Playa Pelada is one of the better quiet beach stops near El Médano, but it is not a polished resort beach and it is not a guaranteed swimming beach. Come for the early light, volcanic landscape and the feeling of having a small Atlantic corner to yourself; come prepared for wind, waves, a short rough walk and no facilities.


When Nastya and I first showed this place, the appeal was wonderfully simple: we did not need to drive across Tenerife to find an interesting, almost empty coast.
From El Médano, Playa Pelada is close enough for a morning outing, yet separate enough to feel like a different mood.
I still like it for exactly that reason. The beach is small, dry and a little untidy in the honest volcanic way.
It rewards an early start, a thermos, and the ability to say, “The sea is rough today; we can have breakfast instead.”
Local verdict: Pelada is a morning beach, not a comfort beach. Come for the light and bring your own basics.

The current practical picture is clear: Playa Pelada is an isolated beach in Granadilla de Abona, reached on foot after parking nearby. Local beach information lists no services, no disabled access and fewer than 50 parking spaces.
Treat those facts as the useful baseline, not as a promise that a space or a perfectly maintained path will be waiting for you.

Quick verdict: Is Playa Pelada worth visiting?
Yes, if you want a quiet morning, original-looking coast and a beach that feels close to El Médano without being in the middle of town. I would choose it for walking, photographs, a packed breakfast and a calm-weather swim—not for guaranteed comfort.
It is a good fit for couples, solo travellers, photographers and independent visitors with a car. It can work for older children who are happy walking on sand and rocks.
I would not choose it for a mobility-limited visitor, a pushchair, or anyone who needs toilets, shade, showers, a lifeguarded swimming area or a café beside the towel.
The biggest mistake is to read “quiet beach” as “safe private beach”. Playa Pelada is naturist-friendly and usually more relaxed than a resort, but it is still an open public coast with changing users, weather and sea conditions.

What Playa Pelada is actually like
Playa Pelada sits below Montaña Pelada, east of the main El Médano beach area. The landscape is pale sand, dark volcanic rock, low scrub and a broad Atlantic horizon.
There are villas nearby, but the beach itself does not feel built around a promenade or a line of beach businesses.

That is the charm. You notice the light, the slope of the sand and the sound of the water before you notice anything designed for visitors. On the morning in the original photo set, the beach looked almost empty and spacious.
I would keep that memory, while dropping the idea that solitude is guaranteed every day.
The beach is not a secret anymore. It appears in local and tourism listings, and people who live or stay around El Médano know it.
If you are comparing it with other low-key places, my hidden beaches in Tenerife guide explains why convenience often creates crowds.
The waterline can change the whole impression. A calm morning may show a gentle strip of wet sand; a windy or rough day can push waves across the darker rocks and make the same beach feel much less inviting. Look first. Unpack later.

Where Playa Pelada is and how to get there
Put Playa La Pelada or the La Pelada neighbourhood into your navigation, rather than relying on the old Russian post’s source-language links. The practical orientation is Av. Juan Carlos I, on the eastern side of El Médano, with the beach below Montaña Pelada. The final approach is on foot.
From El Médano on foot
If you are staying in El Médano, walking is realistic for an active visitor, but it is not the same as strolling along the seafront to Playa Chica.
You leave the most urban part of town, follow the local road towards La Pelada, then walk down towards the beach.
Start with daylight if you do not know the route; pre-dawn navigation on an unfamiliar sandy path is a poor place to prove your adventurous spirit.

The exact time depends on where you start, your pace and the condition of the path.
The local parking guide describes the La Pelada area as roughly 20 minutes from the centre on foot; use that as a planning scale, then check the route from your accommodation.
Carry everything you need because the beach will not rescue a forgotten bottle of water.

By car from Los Cristianos or Santa Cruz
By car, approach through the south-east road network towards El Médano and then use the local streets for La Pelada. From Los Cristianos, this is a deliberate south-coast drive rather than a quick add-on to a resort beach day.
From Santa Cruz, it is a longer cross-island outing; leave enough time to enjoy the coast instead of turning around as soon as you arrive.
The broader Tenerife car-hire guide is useful if you are still deciding whether a rental car makes sense. For this beach, a car saves walking time, but it does not remove wind, waves, parking pressure or the final sandy section.

Where parking ends and walking begins
Park legally in the nearby built-up area and walk the final section. Do not push a rental car along rough coastal tracks or into protected natural ground just to save a few minutes.
The official beach listing gives parking as available but limited; early arrival improves your chance, while late-morning certainty is something I would not promise.
Do not leave valuables visible in the car, and do not block residents’ access. A quiet neighbourhood is not an overflow car park. If the legal spaces are full, move on to El Médano or choose another beach rather than inventing a space on a track.
Map note: If the legal spaces are full, the correct answer is to walk from town or choose another beach—not to drive onto the coast.

Is Playa Pelada good for swimming?
Sometimes. The beach can be pleasant for a dip when the sea is calm, but it is exposed Atlantic coast rather than a protected resort swimming pool. The official tourism information specifically warns visitors to take care with swell, and that is the advice I would put above every beautiful photograph.

Before entering, watch the water for several minutes. Look at the sets, the pull of the backwash, the rocks at the edges and whether other confident swimmers are actually using the water.
Do not assume that a quiet-looking first few metres mean the whole shore is safe.

For snorkelling, the answer is even more conditional. There may be interesting volcanic edges and clear water on a calm day, but this is not the place to force a snorkel session when waves are moving across the rocks.
Wear secure footwear for the approach and leave the water if conditions change.

Families should be especially honest here. Playa Pelada can be a good nature morning with older children who listen and stay close.
For small children, choose a more managed beach with easier access and a more predictable swim, then visit Pelada as a short look if the sea is kind.

Never swim alone, never turn your back on the Atlantic, and do not let a planned sunrise or picnic become a reason to ignore a warning flag, local advice or your own hesitation.
Safety rule: A calm-looking shoreline is not proof of calm water. Watch the sets before you unpack.
Wind, waves and the best time to go
The original article loved Playa Pelada at sunrise, and I agree with that instinct. Early morning usually gives you the best chance of soft light, cooler sand and a quieter atmosphere.
It also gives you a better chance of leaving before the south-east wind turns a peaceful breakfast into a sandblasting experiment.

There is no magic month that guarantees calm water. Wind and swell change by day, and the same season can produce completely different beach conditions. Check the forecast shortly before leaving, but use your eyes when you arrive.
Forecasts are useful; the ocean gets the final vote.
Sunrise direction matters less here than the quality of the light across the sand, rocks and water.
If the coast is grey, hazy or windy, the beach may still be worth a walk, but do not force it into the perfect photograph promised by an old memory.

For a calmer-weather decision, compare the live feel of Pelada with the more active El Médano kitesurfing coast.
If people are rigging sails and the wind is doing the talking, you may have found a good sports day rather than a quiet-towel day.
Naturist beach etiquette
Playa Pelada is known as a naturist-friendly beach, but it is not a private resort and it is not a stage. Textiles and naturists may share the coast.
Arrive with the attitude that other people are here to enjoy the sea, not to become part of your holiday content.

The rules are simple: do not stare, do not photograph strangers, do not walk close to someone’s towel without a reason, and keep children away from adult private space.
If you are unsure whether clothing is expected in a particular area, follow the local tone and use ordinary courtesy.
Naturism is not permission to behave badly. Leave no rubbish, do not build improvised structures, and do not turn the quiet atmosphere into a loud party. Montaña Pelada is a protected natural area, so stay on existing paths and avoid trampling vegetation or cutting new tracks.

Who is Playa Pelada good for?
| Visitor | My honest answer | Plan for |
|---|---|---|
| Couples or solo travellers | Very good for a quiet start | Bring food, water and a flexible swim plan |
| Photographers | Excellent in soft morning light | Protect equipment from sand and wind |
| Families with older children | Possible on a calm, supervised day | Choose a safer fallback before arrival |
| Small children or pushchairs | Not my first choice | Use a managed beach with easier access |
| Mobility-limited visitors | Poor fit | The beach is not listed as accessible |
| Surfers or water-sport visitors | Condition-dependent | Check the sea and use the specialist El Médano areas |
The key word is independent. You need to be comfortable making your own decision about the path, parking, wind and sea. If you want a beach with a service layer around you, Playa Pelada will feel more inconvenient than romantic.
What to bring for a Playa Pelada morning
- Water and a proper breakfast: there is no beach café, shop or reliable shade waiting at the sand.
- Shoes with grip for the sandy, rocky approach and volcanic edge; flip-flops are not a personality test.
- A light layer for the early start and wind protection for the return walk.
- Sun protection, a hat and something to sit on; the beach itself does not provide shade.
- A small rubbish bag. Take every wrapper, peel and bottle back with you.
- A charged phone and an offline route if you are walking before the town is fully awake.
- A backup plan. The best beach day is the one you can change without sulking.
Do not bring the expectation of toilets, showers, lockers, sunbeds or accessible boardwalks. The current official listing gives Playa Pelada no services and no disabled access. Those are not minor details if you are travelling with a baby, managing a disability or planning to stay for many hours.
How to build a south Tenerife morning around it
The cleanest plan is Playa Pelada first, then breakfast or coffee in El Médano. If you are still choosing a base, compare the area with my where to stay in Tenerife guide.
The town gives you the facilities that the beach intentionally does not.

For a bigger outdoor day, combine it with the Montaña Roja short walk or the more beach-led plan in the La Tejita guide.
Do not try to squeeze every stop into one morning; Montaña Roja and La Tejita deserve their own weather and energy decisions.
If you want food shopping or a market-led morning, use the Tenerife farmers and street markets guide to choose a real next stop.
If you are staying farther west, compare the route with my guides to Los Cristianos and Playa de las Américas before assuming El Médano will feel interchangeable.

Teide volcano guide
Want to build the mountain day properly?
If Playa Pelada is one quiet morning, Teide needs its own plan. Use my Teide volcano guide for the route, timing and mountain-day decisions.
For the wider island decision, start with things to do in south Tenerife or the full Things To Do In Tenerife guide. Families can use the Tenerife with kids guide; winter visitors may want Christmas in Tenerife.
These are different planning questions, so I would keep them as separate decisions rather than turning Pelada into a generic south-Tenerife list.

If your trip is moving north, use La Laguna, La Orotava and the North Tenerife guide for a very different coast-and-town rhythm.
For mountain days, read the Teide guide or Anaga guide; neither should be treated as a quick detour after a beach breakfast.
What to do if conditions are wrong
If the wind is strong or the waves are breaking hard, have breakfast in El Médano or choose a more sheltered, managed beach. A good local plan contains an exit.
For a different beach mood, use the best beaches in Tenerife guide. La Laguna or La Orotava can also be better than driving between exposed beaches.
And if you only wanted to see what Playa Pelada looks like, that is enough. Not every beautiful place needs to become a swim, a picnic, a hike and a social-media production. Sometimes the correct use of a beach is a short look and a sensible retreat.

FAQ
Is Playa Pelada a nudist beach?
It is naturist-friendly, but it is an open public beach. Textiles and naturists may share the sand. Respect privacy, never photograph people without permission and behave ordinarily.
Can you swim at Playa Pelada?
You can swim when the sea is calm, but it is not a lifeguarded resort beach. Watch the swell and currents, avoid the rocks and leave if conditions change. I would not choose it as a first swim for a small child.
Is Playa Pelada easy without a car?
It is possible from El Médano on foot, but the last part still involves walking. From Los Cristianos or Santa Cruz, it is a deliberate public-transport trip. Check the current route and return connection.
My final local verdict
Go early. Park legally. Walk carefully. Bring breakfast and water. Treat naturist visitors as people, not scenery. Let the sea decide whether you swim. If those rules sound reasonable, Playa Pelada can give you the quiet south-Tenerife morning the original article promised.
If they do not sound reasonable, choose a more managed beach. There is no shame in that. The best Tenerife advice is not always “go”; sometimes it is “go when the place actually fits you.”
