Portugal · CocoVolare

Europe · Boutique

Portugal

Europe's Atlantic frontier

P ortugal entered the curious traveller's map through its value for money and stayed for everything else. Spain is vital and loud, Italy expressive and baroque, Greece luminous and sprawling.

The essence

The country you read in a low voice

P ortugal entered the curious traveller's map through its value for money and stayed for everything else. Spain is vital and loud, Italy expressive and baroque, Greece luminous and sprawling. Portugal is something more intimate, more contained · almost written in a whisper. Lisbon pulses across seven hills above the Tagus, Sintra generates its own microclimate of Atlantic forest, Porto was built downhill towards the Douro. This is a destination that rewards curation: it works when someone applies discernment, far from autopilot and the sealed package. The right seasonal window, the right neighbourhoods, tables reserved months in advance and a guide who knows the details. Done that way, Portugal delivers the most memorable journey in southern Europe.

1143 year of foundation · Europe's oldest nation-state
7 hills upon which Lisbon was built
365 bacalhau recipes · one for every day of the year
17 UNESCO World Heritage Sites

Regions

The 5 faces of Portugal

Lisbon · Portugal 01 · Capital

3–4 nights

Lisbon

The capital of the seven hills

There are older European cities, but none you walk with quite this combination of melancholy and golden light. Azulejos cover entire facades, fado drifts out of Mouraria taverns and yellow trams groan up impossible slopes. A capital built to a human scale.

Hotels
Palácio Belmonte · Memmo Príncipe Real · The Lumiares
Must-see
Alfama and the Sé · Belém and the Jerónimos · miradouros · fado
Best time
April to June and September to October
Sintra · Portugal 02 · Sierra

2 nights

Sintra

The Atlantic fairy tale

Twenty-eight kilometres from Lisbon, a sierra of Atlantic forest with its own microclimate. UNESCO declared it a Cultural Landscape · a category almost invented for it. Romantic palaces, esoteric quintas and Cabo da Roca, the western tip of the European continent.

Hotels
Tivoli Palácio de Seteais · Lawrence's · Penha Longa
Must-see
Palácio da Pena · Quinta da Regaleira · Cabo da Roca
Best time
April to June and September to October
Porto · Portugal 03 · North

3 nights

Porto

The city that gave the country its name

Grey granite, blue azulejo and terracotta rooftop stacked on a hillside running down to the Douro. The nation was born here in the 12th century and the fortified wine that bears its name was invented here too. A working, seafaring city of magnificent facades and unpretentious bars.

Hotels
The Yeatman · Torel Avantgarde · PortoBay Flores
Must-see
Ribeira · Ponte Dom Luís I · Gaia wine cellars · Livraria Lello
Best time
May to October · June for São João
Douro Valley · Portugal 04 · Wine

2 nights

Douro Valley

UNESCO-listed terraced vineyards

The world's oldest demarcated wine region. Vineyards cascade in terraces down to the river, family quintas converted into five-star hotels, and slow cruises on traditional rabelo boats. In September, the grape harvest is still done by foot, as it has always been.

Hotels
Six Senses Douro Valley · Quinta da Pacheca · Vintage House
Must-see
Quinta tasting · Douro river cruise · harvest season
Best time
June and October · September for harvest
Madeira and the Azores · Portugal 05 · Islands

3–4 nights

Madeira and the Azores

Two archipelagos in the middle of the Atlantic

Madeira is a subtropical garden mild year-round, with mountain levadas and centuries-old fortified wines. The Azores are oceanic and changeable: whale watching, crater lakes and UNESCO-listed vineyards on volcanic rock on the island of Pico.

Hotels
Reid's Palace · Vila Vita Parc · boutique lodges in the Azores
Must-see
Madeira levadas · whale watching on São Miguel · Pico
Best time
April to October · whales May to July

Signature experiences

Moments to remember

Private access, guides born in the place and a rhythm designed around you.

Practical

The essentials before you travel

Information verified by our travel designers, updated for 2026.

