
Alfama
Lisbon's oldest quarter — a medieval maze of stairways, fado houses and tiled facades below the castle.
The call
Worth it if you are watching the budget and you only have one day.
Why
- 01
The one neighbourhood that survived the 1755 quake, so it's genuinely old: getting lost in it is the point, with washing lines, sardine grills and stray fado drifting from doorways.
Our read - 02
The catch: the most photographed lanes are increasingly Airbnb-and-souvenir, and every alley is a calf-burning stair.
Our read
Is it a fit?
Go if
You are watching the budget
Alfama earns the spend, even on a tight budget.
You only have one day
Short trip or not, keep Alfama.
You are traveling as a couple
As a couple, Alfama is an easy yes.
You are traveling solo
Solo, Alfama is an easy yes.
The same streets, hour by hour
Quiet, local, washing on the lines and the smell of coffee
Tour groups and souvenir browsers thicken the main lanes
Fado drifting from doorways and a soulful hush off the busier streets
Worth-it spots in the area
Plan it well
- Cost
- Free to wander
- Timing
- Early morning or weekday evenings for the least crowding
- Allow
- 1.5–3 hrs
- Accessibility
- Steep stairs and cobbles throughout; not suitable for wheelchairs
- Getting there
- Walk down from the castle, or Tram 28; the Sé cathedral marks the lower gateway
Consider instead
Sources and method (1)
- Lisbon's oldest district, largely spared by the 1755 earthquake, retaining its medieval Moorish street layout; historic heart of fado. golisbon.com ↗