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Playa de las Américas: By October, the Canary Islands trade summer crowds for golden light and an eternal spring that still feels like a secret.
© All artwork and photos by Corey Gasman
At some point during planning, I typed a very specific question into Google: “Where do people from Dublin go on vacation in October?”
The same destinations kept popping up: Malta, Greece, and the Canary Islands. Then I saw Tenerife’s October weather hovering around 80°F (27°C), and the decision was basically made.
For travelers from Great Britain and Ireland, Tenerife feels a lot like Mexico does for Midwesterners. Short flights, reliable infrastructure, warm water, and solid value. After weeks of Irish rain and moody skies, a few days of beach sunshine felt less like indulgence and more like balance.
Quick Guide: Tenerife in October
Why Visit Tenerife in October
First Impressions of South Tenerife
Our Favorite Daily Routine
Whale & Dolphin Watching
Best Seafood in South Tenerife
Mount Teide & Masca Valley
Why Visit the Canary Islands in October
Best Local Restaurants in South Tenerife
Traditional Canary Islands Food
Tenerife FAQs
We landed, hadn’t grocery shopped yet, and the Golden Arches were right there.
Not just any McDonald’s. This one was literally on the beach, with ocean views and an outdoor patio. I ordered a cappuccino, a sausage and egg McMuffin, and thick-cut breakfast fries for about €4.
It was oddly perfect.
That moment set the tone for Tenerife: casual, affordable, and refreshingly unpretentious. High-end resorts exist, but everyday life still feels approachable.

Beachfront McDonald’s in South Tenerife: somehow the perfect “we just landed” breakfast.
Walking the malecón became our daily ritual. No plans. No destination. Just walking the oceanfront for an hour or two, turning around, and walking straight back.
In between walks, we discovered how shockingly affordable grocery shopping is in Tenerife. Wine bottles with security tags for under ten euros. Jamón shaved to order. Fresh baguettes, olives, and excellent canned fish.
Most evenings ended with simple tapas on our balcony at sunset, followed by Aperol spritzes with ocean views. It felt indulgent without ever feeling expensive.

The malecón loop: our daily ritual in South Tenerife, no plan required.
One of the most memorable experiences of the trip was a whale and dolphin watching catamaran tour.
For about $50 per couple, it included drinks, a light sandwich, and something far more important: respect for the animals. Engines were cut. No chasing. No feeding.
A pod swam right up to the boat. At one point, the crew dropped an underwater microphone so we could hear them communicating.
Calm, ethical, and unexpectedly moving. Easily one of the best value experiences in Tenerife.
Whale Watching & Listening Eco-Catamaran Tour
If you’re hunting for the best seafood in Tenerife, here’s the short version: skip the glossy tourist menus and follow the fish. These are the spots we’d recommend again in a heartbeat, from casual beach-town seafood to a proper date-night splurge and a market-style experience in Santa Cruz.
One of our favorite meals in South Tenerife was at Restaurante Agua Marina, a laid-back seafood spot that gets everything right without trying too hard.
We started with tuna carpaccio (about €10), then split sesame-crusted tuna, papas arrugadas, and a simple salad. Nothing fancy. Nothing overworked. Just great ingredients handled well.
Restaurante Agua Marina (official site)
If you want a more polished “date night” upgrade from Agua Marina, Almar Tenerife is the move. It leans into a Mediterranean base with Japanese influence, and the setting feels like an occasion.
Almar Tenerife (official site)
View menus
El Cine is the perfect companion recommendation to Agua Marina. It’s tucked into a small alley near the harbor, it’s usually busy, and it’s beloved for a reason: fresh seafood, fast service, zero nonsense.
Restaurante El Cine (official site)
Yes, it’s a drive from the south, but if you’re doing a day in Santa Cruz or heading to Playa de Las Teresitas, Los Pinchitos is a local favorite for fresh fish and seafood without the “tourist tax.” This is a plastic-tablecloth-in-the-best-way kind of place.

The Santa Cruz market morning that accidentally turns into a full morning.
If you want a true Tenerife food experience, spend a morning at La Recova (Mercado Nuestra Señora de África). It’s busy, historic, and packed with local life. Come hungry and wander slowly.

Silky slices of raw tuna that remind you why Canary Islands seafood doesn’t need much help.
Our first introduction to Mount Teide was a guided bus tour that also included Masca Valley and Garachico. Even if you never get off the bus, the drive alone is worth it.
Pine forests give way to volcanic highlands, and suddenly you’re above the clouds in terrain that feels almost lunar.

