As the midwinter blues set in, low-cost flights to the Canary Islands and warmer climates beckon. Deciding to head for the airport is the easy bit; which island to pick is the hard part.

We’ve narrowed it down to Lanzarote and Fuerteventura – and have left the rest to two passionate experts to make the case for their preferred getaway.

Loving Lanzarote

Travel journalist Isabella Noble grew up in Spain and now splits her time between Barcelona and Andalucía. Wildly beautiful Lanzarote has always been her favorite place in the Canary Islands.

A soulless sea-and-sun escape? Think again. For me, Lanzarote evokes everything magical and surprising about the sunny Canaries, an island that overturns stereotypes at every corner but also has its own distinctive, irresistible energy.

Sure, Fuerteventura might be famous for its beaches, but Lanzarote has fabulous Famara – a wild, all-natural, golden-white beauty stretching 6km (3.75 miles) beneath cascading volcanic soil cliffs, and one of the greatest surf beaches in Europe. Then there are the sun-toasted Papagayo beaches in the south near Playa Blanca, part of a pristine nature reserve, where diving into the glittering Atlantic is your reward for thrilling hikes along the cliff-hugging trails. Or escape to wonderfully isolated Playa del Risco (reached by an hour-long hike) or remote, bewitching Isla Graciosa, also protected and accessible only by boat from northern Lanzarote. Like many lanzaroteños, I love the twinkling natural sea pools in Punta Mujeres for a dip, too.

Surfer walks into the water at the beach of Famara, with the La Graciosa Island in the background, Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain
Famara in Lanzarote is one of Europe’s greatest surfing beaches but there are loads of other things to do, too © Jose A. Bernat Bacete / Getty Images

Unlike many of Spain’s other islands, development on Lanzarote has been mostly kept to a minimum, and there’s only one skyscraper on the entire island. Dotted across the rugged volcanic landscape, the villages are whitewashed and have the eye-catching traditional architecture of low-rise buildings with ocean-blue or forest-green shutters. Much of this is down to the pioneering work of the celebrated 20th-century lanzaroteño artist and environmental campaigner César Manrique, whose spectacular, boundary-pushing works still take over lagoons, caves, lookouts and other spaces all over the island. Everyone here has their favorite; mine is the Jameos del Agua, a moody cave-lagoon ingeniously reimagined by Manrique in the 1960s as a cultural space. And there are centuries of history to uncover, starting with the former capital Teguise, originally an Indigenous settlement.

Fancy something active? Lanzarote also happens to be a dream for hikers and cyclists – just ask the many professional athletes who flock here from all over the globe to train. Scrambling up volcanic calderas on the fringes of the otherworldly, lava-molded Timanfaya National Park to drink in the scenic views is just the beginning – the wide-open coastline is also a delight for water sports like kayaking, paddle-boarding, diving, snorkeling, windsurfing and kitesurfing.

tourists sitting in local restaurant in old town of Teguise. This town is former capital of Lanzarote island and is very popular attraction to see.
Teguise has a number of excellent restaurants © pkazmierczak / Getty Images

But there’s much more. Lanzarote’s gastronomic offer ranks among the most exciting food scene in the Canaries, packed with fresh island ingredients, traditional recipes and a healthy splash of innovation. On every visit I squeeze in meals like restaurants at the inventive Cantina Teguise, the elegant El Risco, the classic Bodega de Santiago (in a gorgeous old country mansion), the rustic Casa de la Playa (for perfect grilled cheese with local jam), SeBE (for delicious rice) and La Santa’s Alma Tapas & +. And how about those glorious Lanzarote wines? Grown in circular vineyards in mineral-rich volcanic soils and with every grape picked by hand, they’re quickly making a name for themselves on Spain’s wine stage.

