
Hotel Lauria
Exceptional·2.9k reviews
From
€95/ night

Tarragona is Catalonia's UNESCO Roman seaport on the Costa Daurada, with three designated dog beaches, an open-air 2nd-century amphitheatre that doubles as the prettiest leashed walk in the city, and a 24/7 reference vet hospital at La Canonja. Top spots for pets include the Roman amphitheatre and its seafront viewpoint, the dog area at Platja Llarga and the secluded Cala Fonda cove through the Bosc de la Marquesa pine forest, and the Passeig Arqueològic around the Roman walls, especially around the medieval Part Alta and Roman walls, the Rambla Nova ending at the Balcó del Mediterrani, and the seafront Platja del Miracle.
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Why Tarragona with your pet?
Tarragona is Catalonia's UNESCO Roman seaport on the Costa Daurada, with three designated dog beaches, an open-air 2nd-century amphitheatre that doubles as the prettiest leashed walk in the city, and a 24/7 reference vet hospital at La Canonja.
📍 Top spot
the Roman amphitheatre and its seafront viewpoint, the dog area at Platja Llarga and the secluded Cala Fonda cove through the Bosc de la Marquesa pine forest, and the Passeig Arqueològic around the Roman walls.
🏘️ Best area
the medieval Part Alta and Roman walls, the Rambla Nova ending at the Balcó del Mediterrani, and the seafront Platja del Miracle.

Exceptional·2.9k reviews
From
€95/ night

Excellent·2.1k reviews
From
€75/ night

Very Good·1.8k reviews
From
€88/ night

Excellent·1.1k reviews
From
€55/ night

Exceptional·900 reviews
From
€65/ night
Tarragona, historic capital of its eponymous province in Catalonia, is the ancient Roman Tarraco, the administrative and military metropolis that vied with Carthago Nova for control of Hispania under Augustus. The Archaeological Ensemble of Tarraco has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2000 and includes the seafront amphitheatre, the circus, the forum, the cyclopean walls of the 3rd century BC and several villas and aqueducts. The city today counts around 135 000 inhabitants (250 000 in the metropolitan area), stretched between the medieval upper city (Part Alta), the Rambla Nova running down to the sea, and the Costa Daurada coastline. On dogs, Catalonia enforces strict regulation (≤2 m leash, licensed "potentially dangerous" breeds, mandatory waste pick-up and urine rinsing), but Tarragona is one of the most welcoming large Catalan cities: three designated dog beaches, around 80 dog-friendly restaurants listed by the tourism office, a 24/7 vet hospital 5 km away at La Canonja, and a 70-minute Rodalies ride to Barcelona with your dog.
The 2nd-century AD Roman amphitheatre carved into the seaside promontory, with capacity for 15,000 spectators at its peak. The fenced interior is closed to non-assistance dogs, but the surrounding park and the upper viewpoint stay open and offer one of the most spectacular leashed walks in Catalonia.
The wrought-iron-railing balcony at the end of the Rambla Nova, with views over the Mediterranean and the amphitheatre. The most photographed viewpoint in Tarragona, open 24/7, leashed dogs welcome; Catalan tradition says you touch the iron (tocar ferro) for good luck.
A 1 km shaded promenade between the inner Roman walls (3rd century BC) and the 18th-century outer fortifications, with viewpoints, lawns and watchtowers. Outdoor, on a leash, perfect when combined with Camp de Mart to circle the whole wall.
Tarragona's largest urban park, 32 ha along the Francolí river, with a fenced àrea d'esbarjo per a gossos (off-leash dog area), flat paths and a riverside pedestrian promenade. The local daily walk, 15 minutes on foot from the Rambla Nova.
East of the city, Platja Llarga (3 km of sand, designated dog area) extends the Costa Daurada coast; a path through the Bosc de la Marquesa pine forest leads in 20 min to Cala Fonda, the unsupervised cove and local dog-favourite, open year-round.
The 12th-century Romanesque-Gothic cathedral crowning the Part Alta. The interior is closed to non-assistance dogs, but the open-air cloister and the surrounding square are leashed-dog accessible and offer one of the calmest viewpoints over the old town.
Restaurants, parks, transport, beaches, vets. Everything you need to know for Tarragona with your pet.
Terrace cafés & dog-welcoming spots
Off-leash zones, trails & green spaces
Metros, trains & pet travel rules
Dog-friendly beaches & coastal walks
Sights, museums & things to do
Trusted sitters & day care services
Emergency vets & animal clinics
Local rules, habits & insider tips
Average temperatures. Ideal for planning your pet trip
🐾 Best months to travel with a pet in Tarragona: Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct