Granada is the Andalusian university city under the Alhambra, the cheapest of the Andalusian capitals by a margin. The altitude pushes the winters cooler than the rest of the south, the Sierra Nevada sits inside an hour for the ski day, and the tapas tradition runs the most generous in Spain. Seville is the capital of Andalusia, the largest of the southern Spanish cities, with the heaviest summer heat in mainland Spain. The cultural depth runs deep on flamenco, on tapas tradition, on Holy Week. The cost line runs 200 to 400 dollars a month below the Mediterranean coast cities. The math runs different ways depending on the budget, the climate appetite, and the role.
Same continent, same currency, same EU passport. The verdict turns on cost, climate, and the role.
Granada wins on the everycity index by 0.2 of a point, on the cost line by 280 dollars a month all in, and on the lifestyle axis that the methodology weights. The call hinges on whether the household needs Granada's scale or Seville's breathing room.
Seville scored 8.1 on the everycity index in 2026, Granada scored 7.9. The two cities share the EU passport, the Spain federal framework, and the Mediterranean cultural floor. The split lives in cost, density, and employer mix. For the deep read, see the Granada city profile and the Seville city profile.
If your role sits inside design, finance, or any function that benefits from the larger employer cluster, Seville wins on salary. If your role runs remote against a US or UK time zone, the cost gap favors Granada, which lands 280 dollars a month below Seville on the all in monthly. The remote work ranking places Seville at 8.1 and Granada at 7.9.
Both cities sit inside Spain and on the Europe page in our atlas. For the cross country comparison, see Lisbon vs Barcelona, Madrid vs Barcelona, and Lisbon vs Madrid. For other matches in the region, see the full comparisons index.
Twelve line items priced in May 2026 for a single resident in a central one bedroom. Green text marks the cheaper city per line.
Granada is cheaper across the headline rent and grocery lines. The rent gap is the largest item: a central one bedroom in Granada's Albaicin runs 815 dollars; the equivalent in Seville's Santa Cruz runs 1,030 dollars. The 215 dollar a month gap compounds to 2,580 dollars a year, which is the line that drives most rent led relocations.
The all in monthly figure of 1,260 dollars in Granada versus 1,540 dollars in Seville is the headline. The 280 dollar a month gap compounds to 3,360 dollars a year. Granada's monthly figure puts it inside the European top 25 on the cheapest cities ranking; Seville sits in the European median band.
For the Euro to home currency math, Wise handles the line at within 0.4 percent of the mid market rate. For the first month before the long term lease gets sorted, Booking.com covers both cities. The cost converter tool takes your salary in either direction. The cheapest cities ranking places Granada ahead of Seville by 18 percent on all in cost.
Three quiet costs. Spanish rentals require a one to two month deposit. Agent fees run one month plus 21 percent VAT. The community fees (comunidad) run 30 to 200 euros a month depending on the building and amenities. The IBI property tax sits on the landlord side. The community fees on a Granada apartment run 60 to 200 euros a month against Seville's 30 to 90. The relocation checklist has the line by line.
The 10 point safety read across the four sub axes the methodology weights equally.
Seville wins safety across the headline axes. The 8.2 overall score places Seville inside the European top 30; the gap on the after dark axis runs 0.2 points, the gap on the solo female day axis runs 0.2. Both cities sit well above the European median for violent crime; the gap lives almost entirely on property crime and traffic noise.
For the new arrival, SafetyWing covers either city for the first six months while local cover is sorted. The solo female safety ranking places Granada at 8.2 and Seville at 8.4. The safest cities ranking ranks both inside the European top 75.
Annual averages, the headline summer and winter readings, and the count of days in the comfort band.
Granada runs the mediterranean altitude pattern with summer highs at 95F July and winter lows at 35F January. Seville runs the mediterranean hot pattern with summer highs at 99F July and winter lows at 50F January. The comfort band day count is 280 for Granada and 290 for Seville, with the rainier of the two carrying 56 rain days against 50 for the drier.