Thrown in with all of this is an understated creative scene rooted in ancient artisanal crafts. Try your hand at Lanzarote-style pottery with a local ceramicist, roam around the independent galleries and boutiques in Teguise and learn about the divine cheeses with an expert quesero (cheesemaker). You’ll feel the island’s soulful creativity in the ever-growing number of outstanding, independent original-design hotels too, from La Geria haven Buenavista Lanzarote to sustainability-driven Finca de Arrieta in the north to Costa Teguise’s chic Álava Suites – all inspired by the bold volcanic landscapes and rich artistic heritage.

This is just a taste of why I escape to Lanzarote almost every year. Tempted yet?

All the feels for Fuerteventura

Helen Ochyra is a London-based travel writer who specializes in writing about Spain, especially the Canary Islands. Fuerteventura was the first of the Canaries she ever visited, and she has treasured memories of holidays there from her childhood as well as from returning with her children.

When it came to choosing where to take my first child on her first vacation, it was a no-brainer: Fuerteventura.

All of the Canary Islands are fabulous – there’s a reason why I’ve long specialized in writing about them – but there’s something special about exploring Fuerteventura. Something that kept me dreaming of it in those first months of parenthood. Something that epitomizes escape.

Spain, Fuerteventura, mother running with daughter on the beach
Fuerteventura has many attractions that appeal to families © Westend61 / Getty Images

It could be the beaches. Even Canarios from the other islands tend to agree that Fuerteventura has the best, and there are certainly plenty to wiggle your toes into. In the far south, Parque Natural de Jandia is an ochre and blond desert-scape that feels like an exercise in sand art, its mountains and dunes crumbling down towards the sea and flattening out into mile upon mile of golden, Atlantic-washed playa. I like Morro Jable for its soft, white sands and a swim in waters the color of a blue raspberry ice pop, but also love to take the dirt road to Playa de Cofete, a wild strand ripe for a sandy-toed romp.

My favorite beach, though, has to be the Grandes Playas de Corralejo. Quite literally called the “big beaches,” these vast swathes of sand are protected as the Parque Natural de Corralejo and remain utterly pristine. Getting away from it all is easy-breezy here: just park, then run down the dunes, kicking up sand as you whoop your way toward the ocean. You can’t fail to gambol here; I can never seem to wipe the smile off my face.

Person watching the sun standing inside a sandstone rock cave, Barranco de las Penitas, Fuerteventura, Canary Islands, Spain
Fuerteventura has some super hiking, including to Barranco de las Penitas rock cave © Roberto Moiola / Sysaworld / Getty Images

Naturally, hiking Fuerteventura is a joy too. Well-marked trails run across the island, spaghetti-like sinews that pass between volcanoes and lead to ancient craters and otherworldly lava formations. La Oliva, in the north, is the ideal jumping-off point for walks that loop through spectacular scenery, and I always make time to stop in teeny Lajares, an inland village that’s inexplicably beloved by the surf crowd, with its line-up of excellent cake shops and hip cafe-bars.

Speaking of surfing, the island’s constant trade winds make for dependable waves, and there are surf beaches dotted along the northern coastline. A dirt-and-sand road runs from the resort town of Corralejo to the fishing village of El Cotillo, passing remote coves ripe for wave-riding, while in Corralejo itself numerous surf schools stand ready to get you out there whatever your level of experience.

Corralejo is also my favorite base on the island. Although a tourist resort, it has a real-town feel. I’ve seen local schoolchildren enjoying activities like a phys-ed lesson on the quayside and long-time residents gesticulating over morning coffee at teeny kiosk bars. I always grab a table on the waterside terrace at El Anzuelo, order the catch of the day and linger as I take it all in.

Back to those dreams of mine, though. They tend to take me to El Cotillo and a table above the harbor at La Vaca Azul. A local cherne fish, freshly blackened from the grill, is being filleted in front of me; a bottle of flinty Malvasia volcanica white wine from neighboring Lanzarote stands table-side in a cooler. Warm sunshine makes my shoulders drop as the sound of the sea slows my breathing. This, for me, is the joy of Fuerteventura island. A true escape. A no-brainer.

This article was first published December 2022 and updated December 2023

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