The most common question anyone asks before booking a Canary Islands holiday isn't about hotels, or flights, or what to pack. It's simpler and more fundamental: which island should I actually go to? Seven islands sit scattered across 450 km of Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa, and they are more different from each other than most people expect. This guide doesn't hedge. It tells you honestly what each island is, who it suits, and who it doesn't — so you can stop agonising and start planning.
Seven Islands, Seven Personalities
The Canary Islands are a Spanish autonomous community sitting 100 km off the northwest African coast, closer to Morocco than to Madrid. They share a climate — warm, dry, and permanently pleasant by European standards — but almost nothing else. The eastern islands (Lanzarote, Fuerteventura) are flat, arid, and volcanic. The central islands (Gran Canaria, Tenerife) have dramatic mountain interiors and the most developed tourism infrastructure. The western islands (La Palma, La Gomera, El Hierro) are smaller, greener, and significantly quieter.
The single most useful framing: think of the islands on a spectrum from resort at one end to wilderness at the other. Fuerteventura and the south of Tenerife are at the resort end — purpose-built for sun, beach, and ease. El Hierro and La Gomera are at the wilderness end — UNESCO Biosphere Reserves with minimal tourist infrastructure and maximum natural drama. Most islands sit somewhere in the middle, but understanding where each one falls is the key to a good decision.
| Island | Best For | Beaches | Hiking | Nightlife | Quiet? | Flights |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tenerife | Everyone — most versatile | ★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | Moderate | ✦ Many direct |
| Gran Canaria | Cities + dunes + culture | ★★★★★ | ★★★★ | ★★★★★ | Moderate | ✦ Many direct |
| Lanzarote | Couples, architecture, wine | ★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★★ | Low–Med | ✦ Many direct |
| Fuerteventura | Beaches, watersports, sun | ★★★★★ | ★★ | ★★★ | Low–Med | ✦ Many direct |
| La Palma | Hiking, stargazing, nature | ★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★ | Very quiet | – Via connection |
| La Gomera | Serious hikers, escapists | ★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★ | Very quiet | – Via connection |
| El Hierro | Divers, remote seekers | ★★★ | ★★★★ | ★ | Extremely quiet | – Via connection |
Tenerife: The Island That Has Everything
Tenerife
Tenerife is the largest Canary Island and the most visited in Spain. That breadth is exactly its strength: no other island in the archipelago offers the same range of experiences within a single destination. The south delivers resort-grade beaches, guaranteed sunshine (2,900+ hours/year), and Europe-scale nightlife in Playa de las Américas. The north offers the kind of authentic Canarian life — colonial towns, laurisilva forest, the extraordinary Puerto de la Cruz seafront — that the south sacrificed to tourism decades ago.
The centrepiece is Teide: a 3,715-metre volcano at the heart of a UNESCO National Park, surrounded by a surreal landscape of solidified lava fields, pine forests, and a summit that catches snow in winter while the coast bakes below. It's the third-largest volcano in the world measured from its ocean base, and hiking or cabling up to it is one of the genuinely unmissable experiences in the Canaries.
The dividing question with Tenerife is north vs south — covered in our dedicated Tenerife South vs North guide. But the headline is simple: south for guaranteed sun and resort infrastructure, north for character and authenticity. A hire car lets you access both from either base.
Two airports: TFN (north, Puerto de la Cruz) and TFS (south, Playa de las Américas). Choose your airport based on where you're staying.
Gran Canaria: Continent in Miniature
Gran Canaria
Gran Canaria earns its nickname "a continent in miniature" — within 50 km you move from Las Palmas's 19th-century colonial waterfront to the Saharan-scale Maspalomas Dunes to the pine-forested mountain interior around Tejeda at 1,000+ metres. The variety is genuinely extraordinary and rivals Tenerife for sheer diversity of experience, if not for hiking ambition.
Las Palmas is the islands' largest city and one of Spain's most underrated urban destinations. Playa de las Canteras — a 3 km reef-protected urban beach in the heart of the city — is one of Europe's finest city beaches. The Vegueta old quarter, the Columbus museum, the contemporary art museum, the Mercado de Vegueta: this is a city with genuine cultural depth. Our complete Gran Canaria South vs North guide breaks down the full decision.