For climate matching, the climate match tool finds cities with similar profiles. The warm winter ranking places both inside the European top 30. The mild summer ranking ranks the cooler of the two ahead. The climate atlas maps both into their respective Koppen bands.
Median salaries for three mid level roles, the headline tax band, and the effective rate after standard deductions.
Seville pays 11 percent more on the gross salary line for comparable mid level roles, on the back of the larger employer cluster. The headline tax band is 47 percent in Granada and 47 percent in Seville. The effective rate after deductions for an 80,000 dollar earner is 24 percent (Beckham Law) in Granada and 24 percent (Beckham Law) in Seville. The tax calculator tool runs your number against the relevant federal table.
The major employers in Granada are the Universidad de Granada, the regional hospital cluster, the Andalusian regional government, the tourism backbone anchored on the Alhambra, and a small cluster of remote first developers and academics. The major employers in Seville are Abengoa, Heineken Espana, Airbus's Tablada plant, the regional government of Andalusia, the Universidad de Sevilla, and a growing cluster of remote first firms anchored on Nervion. The highest paying cities ranking places Seville inside the European top 60.
The qualitative axes scored on the same 10 point scale the index uses elsewhere.
The denser of the two, Seville, runs the deeper nightlife bench. The bar count, the museum count, and the international venue count all favor the larger metro. The cheaper of the two, Granada, wins on food per dollar, on the local market culture, and on the lower bar to the local nomad community. The cities for foodies ranking places both inside the European top 30. The nightlife ranking places the denser of the two inside the European top 50.
The boring section that decides whether the move actually happens.
Visa rules are federal and apply equally inside each country. The Spanish digital nomad visa launched in 2023 covers both cities; the salary floor is 2,762 euros gross monthly for the primary applicant. The Highly Qualified Professional route, the EU Blue Card, and the Non Lucrative Visa for the retiree are the other primary pathways. The 2026 visa guide covers each route.
Healthcare. The Spain system is the same in both cities: universal coverage funded through social security contributions, a strong primary care floor, and the option of private top up insurance for faster specialist access. Both cities score above 8.0 on the everycity health methodology. For new arrivals, SafetyWing covers the gap.
Education. International schools in both cities cover the British, American, and IB curricula. Tuition in Granada runs 9,500 to 22,000 dollars a year depending on curriculum and grade level. Tuition in Seville runs 8,800 to 19,500 dollars. The relocating with kids guide walks the calendar.
Language. Spanish is the primary working language. English fluency runs at roughly 28 percent of the adult population, with Madrid and Barcelona the strongest English markets. Babbel covers both the Italian and the Spanish programs.
Move logistics. The shipping container math from the US East Coast to either city runs 4,200 to 6,800 dollars on a 20 foot container. Customs clears in two to three weeks under the standard household goods declaration. Pet relocation runs the EU pet passport route. The relocation checklist covers both end to end.
The longer term resident question. Spanish citizenship for the EU passport opens after ten years of legal residence; the Sephardic descent route and the Latin American passport holder route reduce the requirement to two years. The visa to citizenship guide tracks the multi year pathways.
For the high earner with an in person role in design, fintech, or finance, Seville wins. The employer cluster, the recruiter pool, and the conference circuit all run deeper.
For the remote worker on a US or UK contract, the digital nomad on a European visa, or the household trading peak salary for the Mediterranean lifestyle on a budget, Granada wins. The 280 dollar a month all in cost saving compounds to 3,360 dollars a year. The relocation checklist spends a chapter on each.
For the comparison view across the same axis: Lisbon vs Barcelona, Madrid vs Barcelona, Milan vs Rome. For the city profiles: Granada, Seville.
One reading note. The Granada versus Seville comparison is one of 25,000 we maintain on the same methodology. The underlying scores feed the rankings on cheapest cities, safest cities, remote work, and families. The numbers refresh quarterly. If the verdict here clashes with your lived experience, the methodology page walks the weights.
For the deeper comparison set, the comparisons index tracks every two way matchup. The relocation score tool takes your current city and target city and returns a 1 to 100 fit score. The where should I live quiz is the entry point for readers without a target.