REVIEW · VALENCIA
Valencia: Flamenco at Toro y La Luna with optional Dinner
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Tablao El toro y la luna · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A flamenco night you can feel up close. At El Toro y La Luna, Valencia’s first tablao, you can pair a traditional meal with a live show in a small room in a quiet plaza. It runs Wednesday to Sunday, and the staff speaks multiple languages, so you can get settled without fuss.
I love the show’s hands-on scale: seven artists (dancers, singers, and guitarists) performing live on the same stage. I also like the closeness—this is the kind of place where footwork, handclaps, and guitar strings feel loud and personal, not distant.
The main trade-off is seating. If you book show only, you might end up with a corner or side view, depending on where you’re placed. If sightlines matter, the dinner option tends to make the experience smoother.
In This Review
- Key things that make this flamenco night tick
- Why El Toro y La Luna is a smart Valencia evening plan
- The show itself: seven live artists and a real 90-minute production
- Dinner + flamenco: what you gain with the gourmet option
- Show-only tickets: great value, but read the room
- Seating in a small tablao: timing and where you want to be
- How to fit this into your Valencia schedule
- What to expect from the atmosphere (and why it feels authentic)
- Is it worth the money? A value check on $23 and the dinner add-on
- Tips to have a smoother night
- Who should book this flamenco show in Valencia?
- Should you book El Toro y La Luna?
- FAQ
- What does the experience include?
- How long is the show experience?
- How many artists perform on stage?
- What days is it available?
- Where does it take place?
- Do I need to choose dinner in advance?
- What languages are available with the host or greeter?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
- Do I pay right away?
- How long is the flamenco performance?
Key things that make this flamenco night tick

- Seven artists on stage create a full, live production with dancers, singers, and guitar.
- Intimate tablao feel means you’re close enough to read emotion in faces and movement.
- Optional dinner turns it into a true night out, not just a quick show ticket.
- Audience participation at the end can happen, turning the finale into a shared moment.
- Show length can run long when the energy stays high.
- Book flexibly with reserve now & pay later and free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance.
Why El Toro y La Luna is a smart Valencia evening plan

Valencia has plenty of things to do after dark, but a flamenco show is one of the few activities that instantly gives you culture you can feel in your body. At El Toro y La Luna, you’re not going to a massive theater where the performance becomes a distant spectacle. This is a small, cozy tablao tucked into a quiet plaza, which changes how the night works: you hear everything, and you don’t have to strain to see.
One detail I appreciate is the venue’s identity. The experience is presented as Valencia’s first authentic tablao, which matters because it hints at a longer-running commitment to the format: live performers in a room built for this kind of show. It’s the sort of place where you expect talent, yes—but also a familiar atmosphere, like the night has its own rhythm.
The timing is another practical perk. It operates Wednesday to Sunday, with options that can fit an early dinner crowd or a later night plan. The overall duration is listed as 1 to 3 hours, so you can build it into your itinerary without planning your whole evening around one rigid schedule.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Valencia
The show itself: seven live artists and a real 90-minute production

Here’s what you’re paying for: a live flamenco performance with seven artists. That’s a big deal. Many shows feel like one act bolted onto another. Here, the lineup is broad enough that you typically get the full flavor of flamenco—dancers, singers, and guitarists performing live together.
Expect a passionate show lasting about one and a half hours. In practice, the energy can stretch it a bit longer, especially when the group keeps the momentum going. You’ll also likely see changes in pacing and staging, with costume changes and switches between performers (you want that variety, because flamenco is not just one tempo—it’s a sequence of moods).
And yes, this kind of show is intense. One of the recurring themes from people who’ve been is how powerful the singing feels and how energetic the dance becomes when the performers are locked in. The guitar work matters too: you’re hearing flamenco guitar as a live engine for the entire room, not as background music.
The finale is also part of what makes people talk about it. There’s often an ending moment where audience participation can happen, including guests being brought up to dance. If you love people being a little brave, that’s great. If you prefer to sit and watch quietly, it’s still fun—but it’s good to know the mood can become communal at the end.
Dinner + flamenco: what you gain with the gourmet option

