Spain
This is Cruzcampo territory. Seville runs on tapas and a lager that's been dialed in over generations for surviving an Andalusian summer. Craft beer exists here too, but you have to want to find it. When you do, the people pouring it are passionate in the way only still-young scenes manage, a tight little community that seems genuinely glad when anyone in it does well.
Then there are the oranges. They're everywhere, thousands of trees lining the streets, fruit hanging overhead and scattered across the sidewalks at the same time, which is a genuinely surreal thing to walk through the first time. Fair warning: these are bitter oranges. They belong to the city, they taste terrible, and you should not eat one.
One favor to yourself while you're here: don't anchor in Old Town the whole trip. Seville is easy to get around, the public transport is painless, and the neighborhoods each have their own feel. Go find them, grab tapas and a vermut at every stop, and try a little of everything.
Spots in this guide
La JoyeriaCarefully curated beer under the Setas de Sevilla.↓ La Linterna CiegaCool vibe, great beers, and food worth staying for.↓ Cervecería Hops & DreamsComfortable space for beer and quality food.↓ Gallo RojoCraft beer, original artwork, and live music every night.↓ ViriatoGastropub food and Iberian beer.↓ Cervecería Europa InternacionalBright and airy, with the best Belgian tap list in Seville.↓Carefully curated beer under the Setas de Sevilla.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

When we first set out to find La Joyeria, we were not entirely sure what we were looking for. The address led us to the Mercado de la Encarnación, the covered market that sits directly beneath the Setas de Sevilla (the Metropol Parasol, the enormous undulating wooden canopy structure that hovers above the Plaza de la Encarnación). Inside the market, past the produce stalls and the meat counters, is Puesto 39: an unassuming stall with six beer taps and the considered attention of a place that takes what it does seriously.
The owner teaches at the local culinary school, and that background shows in how he runs the bar. Each beer on the tap list seems to have been selected to represent something specific: a style, a region, a way of thinking about fermentation. Each glass arrives with care. If you want to talk about what you're drinking, he's happy to talk. If you'd rather just drink it, that's fine too.

La Joyeria doesn't have much of a food menu: basic snacks, not much more. But you're standing inside one of Seville's best markets. Stalls throughout the Mercado sell paper cones of cured meat and cheese, freshly sliced jamón ibérico, and fresh fruit. It's impossible to visit La Joyeria without wandering through the market, and the wandering is part of the experience.
We did order lupin beans with our beers, a snack the owner referred to, with a smile, as chochitos. This is an established Sevillian term, I was assured. I leave any further translation to the curiosity of the reader.

There are about six tables and room to stand when it's busy, which it usually is. The crowd is a genuine mix of locals and tourists. If you're coming from inside the market, the quickest way in is through the west entrance, Puerta Oeste. One practical note: La Joyeria is not open every day, and Saturday hours are evenings only. Check the current hours on Google Maps before you go.

La Joyeria means jewelry store in Spanish, and the market stall it occupies really was one before the current owner took over. For me, it still is. The rings just live on the coasters now, and the gems are in your glass. The Setas above, the market around you, and a carefully poured beer in front of you: this is one of the more distinctive places to have a drink in all of Spain. La Linterna Ciega is a five-minute walk, making this corner of Seville one of the better beer destinations per square block of anywhere we visited.
Cool vibe, great beers, and food worth staying for.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

La Linterna Ciega ("The Blind Lantern") occupies a warm, wood-paneled space on Calle Regina in the heart of Sevilla's Old Town. Before you've ordered a drink, the decor tells you something about the place: antique keys hang from chains across one wall, dozens of them, at different heights, creating the kind of detail that makes you stop mid-sentence and look up. Old flashlights have been repurposed as light fixtures over the tables, a quiet joke once you realize what the bar's name actually means. The geometric mural on the ceiling picks up where the keys leave off. This is a bar someone thought about.

There are about six beers on tap and more in the cooler, with a selection that leans toward Spanish craft alongside Belgian classics like St. Bernardus. Wine is available for those who choose it; I personally would never do that, but I'm not judging those who do. There is also a proper food menu, which sets La Linterna Ciega apart from most craft beer bars. The tapas lean toward a Spanish-Italian fusion (house croquettes, Iberian pork dishes, sourdough preparations) and the reviews from regulars suggest the food is genuinely worth your attention, not just something to pace your drinking.

The bar staff are friendly and unhurried, which in a city where the evening paseo doesn't really get moving until nine or ten o'clock is exactly the right disposition. There is seating at the front, tables throughout the main room, and a small terrace outside looking onto Calle Regina. This became one of our regular spots in Seville, and the staff are a big reason why. They remembered small things we'd mentioned in passing, and the conversations never felt forced, which was rarer than I expected during our time in the city.

Comfortable space for beer and quality food.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

The first thing we noticed when we stepped out of a rainy winter night into Cervecería Hops & Dreams was that someone had thought carefully about how a bar should feel. Beer labels cover most of the wall space, mixed with the occasional sticker for a progressive cause and a few pieces of what appears to be children's artwork. There is a comfy couch near the entrance and tables spread through the rest of the small room. This is clearly a place people come to stay for a while.

