Picture this: 350+ book stalls lining tree-shaded avenues in Madrid’s most beautiful park. Authors signing books under white tents. Children sprawled on grass reading. Literary conversations floating through spring air. The smell of pages mixing with blooming roses. Thousands of book lovers wandering between publishers, discovering treasures, meeting favorite writers, debating which stack of books to carry home.
This is the Feria del Libro de Madrid – the Madrid Book Fair – Spain’s largest and most beloved annual literary event. For 17 days every late May and early June, El Retiro Park transforms into a massive outdoor bookstore meets literary festival, where Spanish and international publishers showcase hundreds of thousands of titles, celebrity authors sign books for hours, and Madrid becomes a city that reads, discusses, and celebrates literature like nowhere else.
Since 1933 – with interruptions for Civil War – the Book Fair has grown from a modest week on Paseo de Recoletos into a cultural institution drawing over 500,000 visitors annually. In 2026, the 85th edition runs May 29-June 14 with the theme “Leer y reír: dos formas de resistir” (Reading and laughing: two forms of resistance), focusing on humor in literature.
I’ve attended book fairs across Europe – Frankfurt’s industry behemoth, London’s commercial polish, Paris’s intellectual gravitas. Madrid’s stands apart. It’s not industry-focused (though publishers attend). It’s not purely commercial (though sales happen). It’s genuinely cultural – a citywide celebration where regular people buy books, kids attend workshops, authors chat with readers for hours, and literature feels alive, accessible, joyful rather than academic or exclusive.
The setting helps. Retiro Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site, provides stunning backdrop – 19th-century iron-and-glass Crystal Palace, romantic pathways, monumental fountains, ancient trees. The fair runs along Paseo de Coches (Coach Promenade), wide paved path perfect for strolling between stalls.
So let me walk you through everything: 2026 dates and details, what you’ll find, how to maximize your visit, meeting authors, avoiding crowds, where discounts hide, combining it with Madrid sightseeing, and why book lovers shouldn’t miss this extraordinary annual ritual.
2026 Edition: Key Information
Dates: May 29 – June 14, 2026 (17 days)
Location: Paseo de Coches, El Retiro Park
Theme: “Leer y reír” (Read and Laugh) – Humor in Literature
Edition: 85th anniversary
Poster artist: Miguel Pang (illustrator)
Hours:
- Monday-Thursday: 10:30 AM – 2:00 PM, 5:00 PM – 9:00 PM
- Friday: 10:30 AM – 2:00 PM, 5:00 PM – 9:30 PM
- Saturdays-Sundays: 10:30 AM – 3:00 PM, 5:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Entry: FREE
Booths: 350+ (publishers, bookstores, associations)
Expected visitors: 500,000+
Author signings: 1,500+ scheduled throughout 17 days
What You’ll Find
The Booths
350+ stalls representing:
Publishers:
- Major Spanish publishers (Planeta, Penguin Random House, Anagrama)
- Independent presses
- University publishers
- Regional publishers
- International publishers with Spanish titles
Bookstores:
- Madrid independent bookstores
- Specialized bookshops (poetry, children’s, travel, etc.)
