Spain train vs flight route

Madrid to Seville Train vs Flight

Madrid to Seville is Spain's classic high-speed rail corridor. Compare train and flight by door-to-door time, cost, CO2e, station access, airport friction, luggage convenience, and event-season travel risk.

Best overall: Train Fastest line-haul: Flight Lowest CO2e: Train Last reviewed: Q2 2026

AVE, Avlo, OUIGO, iryo, flights, cost, time, and carbon compared

Trying to decide whether to take the train or fly from Madrid to Seville? For most city-center trips, the train is the better default.

Madrid–Seville is one of Spain's classic high-speed rail corridors. Current public planners show the fastest trains around 2h39 and the average journey around 2h46, with direct high-speed options from Renfe, OUIGO, and iryo. Direct flights also operate between Madrid-Barajas and Seville Airport, and the scheduled flight is short. But once you add airport access, security, boarding, deplaning, and the transfer from Seville Airport into the city, flying usually loses its apparent advantage.

The result is clear but not absolute: for central Madrid to central Seville, take the train. Flying is mainly useful for air connections, airport-proximity trips, unusual schedules, or cases where rail prices surge during major Seville event periods.

For the broader Spain-wide decision framework, see the Spain Train vs Flight Guide. For the full domestic route index, see Spain Core Routes.

Method note: This guide uses door-to-door time, typical cost ranges, CO2e logic, and route friction. It is a route-planning guide, not a live timetable. Always confirm current schedules, operators, fares, baggage rules, departure station, airport terminals, and disruption notices before booking.

Quick verdict: Madrid to Seville train vs flight

For most travelers, the train is better from Madrid to Seville because it connects Madrid Atocha with Sevilla Santa Justa, avoids the airport process at both ends, is easier with luggage, and has a much lower carbon impact. Flying can still make sense if you are already at Madrid-Barajas, connecting onward by air, ending near Seville Airport, or traveling when rail fares have surged.

Best overall: Train
Best overall Train

Best for most central Madrid to central Seville trips.

Fastest line-haul Flight

Shorter in the air, but the airport chain usually changes the full trip.

Lowest CO2e Train

The practical lower-carbon option on this corridor.

Biggest caveat Events

Semana Santa, Feria de Abril, and weekends can move fares quickly.

  • Best city-center option
  • Lower CO2e
  • Lower friction
  • Good for weekends
  • Strong for business trips

Why this verdict was selected

  • Fast city-center rail: current public planners show Madrid–Seville trains averaging around 2h46, with fastest journeys around 2h39.
  • Better urban arrival: Sevilla Santa Justa is close to central Seville and avoids the separate Seville Airport-to-city transfer.
  • Strong rail choice: Renfe, OUIGO, and iryo all appear on the corridor, making it easier to compare departure times, fares, and fare rules.
  • Lower friction: rail avoids airport security, boarding cutoffs, baggage reclaim risk, and airport bus or taxi timing.
  • Lower emissions: electric high-speed rail is typically far lower CO2e than a domestic flight of this length.
Flight can still make sense if you are connecting onward by air, already at Madrid-Barajas, staying near Seville Airport, traveling on a fare or schedule combination where rail has surged, or using airline points or loyalty benefits that materially change the total trip value.
Important nuance: Madrid–Seville is train-first for most city-center travelers, but it is less one-sided than Madrid–Valencia. Check both if your origin or destination is airport-based, or if you are booking during a major Seville event period.

Side-by-side comparison table

The flight is shorter in the air, but the train is usually better for the complete city-center trip.

Madrid–Seville train vs flight comparison
MetricTrainFlight
Best overallTrainAirport-based or connection option
Typical door-to-door time~3h20–4h15 for most central-city trips~3h45–5h15 after airport access, security, boarding, arrival, and city transfer
Line-haul durationAbout 2h39 fastest and about 2h46 average on current public planners; some services are slowerAbout 1h10–1h15 scheduled flight time
Typical one-way cost range~€15–€130+ depending on operator, timing, demand, and booking window~€35–€200+ before baggage, seat selection, and airport-transfer effects
Lowest headline faresOften available on advance low-cost rail inventoryPossible, but less meaningful after baggage and airport transfers
FrequencyHigh: many daily high-speed trains across Renfe/AVE/Avlo, OUIGO, and iryo listingsModerate: direct flights operate between MAD and SVQ with Iberia and Air Europa
Main rail nodesMadrid Puerta de Atocha–Almudena Grandes → Sevilla Santa JustaNot applicable
Main air nodesNot applicableMAD → SVQ
City-center convenienceHighMedium; Seville Airport is manageable but still outside the city-center travel chain
Reliability of total trip timeMore predictable for city-center travelMore variable due to airport process, ATC, baggage, and ground transfer
Ability to work/restStrongLimited by short-haul airport process and boarding interruptions
CO2e impactVery low relative to flyingHigher for a domestic flight
Best forTourists, business travelers, weekend trips, luggage, lower-emissions travelAir connections, airport-proximity trips, unusual schedules, loyalty-point cases
Interpretation: schedule-only time can be misleading. A 1h10 flight still has airport access, terminal buffers, boarding, arrival, and Seville Airport transfer time attached to it.

