Hello from Tenerife. This is my honest August answer: warm ocean, strong sun, crowded beaches, dusty air sometimes, and a month I still treat with respect rather than tourist-board romance.

Short answer: Tenerife weather in August is hot, dry and very sunny, especially in the south. It is good for warm sea, fiestas and long evenings, but it is not my favorite month for a first Tenerife trip.

Summer on a Tenerife beach in August
August looks inviting; plan for heat and pressure.

Many visitors arrive in August with the same dream.

Swim all day. Drive anywhere. Hike anywhere. Find a romantic empty beach because Tenerife is an island and islands are supposed to behave beautifully.

Then August answers in its own local language: yes, the ocean is warmer; yes, the south is sunny; and yes, everyone else had exactly the same idea.

The easy beaches are busy for a reason.

Quick Verdict: Should You Visit Tenerife In August?

Visit Tenerife in August if you want heat, warm sea, late sunsets, summer energy and fiestas.

Be careful if this is your first Tenerife trip and your dream is quiet beaches, easy parking, gentle hiking weather and green landscapes everywhere.

Local verdict: August can be fun. But it is not the easiest month to fall in love with Tenerife for the first time.

  • Best for: beach-focused travelers, warm-sea swimmers, fiesta energy, families locked into school holidays, and people who plan around heat.
  • Harder for: hikers, quiet-beach hunters, visitors without a car, sensitive skin, anyone who hates crowds, and people expecting green island scenery.
  • My practical rule: do beaches early, take shade seriously, check alerts, and save exposed hikes for morning or another month.
El Duque is beautiful, but August changes the mood.

Tenerife Weather In August: Official Numbers

The official climate numbers confirm the feeling: August is one of the hottest and driest times of the year, especially around the south coast.

Local detail: official AEMET weather tables are useful here. At Tenerife Sur Airport, August averages around 24.7 C, with daily highs around 28.4 C, lows around 21.1 C, and about 1 mm of rain.

Tenerife Norte Airport is cooler at 21.2 C average, with highs around 25.7 C, lows around 16.6 C, and about 5 mm of rain.

August questionPractical answer
Is Tenerife hot in August?Yes. The south is reliably hot, and even the north is warm by Tenerife standards.
Average south-coast highAEMET Tenerife Sur Airport climate normal: 28.4 C average daily maximum.
Average south-coast lowAEMET Tenerife Sur Airport climate normal: 21.1 C average daily minimum.
Rain in the southAlmost none in the normal climate table, but always check the current forecast.
North TenerifeCooler, cloudier in places, and better for escape days, but not empty in August.
Sea and beachesThe sea usually feels more inviting than in winter, but flags, wind and crowds still decide the real beach day.
Main August risksUV, heat, calima, wildfire restrictions, full car parks, crowded beaches and tired children at midday.
The north is cooler, but not empty.

Local detail: averages are not a promise for your exact travel week. In August, I always check AEMET warnings, UV, wind and dust forecasts before planning Teide, Anaga or a long beach day.

Why August Is Not Always Ideal

The classic tourist thought is simple: “I will swim as much as I want because this is the hottest month of the year.” Fair enough. But warm water comes with other visitors.

August is peak holiday season. Europeans arrive, visitors from the east arrive, and most importantly for island rhythm, mainland Spaniards arrive too. They know how to occupy a beach properly.

Warm ocean brings more towels and fewer gaps.

The first group fills the resort beaches. The second wave often finds the northern coves and wilder beaches.

Some people stay overnight in camper vans and little Volkswagen buses. That quietly reduces the daytime parking capacity before you even finish your hotel breakfast.

Common mistake: do not be surprised if by 9:00 in August you cannot find an easy parking space near Taganana or another wild northern beach. This is not bad luck. This is August on Tenerife =).

Wild beaches are not secret in August.
Pretty evenings do not solve daytime parking pressure.

This does not mean you must cancel August. It means you should plan it like a busy summer month, not like a secret island escape.

Where Did All The Green Go?

One of the most common August questions is also one of the funniest when you live here: “Where is all the green?”

August is dry. The south can look like a grey desert, and even parts of the north lose the soft green face people imagine from spring photos.

