Lanzarote is the Canary Island that arrives black, white, windy and volcanic. It does not need forests, tall towns or tropical drama to make an impression.
Come for the volcanoes, surf, Famara, beaches, Malvasia, Timanfaya, Manrique and La Graciosa. Stay for an island that somehow makes low white villages look right beside black lava.
Lanzarote is small enough to tempt chaos and big enough to punish it. Group your days by coast and landscape.

Quick answer: what are the best things to do in Lanzarote?
Start with Timanfaya, Famara, one good beach day, La Geria and one Cesar Manrique site. Add the lava coast, Mirador del Rio and La Graciosa when you have time and calm ferry weather.
You will probably love Lanzarote if you like volcanic scenery, clean design, beaches, wine, wind, short drives, low-rise towns and landscapes that look edited by someone with taste.
You may dislike it if you want lush greenery, big nightlife everywhere, a beach where every cove is calm and easy, or a holiday where public transport solves every problem. Lanzarote can be simple. It is not idiot-proof.
| Best for | Choose this |
|---|---|
| Volcanoes | Timanfaya, Caldera Blanca, Los Volcanes area, La Geria road |
| Beaches | Papagayo for coves, Famara for surf, Playa Blanca or Puerto del Carmen for easier swimming |
| Art and architecture | Jameos del Agua, Mirador del Rio, Jardin de Cactus, Fundacion Cesar Manrique |
| Short trip | Timanfaya plus La Geria, north/Manrique day, one beach day |
| No car | Resort base, guided Timanfaya tour, bus-friendly towns, careful ferry planning |
| Families | Playa Blanca, Puerto del Carmen, Costa Teguise, Jameos with carrier, short route days |
How to decide if Lanzarote is your island
Before the list, decide what kind of Lanzarote trip you are building. The island has several personalities, and mixing them badly is how people end up exhausted and mildly annoyed at a place that did nothing wrong.
For volcanoes, use the west and centre: Timanfaya, La Geria, El Golfo, Los Hervideros and the lava coast. For beaches, separate surf from easy swimming. Famara is not Papagayo.
Do not collect Manrique sites like stamps. Choose one or two that fit your route. They explain why Lanzarote still looks like Lanzarote.
| Traveller type | Good plan | Caveat |
|---|---|---|
| Volcano/nature person | Timanfaya, La Geria, El Golfo, Los Hervideros, Caldera Blanca | Book/check access and avoid midday heat |
| Beach person | Papagayo, Playa Blanca, Puerto del Carmen, Costa Teguise, Famara | Not every beach is a safe swimming beach |
| Design person | Jameos, Cueva, Mirador, Jardin, Fundacion Cesar Manrique | One or two Manrique sites per day is enough |
| Family | Short drives, toilets, easy beaches, one paid attraction per day | Wind and sun decide comfort |
| No-car traveller | Stay in a resort and use tours for hard places | Buses help, but they do not make every route elegant |
| Rainy/windy day | Cueva, Jameos, Jardin, Fundacion, towns, food | Check coastal wind before committing to viewpoints |
The best Lanzarote days have one big landscape, not five random pins.
Route logic: group Lanzarote places by geography
Lanzarote is not huge, but the best places sit in loops. The trick is to group them, not to pin twenty saved places and obey the map like it is a very boring boss.
Build one west-volcano day, one north-Manrique day and one south-beach day. Treat La Graciosa as a full ferry day, not a quick extra.
| Area | Combine these places | Do not combine with |
|---|---|---|
| West and south-west | Timanfaya, La Geria, El Golfo, Los Hervideros, Salinas de Janubio | La Graciosa, unless you enjoy punishment |
| North | Famara, Haria, Mirador del Rio, Orzola, Cueva, Jameos | Papagayo in the same half-day |
| South | Playa Blanca, Papagayo, Marina Rubicon, Femes viewpoint | Northern cave sites if you want a beach day |
| East and centre | Arrecife, Costa Teguise, Teguise village, Jardin de Cactus | Too many beach stops |
| Island hop | Orzola ferry to La Graciosa | Timanfaya time-slot stress |
Lanzarote: volcanoes, surf and a very specific mood
Volcanoes are everywhere here. Timanfaya is the famous name, but black slopes, ash fields and low lava walls give the whole island a lunar mood.
