Nightlife in Seville doesn't work on a flat schedule. Each day of the week has its own pattern, its own crowd and its own best venues. Show up to the wrong area on a Tuesday and you'll wonder if the whole city's on holiday. This guide maps out tonight, whatever night it is in 2026.
Monday Night
Quietest night of the week. Clubs are closed. Go local: tapas around Plaza Salvador or Alameda, a walk along Calle Betis in Triana, one last caña on a quiet terraza. La Carboneria sometimes has spontaneous flamenco until late. If you want a proper night out, wait until Thursday.
Tuesday Night
Also a rest day for most clubs. But Tuesday is when the best intimate flamenco programming happens. Check Casa de la Memoria for a 7:30pm or 9pm show, then pintxos on Calle Mateos Gago. Bar El Comercio stays busy until 1am. Perfect for a culture-first evening.
Wednesday Night
Midweek picks up. Sala Fun Club in Alameda programs indie and electronic nights on Wednesdays, with DJ sets starting at midnight. Thursday-lite. Urbano Café also opens its doors. Students and early-weekend locals start here, with cheaper drinks.
Thursday Night
The unofficial start of the weekend. Student night in Alameda and Alfalfa: bars full by 11pm, clubs open around 1am. Bilindo and Boss Sevilla run full programming from Thursday. The crowd is slightly younger, the dress code is relaxed, entry prices are lower than Saturday.
Friday Night
Peak night. Follow the classic Seville timeline: tapas at 9:30pm in Alfalfa or Alameda, terraza copas from 11:30pm, club entry at 2am. Antique Theatro runs its biggest night on Fridays in summer, with the outdoor terraza open. Nervión taxis saturate after 1:30am, so call early.
Friday Insider Pick
If you want the most authentic Friday experience in 2026: start at El Rinconcillo (Spain's oldest tapas bar, from 1670) at 9pm, walk through Alfalfa to Plaza Salvador for a copa, then take a taxi to Antique Theatro at 2am. You'll hit three Seville archetypes in one night.
Saturday Night
The biggest night. Everything is open, everything is full, and prices peak. Book the rooftop terraza at EME Cathedral for sunset at 8pm, dinner in Alameda or Triana at 10pm, then decide between Alameda (relaxed) or Nervión (dressed-up club). Saturday club entries are 15 to 25 euros with one drink.
Sunday Night
The hidden gem of Seville nightlife is Sunday tardeo. From 5pm to 11pm, rooftop terrazas and riverside bars fill up with a relaxed after-work crowd. The Hotel Doña María terraza, Las Setas and riverside bars in Triana are all worth the trip. You get the social buzz without wrecking Monday.
By Interest
- Tonight for flamenco: Casa de la Memoria (daily), Tablao Los Gallos, or a peña programming.
- Tonight for a proper club: Antique Theatro on Friday or Saturday, Bilindo from Thursday.
- Tonight for budget: Alameda de Hércules bars, cañas at 2.50 euros, terraza tables free.
- Tonight for rooftops: EME Cathedral, Las Setas, Hotel Doña María, any April to October evening.
- Tonight for live music: Sala Fun Club or Sala X, check their Instagrams for lineups.
- Tonight for a quiet date: Plaza Salvador terraza, a bodega in Triana, dinner on Calle Betis.
Practical Tonight Rules
- Book the rooftop terraza 2 days ahead. They fill fast April to October.
- Eat at 9:30pm, not 8pm. You'll be alone.
- Taxi apps: Pide Taxi Sevilla is more reliable than Uber on weekend nights.
- Carry some cash: smaller bars and many terrazas take cash only for cañas.
- Dress up for Nervión, dress down for Alameda.
Whatever night you've got, Seville has a version of itself for it. The mistake is treating every night the same, showing up at midnight to an empty club or 10pm to a restaurant that hasn't opened. Match the city's rhythm and it pays you back.