If you choose the package with dinner, you’re effectively turning the night into two events in one setting: dinner first, then flamenco without leaving. That’s not just convenient. It changes how the night feels, because you settle in earlier and you’re already part of the venue atmosphere before the first guitar note.
The dinner option is described as a gourmet diner experience using traditional Spanish cuisine and fresh, local ingredients. From the dishes people highlight, you’ll commonly see classic, crowd-friendly items like patatas bravas and salad to start, plus mains such as chicken and pork (often with flavorful sauces). Dessert is frequently mentioned too, including chocolate cake.
Drinks are part of the vibe. People often mention sangria, and it fits the mood of a flamenco night—sweet, warming, and easy to sip while you watch. If you like pairing food and performance, this option makes the most sense.
The other big reason to consider dinner is seating quality. One recurring practical point: if you book only the show, some people end up in positions that aren’t as ideal—like a corner seat or a side view. With dinner, you often get a better place in the room, and one guest even described a dinner upgrade as putting them close to the stage. I can’t promise the exact same results every time, but the pattern is clear: the more bundled your evening plan is, the more you tend to benefit from being seated earlier.
Show-only tickets: great value, but read the room
The activity price is listed at $23 per person, which strongly suggests the show-only entry is the budget-friendly route. For that price, you’re not buying a “nice cultural add-on.” You’re buying a live production with seven performers. For many first-time flamenco watchers, that’s enough to make the evening feel like a highlight of the trip.
But you should go into show-only tickets knowing the main risk: sightlines. In a small room, where you sit can dramatically change the experience. If you’re sensitive to side views or being too far off to one side, show-only is where you might feel it.
If you’re traveling with someone who really wants to watch faces and footwork closely, dinner is likely worth it. If you’re flexible, mainly want the music and the energy, and can accept that seating is shared and tight, show-only can still be a very solid deal.
Seating in a small tablao: timing and where you want to be

This is a small venue. People describe it as cozy, with a layout that puts the performers close to the audience. That’s why the show lands so hard: you’re not watching from across a hall. You’re watching from close quarters.
At the same time, small rooms create a predictable problem: seating can be crowded. Some people say it’s easy to feel packed in. Others say they ended up with a great view, especially if they were early or positioned close to the stage.
My practical advice: arrive early enough to get your bearings, even if your instructions say you should meet outside first. The meeting point can vary depending on the option booked, so don’t assume the first entrance you find is the only correct one. If the doors are open and staff are visible, it often pays to go in and check.
Also, if you’re offered a standing spot (or choose one if that’s how the room works that night), remember that flamenco is rhythm-heavy. Standing can sometimes be good for watching the guitar and singer angles, but you’ll want to keep your footing steady and avoid getting blocked.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Valencia
How to fit this into your Valencia schedule
This experience runs Wednesday to Sunday, and the total duration is listed as 1 to 3 hours, depending on whether you add dinner. That flexibility is useful in Valencia, where evenings can shift depending on your appetite and how long you linger over tapas.
A common pattern you may run into: dinner happens first, then the show follows later. One detailed example shared by a guest described dinner at around 8:30pm and a show starting closer to 10:30pm, lasting almost 1.5 hours. Your timing will depend on the specific start time for your booking, but the structure is typically dinner-then-show rather than show-only happening immediately.
So here’s how you can plan without stress:
- If you pick dinner, treat it as your early dinner anchor and then plan something lighter afterward (or plan to stay put for the show).
- If you pick show-only, treat it like a fixed appointment and schedule a simple snack/tapas earlier.
Languages supported by the host or greeter include Spanish, French, Italian, and English, which helps if you’re trying to understand timing and seating instructions quickly.
What to expect from the atmosphere (and why it feels authentic)

