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| Where Was ‘Berlin and the Lady With an Ermine’ Filmed? Inside the Stunning Spain Locations Behind Netflix’s 2026 Heist Series. (Credits: Netflix) |
Berlin and the Lady With an Ermine did not just return with another stylish robbery, chaotic mastermind energy and enough expensive coats to bankrupt half of Europe. The 2026 Netflix series also quietly transformed Spain into a cinematic playground full of cathedrals, royal streets, futuristic buildings and suspiciously attractive criminals walking around like they own the country. Honestly, if this series did not immediately make viewers search “cheap flights to Spain”, the production team probably failed their mission.
Created by Álex Pina and Esther Martínez Lobato, the second chapter of the Berlin universe expanded far beyond luxury vaults and dramatic speeches. This time, the story followed Berlin and his team attempting to pull off an elaborate fake theft involving Leonardo da Vinci’s legendary Lady with an Ermine painting while clashing with the wealthy Duke of Málaga and his wife.
Naturally, the entire thing unfolds in cities so visually gorgeous that viewers almost forget everyone on screen is lying every five minutes. Like many major Netflix productions, not every filming location was publicly disclosed during production.
Several areas were intentionally kept private while cameras rolled in order to stop stalker fans, leaked footage hunters and random tourists from accidentally wandering into active filming zones asking where Berlin was standing three minutes earlier. Still, enough locations eventually surfaced to prove this series basically used Spain as one giant heist set.
The heart of the production was undeniably Seville, the Andalusian city that became the emotional and visual centre of the series. The warm golden lighting, narrow historic streets and dramatic old-world architecture gave the show its seductive atmosphere.
Much of Berlin’s planning, manipulation and theatrical chaos unfolded around the city’s famous historic quarters. The production reportedly filmed around the Santa Cruz district, where twisting alleyways and hidden courtyards perfectly matched the show’s secretive energy.
Fans online joked that every corner of Seville looked like “a place where someone either falls in love or gets robbed politely”. Several scenes were also filmed around the breathtaking Plaza de España, one of the most visually recognisable spots in the city.
The enormous semi-circular complex added grand cinematic scale to the series, especially during large exterior sequences involving Berlin’s crew moving through crowded public spaces while pretending not to look suspicious. Which, to be fair, becomes difficult when your group dresses like an editorial fashion campaign.
The production also incorporated Real Alcázar of Seville, whose intricate Moorish-inspired interiors added aristocratic elegance to scenes tied to the Duke and Duchess. Viewers immediately compared certain sequences to historical fantasy dramas because the palace looked almost unreal on screen.
Meanwhile, portions around Metropol Parasol, also known as Las Setas, helped ground the story in modern Seville with a sleek urban contrast against the city’s older architecture.
The series then moved into Madrid, which once again became central to the expanding Berlin universe. Spain’s capital delivered a colder, more corporate atmosphere compared to Seville’s romantic heat.
The production reportedly used areas around Gran Vía, where neon lights, historic facades and endless crowds created ideal conditions for tense chase scenes and secret meetings.
Several viewers online laughed that the characters somehow managed to plan international-level crimes while casually walking through one of the busiest streets in Spain without anyone noticing.
Filming also took place around Plaza Mayor, where classic Madrid architecture gave several episodes a refined old-European atmosphere. Meanwhile, sequences around Atocha Station added urgency and movement to the series’ travel-heavy narrative. The station’s massive structure became the backdrop for key transition scenes involving Berlin’s team relocating across Spain. Some fans even claimed they recognised exact train platforms before immediately rewatching episodes to confirm their detective work.
Another standout location was San Sebastián, located in Spain’s Basque Country. The coastal city brought an entirely different visual tone to the series. Elegant seaside promenades, luxurious hotels and cinematic ocean views made the city feel less like a crime series setting and more like a very expensive perfume commercial interrupted by criminals. The production reportedly filmed around La Concha Beach, where several quieter character moments unfolded against dramatic coastal scenery.
The series also captured footage around Monte Igueldo, whose elevated views over San Sebastián added scale and atmosphere to exterior shots. Fans online were quick to point out that even Berlin’s emotionally complicated moments somehow still looked aggressively stylish.
