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Ibiza vs Granada

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Quick Verdict

Pick Granada for Alhambra Nasrid Palaces, Sacromonte cave flamenco, and free tapas with every Bodegas Castaneda beer. Pick Ibiza if Pacha and Hi club nights, Es Vedra sunset cliffs, and Cala Comte coves define the summer.

🏆 Granada wins 80 OVR vs 75 · attribute matchup 36

Ibiza
Ibiza
Spain

75OVR

VS
Granada
Granada
Spain

80OVR

80
Safety
82
78
Cleanliness
78
40
Affordability
63
79
Food
90
74
Culture
93
88
Nightlife
77
68
Walkability
90
95
Nature
65
86
Connectivity
81
53
Transit
64
Ibiza

Ibiza

Spain

Granada

Granada

Spain

Ibiza

Safety: 80/100Pop: 150K (island year-round); 3M+ summer visitorsEurope/Madrid

Granada

Safety: 82/100Pop: 230KEurope/Madrid

How do Ibiza and Granada compare?

Two Spanish weeks that share a country and not much else. Granada is Andalusia's Moorish crown — the Alhambra (Spain's most visited monument and the last great Moorish palace in Europe), the Albayzín UNESCO quarter rising in whitewashed steps opposite, free tapas with every drink at Bodegas Castañeda, cave flamenco in the Sacromonte caves of Camino del Sacromonte, and Sierra Nevada ski runs at 3,398m a 35km drive away. Ibiza is the Balearic island that defines summer Mediterranean nightlife — Ushuaïa and Pacha's open-air clubs, Es Vedrà's offshore monolith at Cala d'Hort sunset, Dalt Vila's UNESCO Renaissance walls above Ibiza Town's marina, Cala Comte's turquoise coves, and 30-minute ferries to Formentera's empty white beaches.

Granada is friendlier on the wallet at roughly $145 a day mid-range against $280 in Ibiza, and the spend is in different universes. Granada runs you on tapas crawls (€2.50 a beer comes with a free plate), the €19 Alhambra ticket (book six weeks ahead), and a casa cueva guesthouse on the Sacromonte cliffs for €90. Ibiza runs you on club entries (€60–€90 a night), beach club daybeds (€200 minimum spend at Blue Marlin Cala Jondal), and the ferry to Formentera that turns into a €120 day after the rental moped. Granada wins on cultural depth, tapas economics, year-round usability, and the simple option of skiing Sierra Nevada in the morning and tapas-crawling at sea level by sunset. Ibiza wins on beach access, nightlife at a global level, and a hedonistic week nothing in mainland Spain matches.

Granada peaks March–May and September–November; Ibiza peaks June–September, with the club calendar collapsing by mid-October until May. The Vueling or Iberia direct from GRX–IBZ is seasonal only; most travelers connect through Barcelona or Madrid on a half-day routing. Pro tip: in Granada, book your Alhambra Nasrid Palaces timed entry the moment your dates are firm — same-day tickets are routinely 'agotado' (sold out) by 9 a.m. and the workaround visits cost double through tour operators. Pick Granada for Moorish history, free tapas, and a meaningful Andalusian week at low spend. Pick Ibiza for Mediterranean nightlife, beach clubs, and a hedonistic island summer at a serious premium.

💰 Budget

budget
Ibiza: $80-130Granada: $45–70
mid-range
Ibiza: $200-350Granada: $110–180
luxury
Ibiza: $500-1500+Granada: $280+

🛡️ Safety

Ibiza80/100Safety Score82/100Granada

Ibiza

Ibiza is a very safe destination — Spain has low overall crime rates and the Balearics have lower violent crime than the mainland average. The risks here are nightlife-specific: drink-spiking, drug-related medical emergencies (Ibiza's clubs have the highest MDMA-related ER visits in Europe per capita), drunk driving, balcony falls (Spain has campaigns against "balconing"), and pickpockets in the West End of Sant Antoni and around the Ibiza Town port area at peak season.

