Funchal
Portugal · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.
Choose your pace
Madeira in a Day — Market, Mountain Shrine, and the Wicker Flight Down
Mercado dos Lavradores
LandmarkArrive as the market wakes — by 8 AM the upstairs fish hall is stacked with metre-long black scabbardfish and ruby-flesh parrotfish, while ground-floor vendors pyramid custard apples, passion fruit, and Madeira bananas beneath the iconic flower-panel azulejos. The morning sun slants through the glass atrium, local cooks argue over weight, and no one is selling to tourists — come back at 11 when the cruise crowds flood in, and both the prices and the mood will have changed completely.
Tip: Ignore the first two tropical-fruit stalls inside the main entrance — those vendors slice open fruit you didn't ask for and charge €5 per banana. For the photograph of the azulejo farmer panels at the east entrance, shoot before 09:00 while the eastern sun still lights the tiles directly; after 10 the tiles go flat and glare-white. The real produce bargains are the back-row stalls on the ground floor, where the Funchal grandmothers shop.
Open in Google Maps →Teleférico do Funchal (Cable Car to Monte & Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Monte)
LandmarkWalk out the market's south door onto the palm-lined Rua da Boa Viagem and stroll 10 minutes east along the Atlantic to the cable-car base at Campo Almirante Reis — the glass cabins gliding overhead the whole way announce that you've arrived. The 15-minute climb lifts you 560 m above Funchal's terracotta roofscape to Monte (sit on the left for the harbor view); from the upper station it's three minutes uphill to the Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Monte, the pilgrim basilica where the last Emperor of Austria is entombed and whose 74-step basalt staircase frames the city's most-photographed shot.
Tip: Buy a one-way ticket (€18) only — you're coming down by toboggan, not by cable car. Queues triple after 10 AM when the cruise groups arrive; board before 10 and you'll wait under 10 minutes. Skip the €15 Monte Palace Tropical Garden beside the upper station — it needs 90 minutes you don't have, and the church's terraced forecourt gives you the same hilltop-over-Funchal view for free.
Open in Google Maps →Carros de Cesto do Monte
EntertainmentFrom the basilica, walk east down Caminho do Monte for 2 minutes — you'll see the straw hats before the sleds. Two carreiros in white uniforms and greased-sole boots strap themselves to the back of a wicker basket on wooden runners and push you at 35 km/h through hairpin cobbled bends, leaning the sled through corners with their shoulders. The two-kilometre descent to Livramento takes ten adrenal-drenched minutes on a contraption that has run this route unchanged since 1850 — Hemingway called it 'one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life.'
Tip: Tip the carreiros €2-3 per person at the bottom — they live on tips, not salary. Don't buy the €70 'photo + video' package at the top: they snap the shot regardless and throw it out if you decline. Want the photo yourself? Sit front-right, hold your phone low, and fire 30 seconds in at the first hairpin — the sled lurches and the carreiro's straw hat fills the foreground.
Open in Google Maps →Cervejaria Beerhouse
FoodGrab the €12 taxi from the Livramento toboggan ramp down to Funchal Marina — the driver drops you at the São Lázaro pier, twenty steps from Cervejaria Beerhouse, a glass-and-copper pavilion built onto the breakwater where they brew the only beer on Madeira. Order the espada frita com banana (fried black scabbardfish with caramelised Madeiran banana, €16) with a half-litre of Coral draft and a side of bolo do caco — it's the island condensed onto one plate. Forty-five minutes, under twenty euros, and the Atlantic slapping the pier beneath your table.
Tip: Ask for the west-facing tables — uninterrupted Atlantic view and the afternoon sun behind you, not in your eyes. Avoid the picanha steak on the menu; it's cruise-tourist bait, and the chef is an island fisherman's son — the scabbardfish is where his pride is. Want a real digestif? The 10-year Madeira Malvasia by the glass (€4) is better than the €30 tourist-shop bottles, and you'll actually drink this one.
Open in Google Maps →Rua de Santa Maria (Painted Doors of Zona Velha)
NeighborhoodWalk 15 minutes east along the seafront promenade from the Marina — past the cream-stone Sé Cathedral and the palm-shaded Jardim Municipal — until you reach Rua de Santa Maria, Funchal's oldest cobbled alley in Zona Velha. The 2011 Arte de Portas Abertas project invited artists to paint the doors of this crumbling quarter; 200 canvases later, every front door is a graffiti portrait, a surrealist fish, or a trompe-l'œil opening into imagined worlds. Walk the full length of the street to the 17th-century Forte de São Tiago at the eastern end, where the mustard-yellow fortress rooftop faces west for the sunset back over the painted quarter.
