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Trip guide · Spain

Splitting expenses on a Madrid trip - what to budget, how to settle up

Last updated by The EvenRound team.

Late dinners at 10pm, vermouth Sundays, and a group trip to Toledo somebody has to drive.

Madrid eats late and pays in cash more than most European capitals - even today, the best tabernas in La Latina expect cash for tapas and only switch to card when the bill crosses €30. Group trips here usually include a Sunday vermouth crawl, one big group dinner with a fixed-menu reservation, and a day trip to Toledo or Segovia. The split needs to handle people who skip the bull-fighting museum and people who go heavy on the vermouth.

Realistic per-person daily budget

Local currency: Euro (EUR)

CategoryPer person, per dayNotes
Accommodation€55–€95Apartment in Malasaña or La Latina for 4–6; mid-range hotels in Sol run €130–€190/night.
Food and drinks€40–€65Lunch menú del día (€14–€18), tapas dinner (€20–€35), bocadillo de calamares (€4), vermouth (€3 per glass).
Transport€7–€10Metro 10-trip ticket (€12.20). Airport metro adds €3 supplement.
Activities and entrances€18–€35Prado (€15, free 6–8pm), Reina Sofía (€12, free Mon and after 7pm), Toledo day trip (€60 with bus + monument pass).

Common shared-expense scenarios in Madrid

  1. 01
    La Latina tapas crawl on a Sunday afternoon

    Five tabernas, five rounds, five bills. Some are cash-only.

    Split tip

    Designate one person to log each stop on their phone the moment the bill comes. Don't let it pile up.

  2. 02
    Group dinner at a casa de comidas with a fixed menu

    Botín, Casa Lucio, Casa Salvador - fixed menus around €45–€60 per person, plus wine for the table.

    Split tip

    Equal split. The whole point of fixed-menu places is everyone pays the same.

  3. 03
    Toledo day trip with mixed attractions

    Bus to Toledo (€11 each way), then a Pulsera Turística monument pass (€11) for those who want monuments.

    Split tip

    Bus equal across riders; pulseras as exact-amount expenses for whoever wanted one.

  4. 04
    Vermouth Sunday with separate kitchens

    Each taberna has different boards - cured ham, anchovies, gildas. People shuttle between bars.

    Split tip

    Pool by table not by drinker. Whoever's at a given table pays one bill; log it as that subset.

  5. 05
    Metro top-ups on different cards

    Each person needs their own Multi card (€2.50 issuance + trips). One person can't pay for the group.

    Split tip

    Personal - don't try to share. Just have everyone load their own card.

Recommended split mode for Madrid

Equal for fixed-menu meals, exact for tapas crawls and museums

Madrid mixes high-equality experiences (the casa de comidas dinner) with high-variance ones (vermouth Sundays). One mode doesn't fit both.

Sample 3-day itinerary with expense touchpoints

  1. Day 1
    Sol, Plaza Mayor, La Latina tapas
    • Metro 10-trip
    • Bocadillo de calamares lunch
    • La Latina tapas crawl
    • Late drinks at Malasaña
  2. Day 2
    Prado + Retiro + casa de comidas dinner
    • Prado tickets (or free slot)
    • Retiro rowboat
    • Reina Sofía
    • Group dinner at Botín
  3. Day 3
    Toledo day trip
    • Bus to Toledo
    • Pulsera Turística
    • Lunch in Toledo
    • Bus back + farewell vermouth

Best for groups of …

Best for groups of 4–10. Casa-de-comidas reservations cap easily at 8; the Toledo day trip scales fine to 10 with two cars.

Currency notes

Eurozone. Cash culture is stronger here than in Barcelona - keep €40–€60 in coins and small notes. Tipping is minimal: leave the change. ATMs at BBVA, Santander, and CaixaBank charge nothing if you use a card from a bank that has reciprocal agreements; check before traveling.

Madrid is generous to groups that decide their split philosophy in advance and stick to it. The vermouth never tastes as good when there's an unresolved €17 floating around the chat.

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