Cueva de los Verdes in Lanzarote: tickets, opening times, prices and tips for your visit

Cueva de los Verdes is one of the most special places to visit in northern Lanzarote. It is a guided walk inside a volcanic tube where you can clearly understand the island’s origin, landscape and part of its history.

If you are planning to visit, it is best to book your ticket in advance, arrive with some extra time and wear comfortable shoes. The experience is well worth it, but the route has uneven ground, steps and some narrow sections.

Quick facts for planning your visit

Practical detailUseful information
LocationHaría, northern Lanzarote
Approximate durationAround 50 minutes
Type of visitGuided
TicketsOnline
Usual opening timesCheck the official website before going
PriceCheck the updated fare before booking
RecommendationArrive with time before your booked slot
AccessibilityNot adapted for reduced mobility

What is Cueva de los Verdes and why is it worth visiting?

Cueva de los Verdes is located in the municipality of Haría, within the volcanic landscape of Malpaís de La Corona. It is part of the large volcanic tube created by the eruptions of the Corona Volcano, the same natural system that also includes Jameos del Agua and the underwater section known as the Tunnel of Atlantis.

Put simply, this is not a cave carved out by water, but a natural tunnel formed by ancient lava flows. That is why the visit helps you understand how this part of northern Lanzarote was formed.

As someone from Lanzarote, I do not see it as just another tourist attraction. It is one of those places that helps you understand the island from the inside: the lava, the landscape, the history and that very Lanzarote way of turning a natural space into a carefully designed experience without taking away its character.

A volcanic tube formed by the Corona Volcano

The origin of this space lies in the eruptions of the Corona Volcano. During the visit, you walk through lava-formed galleries, with passages, natural vaults, changes in rock colour and areas where you can clearly see the power of the volcanic landscape.

You do not need to be a geology expert to enjoy it. The cave is very visual and easy to understand. You walk through an ancient volcanic tube and, almost without realising it, begin to read Lanzarote’s landscape from a completely different perspective.

galeria roja en la cueva de los verdes

Its connection with Jameos del Agua and the Tunnel of Atlantis

This volcanic tube and Jameos del Agua are part of the same natural system, although the experience in each place is different. The cave feels more underground, guided and focused on geology. Jameos del Agua combines nature, water, architecture, vegetation and art.

This connection matters because many people visit both places on the same day. It makes sense, as they help you better understand northern Lanzarote and the volcanic history of the area.

From historical refuge to tourist visit

The cave also has a very interesting historical side. For centuries, local people used these galleries as a refuge from pirate attacks. On an island with such open landscapes, an underground space like this had enormous value.

Later, it was adapted for tourism with a very careful intervention. The lighting, the route and the way the space is presented are designed to accompany the experience without turning it into an artificial stage set. That balance is one of the reasons why the visit works so well.

Tickets, online booking and access

Tickets must be purchased online. This is important because it is not a good idea to go there assuming you can buy your ticket on arrival.

The safest option is to book in advance, choose the right day and time, and arrive with enough margin. In high season or on busy days, improvising can mean wasting time or having a less organised visit.

Online purchase and timed entry

The ticket works with a selected day and time. It can usually be shown on your mobile phone, so printing is not normally necessary, but it is still a good idea to have it ready before reaching the entrance.

If you are travelling in a group, check how the booking has been made and whether all tickets are linked to the same reservation. It is a small detail, but it can avoid confusion at the entrance.

Can you buy tickets at the ticket office?

The recommendation is to buy your ticket online before going. Official information from the Centres of Art, Culture and Tourism of Lanzarote indicates that sales are managed online, so it is better not to rely on buying directly there.

If you find tour pages or combined excursions, check carefully what they include, whether they are intermediaries and whether the price is really worth it. For a standard visit, the main reference should always be the official channel.

Tips before booking

Before buying your ticket, check three things: the time slot that best fits your route, whether you want to combine the visit with Jameos del Agua and whether everyone in your group can comfortably do the route.

