Spain is one of the favorite destinations for tourists. Only in 2022, 67.44 million foreign visitors visited our country. However, due to the geographical variety of our country, we can find very different people at one end of the national territory and another.
There are even cities and regions that have a reputation for being more or less pleasant or more or less hospitable. In this sense, the Preply platform has developed a survey asking the inhabitants of different Spanish cities to try to elaborate a ranking of the more or less educated cities in the country.
The methodology followed was to interview more than 1,500 residents of 19 Spanish areas to ask them how often they encounter rude behavior. Among these behaviors were: being on the phone all the time in public, not letting other cars pass when there is traffic, being noisy in public, speaking on the loudspeaker in public or not welcoming strangers.
After the results, they ordered the most and least educated cities in Spain on a scale from 1 to 10. Among the rudest are Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Granada, Alicante-Elche, San Sebastián or Bilbao. Among the most educated, Vigo, A Coruña, Valencia, Murcia-Orihuela and Oviedo-Gijón-Avilés.
However, the conclusions they drew were not so drastic. “Although the conclusions show that some cities are more rude than others, Spaniards are quite polite people in public,” the authors emphasize.
These are the 10 rudest cities, according to Preply:
Santa Cruz de Tenerife Granada Alicante-Elche San Sebastián Bilbao Palma de Mallorca Barcelona Málaga Valladolid Madrid
And these, the 10 most educated:
Vigo A Coruña-Oleiros-Arteixo Valencia Murcia-Orihuela Oviedo-Gijón-Avilés Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Zaragoza Seville Cádiz Madrid
Among the rude behaviors that its citizens considered most common were: being on the phone all the time in public, in San Sebastián; being rude to the service staff, in Granada; speaking to the loudspeaker in public, in Bilbao, or not respecting personal space in Alicante-Elche.
This study also addressed whether in these localities they considered that the residents were more or less educated than the tourists, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Cádiz, they affirmed that the locals, while in Palma and Valladolid they assured that the visitors.
In addition, as a gesture of good manners, in the preply studio the percentage of tip left in each city was analyzed, being Valladolid the most generous, where the tip reaches 10.18% of the amount.
It’s not just a party anymore. ‘The Guardian’ assures that the Balearic island “has reinvented itself in recent years as a wellness destination” and that it is no longer just a place to party.
1
7
Vejer de la Frontera, a small town in Cádiz, has appeared in ‘The Guardian’. And he pays attention to one detail: the communal bathhouses.
J2R via Getty Images
2
7
Are you looking for tranquility? Pontevedra could be your destination. “What is heard in the street is the chirping of birds in the camellias, the clink of coffee spoons and the sound of human voices”, so clearly …
monysasi via Getty Images
3
7
For ‘The New York Times’, “Mallorca has a calm face and is home to mountain villages”.
travelism via Getty Images
4
7
The British newspaper ‘The Guardian’ praises the Andalusian city without thinking twice: “It is a “fascinating” city that has “elegance and movement in equal parts”. Of course, it highlights the monuments that ancient civilizations…
nevarpp via Getty Images
5
7
“It’s a romantic, energetic place with plenty of good views,” says ‘The Guardian’ of Seville. It is very clear to him, among all the highlights are the cathedral and the Alcazar.
IrinaSafronova via Getty Images
6
7
‘The New York Times’ has praised Valencia and has distanced itself from cities as crowded as Barcelona. “It is an old, walled city, with a center full of Gothic, Romanesque, Renaissance and Baroque architecture”, has been…
Alexander Spatari via Getty Images
7
7
It’s not just a party anymore. ‘The Guardian’ assures that the Balearic island “has reinvented itself in recent years as a wellness destination” and that it is no longer just a place to party.
Mariusz Stanosz via Getty Images
#educated #cities #Spain