Benagil Cave is the one you’ve seen on Instagram. Enormous sandstone cavern with a circular hole in the ceiling. Golden light cascading down onto a tiny beach. A single kayaker paddling in for scale. It went viral around 2014 and the entire Algarve coast tourism industry has been shaped by it ever since.
Speed boat tours from Portimão are the cheapest, fastest way to see it. €20 per person, 90 minutes. Kayaking is the alternative (more time inside the cave but more physical effort). Here’s how to book, which Portimão operator to pick, and why you should do this at sunrise.



In a Hurry? The Three Benagil Speed Boat Tours
- Best overall: Portimão Benagil Speed Boat + Sunset Option — from €20. 90 minutes, fast boat, the sunset upgrade adds €10 but is the best value.
- Adventure version: Benagil Sea Caves Speedboat Adventure — from €20. Faster boat, rougher ride, more caves visited on the route.
- With dolphin watching: Benagil + Dolphin Watching + Biologist — from €47. 3 hours, marine biologist onboard, extends the boat time.

- In a Hurry? The Three Benagil Speed Boat Tours
- What Benagil Cave Is
- The Skylight Debate
- The Three Benagil Speed Boat Tours Compared
- 1. Portimão Benagil Speed Boat with Sunset Option — from €20
- 2. Benagil Sea Caves Speedboat Adventure — from €20
- 3. Benagil + Dolphin Watching with Biologist — from €47
- What You See on the Way
- When to Go
- Sea Conditions
- Alternative Ways In
- The Skylight Photo — How to Nail It
- Portimão as a Base
- From Lisbon
- Getting to the Departure Dock
- What to Wear and Bring
- What to Skip in the Area
- Pairing With Other Algarve Activities
- Practical Questions
- When the Speed Boat Isn’t the Right Call
- How Long Benagil Really Takes
- Algarve Budget Questions
- Pairing with Lisbon or Porto
- What the Cave Was Before It Was Famous
- Summer vs Shoulder Season Reality
- Weather and Sea State Decisions
- The Short Version
- Common Benagil Mistakes
What Benagil Cave Is

Benagil (officially “Algar de Benagil”) is a sea cave on the Algarve coast, about 25 km east of Portimão and 10 km west of Albufeira. It’s carved into the same limestone cliff as dozens of other Algarve caves, but it’s the only one with a perfect circular ceiling skylight, a sandy beach inside, and room for a few boats.
The cave is accessible only from the sea. The beach inside isn’t reachable by land — there’s no trail down from the cliff top. There’s a cliff-top viewpoint where you can look down through the skylight (the “eye”), but that’s it for land access.
The cave’s fame exploded after the 2015 episode of the “GoPro Hero” travel videos put it on millions of Instagram feeds. Tourism numbers went from around 100,000 annual visitors in 2013 to over 800,000 by 2019. The authorities have since restricted access (no boat beaching since 2022, group size caps on kayaks) to protect the site.
The Skylight Debate
The circular hole in the cave ceiling is almost too perfect. There’s an urban legend that it was man-made — someone drilled through for ventilation when local fishermen used the cave as a stash site. The geological consensus is that it’s entirely natural, formed by a ceiling collapse. Either way, it’s the defining feature.
The Three Benagil Speed Boat Tours Compared
1. Portimão Benagil Speed Boat with Sunset Option — from €20

The highest-volume Benagil tour. €20 for the standard 90-minute trip, €30 for the sunset upgrade. You visit Benagil last for golden-hour photography in both versions. Our full review has meeting-point details and what the sunset upgrade includes.
2. Benagil Sea Caves Speedboat Adventure — from €20

If you want the faster ride and don’t mind getting bounced around. Same price as the standard tour but covers more coastline. Not great if anyone in your group gets motion sick. Our review covers the extra caves on the route.
3. Benagil + Dolphin Watching with Biologist — from €47

More than double the price but you get a proper half-day on the water. Dolphin watching is pretty much guaranteed (common and bottlenose both cruise this coastline). The biologist is useful for identifying species and explaining the local ecosystem. Our review has the dolphin sighting rates by season.
What You See on the Way

The 25 km boat run from Portimão to Benagil passes about 30 named rock formations. Highlights:
Praia da Rocha — the long sandy beach at Portimão’s edge. You leave from the marina behind the beach.
Praia do Vau — smaller beach, dramatic cliffs.
Algar Seco — sea arches and rock bridges at Carvoeiro, about halfway.