- Chain bookstore representatives
Associations:
- Writers’ associations
- Literary foundations
- Cultural organizations
What they sell:
- New releases (often at 5-10% discount)
- Backlist titles
- Children’s books
- Comics and graphic novels
- Poetry collections
- Academic books
- Foreign language titles
- Signed editions
Author Signings & Events
The main attraction: Meeting authors in person
1,500+ signings scheduled over 17 days:
- Spanish literary stars
- International authors (Spanish translations)
- Debut authors
- Children’s book authors
- Poets, essayists, journalists
How signings work:
- Authors sit at publisher/bookstore booths
- Schedule published on official website (ferialibromadrid.com)
- Free – just buy the book at that booth
- Queues form early for popular authors
- Authors typically sign 1-2 hours
Other events:
- Conferences and talks
- Children’s storytelling
- Poetry readings
- Panel discussions
- Workshops
2026 theme activities:
- Humor writing workshops
- Comedy author panels
- Satirical literature discussions
- Stand-up meets literature events

Special Sections
Children’s Area:
- Kid-focused booths
- Storytelling sessions
- Illustration workshops
- Activity areas
Literary Walks (evening):
- Guided nighttime walks through Retiro
- Stops at literary-themed locations
- Combines books with park beauty
Exhibitions:
- Rare manuscripts display (Casa de Fieras)
- Historical book cover exhibition
- Photos from 1930s fairs
Digital Innovation (2026):
- E-book kiosks for testing
- AI-powered book recommendations
- Digital interactions
How to Make the Most of Your Visit
Strategy for First-Timers
Visit twice if possible:
First visit (reconnaissance):
- Stroll entire fair end-to-end
- Note which booths have books you want
- Compare prices (they vary slightly)
- Check author signing schedule
- Get oriented
Second visit (shopping):
- Target specific booths
- Buy strategically
- Catch author signings
- Avoid impulse buys (you saw everything first visit)
Best Times to Visit
Least crowded:
- Monday-Friday mornings (11 AM-2 PM)
- Weekday evenings (6-9 PM)
Most crowded:
- Weekends (especially Saturday afternoons)
- Author signing times (queues form)
- Opening days (May 29-31)
Pro tip: Weekday visits infinitely more pleasant. If weekend-only, arrive at 10:30 AM opening or after 6 PM.
Budgeting
Discounts reality:
- Most books 5-10% off cover price
- Some deeper discounts (15-20%) on selected titles
- Still not “clearance” prices – modest savings
Budget suggestions:
- €20-30: 2-3 books
- €50: 5-7 books
- €100+: Serious haul (10-15 books)
Money-saving tips:
- Bring calculator (track spending)
- Set budget before entering
- Resist impulse buys (stroll twice strategy)
- Compare prices between booths
- Look for “oferta” (special offer) signs
What to Bring
Essential:
- Cash (many booths prefer it, though cards accepted)
- Large bag/backpack (books get heavy!)
- Water bottle (hours of browsing)
- Sunscreen + hat (May/June sun strong)
- Comfortable shoes (lots of walking)
Helpful:
- Wish list (authors/titles you want)
- Phone (check author signing schedule, take photos)
- Pen (for author dedications – “Para [name]”)
Meeting Authors
Finding signing schedule:
- Official website: ferialibromadrid.com
- Updated daily during fair
- Posted at information booths
- Social media (@ferialibro)
Signing etiquette:
- Arrive early for popular authors (queues long)
- Buy book at that specific booth (required for signing)
- Keep it brief (authors sign for hours, others waiting)
- Have dedication ready (“Para María, con cariño”)
- Photos usually OK (ask politely)
Popular author reality: Lines for celebrity writers can be 1-2 hours. Worth it? Your call.
Getting There
Metro
Best stations:
- Ibiza (Line 9) – Closest to Paseo de Coches entrance (Puerta de la Reina Mercedes)
- Retiro (Line 2) – Also close, alternative entrance
Exit strategy: Follow signs to “Paseo de Coches” or “Feria del Libro”
Bus
Lines stopping near Retiro: 2, 15, 20, 26, 28, 61, 63, 152, 215, C1
