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9 European Destinations That Actually Fit a Family of 7

Europe's apartment and villa rental market is deep enough to house a family of seven, but transport and restaurant logistics vary wildly by destination. These nine cities and regions clear all three hurdles.

By Emma Larsson·Last updated 19‏/06‏/2026

Traveling Europe with seven people breaks most standard travel assumptions. Budget airline seat availability for 7 on the same flight is limited, restaurant reservations for groups over 6 require advance notice everywhere, and hotel rooms max out at 4. The destinations below work because the private rental market is large (vacation apartments/villas are the norm), trains run frequently enough to cover the group, and local restaurant culture tolerates large tables.

What Makes a Destination Work for 7

Three filters matter: apartment/villa inventory (at least 50+ listings sleeping 7+ within a 20-minute transfer of the center), restaurant culture (places comfortable seating 7 as a walk-in or with same-day reservations), and internal transport (trains or ferries that don't require 7 separate seat bookings weeks out). Southern and Eastern Europe generally score better than Northern and Western Europe on all three.

Budget Context

A 3-bedroom apartment sleeping 7 in Lisbon or Porto runs €150–€250/night in shoulder season. The same spec in Amsterdam or Zurich costs €300–€500. Grocery costs follow a similar gap: €120–€150/day feeding seven in Portugal vs €200–€260 in Switzerland. Factor this into destination selection before you fall in love with a Swiss Alps fantasy.

  1. 1

    Lisbon, Portugal

    Hundreds of 4-bedroom apartments in Alfama and Mouraria. Trams and metro handle 7 easily; Uber is cheap. Restaurants routinely seat large groups same-day.

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  2. 2

    Seville, Spain

    Airbnb and local agencies list 50+ apartments sleeping 7-10 in the historic center. Restaurants close 4-8pm — plan around it. Avg 3BR apartment: €160/night in May.

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  3. 3

    Krakow, Poland

    One of Europe's most family-affordable cities. Spacious 4BR apartments in Kazimierz from €80/night. Group dinners at Milk Bars are €5-8/person. Wawel Castle and Wieliczka Salt Mine suit all ages.

  4. 4

    Split, Croatia

    Strong villa rental market outside the Old Town walls. A 4-bedroom villa with pool within 10 minutes runs €250-€400/night June-August. Ferries to islands depart frequently and accept walk-on passengers.

  5. 5

    Tuscany, Italy (agriturismo region)

    Villa rentals designed for 8-12 people are the dominant accommodation type. Weekly rates for a 4BR farmhouse with pool: €2,500-€4,500 in June. Grocery self-catering is nearly mandatory; restaurants outside Florence book solid.

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  6. 6

    Budapest, Hungary

    Large Communist-era apartments now listed as vacation rentals sleep 7-10 at €90-€130/night. Ruin bars accommodate groups of 20; family dinner reservations easy to secure. Direct flights from most European hubs.

  7. 7

    Algarve, Portugal

    The villa rental market here is deeper than Lisbon. 4BR villas with pools from €200/night October-May. Seafood restaurants in Tavira and Lagos readily accommodate 7. Nearest airport (Faro) has good budget airline coverage.

  8. 8

    Dubrovnik area, Croatia

    Avoid the Old Town walls (tiny, expensive). Instead: Cavtat or Konavle valley villas sleeping 7-10 at €180-€350/night. Boat taxis run to the Old Town in 20 minutes. Avoid July-August if crowds are a concern.

  9. 9

    Athens & Attica, Greece

    Athens apartments sleep 7 from €120/night; Attica villa rentals (30-45 min drive) offer pools from €180/night. Greek tavernas expect large families — table for 7 is unremarkable. Island ferries from Piraeus are walk-on.

By Emma Larsson

Mother of 4, family-travel editor

Emma has spent 12 years travelling with her four children across 30+ countries — from minivan road trips to long-haul flights with a toddler on her lap. She writes the guides she wishes she had when she started.

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