Best Glamping Spots Near Tenerife for a Night Under the Stars

Photo by  Andreas M

17 min read · Tenerife, Spain · unique glamping spots ·

Best Glamping Spots Near Tenerife for a Night Under the Stars

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Ana Martinez

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Anana Martinez

I have spent the better part of a decade sleeping in every corner of Tenerife, from the pine forests above La Orotava to the volcanic plains outside Güímar, and I can tell you that the best glamping spots near Tenerife are not where most tourists think to look. They are scattered across the island's microclimates, tucked into banana plantations, perched on cliff edges, and hidden in reforested highlands where the only sound at night is the wind moving through Canary Island pines. What I want to give you here is not a generic roundup but a deeply personal, street-level guide to places where I have actually unrolled my sleeping bag, where I have watched the stars from a hot tub at two in the morning, and where I have learned which owners will sneak you a bottle of local Listán Negro if you ask nicely. Tenerife's glamping scene has grown quietly but dramatically, and the range of options now includes everything from geodesic dome tent Tenerife setups in the Anaga Rural Park to luxury camping Tenerife retreats along the coast near Costa Adeje. Each one connects you to a different version of this island, and that is what makes choosing the right one so important.

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Finca La Hacienda: Rural Luxury in the Heart of the Orotava Valley

Finca La Hacienda, Calle San Juan, La Orotava

You reach Finca La Hacienda by driving up through the old town of La Orotava, past the terraced gardens of the Marquesado de la Quinta Roja, and then turning onto Calle San Juan where the road narrows and the banana plantations close in on both sides. The property sits on a working agricultural estate that has been in the same family since the 1940s, and the owners converted three sections of their upper terraces into glamping plots in 2019. Each plot has a raised wooden platform with a king-size bed, a small outdoor kitchen, and a private shower built from volcanic stone. What makes this place worth your time is the silence. You are at roughly 600 meters elevation, below the cloud line that often sits above the valley, and on a clear night the Milky Way stretches directly over the peak of Teide. I visited in late October and the temperature hovered around 18 degrees Celsius at midnight, which meant I slept with just a light blanket. The best time to arrive is late afternoon, around five, because the light turns the valley walls gold and you can watch the shadow of Teide creep across the plantations below. One detail most tourists miss is the small chapel on the property, Capilla de San Isidro, which is only open on the first Sunday of each month. If your visit aligns, the morning mass followed by coffee in the courtyard is one of the most quietly beautiful experiences on the island. My only honest complaint is that the access road is unpaved for the last 400 meters, and if you are driving a low rental car, you will need to go slowly to avoid scraping the undercarriage on the volcanic rock.

Teide National Park Glamping: Sleeping at the Foot of Spain's Highest Peak

Cañada de los Guancheros, La Esperanza

The area around La Esperanza, along the TF-24 highway that climbs from La Laguna toward Teide, has become the epicenter of luxury camping Tenerife has to offer. Several operators run permanent dome tent Tenerife installations in the Cañada de los Guancheros area, and the one I keep returning to is a small cluster of six geodesic domes set among Canary Island pines at roughly 1,400 meters elevation. Each dome has a transparent ceiling panel above the bed, a propane heater for the cold months, and a wooden deck with two reclining chairs. The operator provides breakfast each morning, and the item you must order is the torta de papas con mojo rojo, a local potato cake served with spicy red pepper sauce that they source from a family kitchen in El Sauzal. I have been here in every season, and the best time is late spring, April through May, when the wild lavender blooms along the trail edges and the daytime temperature sits around 22 degrees. The connection to Tenerife's history here is direct. The Guanche people, the island's original inhabitants, used these same highland caves and clearings for seasonal grazing, and you can still find pottery fragments along the trail that runs behind the domes. The insider tip I always share is to book a dome on the eastern edge of the cluster. Those two units face the sunrise over the Anaga mountains, and the light coming through the transparent panel is extraordinary. The downside is that the shared bathroom facility is a two-minute walk from the farthest dome, and in winter months that walk in the dark at three in the morning is genuinely cold and uncomfortable.

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Casa del Acantilado: Cliffside Glamping on the West Coast

Calle Los Molinos, Los Gigantes

Los Gigantes is named for the massive volcanic cliffs that plunge into the Atlantic on Tenerife's western edge, and along Calle Los Molinos you will find a small property that the owners describe as a "cliffside retreat" rather than a glamping site, though the experience is essentially luxury camping Tenerife style. The main accommodation is a large canvas bell tent set on a wooden platform that hangs over the cliff edge, with floor-to-ceiling mesh panels on the ocean side. You can lie in bed and watch fishing boats cross the channel toward La Gomera. The property is on a quiet residential street, and the neighbors are mostly local families who have lived here for generations. What I love about this spot is the evening ritual. Every night around eight, the owner brings a tray of local cheeses, membrillo paste, and a glass of dry white wine made from Listán Blanco grapes grown in the nearby Valle de Santiago. It is not on the booking page. It just happens. The best time to visit is September, when the tourist crowds have thinned but the sea is still warm enough for swimming at the small beach 300 meters below the property. One thing most visitors do not realize is that the path down to that beach is an old goat trail that was used by fishermen for centuries, and it is steep enough that you should wear proper shoes, not flip-flops. I learned that the hard way on my first visit. The connection to Tenerife's coastal culture is palpable here. The fishing tradition in Los Gigantes dates back to the 16th century, and you can still see the old drying racks for salted fish along the rocks below.