Granada

Granada is a very safe city for travellers. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. The main concerns are pickpocketing in crowded tourist areas (the approach to the Alhambra, the Albayzín, and the main tapas streets) and bag-snatching from café chairs. The Sacromonte caves area warrants extra attention after dark, and some travellers report being approached aggressively by sellers at the Alhambra entrance.

🌤️ Weather

Ibiza

Ibiza has a classic Mediterranean climate — hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters with virtually no extremes. The island averages 300 sunny days a year and rainfall is concentrated in autumn (October–November storms). Sea temperature peaks at 26°C in August and stays swimmable from June through October. The summer trade wind (the embat) provides afternoon cooling that makes even July evenings comfortable.

Spring (April - May)14 to 22°C
Summer (June - August)23 to 32°C
Autumn (September - October)17 to 28°C
Winter (November - March)8 to 17°C

Granada

Granada has a semi-arid continental climate — hot, dry summers and cold winters. It's one of Spain's coldest provincial capitals in winter due to elevation (738m above sea level) and proximity to the Sierra Nevada. Summers are extreme with temperatures regularly above 38°C; the surrounding plains can hit 42°C. Spring and autumn are excellent. Rainfall is low (only around 350mm annually) but concentrated in winter and spring.

Spring (March – May)8–22°C
Summer (June – September)18–40°C
Autumn & Winter (October – February)-2–17°C

🚇 Getting Around

Ibiza

Ibiza is best explored by car — the island is 220 sq miles with the best beaches scattered along all coasts and minimal public transport outside the main routes. Rent a small car at the airport; bus service exists between major towns but is infrequent and useless for beach hopping. Taxis are limited (a perennial summer crisis) and Uber does not operate on the island; pre-book transfers for clubs and arrange return rides in advance.

Walkability: Ibiza Town's old town (Dalt Vila and the Marina district) is walkable and the most pleasant way to experience the UNESCO core. Sant Antoni's sunset strip is walkable end to end (15 min). For everything else — beach-hopping, clubs, rural restaurants — you will need a car or scooter. Walking distances between island destinations are not feasible.

Rental Car€25–100/day depending on season
Taxi€2.50 flagfall + €1/km, surcharges nights/holidays
Public Bus€2–4 per ride; Discobus €4

Granada

Granada is a compact city and most tourist areas are walkable from the historic centre — though some involve significant hills (the Alhambra and Albayzín climbs are steep). The city has a small bus network (LAC). There is no metro. Taxis are inexpensive and widely available. A free electric minibus (Line C3 and C34) serves the Albayzín from Plaza Nueva — invaluable if you want to avoid the steep climb.

Walkability: The historic centre (Centro, Realejo) is very walkable and mostly flat. The Albayzín and Alhambra hill are both steep — plan for significant uphill walking (20–30 minutes each). Wear proper shoes, not flip-flops: the Albayzín cobblestones can be treacherous when wet. In summer, walk to the Alhambra in the early morning before the heat builds.

LAC Urban Buses€1.40 per ride; €20 for a 10-trip tarjeta (card) at any tobacco shop
Alhambra Minibus (Line 30/32)€1.40 per ride (standard LAC fare)
Taxis€5–12 for most inner-city trips; €40–55 to Sierra Nevada

📅 Best Time to Visit

Ibiza

May–Jun, Sep–Oct

Peak travel window

Granada

Mar–May, Sep–Nov

Peak travel window

The Verdict

Choose Ibiza if...

you want a Balearic island that pairs UNESCO Renaissance walls with the world's most influential club scene, sunset coves, and 30-minute ferries to Formentera

Choose Granada if...

you want the Alhambra — Spain's most visited monument, the last Moorish palace in Europe — plus the Albayzín UNESCO quarter, free tapas with every drink, cave flamenco in Sacromonte, and ski runs 35km away at 3,398m

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