The visit is not especially long, but it has its own conditions. It is underground, has steps, uneven ground and some sections where you need to walk carefully. This is not to scare you, but to help you know what to expect.

Opening times, prices and updated fares

Opening times and prices can change, so it is always best to check the official website before buying your ticket or planning your visit.

This section is important because many searches are practical: opening times, prices, tickets, online tickets, duration and access conditions. People do not only want to know what the cave is; they want to organise their visit properly.

piedra con cartel de madera en la entrada de la cueva de los verdes en Lanzarote

Usual opening times

The route works as a guided visit with time slots. That means it is not enough to know that the site is open. You need to book a specific entry time.

If you can choose, it is usually a good idea to avoid the busiest central hours of the day. The cave does not depend on outside light, but the experience can change depending on crowds, parking and how the day is organised.

Ticket price

The price can vary depending on age, residence or possible discounts. Before publishing or updating this content, it is always best to check the exact fare on the official source.

If you plan to use a reduced fare, check the required documentation carefully. These tickets usually require proof of eligibility at the entrance.

When to check the official information

It is always worth checking the official information, especially if you are travelling in high season, with children, with residents, with people with disabilities, in a group or if you want to visit several tourist centres on the same day.

It is also advisable to check opening times and conditions the day before. It takes very little time and prevents surprises. In Lanzarote, some places are best enjoyed without rushing, and this is one of them.

How long does the visit take?

The route takes around 50 minutes. That is the approximate length of the guided visit, but not the total time you should allow in your planning. Between parking, arriving early, waiting to enter and leaving calmly, it is best to allow a little over an hour.

Duration of the guided route

The tourist visit is done on foot through an adapted section of the cave. It is not a difficult walk for someone without mobility issues, but it is not a completely flat stroll either.

There are steps, uneven ground and areas where you need to watch where you step. That is why comfortable shoes and a relaxed pace are important.

How much time to allow in total

Although the route takes around 50 minutes, leave extra time. Ideally, arrive before your assigned time, locate the entrance and go in without rushing.

If you also plan to combine the cave with Jameos del Agua, eat nearby or continue towards Órzola, Arrieta, Punta Mujeres or Mirador del Río, organise your day calmly. Northern Lanzarote is much better when you are not jumping from place to place as if clocking into a volcano factory.

What the guided visit is like

The guided visit is an essential part of the experience. It is not just about walking through a beautiful cave. The guide helps you understand what you are seeing, how the volcanic tube was formed, why it mattered as a refuge and why it was adapted in this way.

When the explanation is good, the route stops being just a striking volcanic formation and becomes a very clear way to read Lanzarote from the inside.

What to see during the route

During the visit, you will see volcanic galleries, lava passages, natural vaults, narrower areas, changes in rock colour and formations created as the lava cooled.

The lighting is one of the strongest parts of the experience. It is designed to accompany the route and highlight volumes, textures and colours without taking attention away from the natural space.

Volcanic galleries and lighting

The feeling inside changes from one section to another. Some areas are wider, others more enclosed, with passages where the ceiling gets lower and points where the lighting creates an almost theatrical atmosphere.

For me, this is one of the keys to the visit: it does not need to be exaggerated. It is already powerful in itself. The value lies in walking through a natural space that reminds you Lanzarote is not only an outdoor landscape, but also underground geology.

The underground auditorium

The space also has an auditorium, a unique venue where concerts and cultural activities are held on specific dates. Not every visitor will coincide with a concert, but it is worth knowing it exists. It reinforces that very Lanzarote idea of bringing nature, art and culture together without separating them too much.

auditorio para conciertos en la cueva de los verdes

The final secret, without spoilers

Cueva de los Verdes has a very famous final secret. In fact, many people look up information about the surprise before going. My advice is not to read too much. The point is to discover it there, inside the cave, following the guide’s explanation. Explaining too much would be like revealing a magic trick before the show starts.