Six beers on tap, a wide cooler of cans and bottles, and a rotating list that changed several times during our four weeks in Seville. You're reliably getting something new on tap.
The moment that made Hops & Dreams something more than a good bar: partway through our first visit, we asked the bartender about other places to find craft beer in Seville. Without hesitation, he picked up a food ticket, turned it over, and wrote a short list on the back. We kept that note on our kitchen counter until we'd visited every place on it. Each of his recommendations features somewhere in this Seville guide.

The crowd was the usual Seville mix: locals and tourists in roughly equal proportion, all of them there for the beer and the company. Nobody seemed to be in a hurry.

Hops & Dreams is on the northern edge of Seville's popular area, about 12 minutes on foot from Las Setas. The Alameda de Hércules, Seville's long tree-lined promenade and one of the city's liveliest evening spots, is a short walk. If you venture this far north, consider also stopping at Pastissimo (@pastissimo.bar), a small Italian pasta shop a few streets over run by a Spanish-Italian owner using family recipes. The food is primarily takeout but there are a few tables. My wife loved it enough that she made us walk over on a cold, rainy winter night just to get some. Having sampled a few beers earlier in the evening, it didn't take much convincing. She was right.
Craft beer, original artwork, and live music every night.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

Our first visit to Gallo Rojo was on a cold and rainy Seville winter night. The contrast when we walked in was immediate: warm light, original artwork covering every wall, the smell of food from somewhere in the back, and a singer delivering a near-perfect Amy Winehouse cover to a crowd that was listening with genuine attention. That's Gallo Rojo in a single image.
The bar hosts live music every night from around 8 PM. What you'll hear depends on the night: jazz bands, open mic sessions, swing dancing. The common thread is that the crowd takes it seriously without taking itself seriously. The room stays subdued while the music's going, and conversations continue at a low volume underneath it. The atmosphere is easy in a way that isn't common.
There are 8 rotating taps for beer, plus wine, liquor, and vermut. We saw people eating pizza, tacos, and various small tapas on every visit, and everything looked good, though we never got around to ordering food. One small note: the music may come with a charge of one or two euros added to your tab. Not a big deal, just something to expect.
Gallo Rojo sits next door to Viriato, a beer bar and restaurant on the same small street. The two make a natural evening together. Both are in the Old Town, about five minutes from the Alameda de Hércules, the long tree-lined promenade that serves as one of Seville's main evening gathering points.
Gastropub food and Iberian beer.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

When you've been in Seville for a few days, a predictable rhythm sets in: tapas and a caña of Cruzcampo, then more tapas and another caña. It's a good rhythm. It's Seville. But at some point you'll want a break from it, and that's when Viriato earns its place on the list.
The bar runs a proper gastropub format: nine taps with local and international beers, a wide selection of cans and bottles, wine, and the option of vermut if you want to go local without going Cruzcampo. The food menu is serious. Of all the craft beer spots we visited in Seville, Viriato had the best food. The pad thai chicken noodles were the high point of a menu with several strong options.

The space is warm and inviting in the way a good gastropub should be. Seating at the bar and at tables throughout the room, several TVs mounted for match coverage (on a game night, I suspect it gets lively). Weekday hours are evenings only, so plan accordingly.

Viriato is next door to Gallo Rojo, a beer bar with live music every night on the same small street. Both sit on Calle Madre María de la Purísima, a quiet Old Town lane with a church across the square and the Alameda de Hércules about five minutes away. An evening that starts at one and moves to the other doesn't require any particular planning. It just requires showing up.
Bright and airy, with the best Belgian tap list in Seville.
Filed from Seville — January 2026

Most of the craft beer spots in Seville are tucked into the narrow streets of the historic centre, warm and character-filled and exactly what you'd expect from an old Andalusian city. Cervecería Europa Internacional is in Nervión, a modern neighborhood of office towers and apartments east of Old Town, a few blocks from the stadium where Sevilla FC plays. The feel is different: bright and airy, with high ceilings, plenty of table seating, and a few sidewalk tables out front. It doesn't feel like the rest of Seville's craft beer scene, and that's part of the appeal.
What brings you here is the beer list. Seventeen taps, most of them Belgian, make this the most extensive tap selection I found anywhere in Seville. Duvel, Chimay, St. Bernardus, Westmalle: beers that reward attention. There are Spanish craft options and a handful of other internationals, but Belgium is clearly the point of view here, and the bar is confident enough in that to lean into it.

The food menu is extensive, with something for most preferences. This is not a bar where you pick at a small snack to pace yourself: the kitchen handles full meals, and the menu reads like it's taken seriously. After several weeks in Seville eating tapas in the old town, the change of setting and the depth of the beer list felt like a genuine refresh.

Nervión is east of Old Town, slightly off the usual tourist path. Getting there on foot from the Cathedral takes about 20 minutes; taxis and buses cover it easily. The neighborhood gets lively on match days when Sevilla FC is playing at home, and I imagine Cervecería Europa becomes animated right along with it. If you're tired of Cruzcampo and the narrow streets of Old Town for a few hours, Nervión delivers a change of pace worth the small detour.