Walking
From Centro/Sol: 15-minute walk east
From Prado Museum: 5-minute walk
From Atocha: 10-minute walk
Entry Points
Main entrance: Puerta de la Reina Mercedes (Mercedes Queen’s Gate) – near Ibiza metro
Alternative entrances:
- Puerta de Madrid
- Various Retiro Park gates
Once inside: Follow crowds/signs to Paseo de Coches
[See complete Retiro Park guide →]
Combining with Madrid Sightseeing
Book Fair + Retiro Park
Perfect combination:
- Morning: Book Fair browsing (10:30 AM-1 PM)
- Lunch: Picnic in Retiro or nearby restaurant
- Afternoon: Explore Retiro Park (Crystal Palace, lake, monuments)
- Evening: Return to Fair for author signing or second browse
Retiro highlights:
- Crystal Palace (5-min walk from Fair)
- Retiro Lake rowboat rentals
- Rose garden (beautiful May-June)
- Fallen Angel statue
- Parterre gardens
Full Day Cultural Route
10:00 AM: Prado Museum (nearby)
1:00 PM: Lunch
2:30 PM: Book Fair stroll
4:30 PM: Retiro Park relaxation
6:00 PM: Book Fair author signing
8:00 PM: Dinner nearby
Weekend Itinerary
Saturday:
- Morning: Book Fair (beat weekend crowds, arrive opening)
- Afternoon: Retiro Park
- Evening: La Latina tapas
Sunday:
- Morning: Prado Museum
- Afternoon: Book Fair (author signing session)
- Evening: Gran Vía stroll
Where to Eat Near the Fair
Inside/Near Retiro
On-site options (Fair grounds):
- Food stalls (tortilla española, jamón, churros)
- Coffee/drink vendors
- €5-10 per person
Nearby Retiro cafés:
- Various kiosks inside park
- Sit-down restaurants park perimeter
Close Restaurants
Budget (€10-15):
- Museo del Jamón (multiple locations nearby)
- Lateral (modern tapas)
Mid-range (€20-30):
- Estado Puro (Paco Roncero tapas)
- Puerta 57 (modern Spanish)
Upscale (€40+):
- Nearby Salamanca neighborhood fine dining
Pro tip: Bring picnic, enjoy on Retiro grass between browsing sessions
[See complete Best Tapas Madrid guide →]
Where to Stay (Book Fair Visit)
Best neighborhoods:
Salamanca (adjacent to Retiro):
- Walking distance to Fair
- Upscale, quiet
- Easy Retiro access
- €100-200+/night
Retiro area (east Centro):
- Closest proximity
- Some budget options
- €60-150/night
Centro/Sol (central):
- 15-min walk or quick metro
- Tourist hub conveniences
- €70-180/night
- More authentic
- Metro to Fair
- Better food scene
- €50-120/night
[See complete Where to Stay Madrid guide →]
History & Cultural Significance
Origins
1933: First Book Fair during “Semana Cervantina” (Cervantes Week, April 23-29)
Location: Paseo de Recoletos
Concept: Colorful stalls, loudspeakers for author speeches, public readings
1936: Spanish Civil War interrupts event
1944: Resumed as “Feria Nacional del Libro” (National Book Fair)
Organization: Instituto Nacional del Libro (INLE)
1967: Moved to El Retiro Park
Reason: Growing demand from booksellers/publishers needed larger space
1982: Renamed “Feria del Libro de Madrid”
Today: 85th edition (gaps for Civil War explain numbering)
Cultural Impact
Spain’s largest book fair: Over 500,000 annual visitors
Community event: Free access, school visits (200+), 1,000+ volunteers
Educational initiatives:
- “Pequeños Gigantes de la Lectura” (Reading Little Giants)
- 15,000+ students participate
- Promotes literacy across 10 autonomous communities
- 2026 adds Basque and Catalan texts
Sustainability efforts (2026):
- Net-zero emissions goal
- 176 solar panels
- 2,000 liters renewable fuel
- Tree planting (Madrid Compensa)
- Recycled paper book workshops
- Solar mobile charging stations
International recognition: UNESCO World Heritage Retiro Park setting
Queen Letizia Tradition
Opening ceremony: Queen Letizia typically inaugurates fair
Morning walkthrough: Royal visit through booths
Media coverage: National attention
Cultural importance: Royal patronage underscores literary significance
Antique Book Fair (Bonus)
Separate event (often same period):
48th Antique and Second-hand Book Fair
Dates: May 2026 (exact dates TBC)
Location: Paseo de Recoletos (original Book Fair location!)