Tip: The most-photographed doors cluster between house numbers 100 and 160 — the cobalt goldfish door at 114 and the weeping-woman door at 145 are the viral favourites. Climb to the Forte de São Tiago rooftop bar at 17:30 for a €5 glass of Madeira Verdelho and the gold-hour panorama over the painted street meeting the basalt-black Atlantic — it's the single strongest photograph of the day.
Open in Google Maps →Restaurante Santa Maria
FoodFrom the Forte de São Tiago rooftop, walk 6 minutes back west along Rua de Santa Maria — the lanterns are lit now and the painted doors glow differently after dark — and stop at no. 145, Restaurante Santa Maria, the undisputed seafood anchor of Zona Velha. Start with lapas grelhadas (grilled Atlantic limpets with garlic butter and lemon, €14) to share while you wait, then the arroz de marisco para dois (lobster, tiger prawn, clam and mussel in a saffron-tomato fumet served cataplana-style, €48) with a half bottle of Quinta do Furão Verdelho. The room is a Belle-Époque townhouse with tiled floors and tin ceilings — ask for the back garden courtyard if the night is mild.
Tip: Reserve by 14:00 via the restaurant's Instagram DMs or Google profile — walk-ins after 20:00 wait 40+ minutes and the back garden fills first. Zona Velha tourist-trap warning: ignore the men with laminated menus outside every other door on Rua de Santa Maria ('best table in town, follow me!') — those are touts on commission for the three or four mediocre restaurants that can't fill themselves, and the 'fresh fish by weight' pitch routinely brings a €90 bill for two plates of farmed sea bream. Santa Maria doesn't need touts because it's already full.
Open in Google Maps →A Morning Above the Clouds, an Afternoon in Painted Alleys
Teleferico do Funchal
LandmarkThe base station sits at the eastern edge of the Old Town, a five-minute stroll from Praca do Municipio along the palm-lined seafront. Board by 09:10 — the first cabin leaves at 09:00 and the queue thickens after 09:30. The 15-minute ride climbs 560 metres above terracotta rooftops and banana plantations, with the whole Atlantic opening behind you.
Tip: Buy the one-way-up ticket (13 EUR), not the round-trip — you'll descend by toboggan, which is the whole point. Take the cabin on the left (ocean side) on ascent for the uninterrupted sea view; the right side faces the green valley wall.
Open in Google Maps →Monte Palace Madeira
ParkExit the top cable-car station and turn right onto Caminho das Babosas, five minutes gently uphill past the toboggan drivers already polishing their wicker sleds. The tropical garden sprawls across fifteen hectares: koi ponds, Japanese pavilions, and 200 azulejo panels tracing Portugal's seafaring history. Morning light through the laurel canopy hits the Oriental pond at exactly the right angle before 11:00, so walk counter-clockwise to reach it first.
Tip: Enter through the main gate and head straight down the stone staircase to the Japanese Garden — most visitors walk the top loop first and arrive here at 11:30, so beat them by thirty minutes. Bring water; the exit path climbs steeply back to the street.
Open in Google Maps →Carros de Cesto do Monte
EntertainmentWalk four minutes back down Caminho das Babosas to the carreiros corner, just below Igreja Nossa Senhora do Monte. Two men in white linen and straw hats will push your wicker sled on wooden runners down a two-kilometre street, steering only with the leather soles of their boots. The tradition is 170 years old and unchanged; you finish at Livramento in ten minutes, heart still in your throat.
Tip: Cash only — 30 EUR solo, 37.50 EUR for two sharing a sled (best value), 55 EUR for three. Two is the sweet spot because the sled picks up real speed with the extra weight. Wear flat shoes, not flip-flops; you step off while it's still rolling.
Open in Google Maps →Gaviao Novo
FoodGrab a taxi at the Livramento corner — 8-10 EUR drops you directly onto Rua de Santa Maria in the Old Town. Gaviao Novo is a tiny three-table spot that locals queue for at 13:00 sharp; the bife de atum com milho frito (tuna steak with cornmeal cubes, 14 EUR) and espetada em pau de louro (beef on a bay-leaf branch, 15 EUR) are why it has zero empty seats after 13:30. Budget 20-25 EUR per person with a glass of Madeira table wine.
