5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A genuine Jerez tabanco where sherry is drawn from barrels behind the zinc bar and served in copitas over bare wooden tables. The format unchanged since the 19th century.
The list: One of Jerez's oldest surviving tabancos. Sherry drawn from barrels at the bar: fino, manzanilla and oloroso. No cocktails, no still wine. The tabanco format.
Tip: Ask for the vino from the barrel rather than the bottled commercial brands; the barrel-drawn fino is cheaper and fresher.
4 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A narrow-fronted Jerez tabanco on Calle San Pablo, two blocks from the cathedral. Barrel-drawn fino with bar snacks and a cast of local regulars from the old city.
The list: Traditional tabanco in the cathedral quarter of Jerez. Fino, manzanilla and amontillado from the barrel. Cheese and olives from the bar counter.
Tip: The best fino at Tabanco San Pablo is the unlabelled house barrel; ask specifically for the casa.
4 by the glassBarrio Bajo, Sanlucar de Barrameda
A tiny Sanlucar tabanco in the Barrio Bajo drawing manzanilla and oloroso from its own small solera. The most local and least-visited tabanco in Sanlucar.
The list: A small bodega-bar in Sanlucar's old lower quarter drawing manzanilla from its own barrels. Limited selection but impeccably fresh.
Tip: The manzanilla en rama poured here comes from a small Sanlucar solera not available in any shop; only accessible at the tabanco.
6 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A traditional Jerez taberna named for the 19th-century Jerez bullfighter, preserving the tabanco tradition with its own barrel stock of fino, amontillado and oloroso alongside jamón and charcuterie.
The list: Named for the great Jerez bullfighter Rafael Guerra (El Guerrita), this taberna serves all styles of Jerez sherry directly from barrels alongside traditional Cadiz tapas. One of the last traditional tabernas in Jerez with its own barrel stock.
Tip: The amontillado and oloroso here are drawn from an old solera owned by the bar rather than sourced commercially; quality and freshness are exceptional.
8 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
The definitive fino bar of Jerez, open since 1943 on Calle Pescaderia Vieja. Cold fino, tortillitas de camarones, and the same local crowd of winemakers, merchants and stallholders every day.
The list: The most famous fino bar in Jerez. Cold fino and manzanilla served at the stand-up zinc bar since 1943. The tortillitas de camarones (prawn fritters) are non-negotiable. No cocktails; exclusively sherry and wine.
Tip: Arrive before 14:00 for the best tortillitas; the kitchen stops frying when the batter runs out, usually by mid-afternoon.
6 by the glassPlaza del Cabildo, Sanlucar de Barrameda
A Sanlucar institution on the main plaza, famous for langostinos and manzanilla. The most photographed bar in the Sherry Triangle. Open until late nightly.
The list: The famous langostino and manzanilla bar on Sanlucar's main square. La Gitana and Solear manzanilla served ice-cold alongside the town's celebrated prawns. Stand at the bar or claim an outdoor table.
Tip: The langostinos de Sanlucar are among the best prawns in Spain; the combination with a glass of La Gitana manzanilla on a warm Andalucian evening is one of the region's peak food experiences.
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A historic Jerez tabanco in a barrel-vaulted alley passage, combining traditional barrel-drawn sherry with spontaneous flamenco performances from local artists.
The list: Sherry from the barrel in a 19th-century alley passage with flamenco. Fino, amontillado and oloroso; no frills, no menu, pure fortified culture.
Tip: The most authentic tabanco-flamenco combination in the Sherry Triangle; the music is spontaneous rather than staged.
20 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A converted bodega bar near the Jerez Alcazar with a focus on aged amontillado, oloroso and palo cortado. Serious sherry crowd in the evenings.
The list: A wine bar set in a former bodega warehouse near the Alcazar, specialising in aged sherries. Strong selection of amontillado, palo cortado and oloroso by the glass alongside bar snacks.
Tip: The palo cortado selection at El Corregidor is the best in Jerez for the style; ask for the oldest available expression.
5 by the glassCasco Antiguo, Jerez de la Frontera
A historic Jerez tabanco on Calle Medina preserving the original neighbourhood fortified-wine bar format: sherry drawn from barrels, zinc-topped tables, tiled walls.
The list: One of Jerez's oldest surviving tabancos on Calle Medina, drawing fino, manzanilla, amontillado and oloroso from American oak butts at a tiled bar. The format: no food menu, no cocktails, sherry from the barrel only.
Tip: The fino drawn from the oldest butt in the house is the one to order; ask the bartender for the barrel with the white chalk tick mark.