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The best Canary Islands to visit – and how to choose the right one for you

This alluring archipelago has a reputation as a great winter sun destination for a fly-and-flop break, but there’s more than meets the eye

A church bell tolls as locals order another espresso and settle in for a chat in the palm-shaded village square. A surfer jogs down smooth golden sands to catch the morning’s waves. A hiker shields their eyes from the rising sun as they reach a volcano’s summit. These may not be scenes you’d expect from the Canary Islands, but times have changed, and so has this archipelago. 
Take the beaches. Some are lively with holidaymakers, of course, but others are so quiet that you’ll make the day’s first footprints. Then there’s the landscape, its staggering variety taking in volcanoes rising to over 10,000 feet and dense subtropical rainforests, arid lava flows and lush banana plantations. 
There’s also incredible food, from grilled fish you’ll pull from the bone with salty fingers to Michelin-starred tasting menus you’ll be talking about for months. Not to mention charming villages with cobbled streets, rooftop cocktail bars with Atlantic views and wine so delicious it’ll have you checking the post-Brexit customs rules to see what you can bring home. 
Value-focused travellers have long known that the Canaries offer excellent bang for your buck, but more discerning holidaymakers have recently started to discover this archipelago and a raft of chic hotels and stylish villas stand ready to accommodate them. 
Here’s our guide to finding the right Canarian holiday for you.
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Best for endless activity
Tenerife is the biggest, boldest Canary, rearing up from the Atlantic like a hulking, jet-black pyramid as you fly in, then dazzling you with everything from waterparks and zoos to Michelin dining and exuberant nightlife. Here you can take a cable car to stand atop Spain’s highest peak, Mount Teide volcano (volcanoteide.com; from £19.60), dance through the night at the world’s second-largest carnival (after Rio) and delve beneath the volcanic landscape at the Cueva del Viento lava tubes (cuevadelviento.net; £17).
In the sun-drenched south, you’ll find luxurious hotels with oceanfront pools, sweeping beaches with sand imported from the Sahara (the natural beaches here are black) and the fabulous Siam Park waterpark (siampark.net; £38.30). Meanwhile, the north has an altogether more laidback air, with its swimming spots quieter, its landscape greener, and its ancient towns home to tapas bars and churches.
If you head north, check in to the elegant Hotel Botanico, for Teide views from your balcony and a Thai-themed spa garden (hotelbotanico.com; double rooms from £236 including breakfast). The south’s top pick is the adults-only Royal Hideaway Corales Beach, with a rooftop infinity pool and Michelin-starred restaurant El Rincón de Juan Carlos (barcelo.com; double rooms from £285 including breakfast). Rather book a self-catering break? The Canarian hamlet of Hacienda El Terrero on the north coast has a rustic-chic style and beautiful Atlantic views (haciendaelterrero.com; sleep two to four from £93). 
How to get there: There are regular direct flights to Tenerife South from the UK with airlines including BA (ba.com), EasyJet (easyjet.com) and Jet2 (jet2.com), with at least one daily departure from both London and Manchester. Flight time is around four and a half hours. Tenerife has a second airport, Tenerife North, but there are currently no direct flights from the UK. 
Plan the perfect trip with our Tenerife travel guide.
Best for variety
Gran Canaria and Tenerife may tussle over which island makes the better holiday destination but there’s little between them when it comes to top-notch hotels, sandy beaches or places to eat – especially now that both have Michelin-starred restaurants from the ground-breaking Canarian-born Padrón brothers with Poemas in Las Palmas (restaurantepoemas.com; tasting menu £76.70). 
Compared to Tenerife, Gran Canaria probably has the more enticing capital; Las Palmas boasts the lively urban beach of Las Canteras, plus a stylish bar and restaurant scene. In the island’s south, the dunes of Maspalomas stretch for some two miles and run down to calm waters ideal for a dip. There’s smashing hiking on Gran Canaria too, with trails up to the rock stack of Roque Nublo and around the crater edge of Caldera de Bandama. Then there are the ancient cave paintings at Gáldar (cuevapintada.com; £5.10) and the cave houses of Artenara.
Base yourself in Las Palmas at the opulent five-star hotel Santa Catalina, a Royal Hideaway (barcelo.com; double rooms from £130 including breakfast), which dates from 1890 and boasts a rooftop pool. Alternatively, head to the other end of the island and stay in a room with a view of the Maspalomas dunes at the stylish Seaside Palm Beach in Meloneras (hotel-palm-beach.com; double rooms from £236 including breakfast). Close by is beachside Villa Sisao with its own private pool, garden and direct access to the promenade (oliverstravels.com; sleeps eight from £6,510 a week). 
How to get there: There are regular direct flights to Gran Canaria from many major UK airports including Manchester, Stansted and Bristol with airlines including Jet2, Vueling (vueling.com) and Ryanair (ryanair.com). Flight time is around four and a half hours.