Praia da Marinha — often called the prettiest beach in Europe. The boat doesn’t land but you pass close enough for photos.
Algar de Benagil — the famous cave itself.
Praia de Benagil — the small sandy cove next to the cave. Swimmers launching their own kayaks to the cave often start here.
When to Go

The Benagil tours run March through November. Peak season is June-September; shoulder seasons April-May and October are ideal.
Best slots:
- Early morning (7-9am) — fewer boats at the cave, crisp light, fewer people
- Late afternoon / sunset — golden light through the skylight, most dramatic photos
Worst slots: midday (11am-2pm) in peak summer. The cave can have 20+ boats jostling for position. Water inside the cave can be rough with wake from all the activity.
Sea Conditions
The Algarve has generally calm waters, but Atlantic swells can make the ride uncomfortable. Check marine forecasts before booking. Strong south or southwest winds mean tours get cancelled. Operators refund automatically.
Alternative Ways In

Three alternatives to the speed boat:
Kayak from Benagil beach: 2-hour paddle tours launch from the village next door. You can actually land inside the cave. €35-50 per person. Physical effort required.
Stand-up paddleboard (SUP): similar to kayaking, sketchier balance. Good if you have SUP experience. €40-60.
Swim: 400m from Benagil beach. Strong swimmers only. Free but no operator support. Surprisingly popular in summer.
Kayak rental (self-guided): €15-20 per hour from Benagil beach. Most restrictive (no guide = fewer cave entries allowed).

The Skylight Photo — How to Nail It

The famous Benagil photograph was taken by local photographer Bruno Quental around 2014. Everyone now tries to replicate it.
Technical notes:
- Wide-angle lens (24mm or wider on a full-frame)
- Mid-afternoon to late-afternoon light (not midday — sun doesn’t fall on the beach then)
- Expose for the bright skylight, not the shadow (adjust in post)
- Include a person or kayak for scale
Getting that exact shot requires being inside the cave, which means kayaking or swimming. Speed boat passengers get a modified version from the water — still good, but without the “standing inside looking up” angle.
Portimão as a Base

Portimão is the biggest town in the western Algarve. About 60,000 residents, decent hotels, functional but unglamorous. Most Benagil tours depart from its marina (at the east end of Praia da Rocha).
Alternatives for a Benagil base:
- Albufeira: closer to Benagil (10 km east), more nightlife, more touristy
- Lagos: 30 km west, nicer old town, but longer boat ride to Benagil
- Carvoeiro: nearest village to Benagil, smaller, quieter
- Benagil itself: tiny village next to the cave. A dozen B&Bs. Book early.
From Lisbon
3 hours by car (A2 motorway) or bus. No direct train. Day trips from Lisbon are possible but tight; most Lisbon-based tours go to Évora or Óbidos instead.
For a proper Benagil trip, plan 2-3 nights on the Algarve.
Getting to the Departure Dock

Portimão marina is 10 minutes by taxi from most hotels in central Portimão. From Albufeira, 45 minutes by road. From Lagos, 35 minutes.
Parking at the marina is paid (€3-5 per 2 hours) and fills up fast on summer weekends. Bus 6 from Portimão train station stops near the marina.

What to Wear and Bring

Reef-safe sunscreen (operators usually provide waterproof bags but not sunscreen). Sunglasses with a strap (loose ones go overboard). Hat (with a chin strap for the same reason). Light long-sleeve layer (wind-chill at speed is real). Swimwear if you’re planning to swim inside the cave (rare on speed boats).
What not to bring: anything that can’t get wet. The speed boat WILL splash you. Phone in a waterproof case only.
What to Skip in the Area

The cliff-top viewpoint above Benagil cave. You can walk to it from Benagil village. Free. But the view is from above looking down — you won’t see the iconic skylight-beach effect. Most visitors think this is the cave itself and leave disappointed. Always take the boat or kayak tour for the actual cave experience.
The “Benagil Cave” lookout on Google Maps is often the cliff-top one, not the real cave access point.
Pairing With Other Algarve Activities

Natural Algarve combos:
- Ponta da Piedade — similar cliff formations at Lagos, separate boat tours
- Ria Formosa — the lagoon area at the east end of the Algarve
- Praia da Marinha — the famous beach, walkable from cliff trails
- Carvoeiro village — 5 km from Benagil, good for a post-boat lunch
Practical Questions
Kids OK? Yes, age 4+. Under 4 not allowed on speed boats (safety rules). Life jackets provided for all ages.
Pregnant? Not recommended. The bouncing is significant.
Wheelchair accessible? Speed boats no. Catamaran tours yes — slower but more accessible.
Seasickness? Normal for 10-15% of passengers on rough days. Take Dramamine 45 minutes before if you’re prone.
What if it’s too windy? Tours cancel and refund. Don’t plan Benagil as your only Algarve activity.
When the Speed Boat Isn’t the Right Call

