REVIEW · BARCELONA
Estrella Damm Old Brewery Barcelona Guided Tour with Beer Tasting
Book on Viator →Operated by Damm · Bookable on Viator
That old brewery smell is half the fun. In 90 minutes, you’ll walk through parts of the Estrella Damm Old Brewery and learn how beer production worked more than 140 years ago. You’ll also get a hands-on finish with a tasting of Damm beers after visiting key historical spaces like the Kettle Room or the Power Generator Room.
What I like most is the combo of history + tasting, not one or the other. The tour format also lets you try five different beers, many of which may be new to you even if you already know Damm.
One thing to consider: the tasting comes with snacks, but if you’re expecting a proper beer-and-cheese style pairing, you may want to plan a bite elsewhere before or after.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- A One-and-a-Half-Hour Taste of Damm’s Old Brewery
- Inside the Antiga Fabrica Estrella Damm (and Why Two Rooms Matter)
- How the Production Story Turns Into a Beer Tasting
- The Tasting Format: What You’ll Taste and How to Approach It
- Snacks and Beer Sausage: When Pairing Is Simple
- Timing in Barcelona: Why 90 Minutes Works
- Getting There With Less Headache (Mobile Ticket Included)
- Who Should Book This Beer and History Tour
- Price and Value: Is $23.23 Worth It?
- A Balanced Take: What You Might Love, What You Might Want to Improve
- Should You Book This Estrella Damm Old Brewery Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Estrella Damm Old Brewery guided tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Is the tour ticket mobile?
- What is included with the tour?
- How many beers are tasted?
- Which historical rooms might I see during the tour?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
- Is the tour suitable for most travelers?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Historic production rooms: Expect a visit to spaces like the Kettle Room or the Power Generator Room, plus other old-school brewing areas.
- A real tasting, not just one pour: You’ll sample five beers as the tour’s payoff.
- Short and focused: At about 1 hour 30 minutes, it fits easily into a busy day in Barcelona.
- Snacks are included, but pairing is basic: Some tastings include snacks and items like beer sausage in a bowl.
- Simple ticketing: You get a mobile ticket, and the site is near public transportation.
- Good fit for most people: The tour notes that most travelers can participate.
A One-and-a-Half-Hour Taste of Damm’s Old Brewery

If you like your souvenirs edible, this is a great stop. This tour is designed to feel like a walk through how Damm started, with a guided look at the old brewery’s workings and then a beer tasting at the end.
You’re not just shown a few photos and sent on your way. The visit connects production equipment and historic infrastructure to what ends up in your glass, so the tasting feels grounded instead of random. In a short amount of time, you get a clear story: how the brewery operated in the early days, and how that legacy still matters.
I also like that the tour stays light on fluff. It’s practical and focused on what the brewery pieces were for, then you get your reward: tasting multiple Damm beers. It’s a smart plan for anyone who wants something fun that doesn’t eat an entire day.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Barcelona
Inside the Antiga Fabrica Estrella Damm (and Why Two Rooms Matter)

The heart of this tour is the Antiga Fabrica Estrella Damm, the old brewery area that traces the company’s roots back more than 140 years. You’ll spend time in standout spaces that help explain production, including the Kettle Room or the Power Generator Room—and typically other historic spots as well.
Here’s why those two rooms are worth calling out. When you hear the words kettle or generator, it sounds technical. But the payoff is easy: you start to understand the chain of tasks behind brewing—heat, process, timing, and power—rather than treating beer like magic. Even if you’re not a brewing-nerd, you can follow the logic as the guide connects equipment to results.
In other words, you’ll leave with more than a beer buzz. You’ll have a mental map of what parts of a brewery do, and why older breweries were designed around production systems that were powerful for their time. That makes the tasting at the end feel like the final chapter of the tour, not a separate event.
How the Production Story Turns Into a Beer Tasting

After walking through the historical areas, the tour ends with a tasting of Damm beers. The focus is on how Damm beers were produced, and the tasting acts like a quick flavor “answer key” to the production lesson you just got.
In practice, you should plan for a five-beer sampling. One review described trying five different types, with many being unfamiliar to them, which is exactly what you want from a brewery tour. If your idea of a tasting is simply ordering one “house lager,” this tour goes further by giving you multiple styles to compare.
The tasting also tends to be portioned for groups, so don’t expect full pours of everything. One detailed review noted that a bottle was shared between two people, resulting in about 2.5 beers per person in that specific format. That’s helpful to know because it sets expectations: you’ll taste broadly, but it won’t feel like a pub crawl.
The Tasting Format: What You’ll Taste and How to Approach It

The tour’s “final taste” is built around variety. You get five beers, and the point is to notice differences—maybe in taste profile, maybe in bitterness or aroma, and definitely in how each beer behaves to your palate.
My practical advice: treat it like a guided comparison. Take a moment after each pour to reset your expectations. The first beer is usually the easiest to judge, but the middle beers are where you’ll start to notice what makes each one distinct. If you’re sensitive to bitterness or strong malt flavors, pace yourself and listen to your body.
Also, if you’re the kind of person who likes to compare notes, you’ll get more out of this if you slow down mentally. You can’t do a full craft-beer seminar in 90 minutes, but you can absolutely pick up patterns like what you like most and what you’d skip next time.
Snacks and Beer Sausage: When Pairing Is Simple