Best for style
Lanzarote can thank César Manrique for saving it from the rampant mid-20th-century development that blighted some other Spanish holiday destinations. The island-born architect and all-around style authority insisted on no high-rise buildings and no billboards – and also designed some truly fabulous spaces. Check out his Jameos del Agua, a concert hall and restaurant sculpted from lava caves (cactlanzarote.com; £12.80), and don’t miss a stroll through his Jardín de Cactus, a striking garden that features some 4,500 cacti (cactlanzarote.com; £6.80). You can also visit Manrique’s utterly unique home and studio in Haría, which remains as he left it on his death in 1992 (fcmanrique.org; £8.50). 
Lanzarote also has excellent beaches, from tot-friendly Playa Flamingo to blustery Playa de Famara, which is ideal for surfing. In the far south, the nature reserve of Papagayo is reached via a dirt track and strung with coves of golden sand. 
Lanzarote is also the islands’ top pick for wine touring; take a swing around the bodegas of La Geria (try Bermejo and El Grifo), picking up bottles of dry white malvasia volcánica as you go. 
For a five-star stay, try adults-only Paradisus Salinas Lanzarote in Costa Teguise, which Manrique himself had a hand in designing (melia.com; double from £322 all-inclusive). Self-catering is chic and sustainable at Finca de Arrieta eco-village where you’ll find a range of yurts (lanzaroteretreats.com; sleep three to eight from £68). Meanwhile ex-farmhouse Villa Guatiza, in the somnolent eponymous village, promises a private pool surrounded by tropical plants (stayone.com; sleeps four from £170). 
How to get there: There are regular direct flights to Lanzarote from many major UK airports including Gatwick, Edinburgh and Luton with BA, Vueling and EasyJet. Flight time is around four and a half hours.
Plan the perfect trip with our Lanzarote travel guide.
Best for beaches
Locals can argue endlessly over which Canary Island has the best beaches, but Fuerteventura will always quietly steal the crown. Although this is the second largest of the Canary Islands it receives just a fraction of the attention compared to some of its neighbours and yet it’s lined with the sort of ridiculously flawless white sands you’d expect to see on a screensaver. 
In the south, Playa de Cofete has a wild feel, its broad sands stretched flat between lofty cliffs on one side and turquoise waters on the other. Meanwhile, the north boasts the Corralejo dunes; a vast expanse of rippling beachscape worth crossing oceans for alone – its mile upon mile of buttery peaks that practically beg you to sprint down them, kicking up soft clouds as you go. 
Corralejo makes a great base, with its compact town centre arranged around a sheltered beach and its promenade of low-key restaurants serving the freshest catch of the day. From here you can take the ferry (navieranortour.com; £13.75) to neighbouring Isla de Lobos; a rugged uninhabited islet home to rare birds which offers some excellent snorkelling and short hiking trails, the best of which runs up Caldera mountain for views back over Fuerteventura. 
Families can stay in the centre of Corralejo at the sleek Barceló Corralejo Sands, which has a kid’s pool and mini club (barcelo.com; double rooms from £134 including breakfast). For grown-ups that don’t have little ones in tow, the relaxed feel of adults-only Avanti Lifestyle Hotel is for you with its promenade location and rooftop terrace (avantilifestylehotel.com; double rooms from £127 B&B). If you prefer to book a villa, opt for Oceanfront Villa Valhalla and you’ll get a private oceanfront garden with a pool and hot tub (airbnb.co.uk; sleeps 10 from £554). 
How to get there: There are regular direct flights to Fuerteventura from many major UK airports including Manchester, Gatwick and Birmingham with airlines including Ryanair, Jet2 and EasyJet. Flight time is around four and a half hours.
Best for natural wonders
The volcanic landscapes of the Canary Islands are far from dormant. La Palma experienced the islands’ most recent eruption in 2021, when the Cumbre Vieja volcanic ridge spewed lava and ash for 85 days straight, covering an area some 5 square miles in size. The fallout has been devastating (some 2,000 buildings were destroyed) but tourism remains the island’s lifeblood and the new volcano formed by the eruption now welcomes hikers to explore its slopes (guided tours only; islabonitatours.com; from £25.50). You can find out more about the island’s volcanic activity at Caños de Fuego Interpretation Centre where you can step inside a lava tube (lapalmacentrosturisticos.com; £6.80). 
It’s not La Palma’s terra firma that promises a natural show. With the island, one of the best places in the world to view the night sky, be sure not to miss an evening spent stargazing (islabonitatours.com; from £25.50). 
The island has never courted the mainstream package holiday market, making hotel options rather more limited than neighbouring islands. Laidback Hacienda San Jorge, with its lagoon-style pool surrounded by palms, is the pick of the hotels (hsanjorge.com; double rooms from £93). Villa La Palma takes self-catering to luxurious heights with its Bauhaus style and Atlantic-view infinity pool (welcomebeyond.com; sleeps six from £297). 
How to get there: Tui (tui.co.uk) flies weekly to La Palma direct from Gatwick and Manchester (Thursdays). It’s also possible to fly with Iberia (iberia.com) via Madrid a couple of times a week but you’ll have to clear immigration so a lengthy connection is advised. There are daily flights to La Palma from Tenerife South (bintercanarias.com). Alternatively, you can travel by ferry from Los Cristianos on Tenerife with Naviera Armas (navieraarmas.com) or Fred Olsen Express (fredolsen.es); multiple daily sailings from two and half hours. 
