REVIEW · MADRID
Madrid: Flamenco Show at Tablao Las Carboneras
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Las Carboneras · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Flamenco in Madrid is loud, fast, and close enough to feel. At Tablao Las Carboneras, you get a one-hour show in a basement room built into the old palace of the Count of Miranda, with a cabaret-style setup that keeps you right in the action. I like how the evening stacks top-level performers with a genuinely small-room atmosphere, and I also like the built-in perk of a free drink timed for the performance. One thing to consider: the venue is tight, so where you sit can affect your view if you end up near late-arrival traffic or certain corners.
This is the kind of flamenco night that works whether you’re seeing your first show or comparing shows across Madrid. The dances, live guitar, and singers are the stars, and the whole format is designed to keep energy high for the full hour. If you’re also hungry and sensitive to food quality, plan your dinner choice carefully, because the dinner option gets mixed feedback.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Tablao Las Carboneras: What Makes This Madrid Flamenco Room Special
- Tickets, Dinner Option, and What $53 Really Buys
- Where to Meet at Plaza del Conde de Miranda (and How Not to Wander)
- The 1-Hour Flamenco Show: What You’ll See Up Close
- Drinks, Seating, and Protecting Your View
- Dinner at Las Carboneras: Convenience vs. Food Quality
- Service and Atmosphere: Host Energy Matters
- Who This Flamenco Show Fits Best
- Should You Book Tablao Las Carboneras for Flamenco?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for Tablao Las Carboneras?
- How long is the flamenco show?
- What’s included in the ticket?
- Is dinner included?
- What additional food and drinks should I plan for?
- Do they provide a free drink during the show?
- Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
- How early should I arrive?
- Will I have a good view from most seats?
- Are there payment flexibility options?
Key things to know before you go

- Small tablao, big view: The room is compact, so most tables offer a close, stage-forward look.
- Pro performers on the lineup: Names you may see include José Maldonado, Candy Román, Ari Alexis Patacuás, Juan Herrera, Shin Yamasawa, Diego Agudo Pinilla, Isabel Fischer, and Ana Palma.
- A free drink starts your night: You’ll receive a complimentary drink, with options to sip during the show.
- Dinner is optional, and it’s a trade-off: Convenience is the upside; food ratings vary.
- Arrive early to lock in the best sightlines: A little time buffer helps you avoid awkward seating and last-minute scrambles.
Tablao Las Carboneras: What Makes This Madrid Flamenco Room Special

Tablao Las Carboneras is a Madrid flamenco experience built around closeness. The show takes place in the basement of the old palace of the Count of Miranda, and that older structure shows in the layout: a cabaret-style interior where the stage feels like it’s wrapped into the room rather than floating across it.
What I love about this setup for you is simple: flamenco is all about detail—footwork, hand tension, facial intensity, and timing with the guitar. In a bigger theater, those things can blur. In a tighter tablao, you actually catch what makes each dancer different. The show also has a contemporary edge that doesn’t strip away the tradition; you get that “inside-the-art” feeling without turning it into museum time.
The downside of this kind of venue is that it’s also a room with limits. Space is limited, and that means late seating, narrow movement paths, and the occasional obstruction can happen if your table placement isn’t ideal. If you’re picky about sightlines, you’ll want to arrive with a little breathing room.
A few more Madrid tours and experiences worth a look
Tickets, Dinner Option, and What $53 Really Buys

The ticket price is about $53 per person for the one-hour flamenco show. The value here isn’t just the performance—it’s the package logic. You’re getting the core experience (professional flamenco) plus a complimentary drink during the evening.
That “free drink” piece matters more than it sounds. In Madrid, flamenco nights can pile up with add-ons, and having a drink included helps you keep the evening from turning into a budget surprise. The show also stays to a tight duration, so you’re not paying for a long event that drifts.
The optional dinner option adds another layer. If you pick dinner, you’re looking at traditional Spanish cuisine served alongside the night’s entertainment. Here’s the fair, practical take: some people find the dinner portion solid and generous, while others feel the food doesn’t match the price. If you’re the type who judges dinner first and show second, you may be happier eating beforehand and keeping your focus on the flamenco.
Where to Meet at Plaza del Conde de Miranda (and How Not to Wander)

Your starting point is Plaza del Conde de Miranda. From there, you’ll need to find your way to Tablao Las Carboneras. The walk is usually manageable, but you should still plan for a little “street-level” uncertainty—Madrid streets can be confusing if you’re relying only on quick assumptions.
A useful tip: don’t cut it too close. Multiple people advise arriving 5–10 minutes early, because there may be limited time before you’re told to come in. In other words: you might be outside waiting, and then you’ll be asked to return at the right moment. Build that into your schedule.
If you want the smoothest arrival, do this:
- Aim to reach the area before your entry time.
- Confirm you’ve found Las Carboneras itself, not just a nearby landmark.
- Keep your phone ready, but don’t follow it so blindly that you miss the right entrance.
The 1-Hour Flamenco Show: What You’ll See Up Close

