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Funchal, Portugal
Funchal

Where to stay in Funchal

The flat Lido seafront suits an easy first trip; pick the Old Town for car-free walkability, the cathedral centre for value, and the east only for a quiet, longer stay.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Funchal

For a first Funchal trip, base yourself on the Lido / Sao Martinho seafront: it is flat, hotel-heavy, has ocean lido pools on the doorstep and a 15-minute bus into town, which the steep Old Town does not. Choose the Old Town (Zona Velha) if walking to dinner, the market and the cable car matters more than sea-view rooms; the cathedral centre for the cheapest central beds; and Garajau or Canico only if you have a hire car and want a quiet, longer self-catering stay.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: the Lido / Sao Martinho seafront.
  • Best value: the cathedral (Se) centre, where central beds are cheapest.
  • Best atmosphere: the Old Town (Zona Velha) for poncha bars, painted doors and the cable car.
  • Best for a quiet, longer stay: Garajau or Canico in the east, but only with a car.
  • Avoid making a sea-view room your only filter; in Funchal that pushes you to noisy Lido high-rises when a flat central street often sleeps better.

Best areas to book

Lido / Sao Martinho seafront

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The flat, hotel-lined stretch west of the centre, built around the Lido and Ponta Gorda ocean pools and a long seafront promenade you can walk to the centre on. The cleanest first-timer base: sea-view rooms, level pavements and frequent buses and Bolt into town. The trade-off is honest โ€” it is a resort strip of larger hotels, not old-Funchal character, and the cheapest deals sit in tall blocks set back from the water.

Best for: First-timers, couples, sea-view and lido-pool hotels

Browse hotels ~15 min bus to centre

Old Town (Zona Velha)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Cobbled lanes of restaurants, poncha bars and the painted doors of Rua de Santa Maria, a couple of minutes from the cable car station, Mercado dos Lavradores and the marina. The pick if you want to do the whole trip car-free and walk to dinner. Expect evening noise from the bar streets and steep, uneven cobbles that are hard work with a suitcase or a buggy.

Best for: Food, walkability, car-free trips, cable car access

City centre / Se (Cathedral)

ยฃ value

The commercial heart around the cathedral and Avenida Arriaga, with Blandy's wine lodge, the municipal gardens and bus connections in every direction. The best value for a central bed: small guesthouses and three-stars here undercut the seafront, and you are flat-walking distance from the market and Old Town. Quieter at night than Zona Velha and less scenic than the Lido.

Best for: Value, transport links, shopping, short stays

Garajau / Canico (east)

ยฃ value

Clifftop hotels, aparthotels and self-catering apartments east of the city near Canico de Baixa and the Garajau Christ statue, closer to FNC airport. The choice for a quieter, longer or self-catering stay, often with bigger sea-view terraces for the money. The catch is real: you will lean on a hire car or the SAM buses, so do not pick it if you want to stroll into Funchal each evening.

Best for: Longer stays, quiet, self-catering, families with a car

Browse hotels 20-30 min by bus/car

Monte / above the city

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Up the hill at the top of the cable car, with the Monte Palace gardens, the toboggan start and cooler, greener air. A handful of quintas and guesthouses sit here for people who want gardens and views over nightlife. Be clear-eyed: it is a steep bus or cable-car ride from the restaurants and seafront, so it suits a slower, walking-focused stay rather than a first trip wanting everything on foot.

Best for: Gardens, views, quiet, walkers

Browse hotels Cable car / 20 min bus above centre

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for the Lido / Sao Martinho seafront first, then compare the cathedral centre if prices look high. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying premium rates for a Monte or clifftop room you then have to bus down from every evening, or booking deep in the Old Town and dragging luggage up wet cobbles. A 5-night mid-range stay here runs roughly ยฃ350-ยฃ500 for a room share within the realistic Funchal break budget, so the seafront-versus-centre call is mostly about whether you value lido pools or a few pounds saved.

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Safety and noise

Madeira is one of the calmer parts of Portugal and violent crime is rare; GOV.UK's day-to-day flag for the country is pickpocketing in crowded tourist spots, so keep bags zipped around the market and the cable car queue rather than worrying about where you sleep. The bigger accommodation issue in Funchal is noise and gradient: the Old Town bar streets carry late into the night in summer, and the steep, slippery calcada cobbles between the centre and the hills are punishing with cases or a buggy. A flat seafront or central street usually sleeps better than a room above a Zona Velha bar.

Pick a flat street near the seafront or cathedral if you are arriving late, travelling with children, or have a heavy case โ€” the cobbled climbs are the real obstacle, not crime.

Budget vs splurge

The cheapest comfortable beds are in the cathedral centre and out east in Garajau or Canico, where guesthouses and aparthotels undercut the seafront โ€” but the eastern saving only pays off if you have a car, because taxis and Bolt into town (โ‚ฌ7-12 each way) erode it fast. The splurge end is the Lido's sea-view five-stars at Ponta Gorda and a few Monte quintas with gardens and views. For most UK visitors the value sweet spot is a mid-range seafront or central three-star, then spending the difference on the cable car, Monte Palace and a booked 25 Fontes levada transfer rather than on the room.

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Where to stay in Funchal FAQs

Lido or Old Town โ€” which is better for a first trip to Funchal?
The Lido for most first-timers. It is flat, has ocean lido pools and sea-view hotels, and a 15-minute bus or short Bolt into town. Choose the Old Town instead only if you want to do the trip car-free and value walking to dinner, the market and the cable car over a sea view โ€” and you can cope with late bar noise and steep cobbles.
Do you need a hire car if you stay in Funchal?
Not if you base yourself on the Lido, in the Old Town or in the cathedral centre โ€” central Funchal is walkable, well served by buses and Bolt, and the cable car covers Monte. You only really need a car if you stay out east in Garajau or Canico, or if you want the western levadas and the north coast, where a one-day rental or a booked hiking transfer makes more sense than a full-trip hire.
Is it worth staying up at Monte?
Only for a specific kind of trip. Monte gives you cool air, the Palace gardens and views, but it is a steep cable-car or bus ride above the restaurants and seafront, so you commit to that climb every evening. It suits a slower, walking-focused stay; for a first trip that wants dinner, the market and the cable car on foot, the seafront or centre is the easier base.

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