How to get there and where to park

The cave is in the municipality of Haría, in northern Lanzarote. The usual way to get there is by car, especially if you are planning a route through this part of the island. The visit combines very well with Jameos del Agua, Punta Mujeres, Arrieta, Órzola or Mirador del Río, depending on how you plan your day.

Where exactly is it?

It is located in the Malpaís de La Corona area, very close to Jameos del Agua. This proximity means many people organise both visits in the same morning or on the same day.

If you are staying in Costa Teguise, Puerto del Carmen, Playa Blanca or Arrecife, calculate the journey from your starting point and add some extra time. Distances in Lanzarote are not huge, but between parking, entering at your booked time and moving between sites, time goes by quickly.

How to get there by car

By car, the easiest option is to follow the signs towards the north of the island and towards Jameos del Agua and Cueva de los Verdes. The area is signposted because it is part of Lanzarote’s usual tourist circuit.

If you already have your ticket, do not cut it too fine. Arriving late can complicate access, especially if your visit has an assigned time.

Parking and arrival tips

The best approach is to arrive with time, park calmly and have your ticket ready on your mobile phone. If several people are included in the same booking, check in advance how the ticket has been issued to avoid doubts at the entrance.

Tips before entering

The experience is worth it, but it is better when you know what to expect. This is not a conventional museum, a viewpoint or an outdoor visit. It is an underground volcanic cave with a guided route, uneven ground and some areas where you need to walk carefully.

Before goingRecommendation
TicketBuy it online and check your assigned time
Opening timesCheck the official information before travelling
ShoesClosed, comfortable shoes with a good sole are best
TimeAllow more than one hour including access and exit
MobilityConsider the route carefully if there are walking difficulties
ClaustrophobiaRemember this is an underground visit
ChildrenExplain that it is a guided visit and not a place to run
Final secretDo not look it up before going

What clothes and shoes to wear

Wear comfortable clothes and, above all, comfortable closed shoes with a good sole. Inside, there may be uneven areas, steps and points where you need to walk carefully.

For me, footwear matters more than it seems. You do not need to dress as if you were climbing a volcano, but you should wear shoes with good grip. Inside there are steps, uneven ground and areas where flip-flops or unstable footwear are not a good idea.

Accessibility and reduced mobility

This needs to be said clearly: the route is not adapted for people with reduced mobility. It includes uneven ground, steps and narrow spaces. There are also areas with low ceilings. This does not mean a tall person cannot visit, but they will need to pay attention and bend down in some sections.

Is it recommended if you have claustrophobia?

It is not the most advisable visit if you suffer from claustrophobia. The cave is lit and has wide sections, but it is still an enclosed underground space. Every case is different. Some visitors are surprised because they do not find it as overwhelming as expected, but others may feel uncomfortable in the more enclosed sections. If closed spaces make you very anxious, it is better to think carefully before buying the ticket.

Visiting with children

It can be an interesting experience with children, but it is important to consider the type of route. This is not a place to run, separate from the group or touch the formations.

With slightly older children, it can work very well if they are interested in nature, volcanoes or stories about refuges and pirates. Ideally, explain beforehand that it is a guided visit and that they need to walk carefully.

Jameos del Agua and Cueva de los Verdes

Jameos del Agua and Cueva de los Verdes are very close and form part of the same volcanic system, so it makes sense to organise both visits on the same day. Even so, they offer different experiences: one is more underground and geological; the other is more open, artistic and scenic.

VisitWhat to expectRecommended if you are looking for
Cueva de los VerdesGuided route through a volcanic tube, with lava passages, history and a final surpriseGeology, an underground visit and a more guided experience
Jameos del AguaA natural space with water, vegetation, architecture and artA more visual, open place connected to César Manrique

If you have a booked time for the cave, organise your day around that ticket. A good option is to do the underground route first and then visit Jameos del Agua, so you understand the volcanic tube from the inside before seeing another part of the same system transformed into a natural and artistic space.

