“Mum, we’re FLYING.” We were not flying. We were in a cable car. But from the perspective of a five-year-old dangling above Barcelona harbour in a glass box, it felt like flying. The city spread out below us — boats, rooftops, the sea — and for once my kids were speechless. The Montjuic Cable Car is Barcelona’s most underrated family experience. No audioguide. No queue management. Just views that make everyone shut up and stare.

Montjuic is the green hill that rises above Barcelona’s harbour. At the top there’s a castle, gardens, museums, and the Olympic stadium. At the bottom there’s the Magic Fountain and Poble Espanyol. Connecting them all is the cable car — and for families, it’s the transport that makes the whole hill work.
Here’s how to do Montjuic with kids without exhausting everyone.

- Short on Time? Here Are Our Top Picks
- The Cable Car: What Families Need to Know
- Montjuic Castle: Worth It with Kids?
- Poble Espanyol: Spain in Miniature
- The Magic Fountain
- The Montjuic Gardens
- Practical Tips
- The Best Tickets for Families
- 1. Montjuic Cable Car Roundtrip —
- 2. Poble Espanyol Entry —
- 3. Walking Tour with Castle & Cable Car —
- More Barcelona Family Guides
Short on Time? Here Are Our Top Picks
Up and back. Best views in Barcelona. Kids think it’s a theme park ride. 5 minutes each way.
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A miniature Spain with craft workshops for kids. At the base of Montjuic. Combine with the cable car.
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Guided tour covering the castle, cable car, and Montjuic highlights. Good for families who want context.
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The Cable Car: What Families Need to Know

The Teleferic de Montjuic runs from the Parc de Montjuic station (mid-mountain) to the Castell de Montjuic (castle) at the top. A roundtrip ticket costs $22 for adults. Children aged 4-12 get a reduced rate. Under-4s are free.

Don’t confuse this with the Port Cable Car (Teleferic del Port) which crosses the harbour. That’s a different cable car entirely. The Montjuic one stays on the hillside.
The gondolas are modern, enclosed, and smooth. They run every few minutes. Wait times are usually under 10 minutes except on summer weekends when you might queue for 15-20 minutes. No buggies in the gondola — fold them and the staff will help you carry them on.

Montjuic Castle: Worth It with Kids?

Yes. The castle is at the top of the cable car and it’s a genuine highlight for families. It’s a 17th-century military fortress with thick stone walls, a moat, ramparts you can walk along, and panoramic views from every angle.
Children love it because it feels like a real castle — not a museum pretending to be a castle. There are cannons, watchtowers, open spaces to run, and walls wide enough for small explorers to walk along (with guardrails). The views from the ramparts cover the entire city, the harbour, the sea, and the mountains.
Entry is about 5 euros for adults. Under-16s enter free on Sundays. The castle takes about 30-45 minutes to explore with kids. Combine it with the cable car for a morning that costs under 30 euros per adult and gives you the best views in Barcelona.

Poble Espanyol: Spain in Miniature

At the base of Montjuic, Poble Espanyol is an open-air museum that recreates a Spanish village using full-scale replicas of buildings from every region. Streets, squares, churches, workshops — it’s like walking through all of Spain in an afternoon.
For kids, the highlights are the craft workshops. Glassblowing, ceramics, leather working — artisans demonstrate traditional crafts and children can sometimes have a go. The village also has a large central square where kids run freely, several playgrounds, and ice cream shops at reasonable prices.

At $15 per adult with under-4s free, Poble Espanyol is good value. Allow 1.5-2 hours. It pairs perfectly with the cable car — do Poble Espanyol first (at the bottom of Montjuic), then take the cable car up to the castle.
The Magic Fountain

The Font Magica (Magic Fountain) sits at the base of Montjuic below the Palau Nacional. On Thursday to Saturday evenings it puts on a free light, water, and music show that’s genuinely spectacular. The water changes colour, the jets dance to music, and the Palau Nacional glows behind it.
It’s free. No tickets. Just show up. The shows run every 30 minutes from dusk. Get there 15 minutes early for a good spot on the steps. Children are mesmerised — the combination of water, light, and music is universally appealing. Even teenagers put their phones down.
This pairs perfectly with an evening at Poble Espanyol — dinner in the village, then walk down to the fountain for the show. One of Barcelona’s best free family evenings.
The Montjuic Gardens

Between the cable car stations and the castle, Montjuic is covered in gardens. The Jardins de Joan Brossa have a playground with zip lines and climbing frames. The Jardins de Mossen Costa i Llobera have cacti from around the world (kids love the giant ones). The Jardins de Laribal have fountains and shaded paths.

These gardens are free, uncrowded, and perfect for letting children run after a morning of structured sightseeing. Pack a picnic. Spread a blanket. Let everyone decompress. This is the Montjuic that most travelers never see.
Practical Tips

The ideal family route: Start at Poble Espanyol (10am), walk or bus to the cable car mid-station (11:30am), ride up to the castle (noon), explore and picnic in the gardens (1pm), cable car back down (2:30pm), afternoon free. Return for the Magic Fountain show in the evening if the kids have energy.


Getting there. Metro Espanya (L1, L3) for Poble Espanyol and the Magic Fountain. Bus 150 from Placa d’Espanya goes up to the cable car mid-station. The hop-on hop-off bus stops at several points on Montjuic on the Orange Route.
Buggies. Poble Espanyol is buggy-friendly. The cable car requires folding. The castle has some steps but is mostly accessible. The garden paths vary — some are smooth, some are gravel. A carrier is more versatile than a buggy on Montjuic.
Food. Poble Espanyol has several restaurants and cafes. The castle has a small cafe. The gardens have nothing — bring water and snacks. There’s a decent restaurant at the cable car mid-station.

The Best Tickets for Families
1. Montjuic Cable Car Roundtrip — $22

The most-booked Montjuic experience with over 22,000 reviews. A roundtrip cable car ride with views over Barcelona’s harbour, city, and coast. Our full review covers the ride experience and what to see at the top. The essential Montjuic family ticket — everything else on the hill is accessible once you’re up.
2. Poble Espanyol Entry — $15

Over 3,100 reviews. A full-scale replica Spanish village with craft workshops, restaurants, and open spaces perfect for children. Our review covers the family experience including which craft workshops work best for kids. Pairs naturally with the cable car for a full Montjuic day.
3. Walking Tour with Castle & Cable Car — $64

A guided experience covering the castle, cable car, and Montjuic highlights. 832 reviews with a strong 4.7 rating. Our review explains what the guide adds. Best for families with children aged 8+ who’ll engage with the history and want a structured half-day experience.
More Barcelona Family Guides

Montjuic pairs brilliantly with the rest of Barcelona’s family highlights. The hop-on hop-off bus connects Montjuic to every other major attraction and stops right at the cable car station. For a water-based afternoon after a morning on the hill, the catamaran cruises depart from the harbour below Montjuic — you can see the cable car from the boat. And for the Gaudi trail, Sagrada Familia, Park Guell, and Casa Batllo are all reachable by Metro from Placa d’Espanya at the base of Montjuic.