The second thing is surf. Lanzarote has reef breaks, beach breaks, serious winter waves and friendly-looking spots that are friendly only until the Atlantic remembers its job.
Lanzarote is not a list of attractions. It is volcanoes, wind, waves, Malvasia and white villages trying to behave in a black landscape.
Famara: the beach I would not skip
Famara is the beach I would not skip. It has that rare quality of making you like it before it has explained anything.
The beach is long, sandy and open to the Atlantic. The beach break can suit beginners. Serious surfers have bigger waves nearby, as usual.
Caleta de Famara still has sandy lanes, surf schools and a pleasantly windblown mood. It works because not everything has been polished smooth.
Famara is for surf, walking, sunsets and cliffs. I would not choose it for a calm toddler swim unless the sea and flags say otherwise.
Wind is part of the Famara story. If you want a flat, warm lagoon, check the forecast before you fall in love with the idea.
From here, the north begins to connect: Famara below, Risco de Famara above, Mirador del Rio beyond and La Graciosa offshore.
Famara is not Papagayo. Pick your beach by purpose, not by its colour.
Beaches in Lanzarote: choose by purpose, not by photo
The main Lanzarote beach mistake is assuming that beautiful means swimmable, easy or family-friendly. Sometimes it does. Sometimes the beach is really saying: come for a photo, then please use your brain.
Choose by purpose: easy resort beach, wild cove, surf beach or scenic north-coast stop. A beautiful beach is not automatically an easy swim.
| Beach area | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Papagayo and Los Ajaches | Clear-water coves, photos, protected south-coast scenery | Dirt-road access, limited facilities, possible access rules/fees, exposed sun |
| Famara | Surf, walking, sunsets, cliffs, atmosphere | Swell, wind, currents, not a calm family swim by default |
| Playa Blanca area | Easier family beach days, restaurants, resort logistics | Less wild, more resort-shaped |
| Puerto del Carmen | Convenience, golden sand, airport proximity, facilities | Crowds and a more touristy feel |
| Costa Teguise | Families, wind sports, Arrecife proximity, easy facilities | Wind can decide the day |
| Caleton Blanco and northern coves | White-sand pools and photos when conditions suit | Tide, wind, limited services |
Papagayo and Los Ajaches
Papagayo earns its reputation. The coves around Mujeres, Pozo, Cera, Papagayo and Congrio have pale sand, volcanic edges and water that can look indecently blue.
Check access before you drive. This is protected land with rougher access, limited facilities and changing parking rules. Take water and sun protection. Also, yes, the beach can be relaxed in more ways than one.
Playa Blanca, Puerto del Carmen and Costa Teguise
Playa Blanca is the easier family choice: Playa Blanca itself, Playa Dorada and Playa Flamingo are more practical than wild. You also have ferry logic to Fuerteventura, Marina Rubicon and simple resort infrastructure.
Puerto del Carmen is busier and more touristy, with Playa Grande, Los Pocillos and Matagorda. The upside is convenience, sand and services. The downside is also convenience, sand and services, if you came to escape everyone.
Costa Teguise has Las Cucharas, Los Charcos, El Jablillo, Playa Bastian and Playa Ancla. It is close to Arrecife and practical for families. For another island comparison, see our best beaches in Tenerife guide.
La Geria: wine, Malvasia and volcanic vineyards
La Geria is the food-and-drink stop I would make time for. Vines grow in black volcanic lapilli behind low stone walls. It looks like elegant farming on the moon.
Pair Malvasia with local goat cheese. The vineyards are not just a tasting stop. They show how people learned to farm an island that never pretended to be easy.
Use a designated driver, book a tour or keep the tasting modest. Calling it cultural research does not improve your driving.
La Geria is not just winery scenery. It is Lanzarote explaining how people adapt.
Timanfaya and Montanas del Fuego
Timanfaya is worth it when you understand the visit. You park at Islote de Hilario, see the geothermal demonstrations and take the Route of the Volcanoes by coach.
Book the official time slot before you drive. There is no box office, and you should arrive early. The coach route is included; private roaming is not.
The coach route protects a fragile landscape. Stay within the system. A perfect photo is not worth leaving the next visitor a worse island.
Go early. A time slot is not a philosophical suggestion, and late arrivals add queue stress, heat and unnecessary holiday drama.
Skip Timanfaya if you hate coach routes or expect a free hike. Most first-time visitors should still go. It is the island’s central volcanic experience.
Do not improvise a walk inside protected land. Check current booking and conditions for routes such as Termesana. Summer heat and wind are not a test for your watch.
Timanfaya’s rules protect the reason you came.
Cesar Manrique sites: why they matter
Cesar Manrique is one reason Lanzarote kept its visual identity. White, black, low, curved, hidden and framed: once you notice the language, the island reads differently.
You do not need every Manrique site in one day. That is how beauty becomes admin. Choose the ones that match your route and attention span.
| Site | Why it matters | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Jameos del Agua | La Corona volcanic tube transformed into rock, water, light, garden and auditorium | Architecture, families with carrier, gentle wow |
| Cueva de los Verdes | Guided walk through the same volcanic tube system, adapted by Jesus Soto | Volcano geology, shade/rain backup, cave lovers |
| Mirador del Rio | A viewpoint hidden in the cliff, framing La Graciosa | North route, sunset mood, photography |
| Jardin de Cactus | A quarry turned into a cactus amphitheatre | Teguise/Guatiza day, design details |
| Fundacion Cesar Manrique | His lava-field home at Taro de Tahiche | Understanding the person, not only the postcards |
| Casa Museo del Campesino | Rural architecture and farming tribute | Centre-island stop, food and tradition |
One Manrique site can feel like culture. Five can feel like errands.
Jameos del Agua
Jameos del Agua turns the La Corona volcanic tube into water, gardens, an auditorium and light. It never lets you forget that the cave came first.
Do not throw coins into the lake. It is a fragile habitat, not a wishing well. Pushchairs are not allowed on the route, so take a carrier.
Cueva de los Verdes
Cueva de los Verdes is a guided walk through galleries in the La Corona volcanic tube. Slow down. It is better when you look than when you try to photograph every dark corner.
Book Cueva de los Verdes online for a set time. The guided route has stairs, narrow spaces and low ceilings, so it is not for reduced mobility or claustrophobia.
Mirador del Rio and Jardin de Cactus
Mirador del Rio proves a building can almost disappear while making a view stronger. Its windows frame La Graciosa and the Chinijo Archipelago from the Risco de Famara.
Jardin de Cactus is quieter and cleverer: an old quarry reshaped into cactus terraces. Pair it with Teguise, Guatiza or an east-side route.
El Golfo, Los Hervideros, Salinas de Janubio and the lava coast
El Golfo, Los Hervideros, Salinas de Janubio and the lava coast belong on the west and south-west loop. Pair them with Timanfaya and La Geria.
Stay behind barriers on the lava coast. Atlantic spray does not care about your camera. The scenery is free; the medical logistics are not.
This loop still works if Timanfaya is full or you decide to skip it. The surrounding volcanic landscape is a strong Lanzarote day by itself.
Towns and villages: visit, stay or pass through?
Lanzarote towns are practical decisions as much as sightseeing decisions. Some are where you stay. Some are where you pause. Some are best used as route glue.
| Place | Visit judgement | Stay judgement |
|---|---|---|
| Teguise | Good for historic streets, Sunday market mood and centre-island routing | Not the obvious beach base |
| Haria | Lovely northern pause under palms, good with Mirador and north roads | Quiet base for slow travellers |
| Arrecife | Worth a short urban/food/art stop if you like real island life | Useful, less resort-holiday feeling |
| Orzola | Ferry point for La Graciosa and north-coast food stop | Too narrow a base for most first trips |
| Playa Blanca | Easy beaches, marina, Fuerteventura ferry, family comfort | Strong choice for families and south beaches |
| Puerto del Carmen | Convenient beaches, nightlife, airport proximity | Good if convenience beats charm |
| Costa Teguise | Easy beaches, wind sports, Arrecife access | Practical for families and no-car travellers |
| Famara | Surf, cliffs, sunsets, wild beach mood | Best if you want surf atmosphere, not resort polish |
La Graciosa day trip
From Mirador del Rio, La Graciosa looks so close that your brain starts planning without asking your calendar. Slow down. A day trip can be excellent, but it is still a ferry day.
The Orzola to Caleta de Sebo ferry takes about 25 minutes. Check the live timetable, wind and return options before you promise yourself a perfect day.
