Portugal has a special relationship with sunset. As the westernmost country of mainland Europe, its Atlantic-facing beaches are among the best in the world for watching the sun sink into the ocean. For centuries, Portugal was the end of the known world — the point where the land ended and the boundless ocean began. That sense of limit, grandeur and wistfulness persists on Portugal's west-facing beaches today.
Best sunset beaches
Cabo de São Vicente (Cape St Vincent) — the southwesternmost point of mainland Europe — has Portugal's most famous sunset. Every summer evening, dozens of people gather at the cape to watch the sun plunge into the Atlantic from 75-metre cliffs. Praia da Adraga (Sintra), surrounded by limestone and schist cliffs, catches the last rays of sun spectacularly and stays relatively uncrowded. The entire Vicentine Coast faces west — Carrapateira, Almograve, Porto Covo all offer memorable sunsets in near-untouched natural settings. Near Lisbon, Costa da Caparica gives easy access (ferry from Lisbon) to a west-facing beach with unobstructed Atlantic horizon views.
Photography tips
- Arrive 30 minutes early — the golden hour starts before the sun reaches the horizon
- Stay after sunset — the most intense colours often appear in the 15–20 minutes after the sun disappears
- Overcast days are not a loss — clouds can filter and scatter light for some of the most dramatic photographs