We’d been in Barcelona for three days and the kids were done with buildings. “No more churches,” my eight-year-old announced over breakfast. Fair enough. So we booked a day trip to Girona and the Costa Brava, and by lunchtime they were dangling their feet in turquoise water from a beach that looked like it belonged in Thailand. Sometimes the best family days are the ones where you leave the city entirely.

Girona and the Costa Brava are about 100km north of Barcelona. Most guided tours combine both — a morning exploring Girona’s medieval old town, then an afternoon on the coast. It’s the perfect antidote to a week of Gaudi buildings. Narrow streets. Turquoise coves. Beach time. Ice cream. Everything a family holiday should include.
Here’s how to do it with kids.

- Short on Time? Here Are Our Top Picks
- Girona with Kids: What to Expect
- Costa Brava with Kids: What to Expect
- The Kayak & Snorkel Option (Active Families)
- Practical Tips for Families
- The Best Tours for Families
- 1. Girona & Costa Brava Small-Group Tour — 0
- 2. Girona & Costa Brava with Pickup (GYG) — 6
- 3. Costa Brava Kayak, Snorkel & Cliff Jump — 3
- Getting There Independently
- More Barcelona Family Guides
Short on Time? Here Are Our Top Picks
The classic combo. Medieval Girona in the morning, beach coves in the afternoon. Hotel pickup included.
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Same concept, different operator. Small groups, great reviews. Slightly cheaper.
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Active adventure for sporty families. Kayaking, snorkelling, cliff jumping. Ages 8+.
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Girona with Kids: What to Expect

Girona is a beautiful medieval city that most families overlook because everyone’s focused on Barcelona. That’s a mistake. The old town is compact, walkable, and genuinely fascinating for children. You can see the highlights in 2-3 hours.
The colourful houses along the River Onyar are the postcard shot. The Jewish Quarter (El Call) has some of the best-preserved medieval streets in Europe — narrow, stone-paved alleys that feel like stepping back 800 years. The Cathedral sits at the top of a grand staircase (86 steps — the kids will count them).

Most guided tours give you about 2 hours in Girona. That’s enough for the old town highlights but you won’t get inside the Cathedral (unless you skip something else). The walking is moderate — some steps and cobblestones. Buggies work on the main routes but not in the Jewish Quarter. Carrier recommended for under-2s.

Costa Brava with Kids: What to Expect

After Girona, the tours head to the coast. This is where the day changes gear completely. Architecture gives way to nature. Streets become beaches. Shoes come off.
The Costa Brava coast is a series of rocky coves with clear turquoise water. The beaches that the guided tours use are typically chosen for family suitability — shallow water, some sand, accessible paths down from the road. Towns like Calella de Palafrugell, Tossa de Mar, and Lloret de Mar are common stops.


The Kayak & Snorkel Option (Active Families)

For families with older, sporty children (ages 8+), the Costa Brava kayak and snorkel tour is a completely different experience. You paddle along the coastline in sea kayaks, stop at hidden coves for snorkelling, and some tours include cliff jumping into deep water.
This is not a gentle boat ride. It’s a proper adventure day that requires physical effort. The payoff is accessing beaches you can only reach by sea — coves with no other travelers, underwater rocks teeming with fish, and that feeling of genuine discovery.

Practical Tips for Families

It’s a long day. Most tours are 10-12 hours including travel from Barcelona. Factor this in. With under-5s, that’s a big ask. Children aged 6+ handle it well because the day has variety — city in the morning, coast in the afternoon. Under-5s might struggle with the coach time (about 90 minutes each way).
Pack swimwear. Wear it under your clothes. You won’t want to waste beach time changing. Also pack: towels (most tours don’t include them), suncream, water shoes (rocky beaches), a change of clothes for the coach ride home.
Food. Most tours include a lunch stop in a coastal town. Some include the meal, others give you free time to find your own. Budget 15-20 euros per person for lunch at a beach restaurant. The food along the Costa Brava is excellent — fresh seafood, paella, and fideuà (Catalan noodle paella that kids tend to prefer).
Coach naps. The ride back to Barcelona in the late afternoon is when every child falls asleep. Bring a travel pillow or hoodie for the coach window. This is the secret benefit of guided day trips — someone else drives while your children sleep and you get 90 minutes of peace.

The Best Tours for Families
1. Girona & Costa Brava Small-Group Tour — $120

The most-reviewed Girona and Costa Brava tour with nearly 7,000 reviews and a perfect score. Small group, hotel pickup, guided Girona tour, and beach time included. Our full review covers the day’s itinerary. The obvious choice for families who want everything organised and stress-free.
2. Girona & Costa Brava with Pickup (GYG) — $116

An alternative operator with nearly 2,000 reviews. Same Girona + Costa Brava format with small group and pickup. Our review compares this with the Viator option. Worth checking if option 1 is sold out or if the itinerary suits your family better.
3. Costa Brava Kayak, Snorkel & Cliff Jump — $103

A full-day active adventure along the Costa Brava coast. Nearly 4,000 reviews. Kayaking, snorkelling, cliff jumping, and lunch provided. Our review covers the fitness requirements and family suitability. Best for families with children aged 8+ who want an active, outdoorsy day away from museums and buildings.
Getting There Independently

If you prefer going without a tour, high-speed trains run from Barcelona Sants to Girona in 37 minutes. From Girona, buses reach coastal towns like Tossa de Mar, Calella de Palafrugell, and Lloret de Mar. A hire car gives you maximum flexibility to stop at coves and fishing villages along the way.
With children under 8, I’d take the guided tour. The logistics of trains, buses, and coastal navigation add stress to what should be a relaxing day. Once kids are old enough to manage multi-transfer journeys, going independently gives you freedom to linger wherever you want.
More Barcelona Family Guides

The Girona day trip balances perfectly with Barcelona’s other family highlights. Back in the city, Sagrada Familia and Park Guell are the must-do Gaudi buildings. For another day trip, Montserrat with kids takes you to the mountains instead of the coast. And for a lazy day between adventures, the catamaran cruises from Barcelona harbour give you sea time without the two-hour drive. Between Girona, Montserrat, and the city itself, you’ve got a week of family memories sorted.
