REVIEW · SITGES
Flamenco: Sevillanas class
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by flamenca y estilo · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Clap. Step. Confidence in an hour. This one-hour Sevillanas class teaches you the basic moves, claps, and posture in a way that feels friendly and focused, guided by Mercedes Mestre at her store in Catalonia. The best part: it’s taught in a small group (up to 10), so you’re not lost in a crowd, and the lesson is designed to adapt to your ability as you go.
One thing to keep in mind: the classic flamenco dress is not included—if you want to rent one, it’s €60 for the activity. Still, you can participate comfortably without it, and the hour is built to get you moving fast.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Why Sevillanas Makes a Great 1-Hour Lesson
- Meeting Mercedes Mestre at Flamenca Y Estilo
- What Happens During the 60-Minute Class
- Teaching Style: Patient Corrections That Don’t Make You Feel Lost
- The Fun Factor: Learning With Confidence, Not Stress
- Photos and Videos After Class (A Nice Bonus)
- Dress Code and the €60 Flamenco Dress Rental
- Price and Value: Is $35 Worth It?
- Who This Sevillanas Class Is Best For
- Should You Book This Sevillanas Class?
- FAQ
- How long is the Flamenco: Sevillanas class?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What group size is it?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is a flamenco dress included?
- What languages is the class taught in?
- Is it suitable for beginners?
- Do you get photos or videos after the class?
- What are the cancellation and payment options?
Key things to know before you go

- Mercedes Mestre teaches in English and Spanish, with some instruction shown in the original language when needed.
- Up to 10 people means you get corrections and encouragement instead of just watching.
- You learn the basics (steps, claps, posture) and leave with a short routine you can practice.
- Water is included, so you can stay relaxed through the session.
- Optional flamenco dress rental (€60) lets you go full style, but it’s not required.
Why Sevillanas Makes a Great 1-Hour Lesson

Sevillanas are a traditional fair dance, and the format of this class is built for quick progress. In just one hour, the goal isn’t perfection. It’s getting the core shapes right: how to hold your posture, where your hands go for the claps, and how the steps fit together in a repeatable routine.
What I like about this setup for real life travel is the time match. If you’re on a short trip, you don’t want a multi-hour commitment where you might feel like you’re starting from scratch. Here, you get a structured lesson and enough practice time to walk away with something you can actually repeat.
And the vibe is not stiff. The teaching style shows up clearly in feedback: people describe Mercedes as positive, encouraging, and patient, with gentle technique refinements as confidence builds. That matters because learning dance is half rhythm, half comfort. If you feel rushed, you freeze. If you feel guided, you start enjoying the process.
Meeting Mercedes Mestre at Flamenca Y Estilo

The meeting point is inside the store Flamenca Y Estilo by Mercedes Mestre. That detail matters because it signals what kind of experience this is. You’re not just entering a theater-like space and blending into a show. You’re stepping into the world of a flamenco fashion designer who’s also teaching the dance.
You’ll also see that the experience is centered on the instructor. Mercedes isn’t described as a distant coach behind a podium. The feedback emphasizes attentiveness and warmth—especially with basic steps—so you’re more likely to get clear guidance early on, when it’s easiest to misplace your hands or tighten your shoulders.
If you hate waiting around on arrival, this is also a plus: the activity includes skip-the-ticket-line access, which saves time and keeps the start smoother. Even for a one-hour class, those small time savings help.
What Happens During the 60-Minute Class

The class is short on purpose: one hour of focused learning. Based on what’s promised, you can expect the lesson to cover three essentials—basic steps, claps, and posture—in a way that beginners can follow.
Here’s how that typically feels in practice during the hour:
You start by getting your posture set. That’s not just about looking right; it’s how you keep your upper body from locking up while your feet work. For many beginners, this is the biggest early hurdle. When your body is coached into a comfortable position, you stop fighting yourself.
Next comes the clapping. Sevillanas claps are part of the rhythm, not a random accessory. Once your hands and timing click, your brain stops tracking every move individually. You start moving with the beat instead of counting every second.
Then you piece the steps together. The class is designed so you’re learning the dance in components first, then joining them. People mention leaving with a routine they can practice at home, which tells me the instructor aims for a complete, repeatable sequence rather than isolated warm-up drills.
Finally, you likely get a chance to practice as your confidence grows. The feedback repeatedly mentions Mercedes refining technique gently. That’s valuable because dance technique isn’t just rules—it’s small corrections that prevent habits from sticking.
Teaching Style: Patient Corrections That Don’t Make You Feel Lost
This is where the reviews shine. Multiple people highlight that Mercedes adapts to your ability and refines technique as you get more confident, without making it feel harsh or overly technical.
Look for what that means for you:
- You’ll probably get help with fundamentals (posture and hand placement) before you’re expected to coordinate everything at once.
- The instruction style seems designed for beginners and people who haven’t done dance classes before.
- Corrections come as you improve, so you don’t feel stuck at the same awkward stage all hour.
One review even describes it like a mini version of Strictly Come Dancing, but in a friendly, achievable way. That’s the sweet spot: dance lessons should feel like a challenge you can manage, not a test you fear failing.
Also, instruction language is English and Spanish. Some content is shown in the original language. If you understand Spanish, even a little, you’ll pick up more. If you don’t, English instruction should still keep you moving.
The Fun Factor: Learning With Confidence, Not Stress
A dance class can be either uplifting or awkward. The best ones strike the balance where you feel brave enough to try, but supported enough to learn.
Here, you’re getting an hour of learning that’s described as professional and fun. People also mention that Mercedes is attentive, amiable, and smiling. That kind of atmosphere matters because sevillanas is rhythm-heavy. If you’re nervous, your timing slips. If you relax, your body starts doing what it’s being taught.
Another strong detail: the class is great for groups and events. With a small group cap, it’s also easier to manage different skill levels in the same room. If you’re traveling with friends who dance a little differently than you do, this is a good setup since the instructor can work with your starting point.
Photos and Videos After Class (A Nice Bonus)