Money

Currency
Euro (EUR). Notes of 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 are standard; 200 and 500 are rare and rarely accepted.
Cards
Visa and Mastercard are accepted almost everywhere. Apple Pay and Google Pay work in 90% of urban businesses.
ATMs
Multibanco, the local network, is found throughout all urban areas. Typical fee of 3 to 5 EUR per international withdrawal.
Cash
Useful only for small tips, rural tascas and markets. Carry 200 to 400 EUR for a week.
Exchange
Avoid airport kiosks and tourist-area bureaux. Best rates at Multibanco or exchange offices away from the centre.
Gratuities
Not mandatory but expected: 5% to 10% at restaurants with good service. Notify your bank of your travel dates.

Visa

Schengen
Portugal is part of the Schengen Area. Tourist stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period.
Latin America
Colombians, Mexicans and most Latin Americans do not require a tourist visa.
ETIAS
From late 2026, ETIAS · a simple online electronic authorisation · is expected to apply to those currently visa-exempt.
Spain
Spanish nationals do not require a visa or authorisation to enter Portugal.
Documents
Valid passport, travel insurance, voucher for first accommodation and return flight to hand.

Health

Vaccines
None required for entry from Latin America or Spain under normal conditions.
Recommended
Tetanus, up-to-date MMR and hepatitis A and B if visiting rural areas or eating raw shellfish.
Insurance
Effectively mandatory for Schengen transit without European residency. Minimum medical cover of EUR 30,000.
Hospitals
Hospital da Luz and CUF in Lisbon and Porto · high quality with English-speaking staff available.
Water
Tap water is safe to drink and good quality throughout the country, with varying taste by region.

Transport

Train
The Alfa Pendular connects Lisbon and Porto in around three hours, comfortable and punctual. Lisbon–Faro in around three hours.
Sintra
Suburban train from Rossio station every 20 minutes, 40-minute journey.
Car
Essential for the deep Alentejo, the rural Douro and the interior Algarve. Electronic tolls via Via Verde.
Apps
Uber and Bolt operate in Lisbon, Porto, Coimbra, the Algarve and the main islands. Citymapper for public transport.
City driving
Do not drive in the historic centres of Lisbon or Porto: impossible streets and low-emission zones. Use tram, metro and taxi.

Language

Official language
Portuguese, spoken by over 260 million people worldwide · the majority outside Portugal.
English
Portugal ranks among the world's top ten for English proficiency: TV is subtitled, not dubbed.
Spanish
Understood without difficulty due to linguistic proximity, though the Portuguese tend to reply in English or Portuguese.
Vocabulary
Saudade (bittersweet longing) · obrigado / obrigada (thank you) · bom dia · faz favor · bica (espresso).
A note
Calling a Portuguese person Spanish is read as an offence due to a long-standing identity question. Slowing down opens doors.

Etiquette

Greeting
Handshake between men; two cheek-kisses, right first, only after you have been introduced.
Volume
Portuguese speak at a moderate volume. Talking loudly in restaurants or on public transport is considered poor form.
Table
Do not begin eating until everyone is served. Make eye contact when toasting. Do not ask for ice in white wine.
Coffee
Ordering "a coffee" brings an espresso (bica). For coffee with milk, ask for galão; for a long black, abatanado.
Punctuality
For a casual dinner, five to ten minutes late is expected. For business meetings, strict punctuality.

Climate

When to travel and why

Portugal is best enjoyed in the shoulder seasons: late May to June and mid-September to October. The chart shows all twelve months with estimated costs, temperatures and iconic festivals. Marked in gold, the windows we recommend experiencing Portugal with us .

