Canary Islands

What to do in Canary Islands

Plans, activities and things to see in Canary Islands

About Canary Islands

The Canary Islands are seven volcanic islands in the Atlantic, each with a distinct character that shapes outdoor activities in different ways. Tenerife holds the greatest number of mountain trails, with Teide at 3,715 metres as the central landmark: the path through the caldera offers views of the main crater and the sea of clouds formed by the trade winds in summer. La Palma, a UNESCO biosphere reserve, attracts cyclists and hikers through the ravines of the north and the Caldera de Taburiente...

Highlights

  • • Hiking to Teide (3,715 m) with views above the cloud layer
  • • Surfing and kitesurfing in Fuerteventura with year-round constant winds
  • • Diving in volcanic underwater caves in Lanzarote
  • • Whale and dolphin watching in the Tenerife-La Gomera channel
  • • Hiking through laurel forest in La Palma, La Gomera and El Hierro
  • • Cycling across the summits of Gran Canaria and Tenerife

Best time to visit

The Canary Islands work year-round. Hiking and climbing: best in spring (March-May) and autumn (September-November) at 18-22°C. Surfing: November-March in Fuerteventura and Lanzarote. Whale watching: June-October off Tenerife.

Practical tips

Book the Teide summit permit weeks in advance — they fill up fast. Bring warm layers even if you start in a t-shirt, as wind at altitude changes in minutes. For diving in El Hierro, contact local dive centres before you arrive: the Marine Reserve has quotas. In Fuerteventura, northerly winds can make certain spots inaccessible even in good season — check real-time forecasts.