Madeira Levadas Trails
Follow centuries-old irrigation channels through Madeira's misty laurel forests and along breathtaking cliff-edge paths.
About this spectacle
Madeira's levadas are a remarkable network of narrow irrigation channels carved into the island's volcanic landscape, some tracing sheer cliffs and threading through laurel forest tunnels. Walkers follow the water's edge along paths that sometimes measure only a foot wide, with the sound of flowing water as a constant companion. The mist-laden laurisilva — ancient laurel forest — creates an otherworldly green canopy overhead, dripping with moisture and alive with endemic birds. Routes range from gentle valley-floor strolls to vertiginous cliff-hugging passages above deep ravines. The air smells of fern and damp stone, and the channels occasionally burst into small waterfalls tumbling into the gorge below. Each levada tells a quiet story of centuries-old water management, and walkers emerge at viewpoints overlooking the Atlantic with a sense of having traversed something genuinely wild.
When to go
Jan — Dec, peak Sep — May
Getting there
Nearest airport: FNC. Nearest city: Funchal.
Booking options
Goyova doesn't process bookings directly. When you tap "Plan this trip" in the app, you'll see options from our partner providers — accommodation, tours, transport — with affiliate links where applicable. See our affiliate disclosure for details.