Most recommended month June · long light, harvest on its way, city alive
Best value vs. experience May and October · pleasant climate, rates easing
Once-in-a-lifetime window September · harvest and grape treading on the Douro

The climate, month by month · Lisbon

Reference city: Lisbon Best season Temperature °C Relative rainfall
10° 15° 20° 25° 30° Jan: 8° – 15°C · 100 mm 15° Jan: 100 mm Jan Feb: 9° – 16°C · 90 mm 16° Feb: 90 mm Feb Mar: 10° – 18°C · 55 mm 18° Mar: 55 mm Mar Apr: 11° – 19°C · 60 mm 19° Apr: 60 mm Apr May: 13° – 22°C · 40 mm 22° May: 40 mm May Jun: 16° – 26°C · 18 mm 26° Jun: 18 mm Jun Jul: 18° – 28°C · 5 mm 28° Jul: 5 mm Jul Aug: 18° – 28°C · 6 mm 28° Aug: 6 mm Aug Sep: 17° – 26°C · 30 mm 26° Sep: 30 mm Sep Oct: 14° – 22°C · 80 mm 22° Oct: 80 mm Oct Nov: 11° – 18°C · 110 mm 18° Nov: 110 mm Nov Dec: 9° – 15°C · 105 mm 15° Dec: 105 mm Dec

Highlights of the year: Feb · Almond blossomJun · Santos PopularesSep · Douro harvest

Lisbon enjoys more than 290 days of sunshine a year: spring and early autumn are the perfect window, with golden light and none of August's crowds. Winter is mild but rainy, ideal for fado and long lunches.

When to go · season & budget

Seasons & estimated cost CocoVolare recommends High Mid Low
Jan: Low season · ≈$440 per person/day Jan Feb: Low season · ≈$440 per person/day Feb Mar: Mid season · ≈$495 per person/day Mar Apr: Mid season · ≈$550 per person/day $550Apr May: Mid season · ≈$605 per person/day $605May Jun: High season · ≈$690 per person/day $690Jun Jul: High season · ≈$745 per person/day Jul Aug: High season · ≈$770 per person/day Aug Sep: High season · ≈$660 per person/day $660Sep Oct: Mid season · ≈$550 per person/day $550Oct Nov: Low season · ≈$470 per person/day Nov Dec: Mid season · ≈$525 per person/day Dec

In our recommended dates, the estimated cost ranges from $550 to $690 per person/day (Premium level, international flights not included).

Investment

What it costs, no fine print

Portugal remains western Europe's best-value luxury: historic quintas, pousadas inside castles and Michelin-starred tables at prices that no longer exist in France or Italy. Your budget stretches remarkably far.

Experience levels · guide budget

Euro (EUR) · 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR USD · per person/day
Boutique essential Boutique essential: $320 USD · per person/day $320 Boutique hotels in Chiado or Príncipe Real, trams and regional trains, honest tascas and vinho verde. Premium Premium: $550 USD · per person/day $550 Five-star addresses such as the Bairro Alto Hotel, a driver to Sintra and the Douro and one auteur table every day. Signature Signature: $950 USD · per person/day $950 Six Senses Douro Valley, private palaces in Sintra, vintage port tastings and two-Michelin-star tables.
Dinner with Portuguese wine USD 45–90Pastel de Belém with an espresso USD 3–4Pena Palace admission (Sintra) USD 16Douro Valley winery tasting USD 35–80Fado night with dinner in Alfama USD 60–100Airport–hotel transfer in Lisbon USD 35–50

Indicative 2026 values per person, excluding international flights. Every CocoVolare quote is tailored to season, hotels and travel pace.

Signature itineraries

Six Portugals · choose yours

Zero templates: every itinerary is rewritten 100% to your measure. Prices per person in double occupancy, boutique category, international flights not included.

5 days · 4 nights · Capital and north

Portugal Essence

Lisbon → Sintra → Porto

Portugal at its core, without losing the rhythm or the soul

  • Private walk through Alfama with a guide: the Sé, the miradouros and the Arab-laid street plan
  • Belém with priority access to the Jerónimos Monastery and the Torre de Belém
  • Sintra with Quinta da Regaleira and the Palácio da Pena in low light

FromUSD 2,800

7 days · 6 nights · Capital, wine and north

Balanced Portugal

Lisbon → Sintra → Douro → Porto

Four faces of the country, with time for each one

  • Lisbon with Chiado, Alfama, Belém and the Gulbenkian
  • A full day in Sintra with an overnight in an 18th-century palace
  • An overnight at a Douro quinta with a wine tasting and terrace views over the vines

