Buying spanish products
Spain is well known for its excellent food and wine.
To find out more about spanish food please click here.
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The quality of shopping in Spain depends very much on which part of the
country you are in. The busy commercial centres of Madrid, Barcelona and
Malaga will not be so different to shopping at home with large, busy department
stores offering all manner of goods. The shops in the big cities will
also be well used to tourists and many will be able to speak English,
French, German and a few other languages. If you decide to go shopping
in areas a bit more off the beaten track don't expect many to speak
your native language and expect big variations in prices. Shopping in
Spain can be quite a pleasurable pursuit if you have plenty of time and
don't mind mixing it up with a bit of meandering in the coffee shops
or bars for drinks and tapas.
Although the opening hours can vary considerably between regions, shops
generally open at 10am and close at 2pm for siesta, reopening between
5pm to 8pm (in many cases till 9). A lot of the big stores including the
hypermarkets and department stores will stay open all day. Most stores
are closed on Sunday and on fiesta days (which there are a lot of)
Hypermarkets are very popular and are present in most of the larger towns.
They are usually located on the outskirts and can normally be found by
following the signs for the local centro commercial. The biggest are Eroski
and Hipercor (part El Corte Ingles). El Corte Ingles is
absolutely huge in Spain and really do sell just about everything. You
can even buy flight tickets from their web site (http://www.elcorteingles.es).
Open air markets are usually open in the mornings from 0900 until 1400
and sell a wide variety of products including: vegetables, flowers, clothes,
shoes, linen, pottery, arts and crafts from local artists, domestic goods,
carpets and jewellery.
Credit cards are widely accepted in Spain. Cheques are not. The currency
is the euro although everywhere you go you will find people still talking
in pesetas and then trying to convert to euros. When you withdraw money
from the bank try not to let them give you 500 euro notes as most shops
refuse to accept them. Visitors can claim back the IVA (VAT) added to
all purchases except food, drink, motor vehicles, and medicines.
Spain is well known for its excellent food and wine.
To find out more about spanish food please click here.
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