Madeira peaks
Madeira climbs
First Ascent Awards
32 of 104 peaks 30%
Top climbing months
March 23%
April 19%
September 14%
Madeira mountains highlights
Latest climbs
"Sunday 17th March 2019. An ascent of Pico Ruivo de Santana 1862m/1862m and Pico do Arieiro 1818m/263m. 9.0km, with 900m of ascent. 5 hours 30mins.
The mountains of Madeira form an east to west spine along the island, with three main ranges. To the west lies the Paúl da Serra plateau, reaching its highest point on Pico Ruivo do Paúl da Serra 1645m/645m. To the east of the Boca da Encumeada pass is the central range, reaching its highest point on Pico Casado 1725m/280m. To the east again, on the other side of the Boca das Torrinhas pass, are the highest peaks, including Pico Ruivo da Santana 1862m/1862m, the highest mountain on Madeira.
These mountains, and indeed the whole island, are composed of a suite of volcanic rocks – for an account of their formation, see at https://www.madeira-a-z.com/facts-and-essentials/geography/geology.html
A trail was constructed in the 20th Century between Pico Ruivo da Santana and Pico Arieiro, winding a circuitous route along the precipitous connecting ridge and avoiding the two intervening mountains – Pico das Torres 1847m/232m and Pico do Gato 1712m/117m. This path is a feat of engineering, using a series of metal stairways, tunnel..." — marktrengove • Mar 17, 2019
"Wow, what a special place. Never have I seen such dramatic mountain beauty. The jagged volcanic peaks jut out of either the Atlantic or the clouds depending on the weather, either should be impressive. My ascent was from Achado do Texeira. I drove through dense fog until 4500 ft up, but once above the clouds it was all sun. Bring your water. I ran the hike in tennis shoes and it went by quickly. I think it took me 15-20 minutes to run down however am uncertain of the ascent time but it was relative. Beautiful beautiful hike. A must-do if you find yourself in Madeira." — zachmitch • Jun 17, 2017
"Walked to Pico Ruivo from Pico Arriero and back. Beatiful trial well maintained with cliffs and very narrow passages at times but with protection cables in all the tricky passages. " — daviddiedejean • May 1, 2016
"The 2016 MIUT Trailmarathon on Madeira was pure madness—43 kilometers of technical terrain, brutal descents and surreal beauty, with over a quarter of the route unfolding above the clouds. We tackled more than 3000 meters of elevation, including 1900 steep, slick downhills riddled with loose rock and muddy ridges that punished every misstep. Three rolled ankles and two full-body skids in just the first stretch set the tone, but what stayed with me more than the bruises were the ghostly forests, Atlantic vistas, and the feeling of moving through a landscape that demanded everything and gave even more." — belgianIbex • Apr 23, 2016
"The 2016 MIUT Trailmarathon on Madeira was pure madness—43 kilometers of technical terrain, brutal descents and surreal beauty, with over a quarter of the route unfolding above the clouds. We tackled more than 3000 meters of elevation, including 1900 steep, slick downhills riddled with loose rock and muddy ridges that punished every misstep. Three rolled ankles and two full-body skids in just the first stretch set the tone, but what stayed with me more than the bruises were the ghostly forests, Atlantic vistas, and the feeling of moving through a landscape that demanded everything and gave even more." — belgianIbex • Apr 23, 2016
