Discover Valencia in a Self Guided Tour

8 hours and a half
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Overview

What's Included

✓ Included

  • Digital Map.
  • Access to the audio guide for 50+ Valencia attractions and hidden spots.
  • Self-guided walking tour (app)

✗ Not Included

  • Private transportation
  • Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.
  • Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.

Itinerary

1
Stop 1
Valencia's spiritual heart occupies the site of the ancient Roman forum, its elegant square now framed by the Cathedral, Basilica de la Virgen de los Desamparados, and the Palau de la Generalitat that houses the regional government. The Turia fountain's reclining figure represents the diverted river while water channels recall the ancient irrigation tribunal that still meets at the cathedral door each Thursday to resolve disputes using procedures unchanged for a thousand years. The plaza's cafe terraces provide front-row seats for people-watching and the evening paseo that fills the square with Valencians of all generations.
2
Stop 2
Valencia's cathedral blends Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque elements accumulated over centuries of construction, but the main draw is the Santo Cáliz chapel where an agate cup claimed to be the Holy Grail has been venerated since arriving from a Pyrenean monastery in 1437. Historians consider this 1st-century vessel among the most credible Grail candidates, and Pope John Paul II celebrated mass with it during his 1982 visit. The Miguelete bell tower's 207 steps reward climbers with 360-degree views while the cathedral museum displays Goya paintings and spectacular religious art.
3
Stop 3
This Gothic masterpiece served as Valencia's silk trading hall during the 15th and 16th centuries when the city rivaled Venice and Florence as a Mediterranean commercial power. The UNESCO World Heritage Site's soaring columns twist upward like palm trees in the main trading hall while gargoyles and carved inscriptions decorate facades that combine civic pride with moral admonition. The building represents the golden age of Valencian trade and the civic architecture that Mediterranean merchant cities created to celebrate and regulate commerce.
4
Stop 4
Europe's largest fresh food market fills a stunning Art Nouveau building with over 1,200 vendors selling Valencia's legendary produce—tomatoes, oranges, saffron, fresh seafood, and the dozens of ingredients that make paella possible. The market's iron structure, colorful ceramic details, and stained glass dome create cathedral-like spaces where Valencians have shopped daily since 1928. Morning visits capture the market at its liveliest while the surrounding streets host traditional shops selling jamón, cheese, and the kitchen equipment needed to recreate Valencian cuisine at home.
5
Stop 5
Valencia's bohemian heart occupies the medieval quarter where narrow streets, ancient churches, and sections of the Moorish and Christian walls create an atmospheric labyrinth now filled with street art, vintage shops, and the bars that fuel the city's legendary nightlife. The neighborhood's transformation from working-class district to creative hub has made it essential for experiencing contemporary Valencia, with galleries, design studios, and restaurants occupying renovated historic buildings. Daytime exploration reveals architectural treasures while evening visits unlock the terrace bars and clubs that keep Carmen lively until dawn.
6
Stop 6
Santiago Calatrava's visionary complex of museums, concert halls, and aquarium has transformed Valencia's image since opening in 1998, its sweeping white structures rising from azure reflecting pools in forms that suggest dinosaur skeletons, opening eyes, and organic shapes from science fiction. The complex includes the Oceanogràfic (Europe's largest aquarium), Hemisfèric IMAX theater, Príncipe Felipe science museum, and the Palau de les Arts opera house, each building a sculptural masterpiece regardless of what's inside. The surrounding landscape architecture creates one of Spain's most photogenic destinations, particularly dramatic at night when lighting transforms the complex into a luminous dreamscape.
7
Stop 7
The nine-kilometer park created in the former Turia riverbed after devastating 1957 floods diverted the river has become Valencia's beloved green spine, connecting the historic center to the sea through playgrounds, sports facilities, and gardens designed by different landscape architects. The park's shaded paths attract joggers, cyclists, and families while Gulliver Park's giant reclining figure provides climbing adventures for children and photo opportunities for all ages. The gardens' position below street level and historic bridge crossings create a linear oasis that offers escape from traffic and heat while providing the most pleasant route between the Old Town and the City of Arts and Sciences.
8
Stop 8
Valencia's most impressive medieval gate once welcomed visitors arriving from the north, its twin Gothic towers now providing rooftop views across the Old Town and serving as the stage for the opening ceremony of Las Fallas festival each March. The towers survived intact partly because they served as a prison and warehouse rather than being demolished for urban expansion, and their scale demonstrates Valencia's medieval importance as one of the Mediterranean's great trading cities. Evening visits offer atmospheric views as the Old Town's lights emerge while the gate's position at the Turia Gardens edge makes it easy to combine with riverside walks.
9
Stop 9
Valencia's trendiest neighborhood has transformed from working-class district to creative hub, its grid of streets south of the train station now packed with independent boutiques, specialty coffee roasters, and the restaurants that have made Valencia a European gastronomic destination. The neighborhood's Moorish name (from a 9th-century royal garden) hints at deep history, but today's Ruzafa belongs to young creatives who have opened studios, co-working spaces, and the hip bars that keep the area lively until late. The Ruzafa Market and surrounding streets provide the best food shopping outside the Central Market while the multicultural population maintains the authentic urban character that gentrification threatens.
10
Stop 10
Valencia's main urban beach stretches for kilometers along the Mediterranean, its golden sand and beachfront promenade providing the seaside escape that makes the city livable during scorching summer months. The beach's traditional paella restaurants—including establishments where the dish was allegedly invented—serve lunch to families who spend entire Sundays moving between sand and table. The adjacent port area has been redeveloped for events and nightlife while the beach itself offers swimming, volleyball, and the quintessentially Spanish experience of late-afternoon bathing followed by sunset drinks on the paseo.
11
Stop 11
This small town just north of Valencia has cultivated the chufa (tiger nut) used to make horchata for over a thousand years, its horchaterías serving the authentic iced drink that has refreshed Valencians since the Moors introduced the crop. The traditional establishments of Alboraya offer horchata alongside fartons (elongated sweet buns for dipping) in an experience that combines refreshment with agricultural heritage. The surrounding huerta farmland—the irrigated gardens that have fed Valencia since Roman times—can be explored by bicycle or on foot, revealing the agricultural traditions that produce the ingredients for Valencia's celebrated cuisine.

