With pear trees in bloom, mild temperatures, and streets brimming with things to do, Madrid kicks off spring with one of the city’s legendary markets. This Holy Week, Recoletos transforms into an open-air stroll showcasing the finest Spanish craftsmanship. From March 23 through April 12, the 4th Holy Week Craft Fair fills this stretch of the Prado-Recoletos axis with stalls featuring ceramics, textiles, jewelry, glass, leather, and leather goods, in an event that brings together 56 creators from across the country and also raffles off 1,500 euros in vouchers to be spent directly at the stands.newspaper.
Organized by the Municipal Council of Centro and the Madrid Association of Artisan Trades (AMOA), the fair serves as a major showcase for contemporary crafts right in the heart of Madrid’s cultural district. The promenade is filled with wooden booths open from 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., without interruption, where each artisan displays unique pieces far removed from mass production: signature tableware, textile accessories, handmade jewelry, crafted glass, and leather bags and goods with their own distinctive style. The City Council emphasizes that the goal is to champion manual labor as an alternative to fast consumption and to highlight fine materials and meticulous craftsmanship.
A craft market in the center of Madrid

One of the highlights of this edition is the raffle for vouchers totaling 1,500 euros, designed to encourage shopping and get the public truly involved with artisanal commerce. The process is simple: through the fair’s official profiles and those of Artesanía de Madrid on Instagram and Facebook, you can win vouchers that are then redeemed at the stalls themselves, turning the prize into ceramics, jewelry, clothing, home decor, or leather goods. It’s a direct way to support creators and, at the same time, turn a casual stroll into a special purchase for Holy Week or for the upcoming spring-summer season.
Right in the heart of Madrid, between Cibeles and Colón, Recoletos transforms for three weeks into a corridor of crafts where ceramics coexist with textiles, glass with leather, and jewelry with leather goods, offering one of the most peaceful and unique experiences of this year’s Holy Week in the capital.