
Maspalomas Dunes
About Maspalomas Dunes
Welcome to the Sahara of the Atlantic
Stepping onto the Maspalomas Dunes for the first time is a surreal experience. One moment you're walking past palm-lined promenades and resort pools; the next, you're standing at the edge of a 400-hectare sea of golden sand that ripples toward the Atlantic like a miniature Sahara. Located on the sun-soaked southern tip of Gran Canaria, this protected nature reserve is one of the most iconic landscapes in all of Spain — and arguably the most photographed beach in the Canary Islands.
What makes Maspalomas Gran Canaria so special isn't just the dunes themselves, but the dramatic contrast they create. To the south, the Atlantic crashes against six kilometers of beach. To the west, a saltwater lagoon (La Charca) attracts migratory birds. To the north, the historic Maspalomas Lighthouse stands sentinel since 1890. And weaving it all together is the soft, shifting sand beneath your feet — sand that, geologists confirm, is actually composed of crushed seashells carried inland by trade winds over millennia.
What to See and Do
Walk the Dunes
The classic experience is the dune crossing from the lighthouse end to Playa del Inglés. It's roughly 2-3 kilometers depending on your route, and while the distance sounds modest, walking on soft sand under the Canarian sun is harder than it looks. Wear minimal clothing, carry water, and go barefoot — sandals fill up instantly. Early morning light paints the dunes in apricot tones, while sunset turns them deep amber and casts long, photogenic shadows.
Hit the Beach
Playa de Maspalomas stretches in a gentle arc from the lighthouse eastward, merging seamlessly into Playa del Inglés. The sand is fine and golden, the water clear and refreshingly cool thanks to the Canary Current. There are designated zones for:
- Families — near the lighthouse, calmer and shallower
- Naturists — a long-established clothing-optional stretch in the central dunes area
- LGBTQ+ travelers — the famous "Kiosko 7" area, a welcoming hub since the 1980s
Visit La Charca Lagoon
At the western edge of the dunes, this brackish lagoon is part of the protected nature reserve. A wooden boardwalk lets you observe herons, egrets, and migratory shorebirds without disturbing the ecosystem. It's a peaceful 20-minute detour and a reminder that this is a fragile environment, not just a playground.
Climb the Lighthouse
The Faro de Maspalomas doesn't allow interior access, but the plaza around it buzzes with cafés, ice cream shops, and street performers. It's the perfect place to refuel after a dune walk.
Camel Rides
Yes, really — camel caravans have operated here for decades, leaving from the Camello Safari station on the northern edge. It's touristy but undeniably memorable, and the animals are well cared for under current welfare regulations.
The Vibe
The energy shifts dramatically across the area. Playa del Inglés is loud, lively, and unapologetically commercial — neon-lit shopping centers, sports bars, and clubs that pump until dawn. Walk west into the dunes and the world goes silent except for wind on sand. By the time you reach the lighthouse, you're in Meloneras, an upscale enclave of designer shops, fine dining, and five-star resorts. You can experience all three vibes in a single afternoon.
Best Time to Visit
Gran Canaria's southern coast enjoys what locals call "eternal spring," with temperatures hovering between 20°C and 28°C year-round. That said:
- November to April is peak season for Northern Europeans escaping winter. Book accommodations early.
- May, June, and October offer the sweet spot: warm seas, fewer crowds, lower prices.
- July and August bring hot, dry winds (calima) and Spanish summer holidaymakers.
For photography, aim for golden hour — roughly 7:30 AM or one hour before sunset in 2026. The midday sun flattens the dunes' textures and is genuinely dangerous without sun protection.
How to Get There
Maspalomas sits about 35 kilometers south of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and just 25 kilometers from Gran Canaria Airport (LPA).
- By car: The GC-1 motorway runs directly from the airport to Maspalomas in around 20 minutes. Rental cars are abundant and affordable.
- By bus: Global lines 66 (express) and 36 connect the airport to Maspalomas for under €5.
- By taxi: Around €35-45 from the airport.
Once in town, the resort area is walkable, and a tourist train loops between the main hubs.
Practical Tips
- No facilities in the dunes themselves — no shade, no kiosks, no toilets. Plan accordingly.
- Stay on marked paths when possible to protect the ecosystem. Drone use is restricted.
- Sun protection is non-negotiable. UV index regularly hits 10+ even in winter.
- Theft can happen on the beach — never leave valuables unattended.
- Tide-pool the lagoon area at low tide for the most striking lighthouse photos.
- Cash isn't necessary for most things, but small euros help at beach kiosks.
Where to Eat Nearby
- Las Rías (Meloneras) — outstanding Galician seafood, splurge-worthy.
- Maximilian's (Playa del Inglés) — German-Canarian fusion, an institution.
- Restaurante La Palmera — local Canarian fare including papas arrugadas con mojo.
- Anything at the Boulevard El Faro — touristy but solid, with sunset views.
Insider Knowledge
Most visitors enter the dunes from the Riu Palace hotel access point on the Playa del Inglés side. For a quieter, more photogenic start, enter from the Faro de Maspalomas end at sunrise — you'll often have entire sand bowls to yourself. Bring a small bag for shoes and a microfiber towel; the sand sticks to everything. And if you're visiting in 2026, check whether the Maspalomas Pride festival (early May) overlaps with your trip — it's one of Europe's largest and transforms the whole resort into a 10-day celebration.
The dunes are constantly moving — they shift up to five meters per year with the wind. The shape you see today is not the shape that existed last decade, and it won't be the shape next decade either. That impermanence is part of their magic.