Skip the speed boat if:
- You want to actually stand inside the cave — book the kayak instead
- You’re prone to seasickness — book the bigger catamaran with dolphin watching
- You’re with small kids (under 4) — book a non-speed boat
- You have specific photography goals — kayak gives you way more time
How Long Benagil Really Takes

At Benagil itself: 5-10 minutes of cave time on most speed boat tours. The boat waits offshore, you get photos from inside, then you move on. For more time at the cave, the kayak tour gives you 20-30 minutes at the actual beach.
Full speed-boat tour: 90 minutes total including transit. Full kayak tour: 2-3 hours with paddling time.
Algarve Budget Questions
€20 for the speed boat tour is genuinely cheap for what you get. If budget is a constraint, this is the single best €20 in the Algarve. Compare: meal at a decent Portimão restaurant = €25-35. Algar Seco boat tour = €15-25. Car rental day = €30-60. The Benagil boat is in the “objectively good value” category.
Pairing with Lisbon or Porto

Lisbon to Algarve: 3 hours by car. Day trip is possible but wastes most of the day driving.
Porto to Algarve: 6 hours. Not a day-trip option. Must stay overnight.
Optimal approach: include 2-3 Algarve nights in a Portugal multi-week trip, with Benagil as a half-day anchor on day 1.
What the Cave Was Before It Was Famous

Until the mid-2010s Benagil was a local fishing cove that occasional kayakers explored. The village has maybe 200 residents. The cave was known but not famous.
Everything changed when drone photography and Instagram converged. By 2017 the cave was on every “best of Portugal” list. By 2019 authorities had introduced restrictions. By 2022 boat beaching inside the cave was outlawed entirely.
The current version you see is the post-tourism-regulation version. It’s still spectacular, but more managed. If you visited in 2014 you could have had the cave to yourself for an hour. In 2026 you get 5-10 minutes with 10 other boats.
Summer vs Shoulder Season Reality
In July and August, the cave area around midday has 20+ boats at once. The “Instagram shot” is effectively impossible to capture without other boats in frame. Queues to enter the cave’s small mouth run 15-20 minutes long.
In May or October at 8am, you might get the cave to yourself for 5-10 minutes. The boat operators know this and will slow down for you to shoot without rushing.
The difference is striking. If your Algarve trip is flexible, shift to shoulder season.

Weather and Sea State Decisions
Algarve weather is generally favourable but the Atlantic can surprise you. Check before booking:
Windspeed: anything over 25 knots cancels tours. 15-20 knots is the comfortable cruising threshold; anything higher and you’ll get a rough ride even if the tour runs.
Swell: 1m and below is normal. 2m-plus is uncomfortable on speed boats; kayaks may not run at all.
Visibility: sea fog is rare on the south coast but occurs in spring and autumn. Full fog cancels tours.
The operators themselves monitor weather hourly and cancel individual departures as needed. They’re good about refunds. But don’t book Benagil as your only reason to go to the Algarve — have a plan B if the weather doesn’t cooperate.
The Short Version
Book the €20 standard speed-boat tour from Portimão for a sunset slot. Wear sunscreen. Bring a phone in a waterproof case. Don’t expect to land on the beach inside the cave — boats don’t do that anymore. For the “stand inside the cave” experience, book the kayak tour instead. The speed boat is the photography-plus-distance-coverage option; the kayak is the physical-immersion option. Both under €50. Either way, book a morning or evening slot, not midday, and give the cave 10 minutes of attention rather than 2 minutes of frantic phone-photo scrolling. If you have time for two Algarve boat experiences, pair the 90-minute Benagil speed boat with a longer dolphin-watching tour or a different-cave kayak session — you’ll see a wider slice of the coast and get two different photography angles.
Common Benagil Mistakes
Three errors catch first-time Algarve visitors: (1) Assuming the cliff-top viewpoint is the cave visit. It isn’t — the famous shot is from inside looking up, not from above looking down. Always take a boat or kayak. (2) Booking without checking the schedule. Some tours depart from Benagil village itself rather than Portimão; if you’ve booked transport to Portimão marina you’ll miss the boat. Re-check the departure location 48 hours before. (3) Wearing cotton clothing on the speed boat. You will get splashed. Quick-dry synthetics or a swimsuit are the answer.
Affiliate disclosure: Some links in this article are affiliate links. If you book through them we may earn a small commission at no cost to you. All recommendations are based on my own trip.
