Gran Canaria Beaches: El Puertillo Beach and Pools

El Puertillo beach on the Gran Canaria north shore El Puertillo beach on the Gran Canaria north shore

El Puertillo is a tiny beach with a couple of excellent local seafood restaurants just 15 minutes drives from Las Palmas. It is completely local and oozes charm. Go during the week and you get its little beach, natural swimming pools and restaurants all to yourself.

In 2014 El Puertillo's beach and natural pools eared a Blue Flag from the EU. 

Unless you surf or like eating in giant warehouse-style restaurants, the north coast of Gran Canaria is the bit you drive through to get somewhere else. It doesn't have the glamorous sandy beaches of the south coast and lacks a must-see attraction. Most of the highlights of Gran Canaria's northern strip (like Arucas' old town and its impressive, if disproportionate, Gothic church) are all inland.

This lack of a stand-out destination keeps the north coast low key: You never see tourists on the shore between Las Palmas and Sardina in the north west corner. Canarians are happy to keep the area quiet. 

There is more to the north coast than banana plantations and pounding surf. 

El Puertillo is a tiny village perched on a rock about 15 minutes out of Las Palmas on the north coast road (the GC-2). The village itself is a mass of higgledy piggledy Canarian houses perched on a rock by the sea. What makes it stand out from the other towns on the coast is its tiny, sandy beach, sheltered in an open bay. The beach is only about 60 metres long and bits of it are covered with fishing boats. There are no public toilets but there is a water tap for washing your feet. 

The town has added to the beach by creating natural swimming pools across the bay and an attractive promenade to link them up. There are a couple of big restaurant terraces along the promenade: Very modern but lacking the charm of the restaurants looking out over the beach.

The promenade is due to be extended all the way along the north coast to San Felipe. However, between the crisis and resistance from locals (who don't see why their houses should be demolished to make way for a path) the extension is not going to happen any time soon. 

Fishing is popular in El Puertillo as the rocky shore holds plenty of bream and parrot fish. The heavy surf along the rocky coast outside the bay protects the fish from the island's unscrupulous spear gun fishermen. The locals fish just by the beach from what looks like a purpose built platform. It's actually one of the last remaining machine gun bunkers on the coast. Franco built them all along the coast to deter invasions and most have now been demolished or eroded away. The El Puertillo bunker remains, probably because it's the only flat place for miles to put a bucket of ground bait! 

See this Google Map of El Puertillo for details of all the sights and highlights mentioned in this post.

El Puertillo beach fills up fast at the weekends and during the summer holidays it's almost impossible to find a towel's worth of sand. Arrive early to find parking and a good spot on the sand. Weekdays are the best time to visit.

Additional Info

  • Lifeguard: No
  • Calm water: Yes
  • You're sitting on: Sand
  • Sand colour: Sahara yellow
  • Looks best at: Sunset
  • Nudist: No
  • Hippy rating: 3

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El Puertillo beach and natural swimming pools www.gran-canaria-info.com

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Tip of the day

  • The Parafarmacia In Gran Canaria Is Not A Chemist!
    The Parafarmacia In Gran Canaria Is Not A Chemist!

    If there is one thing we hate it is visitors being tricked in Gran Canaria. In the past we've warned about overcharging at Gran Canaria chemists, and rip off electronics shops in resorts. 

    In this Tip Of The Day we return to the island's chemists or rather, to the island's fake chemists.

    A chemist in Gran Canaria is called a Farmacia and always has a green cross sign. Farmacias are the only place tobuy medicine in Spain, even basics like paracetamol.

    However, there is another kind of shop in Gran Canaria that looks and sounds like a chemist but doesn't sell medicine. This is the Parafarmacia and it also uses a green cross sign.

    A parafarmacia is a herbal medicine shop that is not allowed to sell any normal medicine such as paracetamol, ibuprofen or antibiotics. 

    Instead, parafarmacias sell herbal alternatives to medicine but don't have to prove that they work and they can charge whatever they want.

    We recently heard from a visitor to Gran Canaria who went into a parafarmacia and was charged 40 euros for a herbal alternative to Ibuprofen. It was only when they read the label that they realised what had happened. 

    To locate a genuine farmacia, see this website and search within your municipio (Puerto Rico is in Mogán, Playa del Inglés is in San Bartolomé de Tirajana). At weekends and on fiesta days many farmacias close but there is always one open, known as the farmacia de guardia, in each municipio.

    Search for the nearest one to you with this tool

    Lex Says: To keep costs down, see this article for the way to ask for generic medicine rather than expensive branded alternatives. 

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