14 Days

“Pilgrimages are vital for a Christian’s life of faith”– Pope Leo XIV

Fatima & the Carmelite Spain Pilgrimage

Spiritual Director: Fr. Matthew MacDonald

Spiritual Director: Fr. Justin Cinnante

Group Leader: Penny Abbruzzese

June 20 – July 3, 2026

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“Pilgrimages are vital for a Christian’s life of faith”– Pope Leo XIV

Fatima & the Carmelite Spain Pilgrimage

Spiritual Director:

Fr. Matthew MacDonald

Spiritual Director:

Fr. Justin Cinnante

Group Leader: Penny Abbruzzese

June 20 – July 3, 2026

MM062026

Lisbon · Santarem · Fatima · Avila · Segovia · Avila · Alba de Tormes · Salamanca · Malagon · Baeza · Ubeda · Granada · Sevilla · Cordoba · Toledo · Madrid

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Book your trip now

Lisbon · Santarem · Fatima · Avila · Segovia · Avila · Alba de Tormes · Salamanca · Malagon · Baeza · Ubeda · Granada · Sevilla · Cordoba · Toledo · Madrid

Fr. Matthew MacDonald

Fr. Justin Cinnante

Penny Abbruzzese

DATES & PRICES
Any Questions? Contact Us:
Liz
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Your trip includes

  • Round-trip airfare from your desired Airport
  • Prepaid seat assignments
  • Airport Taxes and Fuel Surcharges
  • Hotel accommodations: (or similar) in double occupancy
      ~ 2 nights: Jun 21 - 23: Hotel Santa Maria, Fatima, Portugal
      ~ 3 nights: Jun 23 - 26: Parador de Ávila, Avila, Spain
      ~ 2 nights: Jun 26 - 28: Hotel Puerta de la Luna, Baeza, Spain
      ~ 1 night: Jun 28 - 29: NH Collection Granada Victoria, Granada, Spain
      ~ 2 nights: Jun 29 - Jul 1: Hotel Bécquer, Seville, Spain
      ~ 1 night: Jul 1 - 2: Hotel San Juan de los Reyes, Toledo, Spain
      ~ 1 night: Jul 2 - 3: Catalonia Atocha, Madrid, Spain
  • Breakfast and Dinner daily
  • Mineral water with dinners
  • Transfers as per itinerary
  • Transportation by air-conditioned motor coach
  • Whisper headsets
  • Assistance of a professional local Guide
  • Sightseeing and admissions fees as per itinerary
  • Tips to Hotel Staff and Restaurants
  • Mass daily & Spiritual activities
  • Luggage handling (1 piece per person)
  • Flight bag & Digital PDF confirmation of all travel documents
  • Tips to your guide and driver
Centrally located hotels or similar
Hotel Santa Maria
Fatima, Portugal
Parador de Ávila
Avila, Spain
Hotel Puerta de la Luna
Baeza, Spain
NH Collection Granada Victoria
Granada, Spain
Hotel Bécquer
Seville, Spain
Hotel San Juan de los Reyes
Toledo, Spain
Catalonia Atocha
Madrid, Spain
Not Included
  • Lunches and beverages not mentioned.
Optional
Travel Protection

Providing you coverage for situations that may arise during your trip, including medical and dental emergencies, loss of luggage, trip delay, and so much more.

Cancel For Any Reason Waiver

A Cancellation Waiver – allowing you to cancel your trip and receive a refund anytime – up until 48 hours prior to departure.

Itinerary

Day 1 | Saturday, June 20: Depart for Lisbon

Make your way to your local airport, where you will board your overnight flight(s). Your meals will be served on board.

Day 2 | Sunday, June 21: Arrive Lisbon – Santarem – Fatima

Upon landing at Lisbon Airport, and after claiming your baggage, proceed to the arrival’s hall, where you will be greeted by your tour guide and/or driver. Enjoy a panoramic tour of Lisbon and continue to the old city of Santarem. In Santarem we will visit and attend Mass at the Church of St. Stephen, which holds the oldest (13th century) recorded Eucharistic Miracle in Portugal. The Miracle occurred when a woman yearned to change the ways of her unfaithful husband and consulted a sorceress. The sorceress agreed that she would cure the husband’s infidelity in exchange for a consecrated Host. The woman committed the sacrilege, but when she exited the church, the Host began to bleed. It bled so much that her fellow parishioners thought she had cut her hand. The woman ran home and hid the bleeding Host in a trunk. When her husband arrived home, the wife told him what she had done, and later that night there was a light emanating from the trunk. She and her husband began to kneel before the trunk. The following morning, the husband and wife brought the Host to the parish priest. It was then moved to the Church of St. Stephen where another miracle occurred; the miraculous Host was originally put in a wax container, however, when a priest opened the tabernacle to view the Host, the container was found broken, and the Host was found enclosed in a crystal pyx. Continuation of the journey to Fatima.