Finca Eco-Friendly Stay in Anaga Rural Park

Camino de las Lajas, Anaga

The Anaga Rural Park occupies the northeastern corner of Tenerife, and the area around Camino de las Lajas is one of the most ecologically significant zones on the island. A small eco-glamping operation here runs four elevated wooden cabins, each built on stilts to minimize impact on the surrounding laurisilva forest. This is the closest you will get to a treehouse stay Tenerife offers in a formal glamping context, because the cabins are literally suspended among the trees, with rope bridges connecting them to the shared facilities. The forest here is a relic of the subtropical laurel forests that covered much of southern Europe millions of years ago, and walking through it feels like stepping into a different geological era. I visited in February and the mist was so thick that I could not see more than ten meters in any direction, which made the experience feel almost supernatural. The best time to come is late autumn or early winter, when the cloud forest is at its most atmospheric and the tourist traffic is almost zero. The owner, a former park ranger, leads free guided walks on Tuesday and Thursday mornings that cover the history of the charcoal trade that sustained Anaga's communities for centuries. That walk is the single best thing about staying here. My complaint is practical. The cabins are not heated, and in winter the interior temperature can drop to around 10 degrees Celsius. Bring layers. The insider detail is that the water in the outdoor showers comes directly from a mountain spring, and it is some of the cleanest water on the island.

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Dome Tent Experience in Güímar's Volcanic Landscape

Camino de la Chafa, Güímar

Güímar is best known for its pyramids, the step-pyramid structures that explorer Thor Heyerdahl believed had connections to ancient transatlantic navigation, but the area around Camino de la Chafa offers something entirely different. A small glamping site here operates three dome tent Tenerife installations on a former vineyard at about 400 meters elevation, with views across the arid southeastern coast toward the Güímar pyramids and the Atlantic beyond. The domes are larger than most, roughly 30 square meters each, and come with a proper bed, a small sitting area, and a private outdoor hot tub. Yes, a hot tub in a dome tent on a volcanic hillside. I visited in March and spent most of my first evening in that tub watching the sun set over the ocean while drinking a cold Dorada beer from the site's small honor bar. The best time to arrive is mid-afternoon, around four, because the light on the pyramids in the late afternoon is extraordinary and you can walk to the archaeological site in about 20 minutes. The connection to Tenerife's agricultural history is real. This land was part of a vineyard that produced wine for local consumption until the 1970s, and the old stone terraces are still visible around the property. One thing most tourists do not know is that the Güímar pyramids are free to visit on Sunday mornings, and if you go at opening time, nine o'clock, you will have the entire site to yourself. The downside is that the road to the site is a narrow agricultural track, and passing another vehicle requires one of you to reverse for several hundred meters. Not ideal if you are not confident in reverse driving.

Luxury Glamping Near Costa Adeje: Coastal Comfort

Calle Los Cardones, Parque Taoro, Adeje

The area around Parque Taoro in Adeje, just inland from the Costa Adeje resort strip, has seen the development of several high-end glamping properties in recent years. The one I am most familiar with sits on Calle Los Cardones and features six large safari-style tents on individual plots, each with a private plunge pool, an outdoor rain shower, and a covered terrace with a daybed. This is luxury camping Tenerife at its most polished, with daily housekeeping, a concierge service, and a small restaurant on-site that serves Canarian cuisine with a modern twist. The dish you need to try is the almogrote, a thick cheese spread from La Gomera that the chef here makes with local goat cheese, roasted garlic, and a touch of pimentón de la Vera. Spread it on toasted grain bread and you will understand why I keep coming back. The best time to visit is late autumn, October and November, when the coastal temperature is still around 24 degrees but the summer crowds have completely disappeared. The insider tip is to ask for the tent closest to the edge of the property. That one has an unobstructed view of the ocean, and on clear nights you can see the lights of La Gomera reflecting on the water. The connection to Tenerife's modern development story is interesting here. This area was farmland until the 1990s, when the tourism boom transformed the coastline, and the property owner still grows avocados and mangoes on the lower section of the land. My honest gripe is that the restaurant closes at nine in the evening, and if you arrive late from exploring the island, your dinner options are limited to whatever you can assemble from the mini-fridge in your tent.

