Madrid for solo travelers
Madrid scores 9/10 for solo travel. The barra culture means you eat standing at counters alongside locals, no reservation needed. Metro Line 8 runs from Barajas airport to Nuevos Ministerios in 12 minutes, the full network operates until 1:30am, and single-occupancy rates at mid-range hotels tend to run €65-90 per night.
Questions solo travelers ask about Madrid
-
Solo travel
Madrid scores 9/10 for solo travel. The barra culture means you eat standing at counters alongside locals, no reservation needed. Metro Line 8 runs from Barajas airport to Nuevos Ministerios in 12 minutes, the full network operates until 1:30am, and single-occupancy rates at mid-range hotels tend to run €65-90 per night.
Read the full answer → -
Getting around
Metro for most trips, walking for the center, taxi or Cabify after 1:30 AM when the Metro shuts. A Tarjeta Multi costs €2.50 and loads single rides at €1.50 each. From Barajas airport, the flat-rate taxi at €30 to central Madrid beats the Metro's €4.50 per person after the airport supplement.
Read the full answer → -
Language basics
Castilian Spanish. Madrid is home to the Real Academia Española, founded in 1713, which sets the rules for the language across 20 countries. English works in the tourist triangle around Sol, Gran Vía, and Salamanca if your counterpart is under 40. Outside that radius, a handful of Spanish phrases will change every interaction from transactional to friendly.
Read the full answer → -
Cultural etiquette
Madrid runs 2-3 hours behind northern European schedules. Lunch starts at 2pm, dinner rarely before 9:30pm. Greet socially with dos besos (two cheek-touches, right side first). Tip 5-10% at sit-down restaurants, or round up at bars. Cover shoulders and knees at Almudena Cathedral. Always say 'hola' before requesting anything in small shops.
Read the full answer → -
Best time to visit
April, May, and October give you Madrid at its most walkable. Spring highs sit around 18-24°C, autumn around 19-22°C, and both seasons dodge the July-August heat that pushes above 38°C and empties the city of locals. The Museo del Prado has shorter queues, and evening terrazas on Plaza de Santa Ana stay open past midnight.
Read the full answer →