REVIEW · SEVILLE
Seville: 2-Day Hop-on Hop-off Bus Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Sevirama · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Two days in Seville, no rush. This hop-on hop-off ride turns the city into an easy, self-paced loop, with heated and air-conditioned double-deckers and open-top 360º views from a special vantage point. Start at Torre del Oro, get on and off as often as you like, then top it off with two included walking tours per day in Santa Cruz and Triana.
I do see one potential snag. The pre-recorded audio can occasionally feel out of sync with what you’re seeing (and a couple of onboard features like WiFi may be unreliable in practice), so it’s smart to stay flexible and use your eyes as well as your headphones.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- How the 2-day hop-on, hop-off rhythm works from Torre del Oro
- Open-top comfort plus 8-language audio you can actually follow
- Plaza de España, Parque de María Luisa, and the big-photo moments
- Guadalquivir River crossings and the Cartuja chapter
- Almohad walls and the Macarena church you shouldn’t miss
- Santa Cruz and Triana walking tours: using the bus as your base
- A 14-stop route that still feels flexible
- Two bus tours over two days: less repeat, more variety
- Price and value: is $32 a good deal?
- Who should book this Seville ticket
- Quick tips to get the most out of your bus days
- Should you book this Seville 2-day hop-on hop-off ticket?
- FAQ
- Where does the hop-on hop-off bus start?
- How long is the full bus route?
- How many stops are included?
- Is the ticket valid for more than one day?
- Can I hop on and off as many times as I want?
- What walking tours are included?
- What languages are available for the audio guide?
- Is WiFi and headphones included?
- Is there a place for pets or smoking on the bus?
Key highlights at a glance

- Two days, one ticket: valid for 2 consecutive days from first activation, with unlimited hop-on and hop-off
- 14 stops along the route: start at Torre del Oro and build your own plan hour by hour
- Comfort without compromise: double-deckers that are heated and air-conditioned, plus open-top sightseeing
- Audio in 8 languages: headphones included, with stop-by-stop commentary in English and more
- Big-ticket sights, river views, and key neighborhoods: Plaza de España, Guadalquivir crossings, Cartuja, plus walking tours in Santa Cruz and Triana
- Two different bus tours: your 2-day pass covers more ground than a one-loop ticket
How the 2-day hop-on, hop-off rhythm works from Torre del Oro

Your ticket is simple: you activate it once, then you’re covered for two consecutive days. During that window, you can get on and off the bus as many times as you like, which is exactly what you want in a city where you’ll spot something mid-ride and think, I need to go see that.
The full route takes about 1 hour and 15 minutes, and you’ll pass 14 stops total. That matters because you can treat the bus like a moving map: ride it once to get your bearings, then come back later for the spots you actually care about.
In practice, the best move is to use the bus to stitch together your day. You’ll get the drive-by overview while keeping time for wandering when something grabs you—then return to the next stop when you’re ready to reset and move on.
A few more Seville tours and experiences worth a look
Open-top comfort plus 8-language audio you can actually follow

This isn’t just a roof-on-roof sightseeing bus. It’s designed for comfort: the double-decker is heated and air-conditioned, yet you still get the pleasure of an open-top viewing experience. That combination is a big deal in Seville, where you might get warm sun, then chilly air, sometimes in the same day.
You’ll also get headphones and pre-recorded commentary with audio available in Spanish, English, French, German, Italian, Russian, Dutch, and Portuguese. The commentary is meant to guide you stop-by-stop, and I especially like when the narration clearly points out what you’re looking at and which stop you’re on—Seville is full of details, so having structure helps you connect the story to the street in front of you.
Two small warnings to keep your expectations realistic:
- The audio can occasionally be out of sync with visible landmarks, so don’t treat it like GPS-level accuracy.
- WiFi is listed as included on the bus, but there can be hiccups depending on conditions.
A good rule: if the narration seems a little off, just watch where the bus turns and use the stop names as your anchor.
Plaza de España, Parque de María Luisa, and the big-photo moments

If you’re building a first-timer plan, Plaza de España is the kind of stop that makes your camera roll breathe easier. The bus route is designed to bring you to this area, and it’s paired with Parque de María Luisa, so you can enjoy both the monumental architecture and the park-side atmosphere.
Because you’re on a double-decker, you don’t just see these spots from street level. You get a taller, wider view that helps you understand how the city is laid out—especially useful if you plan to walk later.
This is one of those places where you’ll want to hop off and linger, even if you tell yourself you’ll only take photos. Seville’s plazas are built for wandering: you’ll notice people pausing for angles, not just for snapshots.
Guadalquivir River crossings and the Cartuja chapter
One of the best parts of this ticket is that it doesn’t treat Seville like a list of isolated landmarks. You make two crossings of the Guadalquivir River, which gives you different sightlines and a sense of how the city wraps around the water.
Then you hit Monasterio de la Cartuja, where the tour highlights the connection to Columbus, who lived there before leaving on his journey of discovery. Even if you’re not a hardcore history person, this is a strong way to add meaning to what otherwise could feel like just another stop name: the bus narration turns Cartuja into a story you can remember.
You’ll probably find yourself looking more closely at the river edges and the bridges as you pass—because the route is built to give you that payoff twice.
Almohad walls and the Macarena church you shouldn’t miss

Seville’s walls and churches can feel overwhelming when you’re planning on the fly. This pass helps because it points you toward two major visual anchors: the Almohad walls and the Macarena area.
The route includes a stop for the Macarena walls, and the tour description spotlights the famous church of the Virgin Mary in Seville, known as the Macarena. If you want one landmark-driven moment to center your walking and photo stops around, this is it.
The practical advantage here is how the bus supports your choices. You can ride through once for context, then hop off near the Macarena zone when you want to slow down and pay closer attention.
And since this ticket includes daily walking tours, you’re not stuck only viewing Seville from the road. You get a blend: drive-by orientation, then neighborhood-level time.
Santa Cruz and Triana walking tours: using the bus as your base