La Tejita shows the dry summer face clearly.

The good news is that Tenerife still has escape routes.

Anaga, the monteverde forests and parts of Teno can save the impression of the island when the coast feels baked flat.

Teno can rescue a baked coastal week.

Visitors who choose the higher parts of Anaga instead of another baked beach day often come back happier.

I still agree with that. Not every August day should be a beach day.

If you want a deeper nature plan, start with my best hikes in Tenerife guide and the north Tenerife guide. In August, choose routes by shade, altitude, wind and current alerts, not only by Instagram drama.

Free planning help

If August feels too crowded to improvise, start with my free Tenerife map and group beaches, viewpoints and cooler north stops without driving in circles.

Summer beaches need shade, not optimism.

Sun, UV, And What To Wear

In August, the Tenerife sun has a special talent: even when you do not see it behind clouds, it sees you =).

I would not go to the beach in August without SPF 50, a hat, sunglasses and a plan for shade.

With sunburn, most people learn from their own experience. I prefer the boring version: learn from someone else’s red shoulders.

Simple, yes. But in August, simple rules save the holiday.

Clouds do not cancel UV; your skin still knows.

Safety rule: check AEMET UV forecasts and local weather warnings before long beach days, children's plans, Teide stops or exposed walks.

  • Wear light, breathable clothing, but add a UV shirt or cover-up for midday.
  • Carry more water than feels elegant.
  • Use proper shoes for volcanic ground, Anaga paths, viewpoints and hot car parks.
  • Pack a light layer for Teide, the north, windy evenings and over-air-conditioned interiors.

If you do burn, ask at a pharmacy for after-sun or burn-care advice. Aloe, panthenol and similar products can help mild sunburn.

Common mistake: a serious burn is not a souvenir. It is a planning failure with a painful receipt.

Beaches, Parking, And Spanish Holiday Crowds

August on Tenerife, like August in much of Spain, is holiday season. Many Spaniards take vacation in August, and the pressure often continues into early or mid-September.

The famous beaches fill first: Costa Adeje, Las Vistas, El Duque, El Camison, Playa de las Americas, Los Cristianos, and the pretty places people saved on their phones months ago.

Las Vistas fills because it works for families.
Popular beaches fill fast during Spanish holiday weeks.

Small towns feel it too. El Medano, for example, can feel much smaller in August than it does on a normal windy weekday.

El Medano feels small when August arrives.

Plan like this: arrive early, choose beaches with lifeguards if you are with children, and have a backup beach or promenade plan. In August, one full car park should not destroy the whole day.

If you are still choosing beach areas, use my best beaches in Tenerife guide.

The right August beach is not always the prettiest one. It is the one that matches wind, access, facilities, shade and crowd tolerance.

This is less romantic. It is also how you avoid spending half a hot day looking for space.

Calima, Heat Alerts, And Fire Risk

Another classic August question: “What is that haze? Why do the ocean and sky merge?” That is calima: Saharan dust in the air.

Calima can blur the ocean and nearby islands.

During a calima episode, the blue line of the Atlantic can disappear. La Gomera and Gran Canaria hide.

Some people get headaches. Teide stargazing becomes less magical than the brochure promised.

Calima is episodic. Sometimes it passes quickly. Sometimes it sits above Tenerife long enough to change your plan.

Local detail: calima is episodic, but August is exactly when you should know what it is. Check it before planning mountain nights or long outdoor days.

Safety rule: before mountain routes, Teide nights, forest walks or remote beaches in summer, check AEMET weather warnings, the AEMET mineral dust forecast, and current Canary Islands emergency alerts. Heat, calima and wildfire restrictions can change the plan quickly.

Dust can steal the night-sky plan.

The video below shows what African calima looks like on Tenerife and where I try to hide from it.

The north can help a little with calima, but not always. And in August, even northern beaches can be busy =).

Teide, Anaga, Hiking, And Summer Plans

So, will August be bad? Nooooo. But you need to respect the summer nuances.

I still do things in August: north and forest walks, cooler viewpoints, Perseid nights, Teide plans when conditions are friendly, small northern beaches, fiestas and swims in the warm ocean.

Plan like this: choose the right job for the right hour. In August, timing is not a detail; it is the whole plan.

