Your private Madrid experience
The Prado and the Royal Palace sit just over a mile apart, but most visitors treat them as separate experiences — two long queues, two audio guides, two sets of facts without a thread to connect them. This tour gives you the thread: a private historian who links the art on the walls to the monarchy that commissioned...
The Prado and the Royal Palace sit just over a mile apart, but most visitors treat them as separate experiences — two long queues, two audio guides, two sets of facts without a thread to connect them. This tour gives you the thread: a private historian who links the art on the walls to the monarchy that commissioned it.
Your guide has spent years inside these collections, not as a visitor, but as a scholar. They know the secret riddle of Velázquez’s “Las Meninas,” which fresco was a political message disguised as devotion, and which rooms in the palace most visitors walk straight through, missing the most important detail. It begins at the Prado, right as it opens. Here, your guide sets the scene, weaving through the collection’s 8,000-plus works to focus on the paintings that shaped Spain's identity. You’ll stand before Bosch’s monumental “The Garden of Earthly Delights” and understand why it fascinated a king. At Goya's “Saturn Devouring his Son,” you’ll learn how this piece was so personal the artist painted it on his dining room wall. After the galleries, a coffee break at the museum cafe gives you space to absorb what you’ve seen. A private vehicle is waiting outside to whisk you along the Paseo del Prado and up the Gran Vía. As you ride, your guide points out the Cibeles Fountain and the winged goddess atop the Metropolis Building, explaining how this boulevard helped reshape Madrid as a modern European capital. At the Royal Palace, the splendor is immediate: red velvet, chandeliers, gold leaf at every turn. But it's the stories that make it memorable. On the Throne Room’s painted ceiling, you'll see Columbus on his ship as Neptune guides the fleet, and understand what the monarchy meant by it all. In the Royal Chapel, your guide reads the frescoes the way the court intended — every saint, every gilded motif, a deliberate message of power and piety. Your experience ends in the Plaza de la Armería, with the Sabatini Gardens stretching out below and five centuries of Spanish glory behind you.