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Portugal's Beaches and Islands

From the Algarve's cliff-backed coves to the volcanic peaks of Madeira.

The Algarve is Portugal's beach headline act — golden limestone cliffs, hidden coves, and some of Europe's best-value coastal resorts, best between May and October. Madeira, a volcanic island 90 minutes off the coast by plane, trades sand beaches for dramatic cliffside hiking trails, natural sea pools, and a mild year-round climate that makes it a legitimate winter-sun option when the mainland turns gray.

Here's the split almost every guide glosses over: the Algarve is Portugal's classic beach-holiday coast (think cliffs, coves, golf resorts, and a two-hour flight from most of Western Europe), while Madeira is a completely separate volcanic island in the Atlantic that barely has traditional sand beaches at all — it's a hiking-and-natural-pools destination that happens to also have great weather. Confusing the two is a common planning mistake. Here's the honest breakdown of both.

Questions people actually ask

Which is better, the Algarve or Madeira?
Depends what you want: the Algarve for classic beach-and-resort holidays with warm swimmable water; Madeira for dramatic hiking, natural volcanic swimming pools, and a genuinely different landscape (it's often called 'the Hawaii of Europe'). Many travelers pick one per trip rather than combining both.
When is the best time to visit the Algarve?
May–June and September–October give the best balance of warm weather, swimmable sea temperatures, and lower prices than the July–August peak, when the coast gets crowded and accommodation costs spike 40–60%.
Does Madeira have good beaches?
Not in the classic sand-beach sense — most of the coastline is dramatic volcanic cliffs. Porto Santo, a smaller neighboring island a short ferry or flight away, has Madeira's one genuine long sandy beach. Most visitors come for the levada hiking trails and natural sea pools instead.