The Hall of the Cataclysm at Cuevas de Nerja, Andalusia — a vast limestone chamber dominated by the 32-metre Cataclysm Hall column, the world's largest natural stalagmite

Cuevas de Nerja Tickets — Cave Visit

Self-guided audio-tour · all ages (under-6 free with adult)

Reserve cave entry

The cave visit option at Cuevas de Nerja Tickets — self-guided audio-tour · all ages (under-6 free with adult). Includes skip-the-line timed entry to cuevas de nerja, plus 3 other concierge inclusions. Reserve directly — we secure the official slot the moment you confirm.

What's included

Every booking includes the elements below — handled by our concierge team before your visit and confirmed at the door.

• Skip-the-line timed entry to Cuevas de Nerja • Audio guide via app (download free from operator) • Entry to the Nerja Museum (in Plaza de España, separate building) • Virtual Reality Room experience inside the cave (ages 6+)

Who this is for

This option is designed for self-guided audio-tour · all ages (under-6 free with adult). If you're booking for a different group composition, see the other tiers in our booking widget — each is matched to a specific visitor profile.

On the day

Cuevas de Nerja is a 4. 8-kilometre limestone cave system in the village of Maro on Spain's Costa del Sol, four kilometres east of Nerja town and 56 kilometres east of Málaga in the province of the same name in Andalusia.

Frequently asked

What's included in a Cuevas de Nerja ticket?
Self-guided entry to all five chambers currently open to the public — the Vestibule, the Hall of the Nativity, the Hall of the Cataclysm (with the 32-metre central column, the world's largest natural stalagmite), the Hall of the Ghosts, and the Hall of the Cascade. Includes access to the small archaeological museum at the entrance and the gardens around the cave.
How long does a visit take?
About 60 minutes inside the cave at a comfortable self-guided pace. Allow 90 minutes total including the walk in from the car park, the entrance museum, and the on-site café.
Are the prehistoric paintings visible to visitors?
Most are not. The most fragile paintings — including the dated seal images — are in chambers closed to the public to preserve them; only accredited researchers enter those areas. The visitor route does pass interpretive panels and reproductions explaining what has been found, and a small selection of less fragile painted areas is visible at distance.
Is the cave wheelchair accessible?
No. The route inside includes multiple flights of steep stairs, narrow passages, and uneven limestone surfaces. Visitors with significant mobility limitations cannot complete the route. The entrance area, museum, and gardens are accessible.