Short answer: start with Los Cristianos, Costa Adeje, El Medano, Los Gigantes or Puerto de la Cruz. Use Las Americas for surf and nightlife. Treat La Laguna and Santa Cruz as day trips. Pick Candelaria only for a quieter local base.

The accommodation question appears about three minutes after you buy tickets to Tenerife. Every visitor walks the same prickly little path: which part of the island should I choose?

In this guide I explain how to choose the best resort or town for a holiday, a longer stay, or that dangerous thought that starts with “maybe I could live here for a while”.

Choosing a base matters not only for tourists, but also for people who live on the island. Everyone arrives with different needs, rhythms and tolerance for noise, wind, hills, parking and tourist chaos.

Tenerife is a small island, but its resort areas are not small copies of each other. One town has calm beaches and easy buses; another has wind, waves, nightlife, steep streets or a proper local life. That detail can make or break the trip.

Sunny south Tenerife resort coast
The south is convenient, but not one single mood.

Let us start with the main resorts in Tenerife. The tourist cluster in the south is made of several resort towns with good infrastructure and many beautiful beaches without heavy waves.

Most southern Tenerife resorts work well for beach holidays and family trips with children.

Last checked: 8 July 2026. Hotel prices, ferry schedules, bus routes, restaurant awards and beach conditions can change. Use this guide for area choice, then check operators and recent reviews before booking.

AreaBest forMain catch
Las AmericasSurf, nightlife, bars, shopping and young energyNot my first choice for small children or quiet evenings
Los CristianosFamilies, winter sun, easy buses, beaches and ferry tripsPopular, busy and not exactly hidden Tenerife
Costa AdejeComfort, nicer hotels, El Duque, calm resort holidaysHigher prices and a more polished resort feel
Los GigantesWarm winter stays, cliff views and slower beach daysFarther from the motorway and less convenient for island exploring
El MedanoWind sports, local cafe life, young active travelersWind. Real wind. Some visitors never make friends with it
CandelariaLocal atmosphere, east-coast access, quieter staysNot a classic resort and less convenient for beach-only holidays
Santa CruzShopping, concerts, carnival, city errandsTraffic, parking and little holiday mood
La LagunaCulture, old streets, cafes, day tripsNo beaches, cooler weather and clouds
Puerto de la CruzNorth Tenerife, greenery, black-sand beaches, family tripsHills, waves and wetter northern weather
Old towns need a different holiday mood.

How To Choose The Best Area To Stay In Tenerife

Most searches for the best area to stay in Tenerife are really asking the same thing.

Watch this video first. In 8 minutes, I explain why Tenerife towns can feel like different worlds:

Which base will make the holiday easy, not just pretty in hotel photos?

Map note: if you only want south Tenerife resorts, narrow the choice to Los Cristianos, Las Americas, Costa Adeje, Los Gigantes and El Medano. If your real question is which side of Tenerife is best, use the resort notes below to choose southern sun, northern character or a split trip.

  • First trip: Los Cristianos and Costa Adeje are the safest answers because beaches, buses, restaurants and tours are close together.
  • Families: Los Cristianos, Fanabe and Costa Adeje usually beat Las Americas because the swimming and evening mood are calmer.
  • Couples: Costa Adeje works for comfort, El Medano for active local life, Puerto de la Cruz for greener northern character and Los Gigantes for cliff views.
  • Nightlife: Las Americas is still the best place to stay in Tenerife for nightlife, but choose your street carefully.
  • Without a car: Los Cristianos is the easiest base; Costa Adeje can work if you stay near the coast and accept taxi days.
  • Warmest winter base: Los Cristianos, Costa Adeje and Los Gigantes are the safest bets; the north has more character, but more clouds.

Plan like this: there is no single best Tenerife resort for everyone. First decide what would ruin your trip: wind, hills, nightlife, parking, clouds, old apartments, long transfers or feeling trapped in a resort bubble.

Costa Adeje looks polished, but beach choice still matters.

Free Tenerife map

Still comparing towns from too many tabs?

Open my free Tenerife local-secrets page before you book. It helps you connect resort areas with beaches, viewpoints, food stops and quieter days, instead of driving back and forth across the island.

