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Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville (Marriott’s Luxury Collection)

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This is my review of Hotel Alfonso XIII in Seville, part of Marriott’s The Luxury Collection.

When I first started travelling heavily in my early 20s, I would visit cities, walk past – or often pop inside – the main luxury hotel and decide that I would return one day when I had some money. Over the years I have been lucky enough to tick off most of my list, but I’d never made it back to Seville to stay in Hotel Alfonso XIII.

A few months ago (yes, this is a heavily delayed review) I made it down there. I deliberately picked two nights when the hotel seemed quiet with many suites available for sale, knowing that I had some Marriott Bonvoy Suite Night Awards to use up. My plan worked and the upgrade cleared into what I think was a Premium Suite.

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

I paid for my stay and the hotel did not know I was reviewing it. As I didn’t get an official tour I didn’t see any other rooms and didn’t eat any meals except breakfast and one light lunch in the hotel. The hotel website – click here – has a lot of images showing what I don’t cover.

The history of Hotel Alfonso XIII

There are many smaller cities in the world which have one huge historic hotel, something on a scale and grandeur that nothing else in the city can come close to matching. The Hotel Alfonso XIII in Seville is one of these.

Sometimes these hotel are exceptionally faded (eg the Grand in Scarborough!) since they can never charge enough to cover the maintenance required to keep them in top condition. Hotel Alfonso XIII just about pulls it off – it doesn’t have all the mod cons but you wouldn’t want to miss the experience of staying here.

The hotel was built for the World’s Fair of 1929. To quote Wikipedia:

The building is in the Neo-Mudéjar style. This style is historicist and, in this case also has an aspect of Andalusian regionalism. Initially designed in 1916, it blends in with the overall aesthetics of the buildings planned for the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929. Its façade and its overall construction display a significant wealth of decorative elements and details, built from materials that could well be considered as frugal or simple: mostly brick, plaster, wood and ceramics.

The interior puts forth a display of wealth and status: arches and columns, decorated with elaborate coffered hanging lamps and fine carpets from the Royal Tapestry Factory. Ornamented ceramic tiles (azulejos) decorate walls, ceilings and all manner of structures. The luxurious rooms were designed to accommodate kings, presidents, celebrities and other guests of the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929. The floors are marble and wood.

A stay here is like stepping back in time, in a generally good way.

In terms of location, it can’t be beaten – directly in the city centre and just a few steps from the Alcazar.

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

Inside Hotel Alfonso XIII

Instead of going through the usual check-in etc story, I just want to show a few photos from the hotel website. Frankly, if you like the look of what you see you’ll want to come, and if you don’t then nothing I can say about the number of USB sockets will change your mind.

The images above and immediately below are of the astonishing lobby:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

You’re very much not in a Holiday Inn Express here ….

Whilst there are lifts, if you are empty handed you’d be crazy not to enjoy taking the stairs to your room:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

…. with a separate lobby on each floor:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

The heart of the action is the hotel courtyard, which is covered by blinds when the sun is at its peak:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

…. although you can also eat around the edges inside:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

One thing that surprised me was the large swimming pool, which you can’t see from the street or on your way into the hotel:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

The pool makes the hotel into a real urban resort and means a short break here feels like a proper sun holiday in season.

Let’s move on to a few of my own photographs, which look rather poor by comparison to the official ones. Here is breakfast in the courtyard, from a ‘good but not great’ buffet:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

Here’s another shot of the afternoon tea area:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

Here is an utterly OTT lobby area on my floor if you are taking the stairs down:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

My suite at Hotel Alfonso XIII

I had booked a standard room – discounting the cost via the American Express / Marriott cashback offer that ran over the summer and which included this hotel (it is NOT included in the current version of the offer) – and used two Suite Night Awards to request an upgrade.

(You receive five Suite Night Awards for 50 Marriott nights in a calendar year and another five for hitting 75 nights. This HfP article explains more.)

As you’d expect, a historic hotel like this has a disproportionately high number of suites. The chances of a Suite Night Award clearing are good as long as there are a lot of suites still for sale when you book. Out of peak season, suites are also proportionately good value for cash.

The rooms are all different so don’t get too hung up on any particular aspect below. In particular, the hotel photo gallery online shows multiple different bathroom design schemes so don’t let mine spook you!

My suite consisted of two rooms. There was one large sitting area which took up 50% of the space:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

…. with the bedroom and bathroom combined taking up the same area. The furnishings are an acquired taste, to put it mildly:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

…. and the bathroom design was something else:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

and

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

What you can’t see clearly in the photographs is that the stripes are bronze, not purple or brown, creating an interesting reflection everywhere. The shower was over the bath (you’re not in a Four Seasons here, albeit not paying their prices either). Toiletries were Byredo in large bottles.

I don’t want to give the impression that this hotel is hugely luxurious because it isn’t. There were clear maintenance issues, such as this cracking by the door:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

More bizarre was the coffee machine in my room. I’m used to having to request milk for my coffee, but this was the first time that I had to call down to reception to get coffee itself, plus some cups. It still hadn’t arrived after I went out for a couple of hours and I had to chase it.

Housekeeping is also happy to leave waste from the rooms sitting around in the corridors on shelves for hours on end:

Review: Hotel Alfonso XIII, Seville

Conclusion

This is not your typical HfP hotel review – no talk of coat hangers, eggs royale or USB sockets here – because Hotel Alfonso XIII is not your typical hotel, and all the better for it.

