Where to Stay · Guesthouses

Guesthouses in Frigiliana.

Family-run B&Bs and small guesthouses — usually 4–10 rooms, always personal, often the most authentic place to stay in the village. Good for first-time visitors who want to be looked after.

Guesthouses sit in the sweet spot between hotels and self-catering — smaller and more personal than a hotel, more comfortable and breakfasted-than self-catering. In Frigiliana they’re run by couples or families, often in homes they live in, and offer breakfast included. They’re typically the best value-to-experience ratio in the village.

Our picks

Guesthouses & B&Bs we recommend.

Verified-real, top-rated small properties in Frigiliana.

Villa Morera B&B

Top-rated · multilingual hosts

One of Frigiliana’s top-rated B&Bs. Spacious clean rooms, warm hosts, breakfast included. Best for couples, first-time visitors, and anyone wanting personal service.

EL Torreon 109 Charming B&B

Central · rooftop pool

Centrally located in Frigiliana with a rooftop pool area giving great views over the village. Compact, characterful, well-positioned for old-town walks and dinners.

Hospedería el Caravansar

Traditional inn · central

Traditional Andalusian inn with few rooms, central location, balconies looking onto the village chapel. Quaint and quietly atmospheric.

B&B The Lost Village

Pool · Belgian-owned

Cosy small B&B with a swimming pool and barbecue area. Friendly, family-feeling, popular with European couples.

La Casa de Abuela

Adults-only · old town · shared bathrooms

Traditional Andalusian house in the historic core, on a stepped lane in the heart of the cobbled quarter. Adults-only and uses shared bathrooms — back-to-basics, but the location is unbeatable for atmosphere. Best for couples on a quiet old-town break.

Haza Redonda Bed & Breakfast

Edge of village · pool · free parking

On the valley edge of Frigiliana with seasonal outdoor pool, garden and terrace, and the rare bonus of free on-site parking. Continental breakfast included. 8.9/10 on Booking, 5/5 on TripAdvisor. Best for drivers and warm-month visits.

How to choose

Picking the right one.

Four properties, four different fits. Here’s how we’d match them to a trip.

If you want the highest-rated experience

Villa Morera B&B. The most consistent guest reviews of the four. Multilingual hosts, spacious rooms, breakfast worth getting up for. The default first pick — book ahead, it sells out fastest.

If you want a rooftop view

EL Torreon 109. The standout feature is the rooftop pool area with sweeping views over the village. Compact and central — best if you’ll spend evenings out and want a perch to come back to.

If you want the most traditional feel

Hospedería el Caravansar. Few rooms, balconies onto the village chapel, a quiet old-Andalusian inn. Best for travellers who want the village version rather than the design version.

If you want a pool at this price

B&B The Lost Village. Most B&Bs in this bracket don’t have one. Belgian-owned, small, with a swimming pool and BBQ area — a good summer option that doesn’t step up to hotel pricing.

What to expect from a Frigiliana guesthouse

  • 4–10 rooms typically — small enough that the owners know everyone in the house.
  • Breakfast included — usually proper, often a highlight of the stay. Local bread, jamón, manchego, eggs, fresh fruit, coffee. Sometimes homemade pastries.
  • Owners on the desk — checking you in, recommending restaurants, helping with bookings, often joining you for a coffee on arrival.
  • Limited shared spaces — usually a small terrace or breakfast room, occasionally a tiny pool. Not somewhere you spend the day.
  • Real local insight — owners who actually live in Frigiliana, with personal recommendations of where to eat, what to skip, when to do things. Worth more than any guidebook.

Who it suits

Best for these kinds of trips.

First-time visitors

The owners help you get oriented in your first hour. Best Frigiliana experience for someone who doesn’t know the village yet and wants a friendly entry point.

Couples on a long weekend

Compact, romantic, well-chosen. Two or three nights is the typical guesthouse length of stay; the breakfast is a meal you look forward to.

Solo travellers

Small enough that you’re not invisible. Owners and other guests at breakfast can mean recommendations and chat without it being forced.

Mid-range budgets

Hotels can run €150–250 in summer; guesthouses are typically €80–150 for similar quality and a better welcome.

What guesthouses cost

Per room, per night, including breakfast:

  • Off-season (Nov–March): €60–90
  • Shoulder (Apr–May, Sep–Oct): €80–130
  • High season (Jun–Aug + Tres Culturas): €120–180+

Cheaper than equivalent hotels, with arguably better service and certainly more character. The breakfast alone usually justifies the gap.

Booking advice

For guesthouses specifically, booking direct is often better than going through Booking.com — owners save the platform fee and pass some of it back, often as a discount or a thoughtful extra. Email rather than book and ask if there’s a better rate; most will respond same-day.

For peak season (July–August, Tres Culturas weekend), book 3–4 months ahead. Smaller guesthouses fill quickly because they only have a handful of rooms.