Brochures airbrush; travellers deserve straight answers. When Palace Tours guests call to ask about the cabins, this is the tour we give them over the phone.
Think boutique hotel, scaled to a railway
Each suite is a genuinely private room with a proper bed, a wardrobe that swallows a week of layers, and an en-suite bathroom with a good hot shower. Compact? Yes — this is a heritage narrow-gauge train, not a cruise liner. Clever? Very. Everything has a place, and the picture window is the wall that matters.
The night-time secret
The train ties up in a station every evening and does not move until after breakfast. First-time guests expect clatter and rocking; what they get is the quietest sleep of their Spanish holiday. More on the after-dark rhythm in our evenings guide.
Who fits comfortably
Couples and solo travellers settle in easily — see our solo guide for single-occupancy details. Guests with mobility concerns should read our frank accessibility notes first: heritage trains involve steps.
Cabin vs. Gran Lujo suite
If you are weighing this train against its famous big sister, the room is the main difference — our comparison guide lays it out honestly. For dates and current cabin rates, check availability here; Palace Tours quotes the operator's own pricing, nothing added.



