Need to know
Rooms
38, including two suites.
Check–Out
Noon, but flexible, subject to availability and a charge. Earliest check-in, 2pm.
More details
Rates don’t include breakfast (usually €25 a person) but guests get a welcome lemonade or fruit tea on arrival.
Also
One room is adapted for guests with reduced mobility, and there’s a step-free side entrance and two lifts to all floors.
At the hotel
Roof terrace with solarium, gym, hammam, library lounge, charged laundry service, concierge, and free WiFi. In rooms: TV, Nespresso coffee machine, tea-making kit, minibar, air-conditioning, bathrobes and slippers, and Rituals bath products.
Our favourite rooms
Unless you’re watching a Kubrick movie, hotel corridors aren’t normally something to shout about, but each floor here has a different style of gloriously colourful and detailed tiling. And more nods to the Alhambra are found in the room names, with each named after a flower you’ll find in the complex’s lush gardens. Each is elegantly outfitted, but we like the Suite, which hoards more original features than most and has the city’s knack for flair; it has a gallery with stained-glass windows, an ornate ceiling, flouncy mouldings and more. And the Deluxe Room with Balcony gives you dual-aspect views of the Gran Vía.
Poolside
Tucked away in the original stone vaults there’s a surprisingly big heated pool with hydro-massage jets.
Spa
The exposed brick and stone of the original vaults in the hotel’s basement keeps the space cool, but things get steamier in the hammam and Turkish bath hidden down here, and there’s a cosy room for the hotel’s on-call masseuse to ply their pampering. And yoga classes are sometimes held on the rooftop.
Packing tips
Download the Barceló app before arrival and you can check-in speedily and order pillows, massages and room service.
Also
Look above the grand staircase and you’ll be wowed by an intricately carved and configured wooden ceiling that pre-dates the building, having been painstakingly repurposed from an antique Moorish house.
Children
Children are welcome to stay and there are interconnecting rooms and baby cots to borrow. There are no dedicated activities or kit, but babysitting can be arranged on request (must be booked five days in advance).
Sustainability efforts
The Palacio was formerly the Rodríguez Acosta bank, built in 1905 (although ‘palace’ feels a more fitting title). Before renovation began, a historian was called in to log all the original features for safeguarding, and so the delightful Moorish tiling, grand wooden staircase, stained-glass windows, wooden teller kiosks and much more have been preserved throughout. Recycling is also duly followed to Granada’s – very precise – specifications, and food is largely locally sourced.