Organized: Madrid Association of Antiquarian Booksellers (since 1977)
What you’ll find:
- 40 specialist antiquarian booksellers across Spain
- 500,000+ titles
- Prices: €1 to several thousand euros
- First editions, incunabula, rare books, manuscripts
- Second-hand and out-of-print volumes
For collectors: Bibliographic treasures, completing collections
Practical Tips
Language
Predominantly Spanish:
- Most books Spanish language
- Some English/international section
- Author talks in Spanish
- Signage Spanish
International visitors: Spanish language skills helpful but not essential for browsing/buying
Children
Very family-friendly:
- Dedicated children’s area
- Storytelling sessions
- Workshops
- Activity zones
Bring kids: Great cultural experience, promotes reading
Stroller-friendly: Paseo de Coches paved, accessible
Accessibility
Wheelchair accessible: Retiro Park pathways paved
Assistance: Available upon request
Facilities: Restrooms on-site
Weather
Late May/Early June Madrid:
- Usually sunny, warm (20-28°C / 68-82°F)
- Occasional rain
- Strong sun exposure
Prepare: Sunscreen, hat, water, light layers
COVID/Health
Check official website for any current health protocols
Why Book Lovers Shouldn’t Miss It
Unique atmosphere: Unlike commercial book fairs, genuinely cultural celebration
Author access: 1,500+ signings – meet writers personally
Discovery: Browse hundreds of thousands of titles, find unexpected treasures
Discounts: Modest but real savings (5-20% off)
Setting: El Retiro Park beauty – strolling between literary stalls under trees
Cultural immersion: Experience Madrid’s love of literature, language, reading
Community: Thousands of book lovers create electric atmosphere
Free entry: No ticket cost, just books you buy
Combination: Perfect with Retiro Park exploration, Prado Museum visit
Final Thoughts
The Feria del Libro de Madrid isn’t just a book sale. It’s a cultural ritual where Madrid – a city of museums, literature, Don Quixote’s homeland – celebrates the written word in its most beautiful park.
For 17 days, Retiro’s Paseo de Coches becomes literary wonderland. Children discover favorite characters. Teens find new obsessions. Adults stock summer reading. Collectors hunt first editions. Everyone browses, discusses, debates which books deserve precious luggage space.
The author signings create magic. Spanish literary stars sit at modest booths, signing for hours, chatting with readers, making literature feel personal and accessible rather than distant and academic. International authors connect with Spanish-reading fans. Debut writers meet their first readers.
The setting enhances everything. Between browsing sessions, you walk under ancient trees, past Crystal Palace, around rose gardens. You picnic on grass with new purchases. You row boats on the lake. You realize you’re combining two of life’s great pleasures: books and beauty.
My advice? If you’re in Madrid late May or early June, visit the Book Fair. Even if you don’t read Spanish fluently, browsing is joyful. Even if you’re not buying (luggage!), the atmosphere captivates. Even a quick stroll shows you Madrid’s literary soul.
For book lovers, plan strategically: Visit weekday mornings (fewer crowds). Check author signing schedule (ferialibromadrid.com). Bring large bag (books accumulate). Set budget (easy to overspend). Stroll twice (compare before buying).
Combine thoughtfully: Prado Museum morning + Book Fair afternoon. Retiro Park wandering + Fair browsing. Author signing evening + tapas dinner in La Latina.
Because the Feria del Libro de Madrid captures something special – a city that reads, a culture that values literature, a community that celebrates books not as luxury or academic pursuit but as joy, resistance, connection, and life itself.
“Leer y reír: dos formas de resistir.” Reading and laughing: two forms of resistance. In uncertain times, Madrid offers both, free, in its most beautiful park, for 17 glorious days every spring.
See you at the Fair.
FAQs
Q1: When is the Madrid Book Fair 2026?
A: Madrid Book Fair (Feria del Libro) 2026: May 29 – June 14, 17 days. Hours: Mon-Thu 10:30AM-2PM/5-9PM, Fri 10:30AM-2PM/5-9:30PM, Sat-Sun 10:30AM-3PM/5-10PM. Location: Paseo de Coches, El Retiro Park. FREE entry. 85th edition, 350+ booths, 500,000+ expected visitors. Theme: “Leer y reír” (Read and Laugh) – humor literature.
Q2: Where is the Madrid Book Fair held?
A: Madrid Book Fair location: Paseo de Coches (Coach Promenade), El Retiro Park, UNESCO World Heritage Site. Metro: Ibiza (Line 9) closest, or Retiro (Line 2). Main entrance: Puerta de la Reina Mercedes (Mercedes Queen’s Gate) near Ibiza metro. Buses: 2,15,20,26,28,61,63,152,215,C1. Walking: 15-min from Centro/Sol, 5-min from Prado Museum. Wide paved path between tree-shaded book stalls.