Why this route is different

Madrid–Seville is not as clear-cut as Madrid–Valencia, but it is still train-first for most city-center travelers. The rail journey is longer than the Valencia route, yet still fast enough that the airport process usually prevents flying from becoming the better normal choice.

It is Spain's classic high-speed rail corridor

Madrid–Seville is one of the routes that defined modern Spanish high-speed rail. The train has a strong identity here: direct city stations, long uninterrupted onboard time, and a simple city-to-city travel chain.

The flight has real but narrower use cases

Flying is more plausible here than on very short routes, but its best use cases are still airport-based: connections, airport-area destinations, or unusual schedules.

Seville's event calendar matters

Semana Santa, Feria de Abril, holidays, and major events can affect both rail prices and hotel availability. Book earlier than you would for an ordinary weekday trip.

The bus is a budget fallback, not the main comparison

Bus can help if rail prices are too high, but for most travelers the real decision is train versus flight, with train usually winning on convenience and carbon.

Route summary: why Madrid–Seville is usually train-first

Madrid–Seville is a strong high-speed rail corridor because the train's line-haul is fast enough to compete with aviation even over a longer domestic distance.

The rail journey is not as short as Madrid–Valencia, so the train's margin is narrower. But the same principle still applies: flying carries a large fixed time penalty that does not shrink just because the flight is short.

Rail line-haul ~2h39–2h46

Fast enough to compete strongly with aviation for city-center travel.

Typical result Train-first

Especially for central Madrid to central Seville trips.

Main exception Airport-based trip

Flying becomes more plausible if you are already at MAD or ending near SVQ.

The flight process

  1. Get from Madrid city to MAD.
  2. Arrive early enough for security and boarding.
  3. Fly from MAD to SVQ.
  4. Exit the aircraft and terminal.
  5. Travel from Seville Airport into the city.

The train process

  1. Get to Madrid Puerta de Atocha.
  2. Board the high-speed train.
  3. Arrive at Sevilla Santa Justa.
  4. Take a short onward transfer into Seville.

That difference in process is why the train remains the better default for most travelers.

Stations and airports used in the door-to-door model

Rail nodes

Madrid:

  • Madrid Puerta de Atocha–Almudena Grandes

Most Madrid–Seville high-speed services use Atocha, Madrid's main southern high-speed rail hub. Always check the exact station printed on your ticket before travel.

Seville:

  • Sevilla Santa Justa

Santa Justa is Seville's main railway station and is well connected by taxi, local bus, and onward rail services. For many central Seville stays, Santa Justa is much more convenient than arriving at the airport.

Air nodes

Madrid:

  • MAD — Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport

Seville:

  • SVQ — Seville Airport

Seville Airport is relatively compact and close to the city compared with some major airports, but it still requires a separate transfer by taxi, ride-hailing, or airport bus. There is no direct metro or train from the airport into central Seville, so the last-mile leg matters in the flight comparison.

Door-to-door time model

Odyssey Discoveries compares the full travel chain, not only scheduled train time or scheduled flight time.

Train model

Madrid origin → Atocha station access → station buffer → high-speed train → Santa Justa exit → final Seville transfer
15–40 minMadrid station access
15–25 minStation buffer
2h39–3h10High-speed train, depending on operator and stops
10–30 minSeville last-mile

Typical result: ~3h20–4h15 door-to-door for most central-city trips.

Flight model

Madrid origin → MAD airport access → security/boarding buffer → flight → deplaning/exit → Seville Airport transfer → final local transfer
35–60 minMadrid airport access
75–105 minAirport/security/boarding buffer
1h10–1h15Scheduled flight
15–35 minDeplaning, baggage, and exit buffer
25–45 minSeville Airport to city transfer

Typical result: ~3h45–5h15 door-to-door.

To recalculate the trip with your own station access, airport buffer, and last-mile assumptions, use the Time Optimizer Tool.