The north helps, but it is not a secret.
  • For Anaga: go early, expect humidity or cloud, and do not assume every trail is cool or empty.
  • For Teide: check road, wind, heat and dust forecasts before sunrise, sunset or stargazing plans.
  • For hiking: avoid exposed midday routes, carry water, and turn around before pride becomes a medical problem.
  • For families: plan one serious activity per day, not a heroic island conquest between ice creams.
Teide needs a forecast, not bravado.
Teide evenings reward people who check forecasts.

If you want the wider planning layer, read things to do in Tenerife and then narrow the day by weather. August punishes vague plans more than October or February.

Local Tenerife guide

Want August to feel like a planned local day, not a fight with heat and car parks?

Use my handcrafted Tenerife guide when you need route order, timing, local context and quieter ways to enjoy the island carefully.

Good August days are built, not improvised.

Where To Stay In Tenerife In August

If you want the simplest August holiday, stay near the beach routine you will actually use.

In the south and south-west, Costa Adeje, Los Cristianos, Las Americas, Fanabe, Torviscas and Los Gigantes give easier sun and tourist infrastructure.

Convenience wins when the island is hot.

The catch is obvious: these areas are busy, expensive in school holidays, and not exactly secret. But in August, convenience has value.

August resorts are easier, not always calmer.

The north can be more characterful and cooler, especially around Puerto de la Cruz, La Laguna, Anaga and the older towns.

But I would not choose the north only because you imagine empty beaches. August takes that fantasy and puts a towel on it.

The north has character, not guaranteed silence.
Northern Tenerife is cooler, not crowd-proof.

For a booking decision, use my Tenerife north or south comparison and the full where to stay in Tenerife guide.

Map note: August is a month where base choice saves real daily energy. A pretty route on the map can feel much longer when the car is hot and the beach parking is full.

So, Is August Bad For Tenerife?

No. It is just not effortless.

The main thing about the Canary Islands is that every month has its ideal activity.

In August, I would not chase the whole island at full speed. I would swim, choose beaches early, hide from midday sun, go north or higher when it makes sense, watch the sky when calima allows it, and keep some space for fiestas.

Even August softens when you slow down.

August on Tenerife is not the month for pretending nature works around your itinerary. It is the month for listening first.

Then comes the softer season: September, the first hints of rain, falling stars, and the slow return of hiking weather.

Summer ends. Autumn starts thinking about arriving. The island changes mood again. That is part of the magic =).

August ends with a hint of the hiking season.

FAQ

Is Tenerife hot in August?

Yes. Tenerife is hot in August, especially in the south and south-west.

AEMET climate normals for Tenerife Sur Airport show average daily highs around 28.4 C. Sheltered resort areas can feel hotter.

A hot day can still change by coast.

What is the weather like in Tenerife in August?

Expect hot, dry, sunny weather, very little normal rainfall in the south, warmer evenings, strong UV, and occasional calima or heat-alert periods.

The north is cooler, but it is not automatically quiet or cloud-free.

Is August a good time to visit Tenerife?

August is good if you want warm sea, summer atmosphere and school-holiday travel. It is less ideal if you want quiet beaches, easy parking, gentle hiking weather or a green-looking island.

Can you swim in Tenerife in August?

Usually yes, and the ocean often feels more inviting than in winter.

Still check flags, lifeguard advice, wind and waves, especially on wild northern beaches and exposed coasts.

Warm water still needs calm sea.

What should I wear in Tenerife in August?

Wear light summer clothes, but bring serious sun protection: hat, sunglasses, SPF 50, cover-up or UV shirt, and comfortable shoes.

Add a light layer for Teide, windy evenings, air conditioning and north-coast days.

Is Tenerife windy in August?

It can be, especially around exposed southern and eastern areas such as El Medano and La Tejita.

Wind can make a hot day feel easier. It can also make swimming, umbrellas and beach comfort worse.

Exposed coasts decide the beach day quickly.

Where should I stay in Tenerife in August?

For an easy beach holiday, stay in the south or south-west.

For character and cooler day trips, use the north, but do not expect it to be empty. Base choice matters because August heat and parking make long daily zigzags tiring.