Las Americas is lively first, peaceful second.

Las Americas

Las Americas is Tenerife’s little California: good for surfers, nightlife and young travelers who want the south to feel lively from morning coffee to late drinks. The resort is especially popular with visitors from the UK and Scotland.

Alongside the waves, Las Americas gives you shopping centers and entertainment parks. The famous Siam Park water park is also nearby.

Local verdict: Las Americas has plenty of cafes and restaurants, bars, beach clubs, apartment complexes, hotels and villas. It also has many old, tired apartments. Read recent reviews carefully, especially if the photos look suspiciously cheerful.

Check recent apartment photos, not only the location.

The main beach in Las Americas is important to understand before booking. It is rocky and better for surfing than for easy swimming.

On many streets in Las Americas, bars are more common than child-friendly cafes. In plain language, if you are coming with children, neighboring Los Cristianos is usually the better choice.

Great for surf lessons; less simple for small children.
The border between resorts can feel blurry on foot.

The biggest concentration of nightclubs in the Canary Islands, plus other dodgy late-night spots, sits around Las Veronicas in Las Americas. The party crowd also attracts street sellers, petty thieves and people looking for easy targets.

Safety note: do not engage with street sellers or fake “watch” sellers, especially at night. Las Veronicas can feel unsafe after dark, so keep your phone, wallet and pride tucked away.

Shopping is easy here; quiet evenings are less guaranteed.

Las Americas is also known for the Golden Mile on the border with Los Cristianos. It is a long street with many shops and shopping centers.

Years ago, the Golden Mile was almost a synonym for shopping in south Tenerife. After Siam Mall opened near Siam Park, many visitors moved their shopping plans there.

Before choosing this area, read my article about the real situation on the beaches of Las Americas. The name sounds easier than the water sometimes feels.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: large. I recommend comparing apartments and hotels in Las Americas through a price aggregator. It is often cheaper than booking directly through the biggest platforms.

Useful location, but inspect the building carefully.
Los Cristianos keeps buses, beaches and apartments close together.

Los Cristianos

Los Cristianos is probably the most popular south Tenerife resort for family holidays with children. It has broad white-sand beaches, a calmer atmosphere than Las Americas and enough infrastructure to make an easy holiday actually easy.

Many visitors consider the beaches of Los Cristianos among the best on the west coast. The most popular and beautiful one is Playa Las Vistas.

Local verdict: choose Los Cristianos if you want to stay inside the tourist zone but do not want the loudest part of it. You can still find older architecture, a market square and small restaurants between the beach, port and apartments.

Las Vistas is why families forgive the crowds.

After you choose your resort, read my guide to 30 interesting places in Tenerife. It will save you from spending the whole holiday between the same beach towel and the same supermarket.

Los Cristianos has a good range of accommodation: private apartments, simple aparthotels and larger chain hotels. You can find both quiet corners and lively streets, which is useful if half your group wants early sleep and the other half suddenly discovers cocktails.

Busy, practical and easier than many prettier bases.

There are many playgrounds and plenty of family-friendly apartment areas. Las Americas is also very close, so you can borrow its energy without sleeping inside it.

No-car advantage: Los Cristianos has a central bus station. You can arrive from the airport without a taxi and still make trips toward Santa Cruz or Puerto de la Cruz.

Check the current TITSA timetable before the travel day.

The port of Los Cristianos is another practical bonus. Ferries and sea trips leave from here toward La Gomera and La Palma, and local boats also run fishing and marine excursions.

For no-car trips, this convenience matters.

Los Cristianos is a strong winter choice for Tenerife with a child. It is not wild, secret or poetic, but it works – and on a family trip, “it works” is sometimes the highest luxury.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: large. To book accommodation in Los Cristianos, compare prices through an aggregator that compares different booking platforms.

Costa Adeje buys comfort, not secret Tenerife.

Costa Adeje

Costa Adeje is another major resort in the south. It attracts travelers with a higher budget who want better beaches, good hotels, polished service and fewer rough edges.

Honeymooners often come here for the more luxurious hotels. I have recommended places such as Royal Hideaway Corales Suites, Hotel Riu Palace Tenerife and Baobab Suites, but always check recent reviews and current prices before booking.

