Eleven boutique hotels, all within ten minutes of the Mezquita. Rates run from €47 a night at Hotel Mezquita — a restored 16th-century house directly opposite the entrance — to €350 at Hospes Palacio del Bailío, where 1st-century Roman mosaics are visible through the restaurant floor and the spa occupies actual Roman baths. Between those two anchors sit nine more properties, each occupying a converted palace, convent, or Judería mansion.
These are not hotels built to look old. Roman foundations, Moorish arches, azulejo-tiled courtyards, and Andalusian patios are structural facts, not decorative choices: the remains of 2,000 years of occupation that survived because the buildings were too useful to demolish. Two addresses stand out for position alone: Balcón de Córdoba, a 17th-century convent with just ten rooms directly facing the mosque entrance, and Hacienda Posada de Vallina literally opposite the main facade. For the goldsmith's quarter, Patios del Orfebre is a recently restored historic house that preserved original stonework and vaulted ceilings while adding modern comforts. The best boutique hotels here have kept those historical layers legible rather than covering them with plaster and mood lighting.
This ranking prioritises architectural character, heritage authenticity, service quality, and location within or adjacent to the UNESCO World Heritage zone. Every property on the list is within walking distance of the Mezquita and the Judería. Before booking, the best area to stay in Córdoba guide breaks down each district by atmosphere, noise level, and proximity to monuments.