Three Countries in One Day: Andorra, France and Spain from Barcelona

Visit Andorra, cross into France and return through Spain in a single day trip from Barcelona. The full route, border crossing tips, shopping in Andorra and what’s realistic to see.


Quick Answer

A three-countries-in-one-day trip from Barcelona visits Andorra (duty-free shopping and mountain scenery), crosses briefly into France (Pas de la Casa), and returns through Spain. The full circuit covers about 400 km by private vehicle or coach and runs 12 to 13 hours.

Why This Day Trip Works Logistically

Andorra, France, and Spain in one day is genuinely achievable from Barcelona thanks to the proximity of the Pyrenean borders. Andorra is 200 km north of Barcelona — about 3 hours by coach through the mountains. The route passes through the Spanish Pyrenees, crosses briefly into the French Cerdagne via a mountain pass, then enters Andorra through the small principality’s southern border. The return route descends back through Catalonia, making it a genuine three-country circuit.

This is not a trip you can do efficiently by public transport. The logistics require a coach or private vehicle with a driver who knows the border crossings and the Andorran road system. Organised day trips from Barcelona handle this seamlessly, typically running from 07:00 to 22:00 and covering all three territories with guide commentary throughout.

What to Expect in Andorra

Andorra la Vella, the capital, is the highlight of the Andorra section. As a duty-free microstate, it offers significantly cheaper prices on electronics, spirits, tobacco, and perfume than Spain or France. Most day-trippers spend 2-3 hours in the commercial area around Avinguda Meritxell. The old town (Barri Antic) is small but worth 30 minutes — the Romanesque church of Sant Esteve and the Casa de la Vall parliament building are the main attractions.

Andorra’s mountain scenery is extraordinary, especially in autumn when the hillsides turn gold and copper. If your tour includes free time in the mountains, take it — even a 20-minute walk from the coach stop gives perspective on the principality that the commercial streets don’t offer. The currency is the euro; credit cards are accepted everywhere.

Crossing into France

The French section of the tour is typically the Cerdagne plateau — a high-altitude plain in French Catalonia that was historically part of the same cultural region as Spanish Catalonia. Most tours stop briefly at Font Romeu or the border village of Bourg-Madame, giving you a few minutes on French soil before the return through the Pyrenean passes.

The Cerdagne scenery is spectacular and the sense of crossing from one country to another through mountain landscape is memorable. Bring your passport or EU ID card — border crossings are generally waved through for EU visitors but having documents ready avoids delays. Non-EU visitors should check current requirements at the French and Andorran borders before travel.

Practical Details and Booking

  • Duration — typically 14-15 hours including transfers from Barcelona
  • Distance — approximately 500 km round trip by coach
  • Best season — April to October; mountain roads can be closed in winter
  • What to bring — cash for duty-free shopping, passport or ID, warm layer for mountain sections
  • Booking — available through Viator and GetYourGuide; departs from central Barcelona pickup points

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ABOUT THIS GUIDE

Written by the La Sagrada Familia editorial team — local Barcelona travel writers with over 8 years of experience visiting, reviewing, and booking tours at Sagrada Familia and across Catalonia. Every guide is researched on the ground, updated regularly, and based on real visits. We are not affiliated with the official Sagrada Familia foundation.