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Treehouse Stay Tenerife: Elevated Living in the Teno Mountains

Carretera TF-436, Teno Alto

The Teno Mountains form the northwestern spine of Tenerife, and the area along the TF-436 highway in Teno Alto is one of the most remote and beautiful parts of the island. A small operation here offers two treehouse-style cabins built into the canopy of a reforested eucalyptus and pine grove at roughly 800 meters elevation. This is the most authentic treehouse stay Tenerife provides, because the structures are genuinely built around living trees, with the trunks passing through the floor and roof of each cabin. The interiors are simple but comfortable, with a double bed, a small wood-burning stove, and a balcony that looks out over the Barranco de Masca toward the ocean. I visited in August and the temperature was a perfect 26 degrees during the day and dropped to a comfortable 19 at night. The best time to come is summer, June through August, when the rest of the island is baking in heat but the Teno highlands remain cool and green. The owner is a forestry engineer who planted most of the trees on this property himself over the past 30 years, and he gives informal tours of the reforestation project on request. That tour is the hidden gem of this experience. One detail most visitors miss is the small natural pool at the bottom of the barranco, about a 15-minute walk from the cabins, where you can swim in water that comes directly from a mountain spring. The complaint I have is that the road to Teno Alto is one of the most winding on the island, with several sections where only one vehicle can pass. If you are prone to motion sickness, take medication before you start the drive.

Glamping in La Laguna: Urban Meets Rural

Camino de San Francisco de Paula, San Cristóbal de La Laguna

La Laguna is Tenerife's former capital, a UNESCO World Heritage city of cobblestone streets and colonial architecture, and the area along Camino de San Francisco de Paula on the city's northern edge offers a glamping experience that is unlike anything else on the island. A small property here operates four bell tents in a walled garden behind a 19th-century Canarian house, each tent furnished with local textiles, hand-carved wooden furniture, and a small library of books about Tenerife's history and ecology. The garden itself is extraordinary, with a 200-year-old dragon tree, a working well, and a collection of endemic plants that the owner, a retired botanist, has assembled over decades. I visited in May and spent most of my time sitting under that dragon tree reading about the Guanche resistance against the Castilian invasion. The best time to visit is during the Fiesta de la Cruz in early May, when the neighborhood fills with flower-decorated crosses and the sound of traditional Canarian music drifts over the garden wall. The insider tip is to walk from the property to the nearby Mercado de la Laguna, which is a five-minute walk, and buy fresh gofio and local honey for breakfast. The property owner will prepare eggs and coffee if you ask. The connection to Tenerife's urban history is direct. La Laguna was the first planned city in the Canary Islands, laid out in 1496 by the conquistador Alonso Fernández de Lugo, and the grid pattern of the streets around this property has not changed in over 500 years. My only issue is that the tents share a single bathroom in the main house, and if you are in the farthest tent, the walk in the middle of the night is about 40 meters across an uneven garden path.

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When to Go and What to Know

Tenerife's glamping season runs year-round, but the experience varies dramatically by season and location. Coastal sites near Costa Adeje and Los Gigantes are best from October through April, when temperatures are warm but not extreme and the Atlantic is calm. Highland sites in La Esperanza and the Teno Mountains are best from May through September, when the skies are clearest and the risk of rain is lowest. The Anaga Rural Park is most atmospheric in the winter months, November through February, when the laurisilva forest is wrapped in mist. Book at least two weeks in advance for any site during the Christmas and Easter periods, as these are peak domestic tourism times for Canary Island residents. Most glamping sites provide bedding and basic toiletries, but you should bring a flashlight, layers for nighttime temperature drops, and cash for small honor bars and tips. Rental cars are essential for reaching most of these locations, and I recommend booking the smallest automatic you can find, because several access roads are narrow and steep.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best free or low-cost tourist places in Tenerife that are genuinely worth the visit?

The old town of San Cristóbal de La Laguna is completely free to explore and is a UNESCO World Heritage site with over 500 years of history. The Playa de Las Teresitas in Santa Cruz is a man-made beach with imported Saharan sand and free access. The Mirador de la Catedral viewpoint in Anaga offers one of the most dramatic coastal panoramas on the island at no cost. The Güímar pyramids are free on Sunday mornings and open other days for a small fee of around 3 euros.

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What is the safest and most reliable way to get around Tenerife as a solo traveler?

Renting a car is the most reliable option, and Tenerife has a well-maintained road network connecting all major areas. The bus system operated by Titsa covers the main towns and coastal areas, with single tickets costing around 1.45 euros and a monthly pass available for roughly 48 euros. Taxis are metered and reliable, with a minimum fare of about 2.70 euros during the day.

Is it possible to walk between the main sightseeing spots in Tenerife, or is local transport necessary?

Walking between major attractions is not practical due to the island's size and terrain. Tenerife is approximately 80 kilometers from north to south, and the mountainous interior makes direct walking routes between regions extremely difficult. Local transport is necessary for most visitors, though the city center of La Laguna is compact and walkable.

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How many days are needed to see the major tourist attractions in Tenerife without feeling rushed?

A minimum of five full days is recommended to cover Teide National Park, La Laguna, the Anaga Rural Park, the Los Gigantes coast, and at least one day for the southern resort areas. Seven days allows a more relaxed pace with time for spontaneous stops and longer hikes.

Do the most popular attractions in Tenerife require advance ticket booking, especially during peak season?

Teide National Park requires advance booking for the summit permit, which must be reserved online at least a few weeks ahead during peak months of June through September. The Teide cable car also recommends advance booking, with tickets costing approximately 38 euros for a round trip. Most other attractions, including the Loro Parque zoo and the Siam Park water park, offer discounted advance online tickets but also accept walk-up visitors.

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