The resort strip is polished and easy.
Higher prices can save daily logistics.

Of course, Costa Adeje has many good restaurants. Some serious fine-dining addresses are in and around this part of the island, but guide listings change, so treat dinner as something to check, not something to assume. Prices are, unsurprisingly, rather high.

Compare location carefully; not every Adeje address is beachside.
Promenades make Costa Adeje easy with children.

In the center of the resort sits El Duque beach, one of the most beautiful beaches in southern Tenerife. Fanabe and El Beril are nearby.

El Duque is beautiful, expensive and rarely empty.

The best hotels and villas here suit travelers who are ready to pay for quality, quiet and comfort. If your budget is more modest, do not suffer heroically: come to Costa Adeje for a day, enjoy the rich-resort pleasures, then sleep somewhere more sensible.

Price level: $$$. Accommodation choice: medium.

Costa Adeje life hack: five-star hotels sometimes run promotions that make a stay close to a good four-star price. A price aggregator makes it easier to compare those offers.

Is Costa Adeje north or south? Costa Adeje is in south Tenerife, on the beach-resort coast. Adeje town is up in the hills above the motorway. The mountain town has no beach and no resort-hotel strip, but it can be much cheaper than the coast.

Adeje town is inland; do not book it by accident.

Locals live in Adeje town, and the center still keeps the atmosphere of an old Canarian settlement. You can see more in my video about sights and life in Adeje.

Remember that staying outside a main resort, in a small town or village, usually means you need a car. Public transport works for some routes, but the timetable can still make a beautiful plan collapse into waiting.

Cheaper local streets sit above the resort coast.
Los Gigantes is about cliffs, warmth and patience.

Los Gigantes

Known for its cliffs, the southern resort of Los Gigantes is one of the warmest places to stay in Tenerife in winter.

It is easy to find accommodation with beautiful views of the ocean and the basalt cliffs, which rise roughly 600 meters above the sea. The whole town sits on a slope, so many terraces come with a dramatic view whether you asked for drama or not.

The cliffs explain why people accept the distance.

There are large hotels, but tourists in Los Gigantes often choose apartments. Almost the whole town is apartments and tourist-facing businesses.

Hills matter more here than hotel descriptions admit.

Because the town is so oriented toward tourism, service quality and prices can suffer. Finding a genuinely good restaurant in Los Gigantes can be harder than the view suggests.

Ask yourself whether you want to spend the whole holiday inside a tourist reservation. If that does not bother you and you want maximum winter warmth, Los Gigantes can be the right answer.

On the plus side, Los Gigantes has two beautiful beaches where swimming can be comfortable when the sea allows it. There is also a dramatic but dangerous grotto, snorkeling territory and the local-famous stingray story. Enjoy wildlife with your eyes, not your hands.

Good winter warmth; less freedom for constant exploring.

The cliffs are the highlight of the resort, but one day is enough to meet them properly. Whether you should live here for one or two weeks is another question.

The road from Los Gigantes to the island’s main motorway takes about 30 minutes. Add that time to almost every sightseeing day, and the location of this resort becomes much clearer.

If you want to explore Canarian culture, landscapes and towns without spending hours on access roads, stay closer to the north-central part of the island or somewhere with faster motorway access.

Los Gigantes suits families with children and travelers who do not plan to drive around the island constantly. The location does not encourage frequent trips, especially during morning and evening traffic near Las Americas. Yes, Los Gigantes is one of the warmest places in Tenerife in winter.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: medium. Book a hotel or apartment in Los Gigantes through this comparison link, and choose a view of the ocean and cliffs if you are paying for the location anyway.

Choose this base when slow days are the plan.
El Medano is active, local and proudly windy.

El Medano

My beloved El Medano is a mecca for kitesurfing and windsurfing.

Frequent wind gathers fit athletes from all over Europe. Everyone tries to conquer the elements: some on surfboards or kites, others by swimming or running toward neighboring Red Mountain.

It is very pleasant to sit in a cafe on the promenade and watch all this movement. El Medano pulls in Spanish and Canarian lovers of bohemia, ocean romance and slightly salty hair.

