Hotels in Segovia
2 hotels across 0 neighborhoods
Stay steps from Segovia's 1st-century Roman aqueduct and Alcázar fortress. Compare hotels across the historic old town and beyond.
About Segovia
Segovia stands 1,002 metres above sea level on a rocky ridge in Castile, 87 km northwest of Madrid by high-speed rail — under 30 minutes on the Avant service. The city's Roman aqueduct, built under Emperor Trajan around 98–117 AD, runs 728 metres through the centre without a drop of mortar binding its 167 granite arches. That single structure draws more visitors than any other monument in Castilla y León outside Salamanca. At the opposite end of the old town, the Alcázar — the fairy-tale castle that partly inspired Walt Disney's Cinderella design — sits at the confluence of the Eresma and Clamores rivers.
Most visitors arrive for a day trip from Madrid, but those who stay overnight find the old town quieter after 7 pm, with the aqueduct lit against a dark sky. The city sits inside a UNESCO World Heritage zone declared in 1985, covering the Roman, Romanesque, and Gothic layers compressed into roughly one square kilometre. The Jewish quarter, El Barrio de la Judería, runs along Calle de la Judería near the cathedral — Segovia's 16th-century Gothic cathedral is the last built in Spain in that style, completed in 1577.
Segovia is the acknowledged capital of cochinillo asado — roast suckling pig cooked in wood-fired ovens. Restaurants around Plaza Mayor serve it by weight; the tradition of cutting it with a plate rather than a knife dates to the mid-20th century as a theatrical proof of tenderness. Hotels concentrate in and around the walled centre, with additional options in the modern city below the aqueduct on Paseo de Ezequiel González.
Cities like Segovia
Other destinations across Spain within reach.