Another major filming site was Peñíscola, the coastal town famous for its medieval fortress and sea-facing old town. The production used the city’s fortified streets and stone architecture to create tension-heavy sequences tied to secret exchanges and hidden operations. Several scenes reportedly took place around Peñíscola Castle, whose towering structure overlooking the Mediterranean instantly became one of the most talked-about visual backdrops in the series.
The narrow cobbled streets surrounding the fortress gave the production a naturally cinematic environment. Viewers joked that every character walking through Peñíscola looked like they were either escaping danger or modelling for a luxury watch advertisement.
The production later expanded into Barcelona, because apparently the show decided ordinary filming ambition was not enough. Barcelona’s blend of Gothic architecture and modernist landmarks became essential to the series’ stylish identity. Exterior shots reportedly featured areas around La Rambla, where crowded pedestrian streets heightened the tension during surveillance scenes and undercover meetings.
Several moments also showcased the iconic Sagrada Família, whose towering unfinished structure added visual drama to skyline sequences. Other scenes reportedly incorporated Casa Milà, Arc de Triomf and sections of the Gothic Quarter, where Berlin’s world of deception blended seamlessly with the city’s layered architectural history.
One particularly memorable addition was Palau de la Música Catalana, whose extravagant interiors reportedly appeared during elite social gathering scenes involving wealthy art collectors and powerful figures tied to the central heist. The location looked so luxurious that viewers online said the room itself “probably costs more than the robbery”.
The series also spent time in Pamplona, where production crews transformed sections of the city into active filming zones. Streets including Calle Jarauta, Calle San Nicolás and Calle Amaya appeared heavily throughout several episodes. The production even redesigned spaces around Plaza de la Libertad and Plaza San Juan de la Cadena to fit the show’s criminal underworld aesthetic.
Historic landmarks such as Pamplona Cathedral, San Nicolás Church and Pamplona City Hall appeared in the background of multiple exterior shots, giving the city a rich old-European atmosphere. Fans praised the production for using Pamplona beyond the usual tourist postcard imagery, while locals online seemed equally amused and confused watching familiar bars suddenly become part of an international heist series.
Meanwhile, Valencia delivered some of the series’ most visually striking sequences. The production heavily utilised the futuristic Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias, whose white curved structures looked almost too sci-fi for reality. The famous Hemisfèric and Assut de l’Or Bridge became major visual highlights, reinforcing the sleek modern tone of Berlin’s operations.
At the same time, the series balanced that futuristic atmosphere with scenes in Ciutat Vella, Valencia’s historic old town district. Traditional festival imagery inspired by Las Falles reportedly appeared throughout several sequences, bringing fire, colour and organised chaos into the narrative. Which, honestly, feels extremely on-brand for this franchise.
The production also moved into Valencia’s surrounding countryside, filming around Villahermosa del Río and the dramatic landscapes near Tous Reservoir. Rocky terrain, rivers and isolated roads helped create some of the series’ most suspenseful moments. Several viewers online described these scenes as feeling “less Netflix crime drama and more European cinema with very attractive thieves”.
What made Berlin and the Lady With an Ermine stand out visually was not just the number of filming locations, but how naturally each city reflected the mood of the story. Seville delivered heat and seduction, Madrid brought pressure and ambition, Barcelona added elegance, while Valencia looked like the future arrived early and decided to become architecture.
Fan reactions to the filming locations have been wildly divided in the funniest possible way. Some viewers praised the production for turning Spain into a character itself, while others joked that the series was secretly a tourism campaign disguised as organised crime entertainment. Travel forums quickly filled with people planning unofficial filming-location tours, while social media users argued over which city looked best on screen. Seville supporters claimed the city “won the series visually”, while Barcelona fans immediately refused to accept defeat.
And honestly, they all have a point. Every location in the series somehow looked cinematic enough to trigger travel envy. So if you suddenly find yourself researching flights to Spain after watching Berlin casually commit another impossible robbery beside ancient cathedrals and luxury coastlines, just know you are absolutely not alone. Which filming spot would you actually visit first — the royal streets of Seville, futuristic Valencia, coastal San Sebastián or chaotic Barcelona? Fans are already debating it everywhere, and the arguments are getting almost as dramatic as the series itself.
