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Valencia in a Day from Jávea

Spain's third city, close enough for a genuine day trip — the City of Arts and Sciences, the old town and the Central Market, about an hour and a half up the AP-7.

The City of Arts and Sciences, Valencia
Photo: Diego Delso · CC BY-SA 3.0

The city fix, done properly

Spain's third city is close enough to treat as a genuine day trip, not just an airport stopover — about an hour and a half up the motorway, with a full day's worth of old town, market and futuristic architecture waiting at the other end. It rewards an early start more than almost anywhere else on this list; Valencia is big enough that dawdling costs you a real chunk of the day.

Getting there

A straightforward motorway run, if a longer one than the rest of these trips.

~1 h 30Drive from Jávea
AP-7Motorway route, door to door
  1. Join the AP-7 motorway north from Jávea (via Gata de Gorgos or Ondara).
  2. Follow the AP-7 north past Gandía towards Valencia.
  3. Pick up signs for the centre, or head straight for the City of Arts and Sciences if that's your first stop.
  4. Park on the edge of the old town or in a central car park — do not attempt to drive within the historic centre.

The City of Arts and Sciences

Valencia's futuristic architecture complex — all curved white shells and reflecting pools — is the city's headline modern sight and worth the time even if you're normally sceptical of architectural showpieces. It houses an aquarium, a science museum and an opera house among its buildings; picking one or two rather than attempting all of them is the realistic way to fit it into a single day.

The City of Arts and Sciences, Valencia
Photo: Diego Delso · CC BY-SA 3.0

The old town and the Central Market

Valencia's historic centre rewards slow walking rather than a checklist — the cathedral, the Silk Exchange (a UNESCO World Heritage building) and a tangle of old streets built for browsing rather than rushing through. The Central Market, one of Europe's oldest working produce markets, is worth timing for lunch: a wander through the stalls followed by a plate from one of the market's own food counters is about as authentic a Valencia lunch as you'll find.

Where to eat

This is the birthplace of paella, and Valencia takes the distinction seriously — the traditional version uses rabbit and chicken rather than seafood, which surprises visitors expecting the coastal version served everywhere else in Spain. The old town and the streets around the Central Market are the reliable hunting ground for a proper plate; treat it as a lunch commitment rather than something to squeeze in between sights.

Local tip Authentic Valencian paella is cooked to order and takes 20-30 minutes — if a restaurant serves it instantly, it isn't the real thing.

Best time to go

Valencia works year-round, but spring and autumn give you comfortable walking weather for a city that involves a lot of it. Summer is hot enough that the early start matters more than usual — aim to be parked and walking by mid-morning, then use the City of Arts and Sciences' shaded, water-adjacent spaces to cool off through the worst of the afternoon heat.

With kids

The City of Arts and Sciences is genuinely built for a family day — the aquarium (Oceanogràfic) in particular is one of Europe's largest and holds children's attention for hours. The old town is flatter and more buggy-friendly than Jávea's own hillier streets, though the crowds around the Central Market can make it slow going with a pram at peak times.

The practical bits

Do not drive into Valencia's old centre — the streets are narrow, largely pedestrianised and genuinely not built for cars, and the parking situation reflects that. Park on the edge, at the City of Arts and Sciences (which has its own car parks) or in a central multi-storey, then walk or use the tram/metro to cover ground. Valencia is a full city with full-city crowds and traffic, so build in more margin than the drive time alone suggests, especially returning in early evening.

Local tip If you're only doing one museum at the City of Arts and Sciences, check current opening hours and ticket options before you go — several of the buildings keep different schedules.

How much time do you need?

A full day is the realistic minimum if you want the old town, the market and any part of the City of Arts and Sciences without racing through all three. Pick two of the three properly rather than attempting everything; Valencia rewards a slower pace more than a rushed checklist.

Quick answers

How far is Valencia from Jávea? About an hour and a half by motorway via the AP-7, making it a genuine, if longer, day trip rather than a multi-day excursion. It's comfortably doable there and back in a day with an early start.

Can you do Valencia in a day from Jávea? Comfortably, if you start early. The drive is roughly ninety minutes each way, which leaves a full day for the old town, the Central Market and the City of Arts and Sciences — pick two of the three properly and have lunch somewhere good rather than trying to see everything at once.

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