Travel Guide to Fuerteventura, Spain
Region: Europe · Budget: Cheap · Flight from UK: 4 hours · Best months: Year-round
Fuerteventura, Spain sits among Europe's most rewarding destinations and is well-connected by rail and short flights, with reliable infrastructure and easy onward travel to neighbouring countries. Canary Island with endless golden beaches, strong winds, and volcanic landscapes. Here, the island setting shapes everything from the food to the daily rhythm, and the pace is unhurried — this is a place to read on a balcony, eat slowly and let the days run together. It's particularly well suited to family, couples, friends — the rhythm of the place naturally fits how that group likes to travel. Direct flying time from the UK is roughly 4 hours, so you can be on the ground and exploring within the same day. Flights from London are short and frequent, and rail can be a comfortable alternative on cross-border legs. This guide is written specifically for British travellers — covering when to go, what to budget in pounds, where to stay, day-by-day suggestions, plus the visa and safety details that matter most. Whether you're going as a couple, with friends, solo or as a family, the sections below should help you build a trip that fits how you actually like to travel rather than a generic top-10 checklist.
Budget breakdown (per day, GBP)
Stay £15–£35 · Food £8–£18 · Activities £5–£15 · Total £28–£68
Best time to visit
The best time to visit Fuerteventura is year-round. This window typically delivers warm year-round conditions, with manageable crowds and the most reliable weather for sightseeing. High summer (July–August) brings the largest crowds and peak prices — book 2–3 months ahead if you're locked into school holidays. If your dates are flexible, aim for the very start or very end of the recommended window for the sweet spot of weather, crowds and price. Pricing for both flights and accommodation in Fuerteventura can swing 30–50% between low and high season, so flexibility on dates is the single biggest lever you have on overall trip cost.
Weather overview
Fuerteventura typically experiences warm year-round conditions during peak season. Pack layers regardless of the forecast — even reliable climates can have cool evenings, and exposed coastal or mountain spots catch wind that's not in the temperature reading. Sea temperatures peak in the recommended months, and water-shoes are useful on rocky or shell-strewn shores. A lightweight waterproof, comfortable walking shoes and one slightly smarter outfit will cover almost every situation. Check a 10-day forecast in the week before you fly to fine-tune the packing list.
Suggested trip length
1 Week
Day-by-day itinerary
- Day 1: Arrive in Fuerteventura, drop bags at your accommodation and take a slow orientation walk through the centre to get your bearings before the jet lag hits. Grab an early dinner near your hotel — somewhere you can walk back from in five minutes — and have an early night to reset your body clock. If you've still got energy in the evening: Corralejo dunes.
- Day 2: Cofete Beach in the morning while you're fresh and the light is good for photos, followed by a long local lunch somewhere off the main tourist drag. Afternoon: explore a neighbourhood you haven't seen yet on foot, stopping for a coffee or a drink whenever you find a spot that looks right.
- Day 3: Windsurfing — book any tickets in advance online to skip the queues, which can easily eat 90 minutes in peak season. Afternoon: a slower café-and-shops loop in a different part of town, then dinner somewhere recommended by your accommodation hosts rather than a top-10 list.
- Day 4: Oasis Park. Use the second half of the day for any souvenirs or gifts to take home, and try a restaurant outside the main tourist strip — typically 30–40% cheaper for noticeably better food. End the day somewhere with a view, sunset is usually the best free attraction in any city.
- Day 5: Day trip out of Fuerteventura — a coastal town, mountain village, vineyard region or nearby city is usually under an hour by train, bus or ferry and gives you a completely different angle on Spain. Pack light, leave early, and aim to be back for a relaxed dinner.
- Day 6–7: Revisit your favourite spot from earlier in the week now that you know your way around, slow down with a long lunch, and pick up anything you missed on the first pass. Use the final morning for a quiet breakfast and a final wander before heading to the airport — leave at least 3 hours' buffer for international flights.
Things to do in Fuerteventura
- Corralejo dunes
- Cofete Beach
- Windsurfing
- Oasis Park
Best areas to stay in Fuerteventura
- The main town or port — ideal for first-timers; you can walk to most restaurants, the harbour and the main square, and ferries leave from your doorstep so you don't lose half a morning to transfers.
- A quieter beach village 15–25 minutes from the main hub — better value, more local food, and you'll wake up to a calmer beach with locals rather than tour groups; ideal for stays of four nights or more.
- An emerging or up-and-coming district — a bit further from the headline sights but the most interesting food and bars, and where younger locals actually go out at the weekend.
- A pick close to your main transport hub — useful if you have an early flight or train out, or if you're combining Fuerteventura with another stop on a wider trip; saves an awkward 5am taxi at the end of the holiday.
Transport tips
- Skip the airport taxi rank for arrival — the official train, metro or shuttle bus serving Fuerteventura is typically 50–80% cheaper and often just as fast.
- Inter-island ferries get booked up in high season — buy tickets the day before, especially for popular routes.
- Renting a car or scooter unlocks the quieter beaches and viewpoints; check that your travel insurance covers two-wheel rentals.
- Use Google Maps' offline mode by downloading the area before you arrive, paired with a local eSIM (Airalo or similar) for reliable mobile data.
- If you're combining Fuerteventura with another European city, compare rail (Trainline, Omio) with budget flights — trains are often faster door-to-door once you factor in airport transfers and security queues.
Safety tips
- Fuerteventura is generally safe for tourists, but the usual urban precautions apply — keep phones and wallets out of back pockets, especially on public transport, at busy viewpoints and around major sights.
- Use ATMs attached to banks rather than standalone machines, and always select 'pay in local currency' when prompted — the in-app conversion rate is usually 3–5% worse than your home bank's.
- Take a photo of your passport details page and store it in your email — replacing a lost passport abroad is far quicker if you have the details ready.
- Get travel insurance before you leave the UK. Costs are minimal compared to the medical bills you can incur abroad, and most policies also cover delayed flights, lost luggage and theft.
- Save the local emergency number and the British Embassy contact in your phone before arrival.
- Check current and tide conditions with locals before swimming on unfamiliar beaches — rip currents account for the majority of tourist accidents.
Visa & entry requirements (UK travellers)
Visa-free up to 90/180 days. ETIAS authorisation required from 2026.