If this looks fun, El Medano may suit you.
A great base for people who like movement.

On weekends, people from the north often come here looking for a bit of solitude and a warmer, easier mood.

Cafe life here feels less resort-made.

Living in town is very convenient: the beach is close, there is a good supermarket nearby, and there are plenty of excellent cafes.

El Medano is famous for its large sandy beach and golden dunes, where you can hide from both the sun and the wind.

Beautiful sand, but the wind writes the rules.

The wind can scare an unprepared visitor. You get used to it quickly, and after a while it feels strange not to taste salt in the air. But if your dream holiday is a perfectly still beach towel, be honest with yourself.

Ask about wind exposure before booking apartments.

In any case, this southern town is one of Tenerife’s real highlights. People stay in the highlight either in one of its few hotels – historically, only around three – or in apartments and villas.

El Medano is so small and cozy that you can walk to the beach in five minutes from almost any house. Luckily, most tourists dislike the wind and prefer Las Americas or Adeje =).

I made a video for you explaining why Spanish and Canarian visitors love El Medano so much:

Price level: $. Accommodation choice: medium.

I know several good apartments in El Medano that you will not find on the big booking platforms. If you want to stay in El Medano, write through Contacts and I will help.

Small-town charm works best for flexible travelers.
Candelaria feels local before it feels resort-like.

Candelaria

Moving farther along the east coast, you reach Candelaria. You cannot call it a major tourist favorite, but Candelaria has loyal fans.

People come here to touch a little history and religion, while avoiding the full mass-tourism current. Candelaria has the essentials for a holiday, including several sandy beaches. Apartments are the most common tourist accommodation here.

Candelaria works for travelers who do not want to spend too much time driving between the sights of northern and southern Tenerife, and who do not want to live inside a tourist reservation.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: medium.

A quieter east-coast base with real town life.
Good for calm stays, not hotel-bubble holidays.

Santa Cruz de Tenerife

The island capital is not really one of Tenerife’s popular resort zones. Honestly, if you are choosing a holiday base, I would usually choose another area.

People usually come to Santa Cruz for shopping, errands, a concert at the Auditorio de Tenerife, or carnival. Here is one of my videos from that city mood:

Santa Cruz de Tenerife is a real city. Everyone is going somewhere, there are many people, traffic jams, and free parking is not a mythical creature I recommend chasing.

In winter, Santa Cruz hosts Carnival, but even during the festival, tourists rarely book their main holiday accommodation here.

Santa Cruz shines for events, not beach laziness.

From Santa Cruz it is not far to the famous golden-sand Las Teresitas beach and Anaga. But that advantage is less obvious when traffic joins the conversation.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: small.

Stay here for city life, not resort ease.
Useful city base, awkward classic holiday base.

La Laguna

La Laguna is one of the oldest and most beautiful towns in northern Tenerife, and you should absolutely visit it.

The former capital, San Cristobal de La Laguna, is generous with culture, but it is not a good holiday base for most visitors. There are no beaches and none of the familiar tourist-resort comforts. There are museums, basilicas and cozy cafes instead.

Local detail: for much of the year, clouds sit over La Laguna, which is why the town feels green and fresh. In winter it can drop below 10 degrees C, while the south may feel like another island.

I recommend coming here for an excursion, a slow walk and coffee, but not living here during a beach-focused holiday.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: small.

La Laguna is a visit-first, stay-later decision.
The north gives character and more weather drama.

Puerto de la Cruz

The star among Tenerife’s northern resorts is Puerto de la Cruz. English visitors began coming here in the late 19th century, and after the Second World War, travelers from many different countries followed.

Today, Puerto de la Cruz is especially loved by German tourists. If you want to stay in the north of Tenerife and do not know which resort to choose, Puerto is usually the first place to study.

Check hills before falling in love with views.

Puerto de la Cruz is popular because of its greenery, dramatic black-sand beaches with large waves, and that slightly retro sanatorium feeling from the 1980s.

There is a scenic ocean promenade, many parks and a beautiful botanical garden. Puerto de la Cruz is also home to Loro Parque.

It can be a very good family base surrounded by subtropical greenery. Black volcanic beaches are waiting, but remember that northern waves are not decoration.