Cost comparison: train vs flight

Train cost pattern

Madrid–Seville rail pricing depends on operator, booking window, day of week, time of departure, fare class, luggage rules, and refund flexibility.

  • Best-value booking window: book several weeks ahead, especially for off-peak trains.
  • Most price-sensitive departures: Friday afternoons, Sunday returns, holidays, long weekends, Semana Santa, Feria de Abril, and major event dates.
  • Compare operators: Renfe/AVE/Avlo, OUIGO, and iryo may price the same departure window very differently.
  • Check fare rules: low-cost rail fares may charge for seat selection, flexibility, or larger luggage.

Flight cost pattern

Flights can look attractive on headline fare, especially if you are traveling light or using loyalty points. But for a fair comparison, include the full travel cost.

  • Madrid airport access
  • Seville airport-to-city transfer
  • baggage fees or cabin-bag restrictions
  • seat selection if needed
  • airport food during long buffers
  • schedule mismatch cost if the flight creates long waiting time
  • checked-bag delay risk if you need to move quickly after arrival
Practical rule: for this route, a flight needs to win on either schedule or total value, not just headline fare. If the train and flight are close in price, the train is usually the better choice.

To test your own dates and fare assumptions, use the Cost Comparison Tool.

Carbon assumptions: what this means

This page reports CO2e qualitatively to avoid false precision. The important point is directional: high-speed electric rail is typically much lower CO2e per passenger than a domestic flight.

Madrid–Seville is long enough that the aircraft's cruise phase matters more than it does on very short routes like Madrid–Valencia, but the rail option still has a substantial emissions advantage. For travelers trying to reduce the climate impact of domestic travel in Spain, this is a strong rail-substitution route.

Key point: for Madrid to Seville, the train is usually the best blend of time, comfort, lower emissions, and city-center convenience.

For a route-specific emissions estimate, use the Carbon Calculator. For the underlying assumptions, see Transport Methodology and Data.

Luggage, comfort, and convenience

Madrid–Seville is a route where the train's comfort advantage matters. The journey is long enough to work, read, eat, or rest onboard, but short enough that it remains practical for a weekend or business trip.

For tourists

Train is best. Santa Justa gives easier access to Seville's historic center than the airport chain for most visitors.

For business travelers

Usually train. The uninterrupted onboard block can be more useful than fragmented time across airport transfers, security, boarding, and arrival.

For luggage-heavy trips

Train is easier. You avoid checked-bag waits and most airport baggage friction, though low-cost rail fare rules still matter.

Decision guide: when to take the train vs fly

Take the train if

  • You are traveling central Madrid to central Seville.
  • You want the simplest door-to-door experience.
  • You are carrying luggage.
  • You want to work, read, or rest for a longer uninterrupted block.
  • You want a lower-emissions option.
  • You are visiting Seville's historic center.
  • You want to avoid airport security and boarding cutoffs.
  • You are booking early enough to access good rail fare buckets.

Consider flying if

  • You are connecting onward by air through Madrid or Seville.
  • You are already at Madrid-Barajas before the trip begins.
  • Your Seville destination is close to SVQ.
  • A flight schedule fits your timing much better than available trains.
  • You have airline status, points, or bundled fare benefits that materially improve the flight option.
  • Rail prices have surged for a peak travel date.

Check both if

  • You are booking last-minute.
  • You are traveling during Semana Santa, Feria de Abril, major sports events, or holiday weekends.
  • You have checked luggage or strict baggage requirements.
  • Your Madrid origin is closer to the airport than to Atocha.
  • Your Seville destination is outside the city center.
  • You need a very early or very late departure.

Consider bus if

  • You are prioritizing the lowest fare over speed.
  • Rail and flight prices are both unusually high.
  • You are not time-sensitive.
  • You are comfortable with a long surface journey.

Traveler scenarios

Central Madrid to Seville historic center

Recommendation: Train.

This is the baseline case. The train keeps the journey simple, avoids both airport transfers, and arrives at Santa Justa, which is well placed for central Seville.

Madrid Airport to Seville city

Recommendation: Check both.

If you are already at MAD after an inbound flight, a connecting flight to SVQ can make sense. But if the flight connection is long or expensive, transferring from the airport to Atocha and taking the train may still be competitive.

Central Madrid to Seville Airport area

Recommendation: Check both.

If your final destination is close to SVQ, flying becomes more competitive because the flight's arrival node is near your destination. This is not the typical tourist or business-center case.

Weekend break in Seville

Recommendation: Train.

The train usually gives you a better usable-time profile. You avoid the uncertainty of airport process time and arrive closer to the city.