The Maspalomas Dunes in the south are the island's showpiece: 400 hectares of protected Saharan-sand formations that back directly onto one of the best beach coastlines in the Atlantic. Playa del Inglés\/Maspalomas is also Europe's most significant LGBT+ resort destination — the Yumbo Centre complex is a landmark on its own terms.
Lanzarote: Volcanic Art & Dramatic Landscapes
Lanzarote
Lanzarote is the most visually distinctive island in the archipelago — possibly in all of Europe. The 1730–36 volcanic eruptions buried a third of the island under lava and created a landscape so alien that NASA once used it to train astronauts. The Timanfaya National Park, where geothermal heat just 10 cm below the surface still reaches 400°C, is one of the genuinely unmissable natural experiences in Spain. Our full Timanfaya guide covers it in detail.
The island's second defining character is César Manrique — the Lanzarote-born artist and architect who shaped the island's aesthetic with a precision that amounts to a visual philosophy. His rule: no building above two storeys, no advertising hoardings, everything in white with volcanic accents. The result is an island that manages to be both a beach resort and a work of art simultaneously. His own home at Taro de Tahíche (built inside volcanic bubbles) and the Jameos del Agua are among the most remarkable spaces in the Canaries.
La Geria, the volcanic wine valley where vines grow in hand-dug craters in the lava — covered in our Lanzarote wine route guide — adds a layer of agricultural beauty to a landscape that would otherwise seem purely geological.
Fuerteventura: The Finest Beaches in the Atlantic
Fuerteventura
If your primary goal is a beach — specifically the finest, whitest, longest, most consistently sun-drenched beach possible — Fuerteventura wins the Canary Islands competition without much contest. The island is essentially a wind-sculpted sand shelf attached to Africa (it's less than 100 km from the Saharan coast), and its beaches reflect that proximity: kilometre-long stretches of pale gold sand, clear turquoise water, and trade winds that make it the global capital of kitesurfing and windsurfing.
The Corralejo Dunes in the north are a protected natural park of white sand formations that run for 10 km along the coast — comparable in scale and drama to Maspalomas in Gran Canaria but wilder. The Jandía Peninsula in the south has the calmest and most developed resort beaches. Between them lies an arid, beautiful, volcanic interior that most visitors overlook entirely: the drive through the central mountains between Betancuria and Pájara is one of the most underrated landscapes in the Canaries.
The honest limitation: Fuerteventura is not a cultural destination. Its towns are functional rather than beautiful, its food scene is competent but uninspiring, and its nightlife is mild. If beaches and watersports are your entire agenda, it delivers magnificently. If you want more than that, add a few days on Lanzarote or consider Gran Canaria instead.
A hire car transforms every island. GetRentaCar compares 900+ suppliers — book before travelling to lock in the best rates and availability.
La Palma: The Isla Bonita
La Palma
La Palma is the greenest island in the Canaries — a steep, densely forested mountain rising almost 2,500 metres from the Atlantic, covered in laurisilva cloud forest that was old when the Spanish arrived. The Caldera de Taburiente, a 9 km-wide ancient volcanic depression at the island's heart, is the centrepiece of a National Park that offers some of the most dramatic hiking in the entire archipelago. For serious walkers, La Palma edges out even Tenerife's Anaga peninsula in terms of sustained wow factor.
The Cumbre Vieja eruption of September–December 2021 was the most significant volcanic event in the Canaries in 50 years. It destroyed around 3,000 buildings and buried the southwest coast under lava. The island is fully open to visitors in 2026 — the lava fields in the south have become a dramatic new landscape attraction in their own right — but travellers should be aware that some southwest areas remain affected. The rest of the island was untouched.
La Palma's other distinction is its sky. Roque de los Muchachos, at 2,426 metres, hosts one of the world's most important astronomical observatories — the altitude, stability, and lack of light pollution make it a designated Starlight Reserve. Stargazing here is genuinely extraordinary. Our La Palma stargazing guide covers the best spots and times.
And for something truly off the radar: Porís de Candelaria, a handful of whitewashed houses sheltered under a volcanic cliff arch, accessible only by a steep cliff path or by sea — the most isolated inhabited settlement in the archipelago.
La Gomera: The Undiscovered Forest Island
La Gomera
La Gomera is the island that travellers who know the Canaries well tend to name as their favourite — and the one that most visitors never reach. It sits 35 minutes by fast ferry from Los Cristianos in Tenerife, which makes it one of the most accessible "hidden" destinations in the Atlantic, yet its tiny size (370 km²), steep terrain, and genuine lack of resort development keep it effectively off the package tourism circuit.
