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Pamplona is virtually sold out for San Fermin 2026 (6–14 July), with prices running from €300 to €1,500 per night in the city centre. Three practical base alternatives are well-documented: San Sebastian (~63 km / 39 miles, bus from 5:00am, arrives 6:10am, from €8.25) is the only city that lets you see the 8am encierro the same morning; Logroño (~87 km / 54 miles, bus 1h55, €11–17) works well for evenings and bullfights but not the morning run; Vitoria-Gasteiz (~89 km / 55 miles, train 57 mins from €6) is the cheapest option — but the first train (7:32am) arrives after the encierro gates close. Book your bus and accommodation at the same time: Alsa San Fermin tickets sell out as fast as hotel rooms.

On 6 July 2026 at noon, a rocket will be fired from the balcony of Pamplona’s Town Hall and 12,000 people dressed in white and red will fill the Plaza Consistorial. Ernest Hemingway immortalised it in The Sun Also Rises, and San Fermin 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most-attended editions in years — Pamplona’s best accommodation has been fully booked since last December. If you’re reading this in May or June 2026, the question is no longer « which hotel in Pamplona? » but « which nearby town should I use as a base? » This guide compares the three serious options: San Sebastian for the encierro, Logroño for Rioja evenings, Vitoria for sleep and savings — with exact bus and train times, verified prices, and a strategy guide for every type of traveller.

San Fermin 2026: dates, the encierro and the accommodation reality

Crowd in white and red at the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, Spain
Photo by San Fermin Pamplona – Navarra on Unsplash

Pamplona, 6–14 July 2026

6–14 July 2026 Encierro at 8:00am (7–14 Jul) 27–30°C in July €300–1,500/night city centre

According to the City of Pamplona, the San Fermin festival draws more than a million visitors over nine days. If you’re planning a trip to Northern Spain, our guide to the region gives you a full picture of destinations to combine with Pamplona. The 2026 edition is especially popular because the 11–12 July weekend falls right in the middle of the festivities. The Chupinazo (official opening) takes place on 6 July at noon from the Plaza Consistorial. The encierros (bull runs through the streets) take place every morning from 7 to 14 July at 8:00am sharp along an 849-metre route — average duration 2 to 4 minutes. The closing ceremony — the « Pobre de mí » — happens on 14 July at midnight.

On the accommodation front, the 2025 statistics speak for themselves: navarra.okdiario.com records an occupancy rate of 98.6% at peak times. Four- and five-star hotels in the Casco Viejo have been fully booked since December–January; decent three-star options disappear by March. By May 2026, a bunk in a 12-bed dorm costs €100, a private room exceeds €200, and a standard apartment reaches €300–600 per night.

What’s new for 2026

  • Access to the encierro route now closes at 7:30am (was 7:15am), from the Plaza Consistorial only — confirmed May 2026
  • Runners entering the Plaza de Toros ahead of the bulls may no longer stand stationary in the arena
  • 39 balconies with structural deficiencies identified along the route — follow-up inspection in June 2026
  • Plaza del Castillo concerts now start at 11:30pm to reduce noise impact
Pixidia tip: If you still find availability in Pamplona for the nights of 7–9 July (after the Chupinazo), prices drop by 40–45% compared to the opening night. These are the last nights to sell. If you’re primarily there for the encierro, the « external base » strategy is often more comfortable and cheaper over the full trip.

San Sebastian — Donostia: the best base for catching the encierro

La Concha beach in San Sebastian with a panoramic view of the bay
Photo by Hans-Jürgen Weinhardt on Unsplash

San Sebastian (Donostia), ~63 km (39 miles) from Pamplona

~63 km / 39 mi — 1h05 by bus Bus 5:00am → arrives 6:10am €80–180/night in July Encierro: YES (5am bus)

San Sebastian is the only one of the three alternatives that lets you see the encierro on a same-morning return trip. If you’re planning several days in the Basque capital, our San Sebastian guide covers the best addresses and activities. According to machupicchu.org, the Alsa/Conda bus leaves at 5:00am from Amara bus station (Paseo Federico García Lorca) and arrives at 6:10–6:15am at Yanguas y Miranda, Pamplona — leaving between 1h15 and 1h45 to get into position behind the barriers before they close at 7:30am. Tight, but doable if you’re up early enough.

In July outside the festival, a 3–4 star hotel in the Parte Vieja runs between €120 and €250 per night. The Gros/Zurriola neighbourhood — more local, close to the surf beach — is 20–30% cheaper and offers the best value for festival-goers based in Donostia. Hostel dorms: €25–50 per person. Alsa.com sells special San Fermin tickets on this route — book 2–3 months ahead, as they sell out as fast as hotels.