The Teide cable car: ten minutes of waiting for a view that feels like a different planet.
On our second visit, we rented a car and explored independently. Before heading up, we stopped at Bodegas Monje for a wine and cheese tasting with ocean views.
Don’t skip this stop: We paired our Mount Teide drive with a wine tour and long lunch at Bodegas Monje (read more), one of the most rewarding and genuinely local experiences we had in Tenerife.
Because we booked cable car tickets online in advance, the wait was under ten minutes. Even without hiking the summit, the views alone make the experience worthwhile.
Yes. Time slots sell out quickly, and booking ahead makes the day smoother.
Absolutely. It’s touristy because it’s sunny, easy, and good value. Stay just outside the main resort strips for quieter nights.

Masca’s layered ravine views feel like Tenerife unplugged.
Masca is a small, historic mountain village set deep inside a volcanic ravine in northwest Tenerife. Surrounded by steep cliffs and dramatic rock formations, it feels completely removed from the busy beach towns of the south. People come for the panoramic views of layered mountains, palm-filled valleys, and the quiet atmosphere that still hints at what Tenerife looked like before modern resort strips took over.
The drive to Masca along the TF-436 is narrow, steep, and demands your full attention. Tight switchbacks, blind corners, and sections barely wide enough for one vehicle make this one of the most nerve-wracking drives in Tenerife. The scenery is incredible, but it’s also the kind of road where you quietly hope you don’t meet a tour bus coming the opposite direction.
Read more: Teno Rural Park: The Road That Tried To End Me (In A Beautiful Way)
Golden hour from our Airbnb above Playa de Los Cristianos: sunset drinks, palm-lined curves of the bay, and the kind of calm that makes you cancel dinner plans without regret.
Cheap wine, local cheese, cured meats, random pickles, and a sunset that somehow made it all taste better. Sometimes the best meals aren’t reservations, they’re whatever you carry home and put on a plate.
If you want to eat well in South Tenerife, skip the glossy promenades and follow the locals into villages, alleyways, and no-frills spots that don’t care about Instagram. These are the places with plastic chairs, loud dining rooms, and food that shows up fast because it’s been perfected over decades.
Beyond the world-famous salted little potatoes, traditional Canary Islands cuisine is all about simple ingredients, bold flavor, and recipes shaped by island life. Many local dishes feature gofio, a roasted grain flour that shows up everywhere, and comforting stews like ropa vieja that tell a story of practicality and tradition.

Papas arrugadas with mojo rojo and mojo verde: the Canary Islands starter you end up ordering again.
If there’s one dish that defines Canary Islands food, this is it. Papas arrugadas are the iconic “salted little potatoes” you’ll see on nearly every menu, from beach bars to family-run restaurants.

Escaldón de gofio: toasted flour turned into a thick, savory comfort bowl.
Gofio is one of the oldest foods in the Canary Islands, dating back to the indigenous Guanche people. It’s toasted grain flour (often corn or wheat) and it’s still a daily staple.

Ropa vieja: hearty, practical, and way more Canarian than most people realize.
Many travelers associate ropa vieja with Cuba, but the dish traces back to the Canary Islands. It’s a hearty shredded meat stew (the name translates to “old clothes”) that historically used leftovers from a larger stew called puchero. Today you’ll usually see shredded beef or chicken with chickpeas, potatoes, peppers, and onions in a tomato-rich sauce.
October is one of the best months to visit the Canary Islands. Summer crowds fade, prices soften, and the islands settle into their famous “eternal spring.” Expect daytime temperatures around 24–26°C (75–79°F), ideal for beaches, hiking, and long outdoor meals while much of Europe cools down.
This was going on when we were in Tenerife: Afrotronic Tenerife, held October 3–5, 2025, with events at the Hard Rock Hotel Tenerife and a night at Papagayo. If they run it again, it’s the kind of weekend that sells itself: sun, ocean, and a very specific soundtrack.
October in Tenerife is what people mean when they talk about the Canary Islands’ “eternal spring.” Days are warm without being sticky, evenings cool off just enough, and rain is rare, especially in the south.
In short: beach weather during the day, comfortable patio dinners at night, and ideal conditions for Mount Teide drives and hikes.
Tenerife in October is all about light layers and versatility. You don’t need to overthink it, but a few smart additions will make the trip smoother.
If you’re packing like it’s summer in Southern Europe, but with one extra layer you’re doing it right.
If you want the Canary Islands at their best, October is the cheat code. It’s warm but not chaotic, easy to get around, and the island feels like it’s exhaling after peak summer. We came for the sunshine, but what stuck was the rhythm: long walks, simple meals, and a volcano in the background reminding you this place is not just a beach destination.
Bonus Beach Spot: Playa de Los Guíos: Black Sand, Giant Cliffs, and a Seriously Underrated Beach