FromUSD 4,200

10 days · 9 nights · Four regions

Deep Portugal

Lisbon → Alentejo → Douro → Porto

The whole country, with the Alentejo at its heart

  • Lisbon in depth: Chiado, Alfama, Belém and the less-visited neighbourhoods
  • Fairytale Sintra with palaces and Atlantic forest
  • UNESCO Évora and the walled hilltop village of Monsaraz above the Alqueva

FromUSD 6,800

14 days · 13 nights · Coast to coast

Extended Portugal

Lisbon → Comporta → Alentejo → Algarve → Douro → Porto

The whole mainland, from dunes to terraced vineyards

  • Lisbon and Sintra at a slow pace, with a full day dedicated to palaces
  • Comporta: dunes, rice paddies by bicycle and genuine rest
  • The Alentejo of Évora, Monsaraz and the Dark Sky of Alqueva

FromUSD 9,800

10 days · 9 nights · Romance

Atlantic Honeymoon

Lisbon → Sintra → Douro → Comporta

Beginning the rest of your life in a low voice

  • Suite upgrade at every hotel on the journey
  • Dawn photography session at the Quinta da Regaleira with no public
  • Private dinner at a Douro quinta at sunset with wine pairing and violin

FromUSD 8,500

7 days · 6 nights · Gastronomy and wine

Flavour and Wine Route

Lisbon → Douro → Porto

Europe's most underrated Atlantic table, course by course

  • Tasting menu at Belcanto, two Michelin stars by chef José Avillez
  • Mercado da Ribeira at dawn with a private chef and a pastel de nata trail
  • Grape harvest and treading at a Douro quinta in season

FromUSD 5,200

None of them fits? We design your own. WhatsApp →

Gastronomy

The flavors of Portugal

From the morning bica and pastel de nata to a starred tasting menu. Portuguese cuisine is built on the ocean, pork and the kitchen garden · and the contemporary scene is among the most underrated in Europe.

Belcanto

Chiado · Lisbon

Two Michelin stars by chef José Avillez. The new wave of Portuguese authorial cuisine rewriting bacalhau and Atlantic produce. One of the great tables of the Iberian Peninsula.

Cervejaria Ramiro

Intendente · Lisbon

An unpretentious marisqueira that is actually a temple: carabineiros, garlic prawns and the closing prego sandwich. Worth the forty-minute wait.

The Yeatman

Vila Nova de Gaia · Porto

Two Michelin stars with a direct view of Porto's historic centre and one of the most complete Portuguese wine lists in the country.

Antiqvvm

Massarelos · Porto

One Michelin star with Douro views, in a 19th-century villa. Contemporary cuisine with northern produce and impeccable service.

Pedro Lemos

Foz do Douro · Porto

One Michelin star in a stone house at the Foz, where the Douro meets the Atlantic. Seasonal produce and an intimate table.

Manteigaria

Chiado · Lisbon

Freshly baked pastel de nata, creamy and without the industrial queue. Order at the counter, dusted with cinnamon and icing sugar.

Calendar

Dates worth traveling for

A well-chosen date turns a trip into a memory. We design your itinerary around the moment that matters most to you.

Almond blossom · Jan–Feb

The Algarve and Alentejo are dusted in pale pink above the ochre earth. A delicate winter landscape, with low rates and monument queues nowhere to be found.

Easter in Braga · Mar–Apr

The country's most solemn processions move through the north. Green fields, full spring and the best early window for Lisbon and the Alentejo.

Freedom Day · 25 April

Portugal celebrates the Carnation Revolution of 1974, an international symbol of peaceful transition. Red carnations throughout the country.

Festa de Santo António · 13 June

All of Lisbon on the street: sardines, potted manjerico, collective weddings and processions through Alfama. The heart of the capital's Santos Populares.

São João in Porto · 24 June

The night the whole city spills out with plastic hammers, leeks, fireworks over the Douro and a midnight dip in the Atlantic.