This ticket includes two walking tours each day, one in the Santa Cruz neighborhood and one in Triana. That’s a smart pairing because the bus gives you speed and structure, while the walking tours give you texture—street angles, local rhythms, and the kind of details you miss while moving quickly.
The way to get the most out of it is to treat the walking tours as your fixed anchors, then use the bus to feed them. If you know you’ll be walking in Santa Cruz at some point, you can use the bus the rest of the time to reposition yourself without wasting hours crossing the city.
Also, because the bus runs a loop with many stops, you can repeat areas you liked without turning your trip into a strict schedule. That’s the real value of hop-on hop-off: you’re not forcing your day into one exact order.
A 14-stop route that still feels flexible

It’s helpful to see what you’ll pass so you can plan where to get off. Here are the stop names on the route, starting where you board:
- Torre del Oro (starting point)
- Acuario de Sevilla
- Plaza de America
- Plaza de España, Seville
- University of Seville
- Plaza de Cuba, Sevilla
- San Jacinto, Seville
- Puente del Cristo de la Expiración
- Monasterio de la Cartuja
- Urb. Ciudad Expo, 92
- Isla Mágica
- Macarena walls
- Plaza del Duque de la Victoria
- Plaza de armas
Not every stop is a must-stop for everyone. That’s the point. On a day you want calmer sightseeing, you can ride through areas that interest you more casually. On a day you want maximum “I’m here” photos and neighborhood wandering, you hop off where the highlights land—especially near Plaza de España, Cartuja, and the Macarena zone.
One more practical note: the buses generally run frequently (about every 15 minutes, based on what people experienced), so you’re not stuck waiting long if you hop off to eat, shop, or just stretch your legs.
Two bus tours over two days: less repeat, more variety

A single-day hop-on hop-off ticket can feel like a best-of sampler. This one gives you two days, plus two bus tours. The experience is built around the idea that you’ll get more than just one loop’s worth of repeating views.
That’s especially useful if you like to wander off-script. If you hop off for a meal on your first pass, you’re not losing the sightseeing day—you can simply return and keep going later the same day or the next.
You also get variety through the combination of bus viewpoints and the included Santa Cruz and Triana walks. In other words, you’re not depending on just the bus narration to make the trip feel complete.
Price and value: is $32 a good deal?

For $32 per person (for 2 days), what you’re buying is more than transportation. You’re paying for:
- unlimited hop-on and hop-off access across two consecutive days
- a route with 14 stops and major Seville anchors like Plaza de España and Cartuja
- open-top sightseeing with comfort upgrades (heated/air-conditioned double-deckers)
- included walking tours every day in Santa Cruz and Triana
- audio in 8 languages plus headphones
If your alternative is trying to design multiple bus routes, backtracking across neighborhoods, and fitting in timed walks, this ticket can feel like the easiest kind of structure. It’s not the cheapest way to get around, but it is often good value for people who want city knowledge without spending the whole trip staring at maps.
Who should book this Seville ticket
This is a strong fit if you:
- want a low-stress way to see Seville’s top sights across two days
- prefer sightseeing that adapts to your mood (hop off, wander, hop back on)
- like a mix of viewpoints (bus) and pacing (walking tours)
- need clear audio guidance in multiple languages with headphones
It may feel less ideal if you:
- expect perfectly timed narration at every stop (the audio can be out of sync occasionally)
- rely on bus WiFi as part of your plans (it’s listed as included, but it may not work reliably)
Quick tips to get the most out of your bus days
- Use the stop announcements as your mental checklist, but keep your eyes open in case something doesn’t match the audio timing.
- If you want the best views, plan to ride the bus at times when you’ll have daylight and comfortable temperatures.
- Use hop-on/off to build your own meal breaks. A flexible plan beats a strict one in a city like Seville.
Should you book this Seville 2-day hop-on hop-off ticket?
Yes, you should book it if you want a practical, time-saving way to cover Seville’s headline sights while still having freedom to wander. The biggest reasons: two days, unlimited hop-on/off, included walking tours in Santa Cruz and Triana, and a route that hits major landmarks like Plaza de España and Cartuja, with two Guadalquivir crossings for great river views.
Skip it only if you’re the type who prefers to map every detail yourself, or if you’re sensitive to audio commentary needing to match exactly what you see at each stop. For everyone else, it’s a solid way to get oriented and keep your schedule flexible.
FAQ
Where does the hop-on hop-off bus start?
The meeting point is Torre del Oro.
How long is the full bus route?
The complete route takes about 1 hour and 15 minutes.
How many stops are included?
The bus route includes 14 stops in Seville.
Is the ticket valid for more than one day?
Yes. The ticket is valid for 2 consecutive days, starting from the first activation.
Can I hop on and off as many times as I want?
Yes. With a single ticket, you can get on and off as many times as you like during the 2-day validity period.
What walking tours are included?
You get 2 walking tours each day, covering the Santa Cruz and Triana neighborhoods.
What languages are available for the audio guide?
The audio is available in Spanish, English, French, German, Italian, Russian, Dutch, and Portuguese.
Is WiFi and headphones included?
Yes. The bus includes WiFi, and headphones are provided so you can listen to the audio guide.
Is there a place for pets or smoking on the bus?
Smoking is not allowed, and pets are not allowed. Assistance dogs are allowed.



