Is Cueva de los Verdes worth visiting?

Yes, it is worth visiting, especially if you want to see more than beaches and viewpoints. It is a short, different visit and very representative of Lanzarote’s volcanic origin.

Best partsThings to keep in mind
Walking inside a volcanic tubeOnline ticket and assigned time
Carefully designed lightingUneven ground, steps and low ceilings
Guided explanationNot adapted for reduced mobility
History, geology and culture in one visitIt may be uncomfortable if you have claustrophobia
Final surprise without spoilersComfortable closed shoes are recommended

Faqs

The visit takes around 50 minutes. Even so, it is best to allow a little over an hour in total, including arrival, access and leaving the site calmly.

Tickets are purchased online. The best option is to book through the official channel before travelling to the cave, especially in busy periods or if you want a specific time slot.

The price can vary depending on age, residence or applicable discounts. Before booking, it is best to check the updated fare on the official website.

It is not the most advisable visit if you suffer from claustrophobia. The cave has wide and well-lit sections, but it is still an enclosed underground space with some narrower areas.

Yes. They are very close and form part of the same volcanic system, so visiting both on the same day makes a lot of sense. The experience is different in each place, but they complement each other very well.

There is a very famous final surprise, but it is better not to look it up before the visit. Part of the experience is discovering it there, inside the cave, with the guide’s explanation.

About the author

Maike surfer de Lanzarote

Maike Famara

Director of Surf Famara. A free surfer from the 1970s, renowned in the Canary Islands, he has surfed on five continents (the entire South African coast, Western Australia, Indonesia, Peru, Chile, Puerto Rico, Panama, France, Portugal, Senegal, Morocco...) and has dedicated himself to teaching and developing new surfers since 1996! You can find him in San Juan or La Santa, where he remains connected to the ocean like the first day.

Publicaciones similares

  • Risco Beach

    Risco Beach

    Playa del Risco (Lanzarote): how to get there, route along the Path of the Gracioseros and local advice Under the Risco beach is one of those jewels of Lanzarote that you will remember for the rest of your life. Getting there is part of the plan: a zigzagging path, wind that sometimes gets tight and…

  • Timanfaya National Park

    Timanfaya National Park

    Timanfaya National Park (Lanzarote) Timanfaya National Park is the volcanic heart of Lanzarote. For me it is one of the most spectacular places on the island; it is so close to me that I don’t visit it as much as I would like, but every visit always surprises me with something new: dark lava flows,…

  • Natural Pool Cocoteros

    Natural Pool Cocoteros

    Natural swimming pool of Los Cocoteros in Lanzarote There are puddles on Lanzarote that are not about crossing off a visit, they are about reading the day and deciding. Los Cocoteros is exactly that. If the sea is nice, you enjoy it. If not, it is still a curious spot for a short stop along…

  • Mirador del rio lanzarote

    Mirador del rio lanzarote

    The Mirador del Río in Lanzarote In my case, when I go to the Mirador de Famara or the Ermita de las Nieves (another undiscovered viewpoint), I usually combine it with the Mirador del Río to enjoy the north of Lanzarote calmly. If the sky is unstable, I prefer to adjust the order and leave…

  • Lagomar Museum Lanzarote

    Lagomar Museum Lanzarote

    Lagomar Museum: Omar Sharif’s House in Lanzarote The Lagomar Museum is a house-museum excavated in the volcanic slope of Nazaret (Teguise, Lanzarote), with passages, terraces and rooms that merge with the rock. It is not a “museum” in the usual sense, but a house-work that can be visited on foot, going up and down stairs…

  • famara village lanzarote

    Famara beach

    Famara beach: A wild paradise in northern Lanzarote Located on the northwest coast of Lanzarote, Famara Beach spans over six kilometres of pale golden sand, nestled at the base of the imposing Famara Cliffs . Part of the Chinijo Archipelago Natural Park, this destination blends raw geological splendour with a laid-back island lifestyle. From world-class…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *