Discover Community of Madrid
Travel Types
The Royal Palace and gardens of Aranjuez (UNESCO 2001), Felipe II's monastery-palace at El Escorial (UNESCO 1984) and the planned university city of Alcalá de Henares (UNESCO 1998) together cover the Habsburg, Bourbon and Renaissance periods. All three are 30–60 minutes from central Madrid by Cercanías. Patrimonio Nacional sells combined tickets.
Spain's second-most-visited national park — granite peaks above 2,400 m, glacial lagoons at Peñalara, the Pedriza climbing massif, and the small ski stations of Valdesquí and Navacerrada. Cercanías C-8 to Cercedilla, C-9 narrow-gauge to Cotos, or 50 km drive to the Navacerrada pass. Quotas apply on the Peñalara summit walk.
Three small DO sub-zones — Arganda (Tempranillo, Malvar), Navalcarnero (Garnacha, Albillo) and San Martín de Valdeiglesias (the cult zone, old-vine Garnacha) — within 60–90 minutes of the city. Bodegas Bernabeleva, Comando G and 4 Monos have put Madrid Garnacha on international lists.
Alcalá de Henares for Cervantes' birthplace and Spain's first planned university city, Chinchón for its circular three-storey arcaded plaza, Colmenar de Oreja for the Ulpiano Checa museum, Buitrago del Lozoya for its medieval walls and small Picasso collection, Patones de Arriba for restored stone-village dining.
The Lozoya valley, the Hayedo de Montejo beech forest (UNESCO Biosphere, advance-booking only), the Cartuja de Santa María de El Paular at Rascafría, the Embalse del Atazar reservoirs and the slate-roofed villages of La Acebeda, Horcajo de la Sierra, Madarcos. Hire car required; no Cercanías connection.
Toledo (UNESCO, 30 minutes south by AVE high-speed train), Segovia (UNESCO, 25 minutes by AVE), Ávila (UNESCO, 1.5 hours by Avant) and Cuenca (UNESCO, 1 hour by AVE) are all reachable from Madrid in a same-day round trip — technically other autonomous communities, but functionally extensions of a Madrid-region itinerary.
- •The Cercanías Madrid commuter network is the single most useful tool for the region. Buy a Tarjeta Multi card or Bono-10 ticket on day one and use it for Aranjuez, Alcalá de Henares, El Escorial and the Sierra trailheads — all reachable in under 90 minutes from Sol. Trains run every 10–30 minutes on most lines.
- •Patrimonio Nacional manages all three royal sites (Aranjuez, El Escorial, La Granja) and sells combined tickets via its central booking system at tickets.patrimonionacional.es. Most royal sites close on Mondays. Aranjuez's gardens are free; the Royal Palace and the Casa del Labrador require timed tickets.
- •Summer in the Madrid region (July and August) is genuinely extreme — 38–40 °C is normal, and the city empties as Madrileños flee to the coast. Plan indoor or sierra-altitude activities for midday in summer; spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) are objectively better visiting seasons.
- •The Sierra de Guadarrama ski stations Valdesquí and Navacerrada are small (16 and 8 lifts respectively) and informal compared with the Pyrenees — they suit a day visit or beginners, not a destination ski week. The C-9 narrow-gauge railway from Cercedilla to Cotos runs only Friday–Sunday outside winter.
- •Hiking in Peñalara is regulated to protect the glacial lagoons just below the summit. Quotas apply at weekends and on public holidays from May to October — book through the park's online system at parquenacionalsierraguadarrama.es. Off-trail walking is forbidden in the protected core.
- •The Hayedo de Montejo, Spain's most southerly natural beech forest and a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, requires advance booking (free, but strict capacity limits). The autumn colour window is approximately mid-October to mid-November depending on the year — book three weeks ahead for that period.
- •Vinos de Madrid cellar doors are mostly weekend-only, mostly small, and benefit hugely from a designated driver or an organised tour from the city. Bernabeleva and Comando G in San Martín de Valdeiglesias are by-appointment for serious tasters; smaller bodegas welcome casual visits with less notice.
- •Cocido madrileño is best eaten in winter and best at lunch (a full cocido is a 2–3-hour table commitment). Country versions in Sierra Norte villages or Aranjuez often beat the city's classic restaurants for ingredient quality. La Bola in central Madrid is the city's textbook tradition; Casa Pedro on the way to El Pardo is a regional benchmark.
- •Toledo, Segovia and Ávila are technically in Castilla-La Mancha and Castilla y León respectively, not the Community of Madrid. They are nevertheless inseparable from a Madrid trip — the AVE high-speed train reaches Toledo in 30 minutes and Segovia in 25 minutes, both faster than most Madrid suburbs by Cercanías.
- •Driving in central Madrid is restricted by the Madrid 360 / Zona de Bajas Emisiones — a low-emission zone covering the entire M-30 ring road. Older non-Spanish-registered cars may need to register before entering. The simpler approach is to leave the rental car at a Cercanías park-and-ride at Las Rozas, Pinar de las Rozas or Móstoles.
- •Manzanares el Real castle and the Pedriza granite cirque just behind it can absorb an entire day. Climbing in the Pedriza requires no permit but is partly closed for raptor nesting from January to July — check sector closures at the visitor centre at Cantocochino. A hire car is essential; bus 724 from Plaza de Castilla is hourly but slow.
- •Cercedilla, the principal sierra-trailhead village, is overrun on summer weekends and during Madrid school holidays — arrive on the first Cercanías train (around 08:00) for trail parking and quieter walks, or visit on a weekday. The Centro Nacional de Educación Ambiental (CENEAM) at Valsaín, just over the border in Segovia, runs free guided walks and is the regional outdoor-education hub.
Tourism & destination guides
Official tourism portal for the Community of Madrid — regional itineraries beyond the capital, the royal-sites circuit, sierra hiking, and the seasonal events calendar across Aranjuez, Alcalá, El Escorial and the Sierra Norte.
Spain's second-most-visited national park. Trail descriptions, Peñalara summit-walk quota booking, visitor-centre opening hours, and weather and fire-risk warnings. Reached by Cercanías C-8 / C-9 or by car to Navacerrada and Cotos passes.
Culture & festivals
Central booking system for the Spanish royal sites managed by the state — Royal Palace and gardens of Aranjuez, San Lorenzo de El Escorial monastery and royal apartments, La Granja de San Ildefonso. Combined tickets available.
Tourist office portal for the UNESCO-listed Cervantes university city. Universidad de Alcalá visit information, Casa Natal de Cervantes, Corral de Comedias programme, and walking-route maps of Calle Mayor's arcaded streets.
Visitor portal for the Royal Site and town of Aranjuez. Palace and garden ticketing, Jardín de la Isla, Jardín del Parterre and Jardín del Príncipe maps, the Casa del Labrador small palace, and seasonal events including the spring strawberry-train.