Tip: Cash only — no card machine, no exceptions. If the three inside tables are full, ask for the two pavement tables around the corner rather than leaving; they serve the same kitchen. Skip the touristy sangria menu and order a glass of Madeira Sercial aperitif for 3 EUR.
Open in Google Maps →Zona Velha and Rua de Santa Maria
NeighborhoodWalk out of Gaviao Novo's door and you're already on Rua de Santa Maria — the most photographed street in Madeira. Every door along this one-kilometre alley has been painted by a different artist since 2011 under the 'Arte de Portas Abertas' project. Continue east to Forte de Sao Tiago, the lemon-yellow fortress at the sea edge, then drop down to the black-pebble beach at Barreirinha for the afternoon light reflecting off the fort walls.
Tip: Walk the street west-to-east between 15:00 and 17:00 — afternoon sun lights up the south-facing doors like stained glass, and the tour groups have already cleared out. Door number 77 (the mermaid holding a fig) is the most photographed; door 188 (the old woman with the cat) is the local favourite and usually crowd-free.
Open in Google Maps →Armazem do Sal
FoodWalk six minutes west along the old seawall toward the port — the restaurant occupies a 200-year-old salt warehouse at Rua da Alfandega 135, exposed basalt walls and flickering candles inside. The black scabbard fish with passion fruit reduction (22 EUR) and the octopus rice for two (46 EUR) are the dishes Madeirans save this address for on anniversaries. The 19:30 seating catches the stone-wall atmosphere at its candlelit best, before the 21:00 cruise-ship wave.
Tip: Avoid the restaurants along Rua de Joao Gago and the harbour promenade where hawkers wave laminated menus at you — they mark up 40% for reheated frozen scabbard fish and push free poncha shots to soften the bill. Reserve Armazem do Sal 24 hours ahead by phone and ask for table 4 downstairs against the stone wall; the upstairs room sits under the kitchen and loses the candlelit quiet.
Open in Google Maps →The Port Town Where Wine Once Crossed the World
Mercado dos Lavradores
ShoppingThe market sits behind painted tile facades depicting Madeiran harvests, a ten-minute walk east of Praca do Municipio along Rua do Ribeirinho. Upstairs, fruit vendors will slice you wedges of tomato ingles (a sweet red the size of a plum) and pitanga (the seven-flavour cherry) — a 2 EUR tasting flight is expected, not extra. Downstairs, the fish hall displays black scabbard fish with their dragon-like teeth, unloaded at 06:00 from the Camara de Lobos auction.
Tip: Do NOT buy the fruit already sliced and priced on baskets at the top of the stairs — that is the tourist trap (5 EUR for two slices). Walk to the far end stalls behind, where locals shop, and buy by weight from the crates; half a kilo of custard apple (anona) is 3 EUR. Always ask to taste before buying — every honest vendor expects it.
Open in Google Maps →Se Catedral do Funchal
ReligiousExit the market's main door and walk eight minutes west along Rua do Aljube, under the orange-bougainvillea balconies. The cathedral was completed in 1514 on the order of King Manuel I, with a rare Mudejar ceiling carved from Madeiran laurel wood — a Moorish-Gothic-Portuguese fusion you won't find in this form anywhere else. Fifteen minutes inside is enough; the ceiling is the only reason to come, so look up, not down.
Tip: Arrive by 11:00 before the 11:30 coach tours from the cruise port flood in. Stand under the central crossing and tilt your head back — the ceiling beams were joined without nails, using Arab-learned interlocking carpentry. The south transept's sunlight hits the gold altar between 11:15 and 11:30 only.
Open in Google Maps →Blandy's Wine Lodge
MuseumStep out of the cathedral and walk three minutes west on Avenida Arriaga — the lodge fills a 17th-century Franciscan monastery at number 28. The tour winds through three floors of oak barrels aged in the attic heat (the 'estufagem' process that mimics the old equator-crossing voyages), and ends with a tasting flight of four Madeira styles: Sercial dry, Verdelho medium-dry, Bual medium-sweet, Malmsey sweet. The 1863 Bual in the library cabinet is still drinkable, and still sold by the bottle.
Tip: Book the 12:00 Premium Tour online (15 EUR) not the standard Tour (6.90 EUR) — the premium flight includes a 20-year Frasqueira vintage, which alone is worth the price difference. Ask the guide to open the cedar-panelled library cabinet: the 1811 Verdelho on the top shelf is not for sale but is shown on request.
