NH Collection Amistad Córdoba
Two 18th-century mansions on Plaza de Maimónides, 3 min from the Mezquita. Mudéjar courtyards, rooftop pool with Mezquita views, 89 rooms. From €80/night.
10 hotels within walking distance, ranked by proximity.
Córdoba's Synagogue — one of only three surviving medieval synagogues in Spain, built in 1315 — sits on Plaza de Maimónides in the Judería. The square is named for the 12th-century philosopher and physician born a short walk away, and the streets immediately around it hold the densest concentration of genuinely good hotels in the city. NH Collection Amistad Córdoba is 30 seconds from the Synagogue entrance, two restored 18th-century mansions with Mudéjar courtyards, 89 rooms, and a rooftop pool with a direct line of sight to the Mezquita (from €80). La Ermita Suites, Andalusia's only official Monument Hotel, is 2 minutes on foot on Plaza de Abades — six kitchen suites in a 1412 building that was successively an Islamic school, a Jewish residence, and a Christian hermitage, with upper terraces looking straight toward the mosque tower (from €106). Eurostars Maimonides takes 3 minutes to walk from the Synagogue and sits on Calle Torrijos, the street that runs directly along the Mezquita's north wall (from €127). For lower prices, Patios del Orfebre is 300 metres from the Synagogue in the old goldsmith quarter — minimalist rooms, artisan breakfast, no lift, no pool, no frills, from €61 — and La Llave de la Judería has 9 rooms across three 17th-century townhouses on Calle Romero, 3 minutes away, with a century-old orange tree filling the main patio (from €62). The Mezquita-Catedral is 3 minutes in any direction from the square.
Staying in the Judería is a specific choice with real trade-offs, and the neighbourhood's hotels market themselves as though these don't exist. The streets are car-free and genuinely quiet after 9pm — no delivery lorries, no taxis idling outside. That is the good part. The less good part: car-free means no trolleys to your door and no drop-off closer than 150–200 metres from most hotels, so you will carry your bags over uneven cobblestones however heavy your suitcase is. The converted-palace hotels (Las Casas de la Judería, La Ermita, La Llave) are in medieval buildings: thick stone walls, low doorways, steep internal staircases, and no lift in most cases. NH Collection Amistad is an exception — 89 rooms in properly modernised mansions with a functional lift and wide corridors, which matters if mobility or large luggage is a consideration. The other trade-off is the Mezquita itself. Staying two minutes from the most visited monument in Andalusia means you are also two minutes from the tour groups that appear before 9am, the guided-walk stragglers at dusk, and the delivery carts restocking the souvenir shops on Calle Torrijos at 7:30am. The Calleja de las Flores — three minutes north of the Synagogue — generates its own steady pedestrian traffic from morning to evening. The quieter streets inside the Judería's medieval grid, away from the main axes, are substantially calmer: Calle Tomás Conde (where Las Casas sits), Calle Romero, and the lanes off Plaza de Abades lose most visitors by early evening.
On arrival, the standard approach is to drive to the Campo Santo de los Mártires car park, about 10 minutes' walk from Plaza de Maimónides, which charges roughly €16 per day — the closest reliable option for the Judería. From the AVE station, a taxi costs around €8 and drops you at the edge of the pedestrian zone; the last stretch to your hotel is on foot with your bags. Most Judería hotels hold luggage from early morning if your room isn't ready, so arriving at 10am and heading straight out to the Synagogue or Mezquita before check-in at 2pm or 3pm is a sensible plan. For the quietest sleep within walking distance of the Synagogue, the best streets are Calle Romero, Calle Tomás Conde, and the alleys around Plaza de Abades — all set back from the main tourist axes and largely empty by 10pm. The Mezquita's bell tower, converted from the original minaret, rings the canonical hours; guests at the closest properties (NH, La Ermita) hear it from their rooms, clearly in the morning and faintly at night. From the Synagogue itself, the key sights are: Mezquita-Catedral 3 minutes, Calleja de las Flores 2 minutes, Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos 6 minutes, Roman Bridge 9 minutes.
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NH Collection Amistad Córdoba on Plaza de Maimónides is 30 seconds from the Synagogue entrance — two 18th-century mansions with Mudéjar patios, rooftop pool, and 89 rooms (from €80). Eurostars Maimonides is 3 minutes away, named for the same philosopher, with a Mezquita-facing suite option and on-site restaurant (from €127).
Yes — it's one of the most significant medieval Jewish sites in Europe and entry costs €1.50 (free for EU citizens). The Mudéjar stucco decoration inside is remarkably intact for a 14th-century building. It's small (the prayer hall is about 7m x 7m) so 30 minutes is enough for a proper visit. It opens Tuesday to Sunday, 9am to 9pm. The surrounding Judería streets — particularly around Plaza de Maimónides — give the context for the building's history.
La Ermita Suites on Plaza de Abades is 2 minutes from the Synagogue — Andalusia's only Monument Hotel, built in 1412, with six kitchen suites around an original Caliphal arch and Mezquita terrace views (from €106). Hotel Madinat is 5 minutes away with 12 rooms and a private hammam (from €110). Hotel Viento10 occupies a former 16th-century hospital with a vaulted sauna and jacuzzi (from €80).
Patios del Orfebre starts from €61/night — contemporary rooms in the Judería's goldsmith quarter, 300 metres from the Synagogue, with a quality artisan breakfast. La Llave de la Judería offers 9 rooms across three 17th-century townhouses from €62, with a century-old orange-tree patio 3 minutes from the Synagogue.