Hiking in Tenerife - information and tips for you

Wandern auf Teneriffa - Infos und Tipps für dich

Year after year, countless hikers go far to the south of Europe to go hiking in Tenerife. That's not surprising, because the island of eternal spring offers a huge advantage: Here you will find the best conditions and mild temperatures all year round. Added to this is the diversity of the island, which presents you with a wide variety of landscapes. When hiking in Tenerife you can hike directly from the mountains to the sea, crossing vast forests, fertile fields and then exploring coastal hiking trails. The largest island of the Canary Islands is a miniature continent. In this article you will find out which are the best hiking areas on the island.

 

The best areas for hiking in Tenerife

The largest island of the Canary Islands has a few really well-known hiking areas that are correspondingly impressive. The island is known all over the world for these regions and you can be sure that a visit there is really worth it. But if you want to go hiking in Tenerife, you will also find a few insider tips. And they really have a lot to offer. So let's take a look at what you should definitely see.

 

Hiking in the Teide National Park

The Teide National Park is of course at the top of the list. Exploring Tenerife while hiking inevitably means exploring the bizarre volcanic landscape around Spain's highest mountain. It's really unreal at times. It is not without reason that the landscape around Teide is often referred to as a lunar landscape. And if you want to experience something very special, you should be in the national park when the visibility is clear and ideally when there is a new moon. The starry sky is simply amazing and it's not for nothing that Izaña is home to one of the most important observatories in Europe.

 

The Anaga Mountains

Another highlight are the vast laurel forests in the Anaga Mountains, in the very northeast of the island. They offer an almost mystical ambience, especially when light fog drifts through the trees. The most famous path here leads through the fairytale forest. If you want to explore this while hiking on Tenerife, you should get a license from Germany. To protect nature, access to this magical hiking trail has been limited and it can take months to get a license. Alternatively, you can of course look for an official hiking guide in advance or use one of the other hiking trails.

 

Barranco de Masca

The Masca Gorge is another highlight if you go hiking in Tenerife. The gorge stretches from the small mountain village of Masca in the Teno Mountains down to the sea, with rock walls up to 600 meters high extending to the left and right. A really impressive picture that quickly makes you feel very small. Nevertheless, the hike is easy to manage because the path is quite well developed. However, after rainfall you may have to climb a bit as the water flows along the normal path. But that is also easily doable and it is not for nothing that Masca is one of the most visited hiking destinations.

 

Teno alto - insider tip for hiking in Tenerife

The Teno Mountains are located in the very west of the island and, with Teno alto, offer the first insider tip. Well, not quite, because in recent years the Canarios have also discovered hiking, which is why it is no longer as wonderfully quiet as it used to be, at least on weekends. The reason is that from here you can walk up to the impressive cliffs of Los Gigantes. Once on the cliffs, the view extends over the deep blue of the Atlantic and to the neighboring island of La Gomera. However, the journey there is a bit adventurous as the road is quite narrow. However, this also guarantees that it remains an insider tip.

 

The forests above La Guancha

In the northwest of the island is the small town of La Guancha. Above the town there are vast pine forests where no buses stop. If you want to hike in Tenerife and really want peace and quiet, then you've come to the right place. Here you can walk for hours without seeing a single person and come right to the northern flank of the Teide and the Teide National Park. In the forest itself there are rest areas for resting (without a kiosk or similar), but these are hardly frequented.

 

And this list is far from complete, as there are many other hiking areas that make Tenerife a real Mecca for hikers.