Best for dramatic beauty
La Gomera is so riven with ravines that the locals developed a whistling language (Silbo Gomero) to communicate across its dizzying terrain. Today hikers make the most of the jaw-dropping landscape, following well-marked trails through valleys burgeoning with subtropical plants and banana plantations that stretch to the sea. For keen drivers, meanwhile, there are numerous viewpoints to pull in and enjoy the show stopping views. Stay at Parador de la Gomera (paradores.es; double rooms from £85), perched on the cliffs above the capital San Sebastián with Atlantic views from the rooms and a swimming pool.
How to get there: Take the ferry from Los Cristianos on Tenerife with Naviera Armas or Fred Olsen Express; multiple daily sailings; 50 minutes.
Best for end-of-the-world vibes
Once considered the edge of the world, El Hierro feels very far from pretty much everywhere. Here you can walk across lava flows to secluded black-sand beaches, swim in volcanic rock pools and feast on tangy local goat’s cheese and just-caught prawns. Take an oceanview room at the Parador de El Hierro (paradores.es; double rooms from £75) and you can watch the sunrise above the Atlantic from your terrace, illuminating Teide on distant Tenerife. 
How to get there: Take the ferry from Los Cristianos on Tenerife with Naviera Armas; daily except Saturdays; two and a half hours.
Best for escaping everything
On La Graciosa, the streets are made from sand and the pace of life is languid. This is the place to sleep late, lunch long and snooze on the beach. Book a simple holiday cottage in Caleta de Sebo, such as the two-bedroom Casa Lola (airbnb.com; sleeps four from £428 for three nights) and get about by bike. You can peddle out to the buttery sands of Playa de las Conchas in about 20 minutes. 
How to get there: Take the ferry from Órzola on Lanzarote with Lineas Romero (lineasromero.com); multiple daily sailings; 30 minutes.
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If you’re keen on an experience that goes beyond the realms of the conventional Canary Island holiday, there is plenty to choose from. Here are five of the best. 
Get to grips with the volcanic Canarian landscape by striking out on two feet on a self-guided hiking holiday that takes in the highlights of both Tenerife and La Gomera. You’ll spend most of your time on La Gomera, hiking the island’s lush laurel forests and vertiginous valleys, but you can also summit Tenerife’s smouldering Mount Teide. 
Book it: Walks Worldwide (01962 302 085; walksworldwide.com) offers seven-night self-guided walking holidays to Tenerife and La Gomera from £1,149pp B&B, including flights, transfers and some dinners. 
See the islands from the water on a sailing holiday with G Adventures. Set sail from Tenerife and cruise westwards to La Gomera and La Palma, where there’s time to explore ashore. While at sea you can pitch in with the crew or just relax on deck. Once moored, there’s plenty of time for swimming. 
Book it: G Adventures (0207 313 6953; gadventures.com) offers six nights of sailing in the Canary Islands from £903pp excluding flights and meals.
Prefer not to fly? Hop aboard a P&O cruise and head for the Canaries from Southampton, calling at Madeira on the way out, Cadiz and Lisbon on the way back. The ship, Iona, has four pools, a spa and 30 restaurants and bars, with meals and entertainment included. You’ll get a full day ashore on each of Tenerife, Gran Canaria and Lanzarote.   
Book it: P&O Cruises (0344 338 8003; pocruises.com) offers 14-night cruises from £829pp full board. 
Combine walking and cycling on KE Adventure’s Lanzarote itinerary, which includes a hike through the incredible volcanic landscapes of Timanfaya National Park, walks through the vineyards of La Geria and a cycling excursion to neighbouring La Graciosa. 
Book it: KE Adventure (01768 773 966; keadventure.com) offers seven-night walking and cycling trips to Lanzarote from £1,295 excluding flights but including bike hire and some meals.
Year-round balmy temperatures and fresh sea air make La Palma ideal for a relaxing wellness break. Health and Fitness Travel have week-long holidays at the cliff top four-star La Palma Princess, where rooms come with ocean views and the treatment programme includes thermal spa circuits, multiple massages (including hot stone and aromatherapy) and group classes in pilates, yoga and Zumba. 
Book it: Health and Fitness Travel (0203 397 8891; healthandfitnesstravel.com) offers seven-night half-board wellness holidays to La Palma from £1,055pp excluding flights. 
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Of course, you’re thinking winter sun – the Canarian high remains above 20 degrees even in January, after all – but it’s worth considering spring or autumn instead when prices and visitor numbers are lower. This is the time for quieter beaches. Fancy a party instead? Tenerife hosts the world’s second-largest Carnival (after Rio) every February or March (exact dates vary according to when Easter falls). 
Want something specific or slightly unusual? Booking far in advance is best. If you’re looking for a simple beach holiday, though, waiting until the last minute can yield a bargain. With so much flight capacity from the UK and so many beds to fill across the islands’ large hotels, there are often fantastic late deals to be had. 
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This article was first published in January 2024 and has been revised and updated

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