←Back to Destinations

Best Time

Apr – Jun

& Sep – Oct

Budget

$$

~$110 / day

Language

Portugese

English widely spoken

Currency

Euro €

Adopted Jan 2023

Inside Madeira


Madeira rises almost vertically from the Atlantic, a volcanic island with a mountainous interior so dramatic it barely seems compatible with the mild, flower covered coastline below. It is Portuguese but feels like its own thing entirely. The capital Funchal is a proper city with a cathedral, a covered market, and a cable car that climbs the hillside above the old town to gardens that look out over the entire bay. The rest of the island is trails, cliffs, terraced vineyards, and tiny villages connected by roads that cling to the edges of things.

The levadas are what make Madeira unlike anywhere else. An ancient network of narrow irrigation channels that carry water from the wet north of the island to the dry south, now converted into walking trails that cut through laurel forest designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. You walk alongside the water, level and unhurried, through tunnels and along cliff faces, with the forest closing in on both sides. There are hundreds of kilometers of them and no two are alike.

Photos


Top Activities


Walk the levadas

The network of water channel trails is the defining activity of Madeira. Levada do Caldeirão Verde is one of the finest, passing through four tunnels and deep into the Queimadas forest. Levada das 25 Fontes offers waterfalls and dramatic scenery. Start early, bring a headlamp for the tunnels, and wear proper footwear.


Hike Pico do Arieiro to Pico Ruivo

A high altitude ridge walk between the two highest peaks on the island, passing through clouds, across volcanic rock, and through tunnels cut into the mountain. The most demanding hike on Madeira and the most spectacular. Allow five to six hours and check weather conditions before departing.


Take the cable car above Funchal

The Teleférico de Funchal rises from the seafront to Monte, a hillside village with baroque gardens and a church that draws pilgrims from across the Portuguese world. From Monte you can also take the famous wicker toboggan ride back down, guided by men in straw hats who have been doing it for generations.


Drive around the island

The EN101 circumnavigation takes a full day and reveals how many different landscapes Madeira contains. The north coast is dramatic and windswept. The east is flat and open. The west ends at Ponta do Pargo, the most westerly point of Portugal, with lighthouse views across open Atlantic.


Taste Madeira wine

Madeira wine is one of the great fortified wines of the world, aged through a unique process of controlled heating that makes it essentially indestructible. The lodges in Funchal offer tastings across different styles from dry Sercial to rich Malmsey. Even one glass changes your understanding of what wine can be.

Food & Dining


Espada com banana

The black scabbardfish, caught at depths of over a kilometer in the waters around Madeira, served with a fried banana. An unlikely combination that has become the signature dish of the island. The fish is white and delicate, the banana sweet and caramelized. Order it at least once.


Espetada

Chunks of beef seasoned with bay leaf, garlic, and sea salt, skewered on a laurel branch and cooked over wood embers. Served hanging from a hook at the table, carved onto your plate as you eat. The definitive Madeiran social meal.

Best time to visit


Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

-Ideal

-Good

-Calm

Daily Budget


Budget

30/100

~$55

Average

50/100

~$110

Luxury

100/100

~$320+

Getting There


NYC

~8-10 hrs

~$600-950

London

~3.5 hrs

~$80-220

Boston

~7-9 hrs

~$650-$980

FrankFurt

~3.5 hrs

~$90-240

Need to know


The north and south of the island can experience completely different weather on the same day. The mountains create their own cloud systems. Always check conditions before hiking to altitude and bring a layer regardless of the forecast below.

Madeira’s roads are narrow, steep, and full of tunnels. Driving is the best way to explore independently but requires confidence. The expressway system is excellent between major points. The mountain roads demand patience and care.

Several levada trails pass along cliff edges with no barriers. Wear proper footwear, do not attempt tunnel sections without a torch, and tell someone where you are going if you are hiking alone.

Not mandatory but appreciated. Round up at cafes and leave five to ten percent at restaurants where service was genuinely good.

Insider tip

Stay at least five nights. Most visitors do two or three and leave feeling like they only scratched the surface. The island reveals itself slowly and the best levada walks alone could fill a week.

Scroll to Top