Most brewery tours try to keep things moving, and this one includes snacks alongside the tasting. One review specifically described snacks like beer sausage served in a bowl, rather than a more traditional pairing lineup.
Here’s the honest takeaway: if you want cheese pairings or a “flight with a reason” spread, you might feel underfed or slightly under-paired. The snack option can be fine for taking the edge off, but it may not scratch the pairing itch.
So I’d plan like this: if you’re hungry, eat something solid before the tour. If you’re only slightly peckish, the included snacks may be enough to keep you comfortable while you taste five beers. Either way, you’ll enjoy the tour more when you’re not racing your stomach between pours.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Barcelona
Timing in Barcelona: Why 90 Minutes Works

A tour lasting about 1 hour 30 minutes is one of the best lengths for Barcelona. You get a structured activity that doesn’t steal your whole afternoon, and you can still build in time for a walk afterward.
You’ll also have an easier day if you’re juggling neighborhoods. Barcelona is all about momentum, and this tour’s timing helps you maintain it. Start it when you’re ready for something indoors and guided, then go back outside when you want the city’s energy.
One small but real advantage is that it’s a guided experience with a clear arc: history first, tasting second. That makes it easier to choose meals and transport around it. If you’re planning around lunch or dinner, the snack component means you won’t be totally stuck, but eating earlier is still a smart move.
Getting There With Less Headache (Mobile Ticket Included)

This tour uses a mobile ticket, which usually means fewer paper tickets and fewer last-minute problems. It’s also noted as being near public transportation, so you shouldn’t have to fight traffic or hunt for parking.
The “near public transportation” part matters in a city like Barcelona. You’ll spend less time planning and more time enjoying. If you’re already walking around that side of town, you can treat this as a mid-day or early evening reset.
If you’re someone who dislikes waiting around, this is also the kind of activity that tends to work well because it’s time-boxed. You’ll know the visit ends around the 90-minute mark, and you can plan your next stop without guessing.
Who Should Book This Beer and History Tour

This is a strong choice if you want a brewery tour that feels fun, not stiff. The tour is built around historical production spaces and ends with a tasting, so you get an experience that’s both educational and enjoyable.
I’d especially recommend it if you:
- enjoy beer but want variety beyond one style
- like short tours with a clear story arc
- want something different from museums, without skipping the “learn something” part
- prefer guided structure over DIY exploring
If your top priority is deep, long-form brewery education, you might find the experience too short or too light on food pairing. But if your goal is a well-paced afternoon activity in Barcelona, it’s a practical fit.
Also, the tour notes that most travelers can participate. So it’s not presented as a niche or overly restrictive experience, which makes it easier to include in a group trip.
Price and Value: Is $23.23 Worth It?
At $23.23 per person, this tour sits in an accessible range for a guided, ticketed activity in Barcelona. The value comes from two things you’re not likely to get together at the same price elsewhere: a guided look at historic brewery spaces and a structured tasting of multiple beers.
Here’s how I’d judge the value. If you only cared about drinking one beer, you could probably do cheaper. But you’re getting a real comparison flight—five beers—and you’re learning what you’re tasting as you go. That education piece makes the tasting feel more meaningful than a generic bar stop.
The second value driver is time. About 90 minutes means you’re buying a compact experience. You’re not spending half your day commuting, waiting, and lingering. In a city where time costs money, the short duration helps the price feel reasonable.
A Balanced Take: What You Might Love, What You Might Want to Improve
Based on the kind of feedback this tour tends to earn, the strongest moments are the fun, guided feel and the tasting variety. People often leave pleased when the tour includes enough explanation to make the equipment and rooms feel relevant, then follows through with a tasting that offers multiple beers, not just one.
The most common “watch out” is the food-and-pairing side. If pairing is your thing, you may want to add a proper snack or small meal around the tour rather than relying on what’s included. And if you’re the type who wants every object in the old brewery to feel like a narrated museum exhibit, you might find the explanation on some older items less detailed than you’d hoped.
That doesn’t mean it’s a bad tour. It just means it’s best when your expectations match the format: a guided walk plus a tasting, not a long, museum-style deep explanation for every nook and corner.
Should You Book This Estrella Damm Old Brewery Tour?
If you want an easy, beer-focused activity that mixes historic brewery spaces with a real five-beer tasting, I think you should book it. It’s a good match for first-timers who want a story and a variety pack of flavors in one go.
I’d hesitate only if you’re specifically hunting for food pairings that feel like a plated tasting experience, or if you need an ultra-deep walkthrough of every historical object. In that case, plan to eat well beforehand and maybe treat the snacks as a small bonus rather than a main feature.
For most people looking for an authentic, fun Barcelona stop with practical value, this is a solid bet. It’s short enough to fit smoothly, structured enough to feel worth it, and tasty enough that the ending is memorable.
FAQ
How long is the Estrella Damm Old Brewery guided tour?
It’s about 1 hour 30 minutes.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $23.23 per person.
Is the tour ticket mobile?
Yes, it’s listed as a mobile ticket.
What is included with the tour?
You get admission included, a guided visit to historical brewery areas, and a final beer tasting.
How many beers are tasted?
The tasting includes five beers.
Which historical rooms might I see during the tour?
The tour includes visits to places such as the Kettle Room or the Power Generator Room, along with other historical areas.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is the tour suitable for most travelers?
The experience notes that most travelers can participate.


