The main event is one hour of flamenco: dancing, live guitar, and live singing. This isn’t background entertainment. It’s an energetic performance format designed to keep you watching from the first stomp.
You may see dancers and musicians from a rotating lineup that includes names like José Maldonado and Candy Román, along with artists such as Juan Herrera, Shin Yamasawa, Diego Agudo Pinilla, Isabel Fischer, and Ana Palma. The show is built for intense stage presence, not slow storytelling.
A few things that help you set expectations:
- You get professional performers, with strong emphasis on rhythm, footwork, and emotional expression.
- There’s no guarantee of spoken explanations during the performance. Some first-timers enjoy flamenco more when they let the music and movement do the talking.
- The show can feel spontaneous in parts. One visitor even wished they’d been told it was fully improvised, which suggests you may notice moments that don’t feel “scripted.”
Also, the overall design is close-range. One review highlighted that the venue is compact enough for you to see well from almost anywhere, which matters because flamenco is partly about the tiny body language cues—where the dancer places attention, how the singers shape a line, and how the guitarist locks into the rhythm.
Drinks, Seating, and Protecting Your View

The experience includes a free drink, and the format is set up so you’re able to sip while the show is happening. Some people mention that the drink choice and value felt good, and a few note small complimentary touches beyond the drink—like snacks such as olives—though that won’t be something I’d plan around.
Seating is the biggest practical variable. The room is small, which is great for sightlines, but not every table is identical. If you land farther back or near a corner, you might run into late-arrival foot traffic or partial obstructions.
To protect your view:
- Arrive early enough to avoid being shoved into the least favorable spot.
- If you have the option, pick seating that keeps the stage fully in your line of sight.
- Be aware that someone standing to enter or settle can block your view briefly—this is a tight room, so plan your patience accordingly.
One nice detail: even with minor issues like a less-than-perfect corner seat, the show’s intensity tends to win people over fast.
Dinner at Las Carboneras: Convenience vs. Food Quality

The dinner option adds traditional Spanish cuisine to your night. When it’s good, it’s very convenient: you can stop thinking about dinner logistics and focus on the performance.
The catch is that dinner quality gets uneven feedback. Some visitors were happy with food that they described as tasty, well cooked, or even good enough to justify the dinner package. Others felt the dinner was mediocre or not worth the add-on price. A few recommend eating before you come in, especially if you care a lot about your meal.
So here’s my straightforward decision rule for you:
- Choose show-only if you want maximum value per dollar and you like eating at good Madrid spots before a show.
- Choose show plus dinner if you want one-stop convenience and you’re okay treating the meal as part of the overall night, not the main event.
If you do choose dinner, don’t assume it will be a culinary highlight. Assume it’s functional support for an evening built around flamenco.
Service and Atmosphere: Host Energy Matters

A strong part of the experience is the way the room is run. People describe the atmosphere as organized and the staff as friendly, with at least one mention of a host called Kike doing a great job.
The service style in a small tablao also has a rhythm: waiters are busy, and if the room fills up, drinks can take a little time. The good news is that the show itself keeps pulling your attention back to the stage, so waiting doesn’t automatically ruin the mood.
If you’re the sort of person who likes a smooth, scripted evening, this venue is still pretty structured. Just keep expectations realistic for a compact room on show night.
Who This Flamenco Show Fits Best

This is a great fit if:
- You want authentic flamenco in a compact space where you feel close to performers.
- You’re a first-timer and you want a full hour of dancing, guitar, and singing without extra fluff.
- You’re traveling with friends, family, or solo, and you want a memorable evening that doesn’t require complicated planning.
It’s also a solid pick if you like professional performance more than “big production.” This isn’t about fireworks or big staging. It’s about bodies, rhythm, and voice.
If you’re very food-focused, consider doing a show-only ticket first. Flamenco is the reason to be there, and the dinner can be a mixed match depending on your tastes.
Should You Book Tablao Las Carboneras for Flamenco?

Yes—if you want the most important thing right for a Madrid flamenco night: a lively, professional show in an intimate room with a free drink included. The compact setup is a huge part of why it works, and the lineup quality (with performers like José Maldonado and Candy Román) is the kind of reason you book early and show up on time.
If you’re deciding between show-only and dinner, be honest with yourself about your priorities. If your meal matters a lot, eat nearby and treat Las Carboneras as pure flamenco. If you want convenience and you’re fine with dinner being supportive rather than exceptional, the dinner option can still be a comfortable way to spend an evening.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for Tablao Las Carboneras?
Start your activity at Plaza del Conde de Miranda.
How long is the flamenco show?
The duration is 1 hour.
What’s included in the ticket?
The included items are the flamenco show and a free drink.
Is dinner included?
Dinner is optional. You can choose a show ticket or a show plus dinner option.
What additional food and drinks should I plan for?
Additional food and drinks are not included, so if you want more than the complimentary drink, you’ll pay separately.
Do they provide a free drink during the show?
Yes. You receive a free drink, and you can sip a drink of your choice during the performance.
Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
Yes, wheelchair accessible is listed.
How early should I arrive?
A common tip from visitors is to arrive about 5–10 minutes before the show, since there may be limited access before the entry moment.
Will I have a good view from most seats?
The venue is small, and many people say visibility is good. Still, seating can vary, so arriving early helps you avoid tables with possible obstructions.
Are there payment flexibility options?
Yes. You can reserve now & pay later (pay nothing today).



