Open in Google Maps →Restaurante Dos Combatentes
FoodExit the wine lodge, cross Avenida Arriaga at the zebra crossing, and walk four minutes north up Rua Ivens to number 1 — Dos Combatentes has cooked here since 1966 and the wood-panelled dining room has not been redecorated once. Order lapas grelhadas com alho (grilled limpets in garlic butter, 14 EUR) and picado madeirense (a cast-iron skillet of marinated beef cubes with matchstick potatoes, 16 EUR for two). No reservations; arrive at 13:45 when the office lunch crowd is finishing and your table opens up.
Tip: Ask for 'uma poncha da casa' after you order — they pour it from a 20-year-old glass bottle kept under the counter, rum and honey and lemon muddled with a wooden stick ('mexelote'), and it's free with two main courses. Pay in cash for a 5% discount that the waiter won't mention but will apply.
Open in Google Maps →Fortaleza do Pico
LandmarkWalk north from the restaurant up Rua do Castanheiro onto the cobbled Calcada do Pico — 20 minutes, sometimes steep, past walled quintas with bougainvillea spilling over the stones. The 17th-century fortress crowns a volcanic outcrop 111 metres above the Atlantic and is the only spot that frames all of Funchal in a single photograph: harbour, Monte in the clouds above, Cabo Girao's cliffs to the west, Atlantic horizon. Entry is free; the gates close at 18:00, so time your arrival for 90 minutes before that.
Tip: Arrive 90 minutes before sunset — the panorama lights up in sequence: harbour gold first, then the western sea cliffs, then the Monte hills. The north-east corner platform behind the flagpole is the only clean shot without iron railings. Wear proper shoes; the final 50 metres are smooth basalt cobbles that turn skating-rink slippery in light drizzle.
Open in Google Maps →Akua
FoodWalk twenty minutes back downhill — slower than the climb up, much easier on the knees — and turn east onto Rua dos Murcas. Akua is small, modern, and run by chef Julio Pereira, whose kitchen treats Madeiran fishing-village ingredients with technique learned in Copenhagen. The swordfish carpaccio with passion fruit (18 EUR) and the lapas-shell pasta (26 EUR) taste of the whole island in a single mouthful; the five-course tasting (65 EUR) is worth the time if you're not catching an early flight.
Tip: Avoid the identikit 'restaurante tipico' clones lined up along Rua de Joao Gago — they pull tourists in with free poncha shots and serve frozen scabbard fish for 25 EUR a plate, and several run a 'tourist menu' scam where the English version is priced 30% higher than the Portuguese one. Akua holds back 30% of seats for same-day walk-ins; call at 18:00 for a counter seat facing the open kitchen (the best view in the room).
Open in Google Maps →First Taste of Madeira — Where Ocean Meets Old Town
Sé Catedral do Funchal
ReligiousBegin at the 15th-century cathedral where Madeira's story begins — the carved vinhático-wood ceiling overhead is a masterpiece that survived five centuries of Atlantic storms. At 09:00 morning light filters through the narrow stained-glass, and you share the nave with only a handful of early risers before tour groups arrive.
Tip: The Mudéjar-style ceiling above the nave is the real treasure — sit on a pew and look straight up; it is native vinhático, took craftsmen seven years, and most visitors rush past without ever lifting their eyes.
Open in Google Maps →Mercado dos Lavradores
NeighborhoodWalk 5 minutes east along Rua do Aljube past spice shops to the market's iconic azulejo-tiled facade. Inside, tropical fruits you've never tasted crowd every stall — monster custard apples, passionfruit-and-banana hybrids, cactus tabaibo, yellow pitanga cherries — while downstairs fishmongers lay out slippery black scabbard fish hauled from 1,000-meter depths.
Tip: The upstairs fruit vendors love offering free slivers, but if they cut a whole fruit before you agree to buy, refuse politely — a single custard apple can hit 15€. Shop the ground-floor stalls where Madeirans actually buy their week's fruit.
Open in Google Maps →O Tapassol
FoodWalk 3 minutes south along Rua de Dom Carlos I into the Old Town — the restaurant's rooftop terrace opens onto a sunny corner with laundry lines strung between pastel houses. This 60-year-old tasca serves the two dishes every Madeiran grandmother makes: espada com banana (black scabbard fish with fried banana, 14€) and espetada em pau de louro (beef on a fresh bay-laurel skewer, 16€).
Tip: Order the bolo do caco com alho e salsa (garlic-parsley flatbread) as a starter — it comes straight from the wood oven and is worth the whole lunch. Reserve the rooftop table and arrive by 12:30 to claim it before the 13:00 rush fills it.