Day 3 | Monday, June 22: In Fatima

Today will surely be a memorable experience, as you pray and meditate upon one of Our Blessed Mother’s apparition sites. Our Lady appeared to three shepherd children; Lucia (age 10), Jacinta (age 7), and Francisco (age 9). These apparitions occurred monthly from May until October of 1917. Historically, as the entire world was in true turmoil, Our Lady’s most prominent message during this time was to pray for world peace. The destruction of the world at that point in history was also mentioned by Our Lady in her messages of Fatima, and more specifically, in her second secret to the children. Our profoundly reflective day begins with a visit to the Little Chapel of the Apparitions. This simple, yet modern, chapel is the site where the Virgin Mary first appeared on May 13, 1917. Continue with a visit to the stunning neoclassical church, the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary. This Sacred space contains the tombs of St. Francisco, St. Jacinta, and Sister Lucia. View the monument that commemorates the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in the square. Due to Our Lady’s consistency in Her messages to pray the Rosary, this Basilica also features fifteen altars, dedicated to the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary. While in the Basilica, you will be able to feel, through the Love of Our Lord and Lady, the many graces that were received here. Visit the Museum with the exhibition: Fatima: Light and Peace. Continue with a visit to the Holy Trinity Basilica. After free time for lunch, we will experience Christ’s unconditional love by participating in the Stations of the Cross along the Via Sacra. The “Sacred Way” marks the path taken by the shepherd children of Fatima to their first apparition with Our Lady. It is composed of fifteen small chapels in commemoration of the Passion of Our Lord. The fifteenth station, the Resurrection, can be found close to the Chapel of Calvary, dedicated to St. Stephen, King of Hungary. The day ends with a visit to Valinhos, the site of Our Lady’s August 1917 apparition and the first and third apparition of the Angel. Your night will conclude with private devotions, and a candlelight procession, requested by Our Lady (1917). Enjoy dinner and a comfortable night’s rest in Fatima.

Day 4 | Tuesday, June 23: Fatima – Avila

Depart Fatima and head to Avila. Upon arrival in Avila, you will immediately notice the perfectly preserved eleventh-century walls surrounding the old town. The conservation of architecture in this city, to which St. Teresa was born, deems its shrines, convents, and churches necessary to visit any Catholic pilgrimage. The Cathedral de Avila encompasses the Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance styles of its time with its artwork and architecture. La Basilica de San Vicente in Avila stands on the site of the martyrdom of St. Vincent. Visit the Incarnation Convent, where St. Teresa became a nun. Saint Teresa convinced Saint John of the Cross to reform the male Carmelite order, the reform she started when she met Saint John in Medina del Campo. Dinner and overnight in Avila.

Day 5 | Wednesday, June 24: Avila – Segovia – Avila

After breakfast, we will depart for a visit to the town of Segovia. Segovia is the town where Saint John of the Cross was buried. Segovia is a relatively small city strategically situated on a rock ridge. It is deeply and haughtily Castilian, with a panoply of squares and mansions from its days of Golden Age grandeur – it was once a royal resort and a base for the Cortes (parliament). It was in Segovia that Isabel La Católica was proclaimed queen of Castilla. We will find numerous impressive monuments and buildings inside its medieval walls, including the Roman aqueduct: Segovia Acueducto. It was built at the end of the first century during the reigns of the Emperors Nerva and Trajan. Over 800m long, it is supported by 166 arches and 120 pillars and stands up without a drop of mortar or cement. You will also see the Cathedral, the last major Gothic building in Spain; the Alcázar, an extraordinary fantasy castle, with its narrow towers and flurry of turrets; the Vera Cruz church, built by the Templar Knights; the synagogue, very similar in style to Santa María la Blanca in Toledo; and many Romanesque churches such as San Millán, San Justo, San Martín, and more. Return to Avila for a delicious dinner and a restful overnight.

