Street art varies meaningfully across Europe. Here's the honest sort.
Tier 1 — destinations on their own
- Berlin: The European street-art capital. East Side Gallery, Kreuzberg, Neukölln, Friedrichshain.
- Lisbon: Bairro Alto, Mouraria, LX Factory. Vhils tiles distinctive.
- Porto: Galeria de Paris area, Rua de Miguel Bombarda.
- Athens: Exarcheia, Psyrri, Metaxourgeio. Among Europe's densest political street art.
- Bristol, UK: Banksy's hometown.
Tier 2 — strong street art scenes
- Hamburg Sternschanze: Punk-leftist murals.
- Amsterdam Jordaan + NDSM: Industrial-area murals.
- Valencia El Carmen: Dense street-art lanes.
- Bologna university quarter: Strong scene.
- Tirana, Albania: Recent murals project.
Tier 3 — niche but interesting
- Naples Quartieri Spagnoli: Maradona murals + political.
- Sofia, Belgrade: Eastern European street art tradition.
- Wrocław, Poland: The famous dwarves are everywhere.
- Brussels: Comic-strip murals (Tintin) + contemporary.
Strategy
Street-art quality decays in tourist-targeted areas (Barcelona's El Born is now generic). The real scenes are in non-tourist neighborhoods with universities or alternative culture. Walking tours led by local artists are the best access.