REVIEW · VALENCIA
Savor Spain: Your Ultimate Tapas Tour Guide
Book on Viator →Operated by Enjoy Valencia Tapas Tours · Bookable on Viator
A great tapas night starts with a good plan. This Valencia tapas tour mixes classic and modern bites with a walk through the Old Town, plus wine or beer with your tastings. I like that the tour leans on local, family-run spots and uses local products, so what you taste is rooted in how Valencia actually eats. One drawback to consider: some recent bookings had major communication problems and even no-shows, so you’ll want to be a bit proactive on the day.
The format also works well if you want food plus context. You’ll stop at well-known tapas bars, you may hit traditional market-style stops, and you’ll hear stories about what you’re eating and what parts of Valencia matter. My other favorite part is that you get a short list of places to keep exploring after the tour, with extra tips for spending time in the city.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go on This Valencia Tapas Walk
- Why This Starts at Plaça de l’Ajuntament (and Why That Helps)
- What You Eat: Classic Valencian Tapas Plus Modern Twists
- The Stops: Tapas Bars, Food Stalls, and Market-Style Flavors
- When You Meet Chefs, That Story Changes the Bite
- Old Town Monuments: Food Stops With City Context
- Drinks Included: Wine, Beer, or Soft Drinks With Every Stop
- Price and Value: Is $87.27 a Fair Deal?
- Group Size and Pace: How 3.5 Hours Feels in Real Life
- The Real Risk: No-Shows and Communication Failures
- Who Should Book This Valencia Tapas Tour
- Should You Book It?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the Savor Spain tapas tour?
- What time does the tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- What is the price per person?
- What food is included?
- Are drinks included, and can I choose non-alcoholic options?
- Is lunch included?
- Is private transportation included?
- What is the maximum group size?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key Things to Know Before You Go on This Valencia Tapas Walk

- 3.5 hours in the Old Town starting at Plaça de l’Ajuntament at 7:30 pm
- Tapas-focused dinner with 1 or 2 dishes per restaurant stop
- Wine, beer, or soft drinks included (you choose 1 beverage per location)
- Local chef stories when possible, adding real personality to the food
- Monuments on the route, so the walk has historical context, not just sightseeing
- Small group size up to 18, which usually keeps things from feeling chaotic
Why This Starts at Plaça de l’Ajuntament (and Why That Helps)

Meeting at Plaça de l’Ajuntament is smart because it puts you right in the center of Valencia’s Old Town energy. You’re not stuck on the edge of town with long travel gaps. Also, a 7:30 pm start means you’ll be eating while the streets are waking up for the evening meal, which is exactly when tapas feel most natural.
I also like how the tour ends back at the meeting point. That makes it easy to continue on your own after the last bite, without having to figure out how to get back across the city. If you’re planning a dinner elsewhere, you’ll still be close enough to pivot.
The one thing to plan for: it’s a short evening walk, so you’ll be standing and walking through parts of the Old Town. If you know you’re sensitive to steps or slow pacing, you’ll want to give yourself a little extra buffer and bring comfortable shoes.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Valencia
What You Eat: Classic Valencian Tapas Plus Modern Twists

This is a tapas tour, not a meal parade where you just keep eating to finish the clock. The description focuses on a mix of Spanish and Valencian local dishes, with classic favorites like patatas bravas and also newer twists you might not spot on your own.
Here’s how that usually translates to your night:
- You’ll taste different tapas styles across several stops, typically getting 1 or 2 dishes at each restaurant.
- You can expect variety, with some hits that feel traditional and others that feel more contemporary.
- You’re meant to slow down enough to understand what you’re tasting, not just grab food and move on.
If you love tapas, this works because Valencia is all about ordering small plates and sharing. Even when you’re not with a big group, the tour structure helps you get a wide sample in one go. I also like that you’re eating dinner-style, so you won’t end the night hungry.
What you should keep in mind: the tour doesn’t promise a specific menu beyond tapas variety. If you have a strict dietary need, you should check details directly before booking, because the info provided here doesn’t list specific dietary substitutions.
The Stops: Tapas Bars, Food Stalls, and Market-Style Flavors
The tour’s route is designed to mix the feel of the Old Town: you’ll wander charming streets, visit historic tapas bars, and you may visit traditional markets or food-stall-style stops. That matters because Valencia has different flavors depending on where you eat. A bar can be smoky and classic; a market stop can feel more casual and ingredient-focused.
The tour also aims to include places that reflect Valencia’s culinary identity, not just the most tourist-friendly places. You’re not only collecting photos; you’re learning how local food is built—by ingredients, by technique, and by the neighborhood habits that keep it going.
A practical note: you’ll be hopping between places, so expect brief transitions. That’s part of the fun, but if you need long seated breaks, this might not be your style. The pacing is set up for walking plus tastings.
When You Meet Chefs, That Story Changes the Bite

One of the best-sounding elements here is the chance to meet the chefs behind the dishes, at least whenever possible. When it happens, you don’t just hear what’s in a plate—you hear why it’s made that way, and what the restaurant values. Even short conversations can help you taste with more context, like recognizing technique, balance, and regional habits.
I wouldn’t build your whole night around the chef meeting happening, because it’s described as conditional. Still, the tour is clearly built to connect you with local food people, and that intention usually shows up in the way the tastings are explained.
If you’re the type who asks simple questions like how a sauce is built or why they serve a dish in a specific way, this tour likely rewards that curiosity.
Old Town Monuments: Food Stops With City Context