Open in Google Maps →Rua de Santa Maria & Fortaleza de São Tiago
NeighborhoodEnter the cobblestone lane directly behind O Tapassol — each door you pass has been painted by a different artist as part of the 2010 'Art of Open Doors' project: a sleeping cat, a woman's face, a Madeira embroidery motif. At the end of the street the ochre-yellow Fortaleza de São Tiago rises above the black-sand beach of Barreirinha; walk its ramparts for a full panorama back over the Old Town's terracotta roofs.
Tip: Afternoon light (15:00-16:00) hits the painted doors at a 45-degree angle — the richest color saturation for photos, and the street empties as the cruise-ship day-trippers head back. Save 30 minutes afterward for an espresso on the fortress terrace café before dinner.
Open in Google Maps →Armazém do Sal
FoodWalk 12 minutes west along the waterfront Avenida do Mar — the setting sun paints the ocean orange over your left shoulder and the marina yachts clink gently. This 200-year-old salt warehouse now plates contemporary Madeiran cooking in a dimly-lit stone interior: peixe-espada with passionfruit butter (22€) and slow-cooked picado with mountain potatoes (19€).
Tip: Reserve three days ahead and request the corner nook beneath the original iron salt-beam. Avoid the shiny tourist restaurants fronting Avenida Arriaga — most reheat frozen seafood and charge double; one block inland from the water is always better in this town.
Open in Google Maps →Up to Monte — Cable Car to the Clouds, Wicker Sled Down
Teleférico do Funchal
EntertainmentWalk 8 minutes east through the waking Old Town to the cable car base station near Almirante Reis. Glide 560 meters up over tiled rooftops, banana trees, and cloud forest — on a clear morning you see all the way to the Desertas Islands on the horizon. The 15-minute ride unfolds landscapes most visitors only glimpse from below.
Tip: Catch the 09:00 opening cabin — it is nearly empty, morning haze still sits on the mountain, and the light is spectacular for photos. Sit on the right side going up for the widest ocean panorama; the left side only shows cliff rock.
Open in Google Maps →Monte Palace Tropical Garden
ParkFollow the blue-and-white azulejos four minutes downhill from the cable car exit to the gardens' ornate gate. This 70,000-sqm hillside estate holds the world's largest collection of cycads, koi ponds crossed by red Japanese bridges, and a hidden tile museum with 1,000 panels rescued from 16th-century Portuguese palaces. The upper terrace's 'Tigre d'Água' waterfall catches rainbow mist before 11:00.
Tip: Skip the main path and head straight up to the 'Lago Central' and waterfall first — almost no one goes uphill on arrival, so you get the Japanese pagodas to yourself before the 11:30 crowd arrives. The mineral museum beside the koi pond hides a 2-meter amethyst geode most tourists walk right past.
Open in Google Maps →Restaurante do Monte
FoodA 5-minute walk uphill from the garden's upper gate onto Caminho das Babosas — the road narrows under plane trees and the air cools noticeably at 550m. This family-run taberna serves the food locals drive up from Funchal for: picado de vaca (stewed beef in black beer, 12€) and bacalhau à Madeirense (salt cod with sweet potato, 14€), eaten at tiled tables under a grapevine trellis.
Tip: Order a poncha regional (sugarcane rum, honey, lemon) — the island's signature drink, muddled by hand at the table with a traditional wooden mexelote pestle. Always ask for the outdoor courtyard, not the indoor room — same menu, completely different experience.
Open in Google Maps →Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Monte & Carreiros do Monte
EntertainmentWalk 3 minutes uphill to the twin-towered white church perched above 68 stone steps — Madeira's holiest site, and where the last Emperor of Austria, Karl I, is buried inside. From the square, the carreiros — straw-hatted men in white linen uniforms and rubber-soled boots — launch wicker-basket toboggans down 2 km of hairpin village streets, hitting 30 km/h as they steer with rope and bodyweight alone.
Tip: Do not pay the official photographer at the finish line in Livramento — they charge 15€ per shot; mount your own phone on a small gorillapod and film from the basket. Grab a taxi (12€) back to Funchal from Livramento rather than walking; the return is steep, residential, and unglamorous.
Open in Google Maps →Kampo
FoodYour Livramento taxi drops you in central Funchal; walk 3 minutes from Praça do Município along Rua do Sabão. Chef Júlio Pereira's farm-to-fork kitchen changes with the island's harvest, but signatures hold: Madeira beef tataki with black garlic (18€) and octopus over sweet-potato espuma (24€), prepared on an open fire-hearth.