Douro Valley harvest · September

The valley fills with the harvest: grape treading in ancient lagares, granite wine presses and long harvest lunches. Living heritage.

Giant waves at Nazaré · Oct–Feb

The underwater Nazaré canyon generates world-record waves. A big-wave surfing spectacle visible from the lighthouse · no wetsuit required.

All Saints' Day · 1 November

The date of the 1755 earthquake that rewrote Lisbon and European philosophy. A day of remembrance and cemetery visits.

CocoVolare recommends

What we would tell a friend

Advice from our travel designers: what we book first, what we avoid, and the details that turn a good trip into an unforgettable one.

01

Sintra is won before 9:30

The Pena Palace at midday is an uphill queue under the sun. Enter with the first slot of the day with a private driver, explore the Quinta da Regaleira afterwards and lunch late in the village, once the buses have returned to Lisbon.

02

In Lisbon, Chiado and Príncipe Real; the Baixa only in passing

Stay in Chiado or Príncipe Real: century-old bookshops, viewpoints and the city's best cocktail bars on foot. The Baixa looks central on the map, but it is the most touristic area and the one with the least real life at night.

03

Tram 28 is for the photo, not for getting around

It is beautiful and also the favourite spot of Lisbon's pickpockets. Ride it early for a short stretch between Graça and the Sé, valuables in front, and move the rest of the day by private tuk-tuk or on foot across the hills.

04

The Douro deserves a sleepover, not a day trip

Going to and from Porto in a day means seeing the valley through a window. Two nights at a quinta among terraced vineyards, with a vintage tasting and lunch above the river, are Portugal's most memorable chapter. September, at harvest, is unrepeatable.

05

Pastéis de Belém are only original in Belém

The 1837 recipe remains secret at the original bakery beside the Jerónimos monastery. Order them warm, with cinnamon, in the tiled back room: the counter queue is for takeaway and moves fast. Everything else in Portugal is pastel de nata.

06

No visa, but ETIAS from 2025

Colombians do not need a Schengen visa for Portugal for stays up to 90 days, but from 2025 the ETIAS authorisation is processed online, around EUR 7, valid for three years. Do it as soon as you buy your flight and travel with insurance and your first booking to hand.

In motion

Portugal, live

Testimonials

What our travelers say

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

“We boarded tram 28 at half past seven in the morning, with Alfama still asleep. Then a guide opened up the Sé and the miradouros without a single queue. That timing difference, multiplied across the whole trip, meant we saw a different Portugal · the one that doesn't make it onto the saturated postcards.”

Mariana Restrepo

Bogotá · Couple's journey · 7 nights

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

“The fado dinner was in a private house in the Mouraria · no microphone, no printed menu. Three singers and a silence you could almost touch before each verse. I understood saudade right there, not before. CocoVolare knew exactly which door to knock on.”

Javier Mendoza

Mexico City · Cultural journey · 10 nights

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

“We slept at a Douro quinta among terraced vines. The private dinner at sunset, with a violin and the producer's own wine pairing, was the moment of the entire honeymoon. It wasn't catalogue luxury · it was access and silence.”

Andrés Lozano

Medellín · Honeymoon · 10 nights

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a visa to enter Portugal?

Portugal is part of the Schengen Area. Travellers from Colombia, Mexico and most of Latin America do not need a visa for tourist stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period, as is the case for Spanish nationals. From late 2026, ETIAS · a simple and inexpensive online electronic authorisation for those currently visa-exempt, similar to the US ESTA · is expected to come into force. Your passport must have sufficient remaining validity.

What is the best time to visit Portugal?

The optimal window runs from late May to June and mid-September to October: mild temperatures of 18 to 26 degrees, long days, Douro harvests in September and crowds in retreat. March and April are the second-best option, especially for Lisbon and the blossoming Alentejo. From 15 July to 20 August, it is worth avoiding Lisbon and the Algarve due to heat and doubled rates.

How many days do I need to see Portugal?

