
Málaga's Centro Histórico is pedestrianised, walled by the Alcazaba on one side and the port on the other. You can cross it in 15 minutes — but you shouldn't.
Start. Plaza de la Constitución, the heart of the old town.
Walk up Calle Larios, the marble pedestrian boulevard, and turn right into Calle Granada for tile-fronted shops and Iglesia de Santiago (Picasso was baptised here).
Plaza de la Merced for Casa Natal de Picasso and a coffee. Continue to Plaza del Obispo to face the unfinished cathedral (locals call it La Manquita, the one-armed lady).
Wind down Calle Císter and Calle Alcazabilla, where the Roman Theatre sits below the Moorish Alcazaba — three civilisations in one frame.
Eat at Uvedoble (tapas), Casa Lola (classics), or Mercado de Atarazanas for market lunch.
Insider picks
A short, hand-picked list of places worth your time.
- Calle Marqués de LariosMálaga's marble pedestrian spine — luxury shopping and street performers.Open in Maps →
- Mercado Central de AtarazanasIron-and-glass market with a Moorish gate — produce by day, tapas any time.Open in Maps →
- Plaza de la MercedPicasso's birthplace square — café terraces, palms and weekend buskers.Open in Maps →
More of Málaga
A quick wander through the city — old quarters, beaches, rooftops and the food in between.




