Tip: Book the chef's counter rather than a regular table — four seats face the kitchen pass and Júlio often hands you plates directly with a quick story. Ask for the passion-fruit poncha pairing with dessert; it is off-menu but the staff will make it.
Open in Google Maps →Wine, Gardens, and a Farewell by the Atlantic
Blandy's Wine Lodge
MuseumA 10-minute walk west from the Sé along Avenida Arriaga — in spring the jacaranda trees overhead drop purple blossoms across the pavement. The 17th-century Franciscan monastery became Madeira's most famous wine lodge: upstairs in the attic, barrels of Sercial, Verdelho, and Malmsey age 20 to 100 years under tropical roof heat, the same method that preserved the wine Jefferson toasted the Declaration of Independence with.
Tip: Book the 'Premium Tour' (17€, 10:00 slot) which includes a 20-year-old Malmsey tasting — skip the basic entry tour; the young wines simply do not show the island's character. The gift shop holds half-bottles of vintage Madeira you cannot find anywhere else in the world.
Open in Google Maps →Jardins de Santa Catarina
ParkWalk 4 minutes west through Praça do Infante — the bronze statue of Henry the Navigator watches over the park's entrance, facing the ocean he mapped. Terraced downhill toward the bay, the gardens hold bird-of-paradise flowers, a lake with black swans, and the tiny whitewashed Capela de Santa Catarina built in 1425 by the island's first settlers — the oldest building on Madeira.
Tip: The far-western corner near the Cristóvão Colombo statue has an empty stone bench most visitors miss and the best panoramic angle over the marina — it is also where locals come at sunset, so note it for later. Morning is quietest; by 13:00 the cruise-ship arrivals pour through.
Open in Google Maps →Beerhouse Funchal
FoodA 6-minute walk downhill through the tunnel under Avenida do Infante emerges among the marina's moored yachts. This glass-walled restaurant brews its own unfiltered Madeira Beer on-site and serves Portuguese sharing plates built around island ingredients: octopus à lagareiro with roasted garlic (19€), Madeira black pork with sweet potato (16€), all on a panoramic terrace directly over the water.
Tip: Order the house cerveja preta (black beer) with the octopus — the malt sweetness cuts the olive-oil richness perfectly. Sit on the terrace's far-right corner where the natural wall blocks the wind and no docked cruise ship looms in your photos.
Open in Google Maps →Museu CR7 & Lido Promenade
MuseumWalk 2 minutes along the marina to Cristiano Ronaldo's museum — the footballer is Funchal-born and the collection reads like a fan's shrine: every Ballon d'Or on a single wall, a hologram of boy-Cristiano kicking against a Madeira street, boots from every Champions League final. Continue west along the 2-km Lido seafront promenade past volcanic swim platforms, the black-pebble Praia Formosa, and Atlantic surf breaking just below the path.
Tip: The promenade's last kilometer before Formosa Cliffs is where Madeirans jog at 17:00 — you will see more locals here than anywhere else in the city, and Vespas café halfway along has the best terrace for a coffee break. Avoid the taxi drivers clustered at the CR7 museum exit; they quote 15€ for a 6€ meter ride — walk 50m back to Avenida do Infante and flag a passing cab.
Open in Google Maps →Casa Madeirense
FoodA 15-minute stroll west along Estrada Monumental past hibiscus hedges and Lido boutique hotels, or a 6€ taxi if feet are tired. The dining room is unapologetically traditional — stone walls, wrought-iron chandeliers, an open grill — and a meter-long bay-laurel espetada of beef is hooked above your table (22€ per person), dripping fat onto warm bolo do caco brushed with garlic butter.
Tip: Order the espetada em pau de louro for two — it arrives on an iron hook suspended from the ceiling, and the laurel wood imparts a flavor no metal skewer can match. One final warning for the trip: avoid the 'traditional show-dinner' restaurants on Estrada Monumental that advertise folk dancers and discounted set menus — they microwave their espetada; authentic Madeiran grills never need a show to sell the food.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around Funchal
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Funchal?
Most travelers enjoy Funchal in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Funchal?
The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Funchal?
A practical starting point is about €120 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Funchal?
A good first shortlist for Funchal includes Mercado dos Lavradores, Teleférico do Funchal (Cable Car to Monte & Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Monte).