Coastal Canary Life
Where to Stay in Fuerteventura
Endless beaches, big skies and wind — the trick is matching the right corner to your kind of trip.
Fuerteventura is long, flat, wild and gloriously empty — the oldest of the Canaries, with the best beaches in the whole archipelago and a fraction of the crowds. But it’s also big, and the island’s corners feel very different: the lively dune-backed north, the wind-blown beach resorts of the south, and the quiet surf-and-fish-shack villages in between.
The simple way to think about it: the north (Corralejo, El Cotillo) is for energy, dunes and surf. The south (Costa Calma, Jandía) is for jaw-dropping beaches and big resorts. The middle east coast (Caleta de Fuste) is the easy, family, near-the-airport option. Below, every main area by who it actually suits — with real hotels and apartments worth knowing.
Right now on the island
Live temperatures — Fuerteventura is famously sunny and mild year-round, but the wind makes it feel cooler than the number.
Local truth Fuerteventura’s secret isn’t temperature, it’s wind. It’s what makes the island a windsurf mecca — and why a windbreak or a sheltered cove can make or break a beach day. Pick the leeward side on a blowy day.
First, the 30-second version
Good to know The airport is near Puerto del Rosario, mid-island. Jandía/Morro Jable in the far south is stunning but isolated — over an hour from the airport and about 90 minutes from Corralejo. Wherever you stay, a hire car turns Fuerteventura from “a beach” into “a whole island”.
Hotel or apartment?
A hotel makes sense if…
- You want all-inclusive — the big southern resorts do this very well.
- You’re here mainly to switch off by a pool and a beach.
- You want kids’ clubs, entertainment and food all sorted.
An apartment makes sense if…
- You’re staying a week+, or surfing and want flexibility.
- You’d like a kitchen — Mercadona, HiperDino & Lidl make self-catering cheap.
- You’re basing in El Cotillo or a village, where apartments rule.
- You want more space and a lower nightly price than the resorts.
Quick take The south leans hotels-and-resorts; the north and villages lean apartments-and-aparthotels. Each area below lists both so you can pick what fits.
The areas, one by one
Corralejo
Best for dunes, surf & nightlife
The island’s liveliest base, beside the spectacular Corralejo dunes — a Sahara-like sweep of protected sand. Great surf, the most bars and restaurants on the island, and ferries to Lanzarote and the tiny island of Lobos. Buzzy without being brash.
Hotels worth knowing
- Secrets Bahía Real Resort & Spa — landmark luxury 5★, dunes and sea views
- Gran Hotel Atlantis Bahía Real — grand, top end
- Barceló Corralejo Bay — adults-only, seafront
Apartments & self-catering
- Town-centre apartments — walk to bars, beaches and the ferry
- Aparthotels near the dunes — space for families & surf trips
El Cotillo
Best for surf, lagoons & couples
A laid-back former fishing village and the antidote to the resorts. Turquoise lagoons (Los Lagos) with calm warm water for families, the island’s best all-round surf, a historic lighthouse, whitewashed houses and proper seafood. Authentic, low-key and lovely — and the surfers’ favourite base.
Hotels worth knowing
- Boutique & small hotels — El Cotillo stays small and characterful
- Cotillo Beach / Cotillo Lagos — well-placed mid-range
Apartments & self-catering
- Village apartments & villas — how most people stay, near the lagoons
- Surf-house lets — relaxed, walkable to the waves
Caleta de Fuste
Best for families & convenience
The easy choice. On the east coast just 10 minutes from the airport, with a calm protected bay ideal for young kids, a flat promenade, two golf courses and everything on the doorstep. Not the most characterful spot, but the most stress-free — and central for day trips both ways.
Hotels worth knowing
- Elba Sara / Elba Carlota — solid family 4★s with pools
- Sheraton Fuerteventura Beach, Golf & Spa — upmarket option
- Barceló Castillo Beach Resort — family bungalows by the beach
Apartments & self-catering
- Castillo apartments & bungalows — lots of family-sized self-catering
Costa Calma
Best for windsurf & peaceful beaches
A purpose-built resort town in the south, calmer than the northern resorts. Right by the famous Sotavento lagoon — postcard turquoise water and one of the world’s top windsurf/kitesurf spots, hosting championship events. Long soft-sand beaches and peaceful evenings.
Hotels worth knowing
- INNSiDE by Meliá Fuerteventura — stylish, an island favourite
- Bahía Calma Beach — central, by the main beach
- H10 Tindaya / Labranda Golden Beach — family-friendly, near Sotavento
Apartments & self-catering
- Costa Calma apartments — better value than Jandía, near good beaches
Jandía & Morro Jable
Best for the island’s finest beaches
The southern peninsula has the most spectacular beaches in the entire Canaries — endless white sand and dunes, with the Jandía resort strip and the old fishing town of Morro Jable. Big comfortable resorts, serious beach. Honest catch: it’s remote — ~90 min from Corralejo, over an hour from the airport — and dining outside hotels is limited. A car helps.
Hotels worth knowing
- Iberostar Playa Gaviotas — big family resort, loads to do
- RIU Palace Jandía — beachfront, all-inclusive
- Robinson Jandía Playa — sporty, activity-led, well rated
Apartments & self-catering
- Morro Jable apartments — near the harbour and old town, more local feel
For surfers: where to base & the best spots
Fuerteventura is one of Europe’s great surf islands. Here’s the honest, 2026-current breakdown — where to stay, and which breaks suit which level.
The North Atlantic fires. Strong swells light up the reef and point breaks of the North Shore — powerful, advanced-to-expert conditions, and the busiest line-ups as Europe arrives for winter surf.
Smaller, gentler waves. The best time for beginners and intermediates — beach breaks like El Cotillo and Costa Calma let you progress in calmer water with fewer crowds (just mind the summer wind).
Where to base El Cotillo is the surfers’ pick — the best all-round surf town on the island, with a beach break for every level right below town and some of the best surf schools and board rentals in the Canaries. Corralejo is the lively alternative, under 20 minutes from the same North Shore breaks. With a hire car from either, you can tick off half a dozen world-class breaks in a day.
Piedra Playa (El Cotillo) & Playa Blanca
Sandy-bottom beach breaks with reliable white water to practise take-offs. El Cotillo’s south-side beach is forgiving in summer; Playa Blanca, near the airport, is a classic learner’s wave.
Punta Blanca
The north’s best all-rounder — a long cobblestone reef with mellow, peeling rights and an easy channel. A surf-school favourite; 10–15 min off-road from Cotillo or Majanicho. Best on medium tides.
La Caleta & Punta Elena
La Caleta (near Majanicho) is a forgiving A-frame reef, lefts and rights — great for confident surfers stepping up. Punta Elena (“Rocky Point”) in Corralejo bay works when the North Shore is too big.
El Hierro (The Bubble) & the North Shore
El Hierro is a heavy, barrelling right over shallow reef — serious power and sketchy rocks, experts only. The wider North Shore (Majanicho area) holds Europe’s best volcanic reef waves. Respect the locals and the wave.
Honest safety note Most North Shore spots break over volcanic reef, not sand — bring booties, mind the currents, and never paddle out beyond your level. If you’re learning, book a lesson: the local schools know exactly which spot is working that day.
Still deciding? Pick by who you are
Things few visitors know
Sort the rest of your trip
Once you’ve picked your base, these make Fuerteventura work.
Some links above are affiliate links. If you book through them it costs you nothing extra and helps keep Coastal Canary Life running. I only point you to places worth your time. Surf conditions, availability and prices change — always check before booking.
See you on the island ✦