Puerto gives greenery, black sand and Atlantic mood.

Puerto de la Cruz has a wide choice of apartments and hotels for different tastes.

Study the map carefully before booking. Part of Puerto de la Cruz sits on a significant height difference, and a charming apartment can turn into a daily hill workout.

Price level: $$. Accommodation choice: medium. To book accommodation in Puerto de la Cruz, compare options through an aggregator and choose the best offer across booking platforms.

Plan like this: book hotels and apartments early. The best prices often appear around six months before a trip. During New Year, August and Semana Santa, I would start much earlier. Accommodation and cars can disappear almost a year ahead.

Easy bases still save real holiday time.

Did this Tenerife resort ranking help?

Have you chosen where to stay and relax? Leave a thank-you comment. It motivates us to keep making useful materials.

After deciding on accommodation, carefully read my ranking of Tenerife excursions and places. There you will find the island’s most interesting stops, places you should not miss, bad guides, tour-agent tricks and, as usual, a sea of useful details and life hacks ;).

A good base makes big days calmer.

Handcrafted Tenerife guide

Chosen your base? Now build the day properly.

If you do not want to connect beaches, viewpoints, Teide, food stops, parking, weather and quieter timing by yourself, use my handcrafted Tenerife guide. It helps you explore like a careful local guest, not like a person collecting random pins.

Route planning starts after the base choice.

FAQ

Where is the best place to stay in Tenerife for a first trip?

For most first-time visitors, Los Cristianos, Costa Adeje or Puerto de la Cruz are the safest starting points. Choose Los Cristianos for family practicality, Costa Adeje for comfort and Puerto de la Cruz for northern greenery and a different island mood.

What are the main resorts in Tenerife?

The main Tenerife resorts are Las Americas, Los Cristianos, Costa Adeje, Los Gigantes, El Medano and Puerto de la Cruz. These are the popular resorts in Tenerife most visitors compare.

Santa Cruz, La Laguna and Candelaria can be useful towns for specific trips, but they are not classic resort answers.

Practical resorts win by boring details.

Where is the best place to stay in Tenerife South?

If your question is where to stay in Tenerife South, choose Los Cristianos for practical family or no-car trips, Costa Adeje for comfort, Las Americas for nightlife and surf, Los Gigantes for winter warmth and cliff views, or El Medano for wind sports and local cafe life.

Easy south bases solve daily logistics.

What is the best place to stay in Tenerife for families?

The best resort in Tenerife for families is usually Los Cristianos if you want the easiest first answer. You get calmer beaches, playgrounds, restaurants, buses and a quieter feel than Las Americas.

Costa Adeje also works well if the budget is higher.

Managed beaches make family days easier.

What is the best place to stay in Tenerife for couples?

The best resort in Tenerife for couples depends on mood. Costa Adeje is the polished answer, Los Gigantes is scenic and slower, El Medano is active and informal, and Puerto de la Cruz is better for couples who prefer greenery, old towns and northern character over guaranteed beach weather.

What is the best place to stay in Tenerife without a car?

Los Cristianos is one of the better no-car bases because of its bus station, port, beaches and walkable resort layout.

Puerto de la Cruz can also work for the north, but you need to accept fewer remote viewpoints and more timetable planning.

No-car bases need life beyond the beach.

Which Tenerife resort is warmest in winter?

If you are searching for the hottest part of Tenerife, look first at the southwest: Los Gigantes, Costa Adeje and Los Cristianos.

The north and La Laguna can feel much cooler and cloudier, especially in winter.

The southwest buys warmer winter odds.

What is the best place to stay in Tenerife for nightlife?

Las Americas is the clearest nightlife base in Tenerife, especially around the busiest bar and club areas.

Common mistake: booking close to nightlife because it looks convenient, then trying to sleep early. Choose accommodation away from the loudest streets if you want both energy and rest.

Young energy is better with a plan.

Is Las Americas good for children?

It can work, but I would usually choose Los Cristianos or Costa Adeje for children. Las Americas has more bars, nightlife and surf-oriented beach sections, so it is better for young adults, surfers and people who want energy.

A good base makes the whole island easier.

Dmitriy from Hiking Tenerife