Why San Sebastian works as a base

  • Only city with a 5:00am bus — the sole reliable way to catch the 8am encierro
  • Outstanding destination in its own right: La Concha beach, pintxos culture, 6+ Michelin-starred restaurants
  • Lively nightlife until 3am in the Parte Vieja — you arrive in Pamplona rested
  • No tourist tax in July 2026 (introduction expected late 2026 or 2027)
  • 13+ daily bus services in both directions during San Fermin
Pixidia tip: The train from San Sebastian (departs 6:20am Monday, 6:53am other days) arrives in Pamplona at 8:18–8:58am — too late for the encierro. Only the 5:00am bus works. Alternative plan: travel to Pamplona the evening before, party through the night, catch the 8am run, then head back to San Sebastian in the morning.
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Logroño — La Rioja: the most affordable base for evenings and wine

Busy pedestrian street in the historic centre of Logroño, capital of La Rioja
Photo by Mario La Pergola on Unsplash
Photo by Unsplash

Logroño, ~87 km (54 miles) from Pamplona

~87 km / 54 mi — 1h55 by bus Reinforced bus at 9pm → Pamplona €50–90/night in July Encierro: NO (bus too late)

Logroño is the capital of La Rioja autonomous community, Spain’s most celebrated wine region. Wine lovers can also browse our wine tourism itineraries in Spain. A city of 152,000 people often absent from tourist circuits, it offers exceptional value: a 3-star hotel in July runs between €60 and €80 per night — 40–60% less than Pamplona during the festival. Availability is plentiful.

The constraint is clear: according to rome2rio.com, the first regular La Estellesa bus departs at 7:45am and arrives in Pamplona around 9:40am — too late for the 8am encierro. The strategy documented by travel communities: take the reinforced San Fermin bus at 9:00pm from Logroño (Navarre government service), spend the night in Pamplona, catch the 8am encierro, then return on the reinforced 9:00am or 11:50pm service. For afternoon and evening events only (bullfights at 6:30pm, concerts at 11:30pm, fireworks at 11:00pm), Logroño is a perfect base.

Why Logroño works as a base

  • Lowest prices of the three: €60–80/night at a 3-star hotel in July
  • Calle Laurel — Spain’s most celebrated bar-hopping street, each bar specialising in one pintxo
  • La Rioja vineyards 10–15 km away — bodega tours with tastings
  • Medieval village of Laguardia (25 km), cave cellars and Rioja AOC vines
  • Reinforced return bus from Pamplona at 11:50pm (daily) — ideal after the fireworks
Heads up: The Logroño–Pamplona train requires a change at Castejón de Ebro (total journey 2h53–3h50). The La Estellesa bus is the only practical direct transport. Check 2026 timetables on nbus.navarra.es — the reinforced San Fermin services are only confirmed in June.

Vitoria-Gasteiz: the fastest train connection — great for the festival without the early-morning run

View of the Cathedral of Santa Maria and the old town of Vitoria-Gasteiz, capital of the Basque Country
Photo by Pix Tresa on Unsplash
Photo by Unsplash

Vitoria-Gasteiz, ~89 km (55 miles) from Pamplona

57 mins by Renfe train First train 7:32am (too late) €50–90/night in July Encierro: NO (7:32am too late)

Vitoria-Gasteiz is the political capital of the Spanish Basque Country — a city of 255,000 named European Green Capital in 2012. It offers the shortest journey to Pamplona: thetrainline.com confirms 57 to 69 minutes by Renfe train (5–6 daily services, from €6). The catch: the first train departs at 7:32am and arrives in Pamplona around 8:25–8:30am — after the encierro barriers close at 7:30am. Catching the morning run from this base is not possible.

That said, for all afternoon and evening activities — bullfights at 6:30pm, concerts at 11:30pm, fireworks from the Citadel walls at 11:00pm, the all-night street party — Vitoria is a solid base. The reinforced San Fermin services offer return trains from Pamplona at 7:00am (8 and 9 July only), 9:30am and 11:59pm (daily), according to the Navarre government announcement.

Why Vitoria-Gasteiz works as a base

  • Shortest journey: 57 mins by train, from €6 — and hotels still widely available
  • Quiet, restful city — ideal for recovering between festival nights in Pamplona
  • Cathedral of Santa Maria (Gothic restoration site tours), Artium Museum, unique green belt
  • Cuchillería Street for Basque pintxos, Plaza de la Virgen Blanca for terrace cafés
  • Rioja Alavesa 25 km away — AOC Rioja vineyards, medieval cave cellars in Laguardia
Pixidia tip: Vitoria is the perfect base for a San Fermin trip focused on bullfights and the nighttime atmosphere — no 4:30am alarm required. The La Burundesa bus (around €9.35, 1h40) is an alternative to the train with confirmed special San Fermin timetables — check laburundesa.com for the 2026 PDFs.

