Admin
6 juillet 2026

Mount Teide isn't just the highlight of Tenerife — at 3,715 metres it's the highest peak in all of Spain, and its national park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that looks more like Mars than the Canary Islands. Whether you want to ride the cable car to the summit, watch the sunset from above the clouds, or stargaze in one of the world's best dark-sky reserves, here's how to plan a Teide visit that's actually worth the trip.
The drive up alone is worth it: you climb through pine forest, break above the clouds, and emerge into a vast volcanic caldera of frozen lava rivers, twisted rock and ochre desert. It's the most-visited national park in Spain for a reason. Most of Tenerife's best day trips and excursions build around it, and it's the centrepiece of the island's nature and outdoor tours.
There are two realistic ways up:
• The cable car (Teleférico). It whisks you from 2,356 m to 3,555 m in about eight minutes, leaving a short walk to the viewpoints near the summit. Book tickets online in advance — same-day queues are long and it closes in high wind.
• A guided excursion. A guide handles the driving, timing and the best photo stops, and often bundles the cable car with other national-park highlights. If you don't want to rent a car or navigate the mountain roads, this is the easy, stress-free option.
Note the summit permit: to stand on the very peak (the final 200 m above the upper cable-car station) you need a free permit booked well ahead, or a guided sunrise climb that includes it. The viewpoints below the peak need no permit and the views are still spectacular.
This is where Teide becomes magic:
• Sunrise from near the summit, above a sea of cloud, is a bucket-list moment — usually done as an early guided climb.
• Sunset paints the caldera in reds and golds; many visitors pair it with what comes next.
• Stargazing. Teide National Park is a certified Starlight Reserve — some of the clearest night skies in Europe, above much of the weather. A sunset and stargazing tour with telescopes and a guide who knows the sky is the single best evening you can have on the island.
People underestimate this constantly. At 3,500 m it can be 15–20°C colder than the beach, windy, and the sun is fierce.
1. A warm layer and a windproof jacket — even in summer.
2. Proper closed shoes for the volcanic terrain.
3. Sunglasses, sun cream and water — the UV at altitude is no joke.
4. A charged camera; the light changes fast.
Teide is a year-round destination, but the roads and cable car can close in snow (yes, snow in the Canaries) in winter and in high wind any time. Clear, calm mornings are the safest bet — another argument for a guided trip that tracks conditions for you.
If you're comfortable renting a car and booking the cable car and permit yourself, you can do Teide independently. But for the sunset-and-stargazing experience, or a sunrise summit, a guide is the difference between a good evening and an unforgettable one — they know the viewpoints, carry the telescopes, and handle the permits and timing. Browse the options on our Tenerife tours and experiences page and book ahead, especially in summer.
How do you get to the top of Mount Teide? By cable car from 2,356 m to 3,555 m, then a short walk to the viewpoints. Standing on the actual 3,715 m peak requires a free permit booked in advance (or a guided sunrise climb that includes it).
Do I need a permit for Mount Teide? Only for the final stretch to the very summit. The cable-car viewpoints and the rest of the national park are free to visit.
Is Teide good for stargazing? Exceptionally — it's a certified Starlight Reserve with some of Europe's clearest skies. Guided stargazing tours provide telescopes and expert commentary.
What should I wear on Mount Teide? Warm, windproof layers and closed shoes. It's much colder and windier at altitude than at sea level, even in summer.