Expect a slower island: Caleta de Sebo, sandy tracks, bikes, walking and authorised jeep or taxi options. La Graciosa is sweet. It is not a theme park with shade on demand.
La Graciosa is a ferry day. Do not turn it into a rushed detour.
Hiking, walking and outdoor ideas
Lanzarote has good walking, but it is not a soft green hiking island. It is exposed, dry, windy and bright. Sharp volcanic ground and summer heat change a simple plan fast.
Try Famara, Risco viewpoints, Caldera Blanca or a permitted coastal walk. For protected areas and Timanfaya, check current access and guided-route rules first.
Do not wander across lava because it looks empty. Empty-looking land can still be protected, and lava has no sympathy for ankles.
Lanzarote with kids
Lanzarote works well with children when days stay short. Easy beach, one paid attraction, food, shade, pool, done. This is wisdom with snacks.
Playa Blanca, Puerto del Carmen and Costa Teguise are easier family bases than Famara. Use a carrier at Jameos. Choose Cueva de los Verdes only for children who enjoy caves and can follow a guide.
Car seats, heat, wind, toilets and facilities matter more than rankings. Papagayo can be beautiful and still not be the easiest small-child beach day. For a Tenerife add-on, read our Tenerife with kids guide.
Lanzarote without a car
You can visit Lanzarote without a car. The broad route will have more friction. The best loops follow geography, not public-transport elegance.
Without a car, stay in a resort with services and use tours for Timanfaya, La Geria and the north. Buses help with simple resort, Arrecife and airport moves.
Taxis can solve short gaps, but they are a budget line, not a magic spell. Plan La Graciosa around the return ferry. If Tenerife is next, use our Tenerife car hire guide for the bigger island.
A car is not essential. It is the difference between a route and a compromise.
Free vs paid things to do in Lanzarote
Paid sights are worth it when they give access, interpretation or architecture you cannot get from the road. That is true of Timanfaya, Cueva, Jameos, Mirador and Jardin.
Free scenery is excellent too: Famara, viewpoints, towns, lava-coast stops, promenades and sunsets. Lanzarote looks as if it was designed in three colours.
| Pay for | Use free scenery instead when |
|---|---|
| Timanfaya | You missed the slot or only need a volcano-flavour drive |
| Cueva de los Verdes | You dislike caves, stairs or guided groups |
| Jameos del Agua | You already did several Manrique sites and feel full |
| Mirador del Rio | Clouds or wind kill the view |
| Jardin de Cactus | You are short on time and not into design/gardens |
3-day, 5-day and 7-day Lanzarote itineraries
These are route frameworks, not commandments. Swap days for weather, ferry conditions and available time slots.
| Trip length | Car-based route | No-car/tour reality |
|---|---|---|
| 3 days | Day 1 Timanfaya, La Geria, El Golfo, Los Hervideros. Day 2 Famara, Haria, Mirador, Cueva or Jameos. Day 3 Papagayo or resort beach. | Book one volcano/wine tour, use one Manrique/north tour or bus-friendly Arrecife/Teguise day, keep one beach day near base. |
| 5 days | Add La Graciosa or a slow north day, plus Teguise/Jardin/Arrecife. | Choose a resort base, add guided north or La Graciosa, avoid moving hotels too much. |
| 7 days | Add beach variety, one walking route, more villages, slower food/wine time. | Possible, but mix tours, buses, taxis and rest days. Do not pretend it will feel like a car trip. |
A practical 3-day route
Day one: Timanfaya in the morning, La Geria afterwards, then El Golfo, Los Hervideros and Salinas de Janubio if you still have energy. This is the big volcanic day.
Day two: Famara, Haria, Mirador del Rio and either Cueva de los Verdes or Jameos del Agua. Doing both cave sites, Mirador, Famara and a long lunch is asking for complaints.
Day three: Papagayo or an easier resort beach, with Playa Blanca or Puerto del Carmen depending on where you sleep. Keep it simple.
A better 5-day or 7-day route
With five days, add La Graciosa if the weather and ferry work, plus Teguise or Jardin de Cactus. With seven, stop chasing. Repeat a beach. Let Lanzarote breathe.
If Tenerife is part of the same holiday, use our Tenerife things to do guide and north or south guide. The islands are siblings, not copies.
