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.
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.
Frequently asked questions
- Should we book a hotel or an apartment for a family of 7 in Europe?
- An apartment or villa, almost always. Standard hotel rooms max out at four guests, so the realistic option is the private rental market. Look for destinations with at least 50 listings sleeping 7 or more within a 20-minute transfer of the center — Southern and Eastern Europe score best on this.
- Which European destinations are cheapest for a family of 7?
- Krakow (4-bedroom apartments from about €80/night), Budapest (€90–€130), and Lisbon or Porto (€150–€250 in shoulder season) are far below Amsterdam or Zurich (€300–€500). Grocery costs follow the same gap: €120–€150/day feeding seven in Portugal versus €200–€260 in Switzerland.
- How hard is it to get a restaurant table for 7?
- Groups over 6 need advance notice everywhere, but Southern and Eastern Europe handle large tables best. Greek tavernas and Portuguese restaurants seat parties of seven routinely, and Budapest venues comfortably accommodate large groups. Watch local hours — Seville restaurants close between roughly 4 and 8pm.