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.

This spot is part of the Seville craft beer guide, where all the city's spots appear together in one continuous read.