Day 6 | Thursday, June 25: Avila – Alba de Tormes – Salamanca – Avila

The day will begin with breakfast in the hotel. In the morning we will do an excursion to the surroundings of Avila including a visit to the town of Alba de Tormes and the city of Salamanca. Alba de Tormes is where St. Teresa died in 1582 and where she is buried. In the museum of the Carmelite Convent of the Annunciation, we will be able to see the incorrupt heart and left arm of the Saint. It was in Salamanca that Saint John of the Cross studied Theology and was ordained priest and where Santa Teresa founded the Carmelite Convent in 1570. For four centuries Salamanca was the seat of one of the most prestigious universities in the world and, despite losing this reputation in the XVII Century, it has kept the unmistakable atmosphere of being a seat of learning. It is a small place, and it is given a gorgeous harmony by the golden sandstone of which almost the entire city seems to be constructed. The city’s architectural sights seem endless: two cathedrals – one Gothic, the other Romanesque – vie for attention with Renaissance palaces and gems of Plateresque decoration. The Plaza Mayor is the finest in Spain, and the surviving university buildings are tremendous throughout – all of them distinguished by the same warm stone. Today we will visit this impressive and beautiful city. The grand Plaza Mayor is the hub of Salmantine life with the vast Baroque church of La Clerecía, the Casa de las Conchas (House of Shells, named after the rows of carved scallop shells symbol of the pilgrimage to Santiago which decorate its façade), the University, the cathedrals, the Roman Bridge, San Marcos, San Martin churches, and much more. We will wrap up the day with dinner and an overnight stay in Avila.

Day 7 | Friday, June 26: Avila – Malagon – Baeza

We will begin the day with breakfast in the hotel, and then we will depart towards the South of Spain. On our way to Baeza, we will make stop in Malagon where we will find the Carmelite Convent founded by Santa Teresa in April 1568. We will continue on to Baeza for a delicious dinner and a restful overnight.

Day 8 | Saturday, June 27: Baeza – Ubeda – Baeza

The day will begin with breakfast in the hotel. We will spend the day visiting different places related to both Saints. In Baeza Saint John of the Cross worked like a teacher in its famous university, and in 1591 he died in Ubeda. Both cities, designated World Heritage sites by UNESCO, preserve magnificent buildings and monuments in their medieval and renaissance quarters: Incarnation Convent, Jabalquinto Palace, San Pablo Church, the Cathedral, Salvador Church, Santa Maria Church, and more. In Beas de Segura we will find the first convent founded by Saint Teresa in Andalucia (South of Spain) that holds many relics of both doctors of the Church. In Villanueva del Arzobispo we will visit the Sanctuary of La Fuensanta where Saint John of the Cross lived after running away from Toledo’s jail, helped by Saint Teresa. Return to Baeza for a delicious dinner and a restful overnight.

Day 9 | Sunday, June 28: Baeza – Granada

Our day will begin with breakfast in the hotel before departing toward Granada. Saint John of the Cross was Prior in Granada for many years and we will be able to follow in his steps in the city. In the afternoon we will visit one of the most beautiful palaces in the World: The Alhambra Palace. The meaning of the word Alhambra is “the red fort” and comes from its reddish walls. The Alhambra was a palace, a citadel, a fortress, and the home of the Nasrid sultans, high government officials, servants of the court, and elite soldiers (from the 13th to the 14th century). Today, the monument is divided into four main areas: the Palaces, the military zone of Alcazaba, the city of Medina, and the agricultural estate of the Generalife. Beautiful woods, gardens, and orchards surround all of these areas. Other notable buildings belonging to a different period are also included, such as the Renaissance-style Palace of Charles V, which houses the Alhambra Museum (most of the items are from the site of the monument) and the Fine Art Museum. In the evening we will enjoy a beautiful view of the Alhambra from the San Nicholas viewpoint. The day will come to a close with dinner and an overnight in Granada.

Day 10 | Monday, June 29: Granada – Sevilla

Following an early breakfast, we will continue with the visit to downtown Granada where will we find the Cathedral and its Royal Chapel where the Catholic Monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand are buried. In the afternoon we will depart toward the city of Seville. Seville has important monuments and an illustrious history, but it’s essentially famous for its living self, the greatest city of the Spanish South, of Carmen, Don Juan, and Figaro, and the archetype of Andalucian promise. This reputation for gaiety and brilliance, for theatrically and intensity of life, does seem deserved. The city is bisected by the Río Guadalquivir. The old city takes up the east bank and at its heart stand three great monuments: the Giralda Tower, the minaret of the old mosque; the Cathedral, built in the XV Century in Gothic style; and the Alcázar, the Moorish palaces. We will also find the Barrio de Santa Cruz, the medieval Jewish quarter, and now the heart of tourist life. The day will end with dinner and an overnight stay in Seville.

Day 11 | Tuesday, June 30: Sevilla

We will begin the day with breakfast in the hotel. Today we will enjoy a half-day tour of Seville, the capital of Andalucia, and the site of the Cathedral of Saint Mary, the largest Cathedral in Spain and the third largest in Christendom. It is here where Santa Teresa established her 11th foundation in 1575, and it is in the Carmelite Convent of Saint Joseph that the original autographed copy of Saint Teresa’s Interior Castle is kept. The day will come to a close with dinner and an overnight in Seville.

