Four things every generic Barcelona itinerary gets wrong
It doesn't tell you to book Sagrada Familia weeks in advance
Sagrada Familia sells out 4–8 weeks ahead in peak season. AI recommends visiting without mentioning this. If you arrive without a ticket, you will not get in — or you'll queue for 2+ hours for a time slot. Book the minute you know your travel dates.
It recommends eating on La Rambla
La Rambla restaurants are a tourist trap without exception. The food is poor, overpriced, and served by runners paid to fill tables. Every single good restaurant in Barcelona is in a side street. Gracia, El Born, Poble Sec and Sant Pere are where locals actually eat.
It sends you to Barceloneta beach without context
Barceloneta is the closest beach to the city centre and the most crowded. In July and August it's shoulder-to-shoulder. The better beaches — Bogatell, Mar Bella — are 20 minutes further by metro and a fraction of the crowd. AI always defaults to Barceloneta.
It schedules dinner at 7pm
Barcelona eats late. Restaurants fill up at 9–10pm. Showing up at 7pm means you'll be the only table in an empty restaurant — often a sign the place relies on early tourist seatings. Book the 9pm slot. Tapas bars don't get going until 8:30pm at the earliest.
The Barcelona prompt — copy and use
- Sagrada Familia without advance tickets
- Dinner on La Rambla at 7pm
- Barceloneta beach (overcrowded)
- Gothic Quarter as the food destination
- Sagrada Familia booked 6–8 weeks ahead
- Dinner in Gracia or El Born at 9pm
- Bogatell or Mar Bella beach (local choice)
- Poble Sec and Mercado de Sant Antoni for food
Barcelona — answered honestly
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