Five days cover Lisbon, Sintra and Porto in their essentials. Seven to ten days add the Douro Valley and the Alentejo. Fourteen days allow for Comporta and the western Algarve, or an extension to Madeira or the Azores. CocoVolare designs itineraries from five to twenty-one days depending on pace, profile and season.

What currency is used in Portugal?

The euro (EUR). Visa and Mastercard are accepted virtually everywhere, and Apple Pay and Google Pay work in most urban businesses. Cash is useful only for small tips, rural tascas and farmers' markets. Multibanco ATMs are widely available; avoid airport exchange kiosks and tourist-area bureaux.

Is it safe to travel to Portugal?

Portugal consistently ranks among the world's safest countries and regularly appears at the top of the Global Peace Index. The sense of safety is genuine at any hour, including for solo women travellers. The only real precaution is against pickpocketing on tram 28, the blue metro line and the train to Sintra: keep your bag in front and your wallet in an inner pocket. Street violence is virtually non-existent.

Is it worth taking the train between Lisbon and Porto?

Yes. The Alfa Pendular connects Lisbon and Porto in around three hours, comfortably and on time, with open countryside views. The domestic flight barely saves time once you factor in transfers and security. For Sintra, the suburban train from Rossio takes 40 minutes. For the deep Alentejo, the rural Douro and the interior Algarve, CocoVolare coordinates a private driver or hire car.

How much does a boutique trip to Portugal cost?

A boutique ten-day trip, excluding international flights, starts at around USD 2,800 per person in double occupancy with three-to-four-star hotels, guided blocks and one night at a Douro quinta. CocoVolare signature itineraries start from USD 2,800 for five days and scale according to hotels, starred tables and exclusive experiences. Every quote is adjusted to your actual travel window.

Is it worth staying in Sintra or is a day trip from Lisbon enough?

Staying at least one night is very much worth it. Sintra is saturated by day-trippers from cruise ships and Lisbon buses. Those who stay overnight can explore the palaces at dawn or dusk, when the groups have gone, and enjoy the Atlantic forest microclimate. Two nights allow you to add Cabo da Roca and Monserrate at a proper pace.

What is Portuguese cuisine like and is it worth it for foodies?

Very much so · and it is among Europe's most underrated. The cuisine is built on black Alentejo pork, the ocean and the kitchen garden. Bacalhau has over 365 recipes, Atlantic shellfish arrive fresh, and the convent egg-based sweets are in a category of their own. The contemporary scene has added a dozen Michelin stars between Lisbon and Porto, with young chefs rewriting Portuguese produce.

Why do the Douro Valley with CocoVolare?

The mass-market Douro means a full-day cruise with an industrial lunch and a bus back. CocoVolare works with family quintas converted into five-star hotels, private tastings with dedicated tasters, private solar boat cruises and, in September, access to the grape treading with the producer's family. Sleeping among the terraces at sunset justifies the northern journey on its own.

Do Uber and credit cards work in Portugal?

Yes. Uber and Bolt operate in Lisbon, Porto, Coimbra, the Algarve and the main islands, with reasonable fares. Visa and Mastercard are accepted at hotels, restaurants, supermarkets and most businesses; Apple Pay and Google Pay work almost everywhere. Carry some cash only for rural tascas, village markets and small tips.

Can I travel to Portugal with children?

Yes · it is a very family-friendly destination. Combining the Lisbon Oceanarium (one of Europe's finest aquariums), tram 28, the quiet beaches of Comporta and an azulejo tile workshop works very well. CocoVolare designs with family-specialist guides who narrate the Age of Discovery as a story, with fewer museums per day and hotels with interconnecting rooms and a pool.

What does a CocoVolare trip to Portugal include?

Itinerary design from scratch, the Alfa Pendular train or domestic flights where applicable, boutique hotels and historic pousadas with breakfast, a private driver, expert local guides, signature experiences, starred restaurant tables booked months in advance, priority-access entries and 24/7 concierge. Every journey is designed from the ground up to your profile.

Portugal

No molds, made to measure

Tell us what excites you and we will design a tailor-made proposal in under 24 hours, with a dedicated travel designer.