The island's heart is Garajonay National Park — 4,000 hectares of ancient laurisilva cloud forest, where trees grow permanently draped in moss and lichen, the paths are perpetually damp, and the canopy creates a green twilight even at midday. Our Garajonay guide covers the best trail routes. The forest is classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and contains some of the last surviving laurisilva on earth — a vegetation type that once covered much of southern Europe and North Africa before the last Ice Age. Walking through it is like walking through another geological era.
La Gomera is also home to El Silbo — a whistling language developed by the Guanche people to communicate across the island's deep ravines, capable of conveying complex messages over distances of several kilometres. It's still taught in schools and is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
El Hierro: Where the World Ends
El Hierro
El Hierro was the westernmost point of the known world until Columbus proved otherwise — the prime meridian ran through it until the 17th century. Today it's the smallest, quietest, and most remote of the main Canary Islands, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve with a permanent population of around 11,000 and virtually no mass tourism. Reaching it requires a connection flight via Tenerife or Gran Canaria or a long ferry from Los Cristianos. That friction is the whole point.
The island runs entirely on renewable energy — a combination of wind and hydroelectric power makes it the first island in the world to achieve full energy independence from fossil fuels in normal conditions. This is both an environmental statement and a reflection of the island's character: self-contained, deliberate, unconcerned with what the rest of the world thinks.
El Hierro's coast — particularly the Mar de las Calmas (Sea of Calms) on the southwest — has some of the clearest water in the Atlantic and is internationally rated as one of Europe's top diving destinations. The volcanic natural pools at Charco Azul and La Maceta are among the most beautiful in the archipelago. Our El Hierro diving guide covers the main sites.
This is not the island for travellers who want easy, comfortable, amenity-rich holidays. It is absolutely the island for those who want to experience what the Atlantic actually feels like at the edge of Europe, in a place that has not been packaged for consumption.
The Honest Decision Framework
Which Island Is Right for You?
First time in the Canaries, want everything: Tenerife. It's the most versatile island in the archipelago and the hardest to choose wrong with. Fly into TFS for south, TFN for north.
Best beaches, maximum sun, watersports: Fuerteventura. No other island matches it for pure beach quality and consistent sunshine. Accept the trade-off on culture and food.
City life + great beaches + cultural depth: Gran Canaria. Las Palmas is the only real city in the islands; combined with the Maspalomas dunes it offers a range no other island can match.
Couples, architecture, wine, something different: Lanzarote. César Manrique's island is the most aesthetically singular destination in Spain. Timanfaya and La Geria make it unforgettable.
Serious hiking, stargazing, nature immersion: La Palma. The best walking island in the Canaries by a meaningful margin. The eruption aftermath adds a new layer of volcanic drama.
Complete escape, ancient forest, day trip option: La Gomera. Reachable from Tenerife in 35 minutes, but feels like a different world. Best for experienced travellers who know what they're looking for.
Remote, diving, the true end of the world: El Hierro. Not for everyone. Exactly right for the right person.
Can't decide? Visit two. Inter-island flights with Binter Canarias take 30–60 minutes and cost 40–90€ one way. A two-week trip covering Tenerife + La Gomera, or Lanzarote + Fuerteventura, or Gran Canaria + La Palma is entirely realistic and rewards the effort. Kiwi.com searches inter-island routes as part of the same booking flow.
Getting to the Canary Islands
Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, and Fuerteventura all have international airports with direct flights from dozens of European cities. La Palma (SPC) has limited direct services, primarily from mainland Spain and a few northern European cities. La Gomera and El Hierro have no direct international flights — they're accessed via Tenerife or Gran Canaria, by inter-island flight or ferry.
Kiwi.com is particularly useful for Canary Islands flights because it searches multi-carrier routes — useful when you want to arrive on one island and leave from another without backtracking. For all four main islands, a hire car is close to essential for seeing beyond the resort zone. Book in advance — airport availability gets thin in peak season. For the remote western islands, mobile signal can be patchy: a Spain eSIM from Saily or Yesim activates before you travel and covers the full archipelago.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Explore our complete guides to every Canary Island — or dive straight into planning with flights and car hire sorted in one place.