A flamenco tablao is not meant to be polite background entertainment. It’s meant to be alive. At El Toro y La Luna, the atmosphere tends to be intimate, friendly, and welcoming—more like being part of a family-run night out than attending a formal concert.
That family feel shows up in two ways:
1) The venue setup keeps everyone close to the performers.
2) People describe the performers as engaged and expressive, not just executing choreography.
Many guests also connect the show to long-standing flamenco tradition, and some mention photos and connections tied to a legendary musician named Pepe (including a maestro mentioned in guest comments). Even if you don’t know the names going in, you can sense the pride behind the performance style.
If you want a night where you’re not just watching dance steps, but feeling the emotion in the singing and guitar, this kind of room is exactly what you want.
Is it worth the money? A value check on $23 and the dinner add-on
Let’s talk value in real terms. The price you’ll see is listed at $23 per person. For that kind of price, what makes it feel fair is the live ingredient list: seven artists, live singing, live guitar, and live dancing, in a venue built for this kind of show.
You’re also getting something many people don’t realize they want until they’re there: proximity. In a small tablao, you feel more than you watch. That’s hard to quantify, but guests repeatedly describe how close seating can make the emotions hit harder.
Now, dinner is the upgrade question. The data says the gourmet diner is included only if that option is selected, so your added cost is paying for food, and likely for better seating based on real guest experiences. If you’re already planning a full dinner somewhere else, the dinner option may feel redundant. But if you’d rather do one plan that covers both dinner and show, the bundled approach usually makes the most sense.
Tips to have a smoother night

A good flamenco night has two ingredients: good viewing and good timing. Here’s how to stack the odds in your favor.
- Pick the right option for your priorities. If you care about seeing stage action clearly, lean toward the dinner option rather than show-only.
- Arrive early to settle in. Seating is tight in small rooms. Even a few minutes can help.
- Don’t overthink the entry instructions. The meeting point can vary by option. If something feels unclear, check with staff quickly or go in if the venue is open.
- Go in with your mood set. This is not silent museum culture. Flamenco is expressive, and the best nights feel a little contagious.
- If you like food-and-performance nights, order the dinner. Multiple guests mention generous portions and classic plates, plus sangria.
Who should book this flamenco show in Valencia?
This experience is a great fit for:
- First-time flamenco watchers who want the real thing without traveling out of Valencia.
- People who like small venues and don’t mind close quarters.
- Travelers who want a night out that includes both music and dinner rather than choosing one or the other.
It might be less ideal for:
- Anyone who is very picky about sitting perfectly in the center and hates side angles. Show-only can be a gamble because the room is small.
- People who really want a quiet, purely observational performance. The show can end with audience participation moments.
Should you book El Toro y La Luna?
If you want an authentic flamenco night in Valencia, I’d say yes—especially if you’re aiming for a show that feels close and personal rather than distant and polished. The combination of seven live artists, a one-and-a-half-hour performance, and the intimate tablao setting makes the evening feel like more than a tourist ticket.
My decision rule is simple:
- Book show-only ($23) if you’re budget-focused and flexible about where you sit.
- Book the dinner option if you want a full night plan, better odds of closer seating, and classic Spanish food paired with live flamenco in the same cozy room.
FAQ
What does the experience include?
You’ll get entry to a live flamenco show. If you choose the dinner option, you’ll also get the gourmet dinner.
How long is the show experience?
The total experience is listed as 1 to 3 hours, depending on the option you choose. The live flamenco show itself is described as lasting about one and a half hours.
How many artists perform on stage?
The show features seven artists performing live.
What days is it available?
The experience runs Wednesday to Sunday.
Where does it take place?
It takes place at Tablao El Toro y La Luna in the Valencian Community, Spain, in an intimate venue described as a small, cozy space in a quiet plaza.
Do I need to choose dinner in advance?
You choose between show only or show with dinner as part of the booking options.
What languages are available with the host or greeter?
A host or greeter is listed in Spanish, French, Italian, and English.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Yes. There is free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Do I pay right away?
The booking info lists reserve now & pay later, so you can book your spot and pay nothing today.
How long is the flamenco performance?
The performance is described as lasting about one and a half hours, and the overall experience can be longer depending on whether you include dinner.




























