random spooky stop. That makes the walk feel like one continuous experience rather than four separate mini-stories.
This stop also gives you a break from pure street walking. Night tours can wear you out. Having a longer indoor-feeling explanation phase (or at least a more contained stop) helps keep the energy up for the final location.
The last stop with psychophonies: where the tour gets its teeth
The final stop is at a bar-cafetería near the Facultad de Bellas Artes (listed as Bar Cafetería Facultad de Bellas Artes). This is another 30-minute segment, and it’s the one that most people will associate with the tour’s spooky centerpiece.
Here, you listen to stories supported by audiovisual material, including images and psychophonies recorded by the guide. That’s the key detail: the tour doesn’t just say something happened. It pairs the claims with the guide’s audio-visual presentation.
A practical tip: treat this part like a moment where you’ll want quiet focus. If you’re chatting nonstop, you’ll miss cues. If you tend to get distracted, bring your attention back when the guide starts the audiovisual portion. This is also when the group’s energy often shifts—so staying engaged pays off.
The guides matter: what I’d look for in a great session
One reason this tour earns high marks is the quality of the people leading it. Guides for this route have included names like Alberto, José Manuel Bautista (often described as a specialist with his own research and recorded psychophonies), Maripaz, Laura, Grecia, Nieves, Mercedes, Cristina, and Eva González.
You’re looking for a guide who can do two things at once:
1) explain the historical context clearly, and
2) keep the pacing tight when introducing paranormal-style evidence.
From the way this tour is set up, the guide has to manage both. That’s why the best runs feel fun and easy to follow, even when the subject matter gets dark.
If you’re Spanish-speaking, this is a big plus. You’ll catch the tone shifts and the details that are often lost when a ghost tour is translated on the fly.
What kind of history you’ll hear (and why it works at night)

Seville’s old streets are perfect for this theme because the city itself holds contradictions: gorgeous facades, gritty legends, and a layered past that includes conflict and fear. On this route, the stories can touch on darker periods and communities, including the Jewish quarter area of Santa Cruz and dramatic events tied to figures like Pedro el Cruel.
What I like about pitching it this way is that the “paranormal” part isn’t floating in space. The guide frames the supernatural claims inside a historical context, so you’re not just hearing ghost stories—you’re hearing how legends can form around real events, rumor, and cultural memory.
At night, that makes a difference. Daytime sightseeing can feel like a museum schedule. An evening walk can feel like the city has a pulse. This tour leans into that mood while keeping you anchored to actual stops in the center.
Timing, walking, and who should book

The tour runs about two hours and includes four main stops:
- start point at Ayuntamiento de Sevilla / Plaza Nueva (about 10 minutes)
- Ayuntamiento de Sevilla (about 30 minutes)
- Fundación Cajasol (about 30 minutes)
- bar-cafetería near the Bellas Artes faculty (about 30 minutes)
Because it’s built around short segments at each location, you get frequent “story resets.” That makes it easier to handle if you’re tired from daytime walking. It also helps if you’re traveling with a mix of ages—as long as everyone is comfortable walking at night.
The tour requires moderate physical fitness. You don’t need athlete legs, but you do need to be able to walk through the historic streets and stand through explanations.
The group size is capped at 30 travelers. That helps maintain a sense of order, and it usually makes it easier for a guide to manage questions and attention—especially when audiovisual material is involved.
Price and value: is $14.22 worth it?
At $14.22 per person, this tour sits in a sweet spot: it’s priced like an accessible night experience, not a premium entertainment show. What you’re really paying for isn’t just the ghost theme. It’s the combination of:
- a professional local guide,
- a guided walking tour with multiple timed stops, and
- evidence-style segments using recordings, images, and psychophonies.
You also get the practical stuff: a mobile ticket, and all fees and taxes are included. Food and drinks are not included, so you’ll want to plan on grabbing a snack elsewhere if you’re hungry.
Is it a bargain? For many visitors, yes—especially if you enjoy night walks and want a different angle on Seville than the usual sightseeing circuit. If you’re the type who hates any walking at night, then the price won’t fix that mismatch. But if you like guided stories with stops, it’s good value.
Practical tips to help you enjoy it more
A few small choices can make this experience more fun:
- Dress for evening air and walking. You’ll be out at night in the historic core, and good shoes help even when the distance isn’t huge.
- Bring a charged phone for the mobile ticket.
- Be ready for a “listen-and-watch” moment at the last stop when audiovisual material and psychophonies come in.
- Skip food expectations during the tour. Food and drinks aren’t included, so plan dinner before or after.
- Go when weather is good. The activity requires good weather. If weather turns, you might get an alternate date or a refund option.
- If you’re bringing a service animal, you’re covered—service animals are allowed.
If you want the most out of it, arrive with your mind set to listen. Think less about chasing proof and more about enjoying how a local researcher frames fear, rumor, and atmosphere.
Should you book the Paranormal Seville Tour in Spanish?
I’d book it if you want:
- a spooky evening walk in Seville’s city center,
- Spanish storytelling led by guides with real paranormal-research framing, and
- audiovisual moments, including psychophonies, rather than just vague folklore.
I’d reconsider if:
- you only enjoy paranormal tours that feel like strict science,
- you hate night walking or standing around for guided explanations, or
- you’re expecting long, drawn-out investigations. This is timed and story-driven, built to fit into about two hours.
If you like legends but also want something structured and specific, this tour is one of the more satisfying ways to see Seville after dark.
FAQ
FAQ
Is the Paranormal Seville Tour led in Spanish?
Yes. The tour is a ghost-style walking experience led in Spanish.
How long is the tour?
It runs for about 2 hours (approx.).
Where do I meet the guide, and where does the tour end?
You meet at Ayuntamiento de Sevilla, Plaza Nueva, 1 in the Casco Antiguo area. The tour ends at Calle Arguijo (C. Arguijo), Casco Antiguo, 41003 Sevilla.
What will I see or hear during the tour?
You’ll be shown and told about disturbing historical events and ghostly activity using audiovisual clues. The guide uses recordings and images, and at the last stop you’ll listen to material accompanied by psychophonies recorded by the guide.
What is included, and what is not included?
Included are a professional local guide, a guided walking tour, and all fees and taxes. Food and drinks are not included.
What’s the maximum group size?
The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
Does the tour depend on weather?
Yes. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
What is the cancellation policy for a full refund?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience starts. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.
























