Season
Shoulder Season
Crowd level
Moderate
March scam risk
Lower
Year-round scams
14
Safety tips for Seville in March
Season-specific guidance based on shoulder season conditions and how they interact with documented scam patterns.
March is shoulder season in Seville — a practical window with moderate crowds and mostly fair weather. Scam pressure exists but is less concentrated than peak months.
Accommodation prices are generally more reasonable during shoulder season. Still verify reviews and addresses before booking — scam operators are active year-round.
Shoulder season means many popular sites are accessible without peak-season queues, reducing the crowded conditions that facilitate pickpocketing and distraction scams.
Weather can be less predictable in shoulder months. Carry contingency plans for outdoor activities and transport disruptions that can create vulnerability to opportunistic scams.
Regardless of season, the documented scams for Seville remain the same — review the full list of 14 warnings before you travel.
Travel insurance is recommended for any trip to Seville. Policies covering theft, medical emergencies, and trip disruption are essential regardless of when you visit.
Top scams in Seville (active in March)
These scams operate year-round and remain active during March. Moderate crowds keep activity at standard levels.
Distraction Theft at Outdoor Restaurant Tables
mediumIn the Barrio Santa Cruz and along Calle Mateos Gago near the Cathedral, thieves work in pairs targeting tourists eating or drinking at outdoor terraza tables. One person distracts with a question, a dropped item, or a newspaper held up to the table, while a partner removes a phone, camera, or bag left on the table or chair back. This is one of the most consistently reported theft methods in Seville's tourist zone.
How to avoid: Never place phones, cameras, or bags on outdoor table surfaces. Keep bags in your lap or looped around a chair leg. If someone approaches your table uninvited, place your hand on valuables immediately and ask them to leave.
Rosemary Sprig Scam
mediumWomen near tourist sites thrust a sprig of rosemary into your hand claiming it brings luck, then aggressively demand payment once you've accepted it, sometimes grabbing your arm.
How to avoid: Keep your hands in your pockets and say "no gracias" firmly without making eye contact. Do not accept anything from strangers.
Pickpocketing at Monuments
mediumPickpocket teams work in shifts at Plaza de España, the Cathedral, and during Feria and Semana Santa festivals. A distraction from one person covers another lifting your wallet or phone.
How to avoid: Use a money belt or front trouser pocket. Leave your main wallet at the hotel and carry only small cash. Be especially alert during festivals.
Fake Flamenco Ticket Sellers on Calle Sierpes
mediumUnofficial ticket sellers on Calle Sierpes and the surrounding pedestrian shopping streets approach tourists offering discounted or "last-minute" tickets to popular flamenco shows at venues like Casa de la Memoria or Los Gallos. Tickets sold this way are often counterfeit, already used, or for a substandard unlicensed show held in a back room with no professional performers. Victims who arrive at the real venue are turned away and cannot recover the cost.
How to avoid: Purchase flamenco tickets only through official venue websites or the venue box office in person. Booking through your hotel concierge is also reliable. If a stranger on the street offers you a deal on a show starting soon, it is almost certainly fraudulent.
Fake Police Wallet Check
highA plainclothes "police officer" stops you claiming to check for counterfeit currency in your wallet. Real cash disappears during the inspection.
How to avoid: Real Spanish police never inspect tourist wallets on the street. Ask for a badge number and offer to walk to the nearest comisaría together.
What types of scams occur in Seville?
Street Scams
Pickpockets, distraction thieves, fake petitions, and street hustles in tourist areas.
6
Money & ATM Scams
Card skimming, currency exchange fraud, dynamic currency conversion, and cash cons.
2
Taxi & Transport
Overcharging, meter tampering, fake taxis, and transport cons targeting tourists.
1
Restaurant Scams
Inflated bills, hidden charges, tourist menus, and food service tricks.
1
Accommodation Scams
Fake listings, bait-and-switch hotels, ghost rentals, and check-in fraud.
1
Is Seville safe in other months?
Seville in March — answered
Is Seville safe to visit in March?
Seville is lower risk for tourists in March. This is shoulder season for the Europe region. Our database documents 14 scams year-round — during March, shoulder season provides a good balance — tourist areas are active but not overwhelmed, and scam operators are present but less aggressive than peak months. The most common risks are street scams, money & atm scams, taxi & transport.
Is March a good time to visit Seville?
March is a balanced shoulder season for tourists in Seville. Moderate crowds, reasonable prices, and scam activity that is present but less intense than peak months make this a practical travel window.
What scams are most common in Seville during March?
The documented scam types in Seville are consistent year-round: Street Scams, Money & ATM Scams, Taxi & Transport, Restaurant Scams. During March (shoulder season), activity levels are moderate. The specific scams and their locations remain the same regardless of season.
Is it crowded in Seville in March?
Tourist crowd levels in Seville during March are moderate. Moderate crowds mean accessible attractions without the extreme density of peak season.
Should I get travel insurance for Seville in March?
Travel insurance is recommended for Seville regardless of when you visit. Shoulder season is generally lower-risk but standard travel emergencies can occur any time. Look for policies covering medical emergencies, theft/mugging, trip cancellation, and 24/7 emergency assistance.
What should I pack for Seville in March?
Beyond weather-appropriate clothing for March in Europe, pack with scam prevention in mind: a cross-body bag with RFID-blocking (pickpocketing is documented in Seville), photocopies of your passport stored separately from the original, a phone case with a wrist strap (phone theft is reported), and a portable charger to maintain access to transport apps and maps. Avoid visibly expensive jewelry or electronics in high-risk areas.
Editorial note: Seasonal risk assessments for Seville are based on 14 year-round scam reports cross-referenced with regional travel patterns. Scam data is compiled from government travel advisories (US State Dept, UK FCDO, Australian DFAT), verified news sources, and traveler reports. Conditions change — always check current advisories before travel. Read our methodology →
March summary
Lower Risk
Shoulder season
Quick stats