Meeting & End Point

📍
Meeting Point
Location: In the center of the square, next to the Turia Fountain (Fuente del Turia), which features the large bronze statue of a man reclining. Address: Plaza de la Virgen, 46001 Valencia, Spain. Coordinates: 39.4764, -0.3751
🏁
End Point
Location: In the center of the square, next to the Turia Fountain (Fuente del Turia), which features the large bronze statue of a man reclining. Address: Plaza de la Virgen, 46001 Valencia, Spain. Coordinates: 39.4764, -0.3751

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Good to Know

  • Not recommended for travelers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travelers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Known For:

Special Instructions

INSTRUCTIONS

1 – Download the CloudGuide App
The first step is to install the CloudGuide app. The app can be found under the name CloudGuide in the app stores (iOS and Android). You can also get our app here: cloudguide.me/get. Review how to use: cloudguide.me/l/howtouse_en_web.

2 – Get the guide
Once downloaded, open the app. Click "I HAVE A CODE". Type using the keyboard or paste the code that can be found above your ticket on the left, just below the barcode (a 12-digit number starting with “A”, one code per visitor).

Click "START TOUR". You can pre-download or use your guide in streaming. Once activated on your phone, the guide grants access to content for the following 30 days.

3 - Go to the starting point
When you're ready to start the guide, head to the suggested starting point (or feel free to customize the order of your tour).

4 - Need help?
If you have any issues with access codes or in-app purchases, please contact us at help@cloudguide.me. We have also prepared a list of the most common issues and the ways to solve them: cloudguide.me/l/issues.

5 – Didn’t receive your code?
If you haven’t received your access code (a 12-digit number starting with “A” — one code per visitor), please contact us at help@cloudguide.me. Be sure to include your booking number and the name of the tour, and we’ll assist you as soon as possible.

TIP: Having troubles? Apps and phones aren’t perfect. Sometimes they freeze or crash. If this happens, simply close the app (don’t just minimise it!) and reopen it. In most cases that should help.

All stops, routes, and points of interest in this app are recommendations only. Conditions can change — please check local weather, road conditions, and official sources (such as national parks, tourism boards, visitor centers, and municipal websites) before and during your trip. CloudGuide and its publisher are not liable for any loss, injury, inconvenience, or damages resulting from use of this information or decisions based on it.

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