A practical 7-day Algarve road trip itinerary from Tavira to Sagres covering Benagil Cave, Ponta da Piedade and Portugal's dramatic southwest tip.
Portugal's southern coast is one of Europe's most accessible and rewarding road trips. This Algarve road trip itinerary drives the coast from east to west in seven days, starting at the elegant medieval town of Tavira and finishing at Sagres, where the Atlantic meets Europe's southwestern corner.
The route covers roughly 155 km from Tavira to Sagres, spread across five stops. Driving legs are short (the longest is around 80 km), so the focus falls on the coast itself: cliff walks, boat tours, old towns and beaches. Total driving time across the seven days is under three hours.
This suits anyone wanting a relaxed combination of beaches, coastal scenery and historic towns with short, straightforward drives. Families, couples and solo travellers all handle this route comfortably. A hire car is the only requirement.
May to June and September to October offer warm, sunny conditions with noticeably fewer people at boat tours, cliff viewpoints and beaches. July and August are the busiest months, with Benagil Cave tour slots and accommodation booking out weeks ahead. The Algarve averages over 300 sunny days per year, so even a winter visit is mild and uncrowded.
Fly into Faro Airport. Pick up a hire car on arrival and drive 30 minutes east to Tavira for the first night. On the final day, Sagres is about 1.5 hours from Faro Airport.
Often called the Algarve's most elegant town, Tavira sits on the Gilao River and holds a Roman bridge, Moorish castle ruins and whitewashed streets that see fewer package tourists than the resort towns to the west. Spend the morning on foot in town, then take the short ferry from Quatro Aguas pier to Ilha de Tavira, a barrier island with wide Atlantic beaches that stay quieter than those elsewhere on the coast.
A 35-minute drive west brings you to the regional capital. The walled old town (Cidade Velha) is often bypassed by beach tourists, which is a mistake: it holds Roman foundations, a Moorish gateway arch and a 13th-century cathedral whose rooftop gives views over the tiled city. In the late afternoon, catch a short boat trip into the Ria Formosa lagoon for flamingos, herons and the pristine barrier islands behind the town.
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Drive 80 km west to Carvoeiro, a fishing village with a sheltered cove beach framed by ochre cliffs. This is the best base for the route's most famous excursion: a boat tour to Benagil Cave, a large sea cave with a domed skylight ceiling and a small sandy beach inside. The cave is only accessible by boat, paddleboard or kayak; most tours depart from Benagil beach, a short drive east of Carvoeiro. Book ahead in summer. On the second day, walk the Sete Vales Suspensos trail, a 5.7 km clifftop path that reveals the same coast from above, including views down into the Benagil Cave dome.
Lagos is the western Algarve's most complete stop: a walled town with a covered market and good restaurants, and direct access to Ponta da Piedade. The promontory, 2.5 km south of the marina, is a formation of golden limestone arches, sea stacks and grottos that ranks among the most photographed spots in Portugal. Walk down from the lighthouse to the coves at low tide for the closest views, or take a kayak tour from the marina to see the arches from the water. Use the second day for the nearby beaches, which are more sheltered and less crowded than those around Albufeira.
The final drive south on the N268 brings you to Sagres, a surf town on a stark headland at Europe's southwestern corner. Sagres Fortress sits above sheer cliffs with the Atlantic on three sides. Cabo de Sao Vicente, the continent's westernmost point, is 6 km north along the coastal road: a lighthouse above dramatic cliffs with nothing between it and the Americas. Drive out at dusk when the coach tour groups thin out for the best light and quieter views.
Any hire car handles this route. The A22 motorway runs parallel to the coast and uses electronic tolls (Via Verde). Most hire companies offer a Via Verde transponder; otherwise pay at blue-lane booths. Manual transmission hire cars cost significantly less than automatic in Portugal.
In high season, Benagil Cave boat tours sell out days ahead. Parking at Ponta da Piedade fills by 10am in July and August. Petrol stations are plentiful along the A22 but less frequent on the slower coastal N125. The route ends at Sagres, roughly 1.5 hours from Faro Airport for the return flight.
Ready to plan the details? Use the full Routebook route below to see every stop, driving time and overnight in one view.
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The full route — stops, maps, and driving times — is on Routebook by Kington.
A 7-day west-running drive along Portugal's southern coast, from the elegant medieval town of Tavira to the dramatic cliffs at Europe's southwestern tip.