Seville · Month comparison
November vs October
October ranks #1 overall vs November at #4. The best month to visit Seville — ideal weather, lower prices, the city back to itself.
November
#4 of 12 months
Strong option
Quiet autumn with mild days — genuine local city life at low prices with no significant crowds.
- ↑Very affordable accommodation with walk-in availability at most properties: Seville's value window before Christmas rises
- ↑The whole of the historic district — the Cathedral, the Alcázar gardens, Santa Cruz — accessible and unhurried
October
#1 of 12 months
Best match
The best month to visit Seville — ideal weather, lower prices, the city back to itself.
- ↑24°C days with low humidity and golden autumn light: the best conditions of the year for walking the old town without heat or winter grey
- ↑Accommodation prices approaching January lows while all sights, restaurants, and cultural life are fully operational
| Factor | November | October |
|---|---|---|
| Weather score | 7 | 9 |
| Value score | 8 | 8 |
| Crowd score | 8 | 7 |
| Events score | 3 | 5 |
| Atmosphere | 7 | 9 |
| Avg high temp | 18°C | 24°C |
| Monthly rain | 75mm | 60mm |
| Daily sunshine | 6hrs | 7hrs |
November trade-offs
- ↓November brings Seville's most reliable rain: week-long grey spells are common, and outdoor terrace dining may not be comfortable
- ↓Temperatures can drop to 10°C at night — the outdoor café culture that defines the city requires warmer clothing
- ↓Shorter days (around 10 hours of daylight) and limited festival calendar make it quieter culturally than April or October
October trade-offs
- ↓Some October rain is likely — not the persistent grey of northern Europe, but occasional heavy showers that can last half a day
- ↓Daylight shortening toward 11 hours by month end: late afternoons require earlier dinner planning than in summer
- ↓The Alcázar and Cathedral remain popular; October is not the empty city of January — advance booking still advisable
Scores compare months within Seville. Climate data: Open Meteo ERA5 30-year normals (1991–2020). Methodology →