Semana Santa or Feria de Abril trip

Recommendation: Book early and check both.

Seville demand can spike dramatically during major events. The train is still structurally strong, but fares and inventory can move quickly. Compare early and include baggage and flexibility rules.

Business traveler with laptop time

Recommendation: Train.

The longer uninterrupted onboard block can be more productive than the fragmented airport process. For travelers who value usable work time, the train has a practical advantage beyond raw minutes.

Booking window guidance

Madrid–Seville is a popular route. Treat it as a corridor where early booking matters, especially when Seville's event calendar is active.

  • Book early for weekends and events: Seville's peak event calendar can tighten rail and hotel availability.
  • Compare all operators: AVE/Avlo, OUIGO, and iryo can vary by fare rules, luggage, seat selection, and onboard product.
  • Check exact train duration: some trains are faster than others, and a slower departure can change the door-to-door comparison.
  • Do not compare headline fares only: compare total trip cost, including local transfers and baggage.
  • Check flexibility needs: a cheap non-flexible fare may not be the best value if your itinerary might change.

Total train cost

rail fare + Madrid station access + Seville last-mile

Total flight cost

air fare + Madrid airport access + baggage/seat add-ons + Seville Airport transfer

Methodology summary

This page applies the same route-analysis framework used across Odyssey Discoveries.

Time

Door-to-door estimates include access legs, station or airport process time, line-haul travel, and arrival transfer. Scheduled train and flight durations are shown separately.

Cost

Typical one-way economy ranges are modeled from observed operator and aggregator fare patterns. Actual prices vary by booking window, day of week, seasonality, fare class, luggage, and flexibility.

CO2e

Emissions are treated comparatively using Odyssey Discoveries' standard transport methodology. Aviation is expressed as CO2e, not only direct CO2.

See the full Transport Methodology and Data page for details.

Compare your own Madrid–Seville trip

Planning this route now? Start with the Time Optimizer Tool if your decision depends on door-to-door time, use the Cost Comparison Tool if price matters most, and use the Carbon Calculator if you want the lower-impact option.

Use these tools and related guides to personalize the Madrid–Seville conclusion for your own trip.

External sources

Use live operator and airport pages for schedule checks before booking. Timetables, fares, terminals, fare rules, and station assignments can change.

FAQs — Madrid to Seville Train vs Flight

Is the train faster than flying from Madrid to Seville?

For most central-city trips, yes. The scheduled flight is much shorter than the scheduled train, but the train often wins door-to-door because it avoids airport access, security, boarding, deplaning, baggage, and the transfer from Seville Airport into the city.

How long is the train from Madrid to Seville?

Current public planners often show the fastest Madrid to Seville trains at about 2h39 and the average journey at about 2h46. Some services are slower depending on stops, operator, and timetable. Always check the exact train on your travel date.

How long is the flight from Madrid to Seville?

The scheduled direct flight is usually around 1h10–1h15. That is only the flight time. A realistic door-to-door flight trip is much longer once airport access, security, boarding, arrival, and transfer into Seville are included.

Which station do trains use in Madrid?

Most Madrid–Seville high-speed services use Madrid Puerta de Atocha–Almudena Grandes. Always check your ticket before travel in case your specific service or connection uses a different Madrid station.

Which station do trains use in Seville?

Madrid–Seville high-speed trains arrive at Sevilla Santa Justa, the city's main railway station.

Are there direct flights from Madrid to Seville?

Yes. Direct flights operate between Madrid-Barajas and Seville Airport with Iberia and Air Europa. Schedules and operators can change by date.

When does flying make sense on Madrid–Seville?

Flying can make sense if you are connecting onward by air, already at Madrid Airport, staying near Seville Airport, or if the flight schedule is much better than the available trains. For most city-center travelers, the train is usually the better default.

Is Madrid to Seville by train good for a weekend trip?

Yes. Madrid–Seville is well suited to a rail weekend trip because the train arrives close to the city and avoids the extra airport process time.

Is the train cheaper than flying?

It can be, especially when booked early or when low-cost rail inventory is available. But prices vary. Compare total cost, not headline fare: include station access for the train and airport transfers, baggage, and seat add-ons for the flight.

Is the train more sustainable than flying?

Yes. High-speed electric rail is typically much lower CO2e per passenger than a domestic flight, especially when aviation's non-CO2 effects are considered.

Editorial note: This guide is designed for route-level planning, not live booking. Always confirm the current timetable, departure station, baggage rules, airport transfer options, fare conditions, and disruption notices before purchasing.