Five days give you space. Seven days let you stop chasing.
Common Lanzarote mistakes to avoid
- Doing Timanfaya too late. Book/check your slot, arrive early and keep the rest of the day nearby.
- Calling every beach a swimming beach. Famara, wild north-coast beaches and surf zones need different judgement from resort beaches.
- Overloading Manrique sites. Two thoughtful visits beat five blurred ticket checks.
- Ignoring wind. Wind affects beaches, viewpoints, ferry comfort and family patience.
- Treating protected lava landscapes casually. Stay on routes, respect barriers and avoid off-road silliness.
- Building La Graciosa around hope. Check ferry times, wind and return options.
- Skipping route logic. Lanzarote is small enough to tempt chaos and big enough to punish it.
When you need a more focused Lanzarote guide
This is the broad first-trip guide. Use a focused guide when beaches, Timanfaya, La Graciosa, family travel, hiking or a no-car trip becomes the main point of your holiday.
- Best beaches in Lanzarote: Papagayo, Famara, Playa Blanca, Costa Teguise, Puerto del Carmen, Caleton Blanco.
- Timanfaya National Park: tickets, queues, bus route, guided walks, who should skip.
- La Graciosa day trip from Lanzarote: ferry, bikes, jeeps, beaches, weather decisions.
- Where to stay in Lanzarote: Playa Blanca vs Puerto del Carmen vs Costa Teguise vs Famara vs Arrecife.
- Lanzarote with kids: beaches, toilets, shade, easy attractions, windy-day planning.
- Lanzarote without a car: bus routes, tours, resort bases, limits.
- Lanzarote vs Tenerife and other Canary Islands.
- Cesar Manrique route in Lanzarote.
- Lanzarote wineries and La Geria.
- Best hikes and volcano walks in Lanzarote.
Adding Tenerife to the same trip?
Lanzarote needs volcanic route logic. Tenerife needs a mountain day and a different sense of distance. Use the handcrafted Tenerife guide for a ready Teide route.
FAQ
What are the best things to do in Lanzarote for a first trip?
Start with one volcano day, one Manrique site, one beach day and La Geria. Add a northern viewpoint or La Graciosa when the weather is kind.
Is Timanfaya worth it?
Yes. It is a managed coach visit through protected volcanic land, not a free hike or drive. Go early and check the official ticket page.
Do I need a car in Lanzarote?
For the best things to do in Lanzarote, a car makes life much easier. Without one, base yourself in a resort, use buses for simple town moves, and book tours for Timanfaya, La Geria, Papagayo or the north.
Which part of Lanzarote is best for beaches?
For easy family beach days, look at Playa Blanca, Puerto del Carmen or Costa Teguise. For wild scenery and surf atmosphere, Famara is better. For postcard coves, Papagayo is beautiful but needs more access planning.
Can you visit La Graciosa as a day trip?
Yes. Ferries run from Orzola to Caleta de Sebo and Lineas Romero lists a 25-minute crossing with daily service. Check the current timetable, wind and return options before you build a full day around it.
Is Lanzarote good with kids?
It can be excellent, especially from resort bases with easy beaches. Plan around wind, sun, toilets, stroller limits at cave sites, and the fact that some beautiful places have rougher access than the photos suggest.
What should I skip in Lanzarote?
Skip anything that makes your route silly. Three distant attractions in one day can turn Lanzarote into a car-window holiday. Also skip advanced surf spots like El Quemao unless you are there to watch from a sensible distance.
Are Lanzarote beaches safe for swimming?
Some are, some are not, and the difference matters. Resort beaches are usually easier for swimming. Famara is mainly a surf beach. Wild coves and north-coast beaches need flag, swell and wind judgement.
What is the best short itinerary for Lanzarote?
With three days, do one volcano/wine day, one Manrique/north day, and one beach/coast day. With five or seven days, add La Graciosa, slower village time, a second beach zone and one walking route.
Is Lanzarote better than Tenerife?
Not better, different. Lanzarote is volcanoes, low white villages, design, beaches and wind. Tenerife is bigger, greener in the north and much higher. Compare them in our Tenerife guide before you choose.
That is Lanzarote: volcanoes, surf, Malvasia, lava fields, Manrique, Famara, La Graciosa, and the happy relief of not trying to do the north and south every afternoon.