One of the most praised surprises: people mentioned getting photos and videos after the class. That’s not listed in the standard inclusions, but it shows up in feedback as something you may receive.
If that matters to you, here’s how to think about it:
- It can help you remember the steps while the routine is still fresh.
- It’s useful for checking your posture and hand positions.
- It gives you something to show friends without trying to explain it all from memory.
If you care about having content to take home, it’s worth asking at the start whether photos/videos are part of what you’ll receive for your session.
Dress Code and the €60 Flamenco Dress Rental
The flamenco dress rental is optional. It costs €60 and it’s not included in the class price. That said, people come for different reasons—some want the full look, others just want to learn and enjoy the experience.
My practical advice: don’t let the dress question block you from taking the class. If you don’t rent one, you’ll still learn the dance because your lesson is built around your posture, steps, and claps—things you can practice in comfortable clothes.
What to wear instead:
- something you can move in without restriction
- shoes or footwear that won’t make you slip when you step and clap
- layers if the room runs cool (it’s not a dance performance, but you will warm up)
If you do rent the dress, think of it as an experience upgrade. It can add confidence and fun, but it isn’t the key to learning. The key is whether you can follow the instructor’s posture and timing cues.
Price and Value: Is $35 Worth It?

At $35 per person for one hour, the value comes from three things that fit real travelers’ needs:
First, you’re paying for instruction, not just watching. This isn’t a passive show. You’re actively learning basic steps, claps, and posture.
Second, you’re in a small group (limited to 10). For dance classes, group size is everything. Smaller rooms mean more chances to correct your technique before it becomes a habit.
Third, the class includes water during the activity. That’s a small detail, but for a short 60-minute session, it helps you stay comfortable without scrambling for a drink.
If you’re comparing options, think like this:
- If the alternative is a longer class with less personal attention, this still might beat it because it’s tight, focused, and beginner-friendly.
- If you only want a flamenco dress moment, the dress costs extra (€60), so you might spend more than you planned. But if your goal is learning a routine you can practice, the price-to-output ratio is strong.
One more value clue: people describe Mercedes as positive, encouraging, and knowledgeable. In a short class, teaching quality is the difference between leaving with a routine you understand and leaving with moves you can’t replicate.
Who This Sevillanas Class Is Best For
This works especially well if you’re:
- a beginner who wants to try Spanish dance without feeling overwhelmed
- visiting for a short time and want a hands-on activity that fits into your schedule
- traveling with friends or planning a small group activity
- the type of person who enjoys learning a short routine you can repeat later
It also suits people who want culture through movement, not museum-style facts. You’ll connect with Andalusian culture through the dance itself, and you’ll learn the practical building blocks—posture, claps, and steps—rather than just hearing about them.
If you’re an advanced dancer already, you might find the one-hour format a bit basic. That doesn’t mean it’s bad; it just means your focus may be more on style coaching than starting from fundamentals.
Should You Book This Sevillanas Class?
Book it if you want an hour that’s structured, friendly, and built for real beginners. The combination of a small group (up to 10), instruction in English and Spanish, and a teaching style described as patient and encouraging makes it a strong choice for travelers who want to learn something tangible fast.
Skip it if your priority is a full-length performance experience or if you’re hoping for a dress-only photo moment. The dress is optional and costs extra (€60), and the class is designed for learning basics, not a long choreography show.
If you’re choosing between doing nothing on an evening and trying one fun cultural activity, this is the kind of class that turns into a memory you can practice at home.
FAQ
How long is the Flamenco: Sevillanas class?
The class lasts 1 hour.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet inside the store Flamenca Y Estilo by Mercedes Mestre.
What group size is it?
It’s a small group limited to 10 participants.
What’s included in the price?
The experience includes one hour of learning Sevillanas with a flamenco fashion designer, plus water as a drink during the activity.
Is a flamenco dress included?
No. You can rent a flamenco dress for €60 if you want to.
What languages is the class taught in?
Instruction is available in English and Spanish.
Is it suitable for beginners?
Yes. It’s described as perfect for beginners, focused on learning the basic steps, claps, and posture.
Do you get photos or videos after the class?
Some participants mention receiving photos and videos after the experience.
What are the cancellation and payment options?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now and pay later.