This tour doesn’t treat Valencia like a backdrop. It includes sightseeing, with the guide showing and explaining main monuments during the walk. That’s valuable because it keeps the night from becoming only a string of tastings.
Valencia’s Old Town has layers—religious, civic, and commercial history that shaped where people ate and gathered. Even without getting a museum-style deep lecture, hearing quick explanations while you walk helps you connect the dots: why certain areas feel central, why certain streets are built the way they are, and what the city prioritized over time.
A small consideration: if you’re mainly looking for nonstop food time and don’t care about monuments, you might feel the walking explanations take a bit of your appetite. The good news is the tour is still tapas-first, so the city context is meant to support the food theme, not replace it.
Drinks Included: Wine, Beer, or Soft Drinks With Every Stop

The tour includes alcoholic beverages and you get a choice. You can pick water, soft drinks, wine, or beer, with 1 drink option for each location. That’s actually a big value point, because drinks can quietly add up fast when you’re tapas-hopping on your own.
The practical way to think about it: you’re not buying every beverage separately, and the tour plans the pacing so you’re pairing your taste with something that fits the dish. If you drink beer or wine, you’ll likely find it makes the flavors feel more complete.
If you prefer to stay off alcohol, the option for water or soft drinks still keeps the structure intact. Just know that you’ll still be tasting multiple items across multiple places, so hydrate earlier rather than waiting until you feel thirsty.
Price and Value: Is $87.27 a Fair Deal?

At $87.27 per person for about 3 hours 30 minutes, you’re paying for more than food. You’re paying for access to a planned sequence of tastings, guidance through the Old Town, and included drinks.
Here’s what you’re getting for that price based on what’s provided:
- Dinner-style tapas experience across several spots
- 1 or 2 tapas dishes at each restaurant stop
- 1 beverage choice per location
- Cultural context, including explanations tied to main monuments
- A list of places worth visiting after the tour
Where the value really lands is in the combination. If you tried to copy this on your own, you’d likely spend time searching for the right bars, negotiate what to order at each stop, and still pay full price for drinks. This tour reduces that friction.
The caution is that the experience has a modest overall rating (3.2 based on 9 ratings). That doesn’t mean it’s always bad, but it does suggest you should treat it like a plan worth monitoring closely, not a guaranteed smooth evening.
Group Size and Pace: How 3.5 Hours Feels in Real Life

The max group size is 18. That’s not tiny, but it’s also not the kind of number that turns a tour into a human train. With a group in that range, you should still be able to hear explanations and move as a unit without feeling like you’re stuck behind people who move at a different speed.
The tour starts at 7:30 pm and runs about 3 hours 30 minutes, which is a typical window for an early dinner format. You’ll be full enough that you’ll likely skip a heavy second dinner, but you may still want a quick dessert or drink after depending on your pace.
You should also think about your own energy level. If you’re someone who likes to linger and eat slowly, this can feel slightly timed. If you like momentum—one stop leading to the next—you’ll probably enjoy the flow.
The Real Risk: No-Shows and Communication Failures
Here’s the part I don’t want to gloss over. The available ratings include reports where the tour did not happen as expected, including cases where no one showed at the meeting point and others where communication stalled around cancellations. That’s not a small detail. A tapas tour relies on timing and coordination, and a missed start can ruin your evening.
If you book, I suggest you treat this like any plan with a history of inconsistency:
- Keep your booking confirmation handy and easy to access on your phone.
- Arrive a bit early so you’re not standing around wondering what’s happening.
- If you don’t see the group, use the booking communication channel promptly and keep trying until you get a clear answer.
- If you’re traveling with limited evenings in Valencia, consider having a backup dinner option within a short walk of Plaça de l’Ajuntament.
Because the cancellation terms allow refunds up to 24 hours before start, you can also plan with flexibility. The key is not waiting too long once you’re close to departure time.
Who Should Book This Valencia Tapas Tour
This tour fits best if you want:
- a tapast-first dinner plan with structure and included drinks
- a walk through the Old Town with quick monument context
- variety: classic bites plus modern interpretations
- a guide who can share food stories and help you keep exploring after
You might skip it if:
- you need absolute reliability on meeting timing and person-to-person coordination
- you want fully guaranteed, highly specific menus or named stops
- you have strict dietary needs not clearly supported by the provided details
It’s also a good match for couples, small friend groups, and solo visitors who want company and conversation but still want to move around the city like locals.
Should You Book It?
I’d book this if you value a planned tapas night in Valencia with local food stops and you’re comfortable checking in actively if anything seems off near start time. The strongest reasons to choose it are the combination of tastings plus drinks, the focus on Spanish and Valencian tapas, and the added city context through monuments and post-tour suggestions.
I’d hesitate if your trip schedule is tight and you can’t afford a late start or potential cancellation. With the mix of positive intent and the existence of serious no-show complaints, you’ll want to go in informed, not trusting blindly.
If you do book, show up early, keep your confirmation ready, and use the communication tools fast if there’s any glitch. Then you give yourself the best shot at a fun, food-led evening.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the Savor Spain tapas tour?
The meeting point is Plaça de l’Ajuntament, Pl. de l’Ajuntament, Ciutat Vella, 46002 València, Valencia, Spain.
What time does the tour start?
The tour starts at 7:30 pm.
How long is the tour?
The duration is about 3 hours 30 minutes.
What is the price per person?
The price is $87.27 per person.
What food is included?
Dinner is included, with a range of tapas. Each restaurant stop includes 1 or 2 dishes.
Are drinks included, and can I choose non-alcoholic options?
Yes. You can choose water, soft drinks, wine, or beer—1 for each location.
Is lunch included?
No. Lunch is not included, and extra food or drinks are not part of the package.
Is private transportation included?
No. Private transportation is not included.
What is the maximum group size?
The tour has a maximum of 18 travelers.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.































