Best price guaranteed
when booking directly through our website
More flexibility
for cancellations, and changes of dates or accommodations
Direct dealings without intermediaries
Clear and personalized communication with the customer
A cookie is a file that is downloaded to the user's computer/smartphone/tablet when accessing certain web pages to store and retrieve information about the browsing that is carried out from that device.
Technically, cookies are arbitrary pieces of data defined by the web server and sent to the browser. The browser returns them to the server without modification, thus reflecting a state (memory of previous events) in HTTP transactions, which would otherwise be independent of that state.
Without cookies, each request for a web page or a component of a web page would be an isolated event, unrelated to other requests from other pages on the same site. But by returning a cookie to the web server, the browser provides the server with a means of relating the current page request to previous page requests. In addition to being set by a web server, cookies can also be set by a script in a language such as JavaScript, if it is supported and enabled in the web browser.
Cookie specifications suggest that browsers should support a minimum number of cookies or a minimum amount of memory to store them. Specifically, a browser is expected to be able to store at least 300 cookies of 4 kilobytes each and at least 20 cookies per server or domain.
The server that sets the cookie can specify a deletion date, in which case the cookie will be deleted on that date. A shopping site might want to help potential customers by remembering the items in their shopping cart, even if they close their browser without making a purchase and return later, to avoid having to search for the products again. In that case, the server would create a cookie with a deletion date according to the website designer's wishes. If no deletion date is defined, the cookie is deleted when the user closes their browser. Therefore, defining a deletion date is a way to make the cookie survive between sessions. For this reason, cookies with a deletion date are called persistent cookies.
For more information about cookies, we suggest you visit the following link: http://www.iabspain.net/privacidadeninternet/usuario.
Strictly necessary
Information processed: User session, registration details, history of pages visited.
Purpose: Management of user registration and session maintenance, personalization of navigation, load balancing.
Analytics
Google Analytics:
Information processed: Websites visited and browsing time, website leading to the site, searches performed.
Purpose: Statistical reports on how users find the website, how they use it, and whether it is functioning correctly.
The information obtained through these cookies, referring to the user's computer, may be combined with your personal data only if you are registered on this website. The user may, at any time, choose which cookies they want to work on this website by disabling Cookies:
Browser settings; for example:
Chrome http://support.google.com/chrome/bin/answer.py?hl=es&answer=95647
Explorer http://windows.microsoft.com/es-es/windows7/how-to-manage-cookies-in-internet-explorer-9
Firefox http://support.mozilla.org/es/kb/habilitar-y-deshabilitar-cookies-que-los-sitios-we
Safari http://support.apple.com/kb/ph5042
Opt-out systems specific to the cookie in question (these systems may involve installing a "rejection" cookie on your computer to enable your opt-out choice to work); or
Other third-party tools, available online, that allow users to detect cookies on each website they visit and manage their deactivation (for example, Ghostery: http://www.ghostery.com/privacy-statement, http://www.ghostery.com/faq).