Comparing the three bases: decision table

CriterionSan SebastianLogroñoVitoria-Gasteiz
Distance from Pamplona~63 km / 39 mi~87 km / 54 mi~89 km / 55 mi
Fastest transportBus 1h05Bus 1h55Train 57 mins
First service to PamplonaBus 5:00amBus 7:45am (regular)Train 7:32am
Arrival in Pamplona (first service)~6:10am~9:40am (too late)~8:25am (too late)
Can you see the encierro?Yes (5am bus)No (regular) / Yes if all-nighterNo
Accommodation price in July€80–180/night€50–90/night€50–90/night
Return bus/train price€8.25–10 × 2€11–17 × 2€6–23 × 2
Quality as a destinationOutstandingVery good (wine, tapas)Good (calm, green)
Ease of booking in JulyModerateEasyEasy
Recommended forEncierro + full experienceBudget + evenings + wineComfort + savings + bullfights

Transport logistics and practical tips

Plaza de Toros in Pamplona before a Feria del Toro bullfight
Photo by Romain Malaunay on Unsplash

Bus stations, train times and key details

Pamplona bus station (Calle Yanguas y Miranda) is a 7-minute walk from the old town — all intercity buses (Alsa, Conda, La Estellesa, La Burundesa) terminate here. Pamplona Renfe station is in the San Jorge neighbourhood, 2 km from the centre (buses 7 and 9, 15 minutes). According to the Navarre government, 39 extra services were added in 2023 across 5 routes during San Fermin. The 2026 timetables will be published on nbus.navarra.es — worth checking from June onwards.

To watch the encierro as a spectator, noticiasdenavarra.com sets out the new 2026 rules: access to the route closes at 7:30am from the Plaza Consistorial only. For a good spot behind the barriers on Calle Estafeta, you need to be in position before 6:30am. The Plaza de Toros grandstands (free, lower sections) let you watch the bulls arrive without an early start — gates open at 7:00am.

Strategies for your profile

  • Encierro on the agenda: base in San Sebastian + Alsa 5:00am bus booked 2–3 months ahead
  • Tight budget + evenings: base in Logroño + reinforced 9pm outbound bus + 11:50pm return
  • Bullfights + comfort: base in Vitoria + Renfe train (last return 11:59pm, €6–23)
  • By car: Pamplona parking €25–30/day — Plaza del Castillo (953 spaces) full by 6:30am
  • Camping option: Camping Ezcaba 5 km from Pamplona, direct bus line 4 (stop Oricain), €15–25/night
Pixidia tip: Book your bus tickets and accommodation together — Alsa San Fermin seats sell as fast as hotel rooms. The 11–12 July weekend (mid-festival) is consistently the busiest — plan for a potential all-nighter if you’re using an external base on those dates.

Before you go: eSIM and travel insurance

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Frequently asked questions about San Fermin 2026

Can you see the San Fermin encierro on a same-morning trip from San Sebastian?

Yes — but only if you catch the Alsa/Conda bus leaving at 5:00am from Amara bus station in San Sebastian. Arrival in Pamplona at 6:10–6:15am gives you between 1h15 and 1h45 to get into position behind the barriers before they close at 7:30am. Trains don’t run early enough (6:20–6:53am, arriving 8:18–8:58am). Book tickets 2–3 months ahead via alsa.com.

How much does a hotel in Pamplona cost during San Fermin 2026?

Hotels in the historic centre run between €300 and €1,500 per night depending on category. Hostel dorms start at €100 per bed. Airbnb apartments: €300–820 per night. Quality accommodation sells out between December and March. By May 2026, it’s virtually impossible to find anything in the Casco Viejo under €300 per night, according to sanfermintravelcentral.com.

Can you see the encierro from a base in Logroño?

Not with the regular buses — the first departs at 7:45am and arrives in Pamplona around 9:40am, well after the 8am run. The documented strategy: take the reinforced San Fermin bus at 9pm from Logroño the previous evening, spend the night in Pamplona, catch the 8am encierro, then return on the 9am or 11:50pm reinforced service. For evenings only (bullfights at 6:30pm, concerts, fireworks), Logroño is a very practical base, according to navarra.es.

What are the new rules for the San Fermin encierro in 2026?

Two official changes for 2026 according to noticiasdenavarra.com: (1) Access to the route now closes at 7:30am (previously 7:15am), from the Plaza Consistorial only. (2) Runners who enter the Plaza de Toros ahead of the bulls can no longer stand stationary in the arena. Violations carry fines. In addition, 39 balconies with structural deficiencies were identified along the route in May 2026, with a follow-up inspection in June.

Is Vitoria-Gasteiz a good base for San Fermin 2026?

Yes — with one important caveat: the first train departs at 7:32am and arrives in Pamplona around 8:25am, after the barriers close. So the encierro is off the table from this base. However, for bullfights (6:30pm), concerts (11:30pm) and fireworks (11pm), Vitoria is ideal: train in 57 minutes from €6, hotels at €50–90 per night, plenty of availability. Reinforced San Fermin return trains from Pamplona run at 11:59pm (daily), according to thetrainline.com.

Do you have to wear white and red at San Fermin?

It’s not compulsory, but it’s the tradition — and wearing the outfit helps you blend in completely. The traditional costume (traje de pamplonica) consists of white trousers and a white shirt, a red scarf (pañuelo) around the neck, and a red sash (faja, 2.5m × 12cm). These accessories cost just a few euros at any supermarket or market stall in Pamplona. The scarf is only tied on at the Chupinazo (6 July at noon) and worn until the Pobre de mí, according to pamplona.es.

Sources

Research conducted 31 May 2026. Transport timetables should be verified on nbus.navarra.es before travel.

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