It’s not perfect, by any means, but hopefully the pictures give you a feel for what I felt when I first popped in for a look 25 years ago, and why I wanted to go back.

Seville, of course, is a lovely city. It has been astoundingly hot this summer – over 40 degrees at times – so best experienced out of season when the hotel is also better value. For a weekend in late November, rooms start at €450 with a suite like mine around €900 per night. You can knock around €100 off per night for a midweek stay.

You can find out more about Hotel Alfonso XIII on the Marriott website here.


How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Marriott Bonvoy points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

The official Marriott Bonvoy American Express card comes with 20,000 points for signing up, 2 points for every £1 you spend and 15 elite night credits per year.

You can apply here.

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

20,000 points for signing up and 15 elite night credits each year Read our full review

You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points by converting American Express Membership Rewards points at the rate of 2:3.

Do you know that holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Marriott Bonvoy Gold status for as long as they hold the card?  It also comes with Hilton Honors Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points indirectly:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Marriott Bonvoy points is 2:3.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Marriott Bonvoy points.

Comments (24)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • JFSV says:

    Sevilla is VERY hot not just this summer, but all summers. That said, it is an incredibly-rich city when it comes to history, monuments and sights to visit. Plus great (inexpensive) food options.

  • Paul says:

    Beautiful as it is, at £450 a night I expect the detritus to be removed and the cracks filled!

    • Talay says:

      Yes, I was expecting somewhat of a bargain being so run down and off the beaten track so to speak.

      Perhaps £150 a night, not £450 a night. I see zero value there.

  • Gaz_Zebo says:

    always pop in to look at the architecture of this Hotel whenever I am in Seville.
    Very often park at the public car park below which although challenging to get to is perfectly located.

  • T says:

    No talk of eggs, Royale and USB sockets!!!
    Right in your heart Rhys!!
    # Robistrollingthetrolls!
    Thank you for the review Rob, and no thanks to 450 quid a night!!

  • Mark says:

    That bathroom pic should come with an epilepsy warning!

  • Kevin C says:

    We stayed here for three nights this summer a week or two after Rob.

    We booked via FHR to get a 4pm checkout (honoured) because the BA flight back to Gatwick leaves late. Hotel was full and we weren’t upgraded but we got a nice room.

    We used our food and beverage credit at the hotel’s excellent Tapas restaurant which overlooks the square outside.

    The hotel does a guided tour every day at 5pm. I recommend this. We saw various historic function rooms and were taken up to one of the roof terraces. At the end we were given a complimentary drink.

    As others have noticed, Seville gets hot. Forty four degrees while we were there. So once you’ve walked to the top of the cathedral you’re ready for a break. Even at 7pm by the pool it was incredibly hot.

  • Jared says:

    The Alfonso XIII is a bit of an odd one. The building is spectacular, particularly the public areas. The rooms are nothing to write home about, and in season it is very expensive for what it is. The location is also not brilliant as you are a bit out of the action. The reality is that you would have a vastly better experience in one of the boutique hotels in the old town.

    • Rob says:

      It’s not out of the way in the context of Seville itself. Last time I was there I was in one of the large modern hotels in what is effectively the second city centre where the business hub is. You are literally 2 minutes from the Alacazar entrance.

      • Gagravarr says:

        Melia (Hotel Colón Gran Meliá) have a lovely hotel in the city that’s arguably more “central” for tourists. It’s pretty close to the Plaza Nueva square, tucked into lots of small streets by the Fine Arts Museum.

        Very fancy lobby, nice rooms, and the doors are all reproductions of works of art from the museum, which works really well!

      • Jared says:

        I know what you mean, but as someone who likes to be in the warren of little streets and tapas bars in the old town it always felt like a long-ish and hot walk back. I ended up taking a lot of taxis.

  • AJA says:

    How long has it been a part of Marriott? I didn’t know that when I stayed here back in June 2016 (flew back the day of the referendum on a very delayed BA flight for which BA paid out EC261 compensation , which softened the cost of the holiday, but that’s another story).

    Service was impeccable. I don’t remember detritus being left in the corridors. I didn’t have a suite but the room was nice, overlooking the wonderful gardens and had a small, standing room only, balcony. It was level with the sails that covered the central courtyard, interesting to watch as they closed to provide shade below. I liked the bathroom which had the striped effect. The breakfast was great, especially the egg station. And proper freshly squeezed orange juice which is to be expected given the location and the orange trees in the gardens. The pool area was always busy but never a lack of loungers and great, if expensive, poolside service from very attentive staff. The only negative is that the pool was absolutely freezing cold, even more of a thermal shock given the 40+ degrees air temperature. I can only think this was caused by the fact that they had three jets of water blasting at one end (unfortunately the shallower end). Plus it’s a pool that has ladders that you climb down, like a pool on board a ship. So not great if you’ve got limited mobility. That said overall I highly recommend staying here. Fabulous hotel.

    • AJA says:

      Apologies for lack of paragraphs -pressed submit too soon.

    • Bagoly says:

      I remember it being in SPG in 2001 !
      And Marriott bought SPG sometime in 2016.

    • Kevin C says:

      Yes, I liked the fresh orange juice. And the egg station cook made me some nice omelettes.

      I thought the hotel was well situated. We were able to walk everywhere including to the Plaza de España (like Alexandra Palace on an unlimited budget).

      The pool was not at all cold this summer.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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