Day 12 | Wednesday, July 1: Sevilla – Cordoba – Toledo

The day will begin with breakfast in the hotel, then we will board our bus and make our way towards Madrid. On the way, we will visit Cordoba. The city of Córdoba lies upstream from Sevilla beside a loop of the Guadalquivir River, which was once navigable as far as here. Today it is a minor provincial capital, prosperous in a modest sort of way. Once, however, it was the largest city of Roman Spain, and for three centuries it formed the heart of the western Islamic Empire, the great medieval caliphate of the Moors. It is from this era that the city’s major monument dates: the Mezquita-Catedral (Mosque-Cathedral) – the grandest and most beautiful mosque ever constructed by the Moors in Spain. It stands right in the center of the city, surrounded by the old Jewish and Moorish quarters, and is a building of extraordinary mystical and aesthetic power. Apart from the Mezquita, we will walk through the Jewish quarter and visit its synagogue. the day will come to a close with dinner and an overnight in Toledo.

Day 13 | Thursday, July 2: Toledo - Madrid

Following breakfast, we will visit the Imperial City of Toledo where Saint John of the Cross was imprisoned by the Inquisition. Toledo sits on a rocky mound isolated on three sides by a looping gorge of the Río Tajo. Every available inch of this outcrop has been built upon: churches, synagogues, mosques, and houses are heaped upon one another in a haphazard spiral which the cobbled lanes infiltrate as best they can. Toledo is known as the City of the Three Religions or Cultures because for many centuries the Christians, the Moors, and the Jews lived together in relative equality and peace. The city, surrounded by walls, hides great treasures: its awesome Cathedral, robust Gothic construction which took over 250 years (1227 – 1493) to complete; the church of Santo Tomé, where the Greco’s masterpiece is located – The Burial of Mr. Orgaz; the Tránsito Synagogue that houses the Museo Sefardita; Santa María La Blanca Synagogue; the superb church of San Juan de los Reyes, with its exterior bizarrely festooned with the chains worn by the Christians prisoners from Granada released on the reconquest of the city; the different doors that keep the city safe: Puerta de Bisagras, Puerta del Cambrón, Puerta del Sol; and more. After a full day, we will continue on to Madrid for a delicious dinner and a restful overnight.

Day 14 | Friday, July 3: Madrid - Return Home

After breakfast, and with memories that will last a lifetime, we will board our bus that will bring us to the airport for our return flight home.

*206 Tours Disclaimer:
Occasionally local religious and national holidays, weather, traffic conditions and other events may necessitate changes in the sequence of events or the missing of certain events/places. Though every effort will be made to follow the itinerary, it should be considered as an indication, rather than a contract of events and places to be visited.

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Let us know at the time of registration if you would like to arrive earlier, or stay later, than the scheduled tour dates, and pending availability, we will change your airline reservations accordingly, additional fees may apply. Pre- and/or post-stays at the hotel will cost an additional fee. These options should be available to you when registering online, or simply contact us: sales@206tours.com

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$500.00 Deposit is due at the time of Registration

*If within 90 days prior to departure, Full Payment is due at time of Registration.

About your trip

About the Fatima

The Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima is one of most famous Marian shrines in the world. 4 million Pilgrims visit Fatima each year! Many are drawn by the apparitions of the Virgin Mary to the three local shepherd children, in 1917. The Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to the shepherd children on the 13th day of six consecutive months in 1917, starting on May 13th until October 13th. The events at Fatima gained fame due to their elements of prophecy and eschatology, particularly with regard to possible world war and the conversion of Russia.

About Spain

Saint Teresa and Saint Ingatius both hailed from Spain. Saint Teresa of Ávila, also called Saint Teresa of Jesus, was a prominent Spanish mystic, Carmelite nun, and writer. Saint Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight who became priest and found the Society of Jesus and became its first Superior General.

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About your trip

About the Fatima

The Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima is one of most famous Marian shrines in the world. 4 million Pilgrims visit Fatima each year! Many are drawn by the apparitions of the Virgin Mary to the three local shepherd children, in 1917. The Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to the shepherd children on the 13th day of six consecutive months in 1917, starting on May 13th until October 13th. The events at Fatima gained fame due to their elements of prophecy and eschatology, particularly with regard to possible world war and the conversion of Russia.

About Spain

Saint Teresa and Saint Ingatius both hailed from Spain. Saint Teresa of Ávila, also called Saint Teresa of Jesus, was a prominent Spanish mystic, Carmelite nun, and writer. Saint Ignatius of Loyola was a Spanish knight who became priest and found the Society of Jesus and became its first Superior General.

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Any questions?  Contact Us:
Liz