Q3: Is the Madrid Book Fair free?
A: YES! Madrid Book Fair FREE entry – no tickets required. Just pay for books you buy. 350+ booths open public May 29-June 14. FREE author signings (purchase book that booth), FREE children’s activities, FREE exhibitions, FREE events/talks. Only costs: books purchased (5-10% discount typically), food/drinks. Accessibility: wheelchair accessible. Community cultural event open everyone.
Q4: How do author signings work at Madrid Book Fair?
A: Madrid Book Fair 1,500+ author signings over 17 days. How: authors sit publisher/bookstore booths per schedule (posted ferialibromadrid.com daily), buy book THAT specific booth, join queue (arrive early popular authors 1-2 hour waits), keep interaction brief (many waiting), have dedication ready (“Para [name]”). FREE with book purchase. Photos usually OK (ask politely). Spanish literary stars + international authors Spanish translations.
Q5: What can you buy at Madrid Book Fair?
A: Madrid Book Fair 350+ booths sell: new releases (5-10% discount), backlist titles, children’s books, comics/graphic novels, poetry collections, academic books, foreign language titles (some English), signed editions. Major Spanish publishers (Planeta, Penguin Random House), independent presses, bookstores, associations. Hundreds thousands titles. Prices: modest discounts (5-20% select titles), not clearance but real savings. Predominantly Spanish language books.
Q6: What are the best times to visit Madrid Book Fair?
A: BEST (least crowded): Weekday mornings Mon-Fri 11AM-2PM, weekday evenings 6-9PM. AVOID (most crowded): Weekends especially Saturday afternoons, author signing times (queues), opening days May 29-31. Strategy: weekday visits infinitely more pleasant browsing. Weekend-only? Arrive 10:30AM opening or after 6PM. Visit twice if possible: once reconnaissance, once shopping (compare prices, avoid impulse buys).
Q7: Can I combine Madrid Book Fair with other sightseeing?
A: PERFECT combination! Book Fair + Retiro Park: Morning Fair browsing (10:30AM-1PM), lunch picnic Retiro/nearby restaurant, afternoon explore park (Crystal Palace 5-min walk, lake rowboats, rose gardens), evening return Fair author signing. Also combine: Prado Museum (nearby, 10AM-1PM) + Book Fair afternoon, or Centro/Sol sightseeing + Fair visit. Location allows easy multi-attraction days. Budget full day cultural route.
Q8: Is Madrid Book Fair good for kids?
A: YES! Very family-friendly: dedicated children’s area, storytelling sessions, illustration workshops, activity zones. Kids discover favorite characters (Harry Potter, comics, Spanish titles), parents browse young adult books. Stroller-accessible Paseo Coches paved paths. Educational “Pequeños Gigantes de la Lectura” program involves 15,000+ students. Free entry makes affordable family cultural activity. May-June weather pleasant outdoor browsing. Perfect promoting reading kids.
Q9: What is the theme of Madrid Book Fair 2026?
A: 2026 theme: “Leer y reír: dos formas de resistir” (Reading and laughing: two forms of resistance). Focus: HUMOR in literature. 85th edition explores comedy all forms – refuge, critique, storytelling. Activities: humor writing workshops, comedy author panels, satirical literature discussions, stand-up meets literature events. Poster designed illustrator Miguel Pang. Celebrates laughter + reading as resistance forms.
Q10: How much should I budget for Madrid Book Fair?
A: Budget suggestions: €20-30 = 2-3 books, €50 = 5-7 books, €100+ = 10-15 books (serious haul). Discounts: modest 5-10% off most titles, some 15-20% select titles. NOT clearance prices but real savings. Money-saving: bring calculator (track spending), set budget beforehand, resist impulse buys (visit twice – compare first), look “oferta” (special offer) signs. Bring large bag/backpack (books heavy). Cash preferred many booths (cards accepted).
Official website: ferialibromadrid.com
Email: info@ferialibromadrid.com
Phone: +34 915 338 836
Social media: @ferialibro (Twitter/Instagram/Facebook)
- Temperature
- Precipitation
- Rain Chance
- Wind
- Humidity
- Pressure



