A strong but calmer high-altitude day in Teide National Park.
Action guide
Climb Mount Teide with a clear Tenerife hiking plan.
A practical guide to the Mount Teide sunrise hike: PNT 07 via Montaña Blanca, Teide permits, cable car tickets, parking, gear, descent options and high-altitude realities.
Read this first
This is not a walk. It is a real high-mountain ascent.
Teide is a demanding high-altitude route, not a casual walk. Higher up the mountain the air gets thinner, the terrain rougher and the pace slower. With the right preparation, sunrise above the clouds becomes the reward for a hard night ascent.
Altitude first
Acclimatization route before Teide.
Teide starts where many people already feel altitude. A shorter route before summit night helps you test pace, layers and breathing before committing to a cold, dark climb.
Volcanic terrain, big views and a good test before the summit.
These routes are part of the Canary.Hikes route shop.
Step by step
Four steps, then the Teide route details below.
For a first Teide ascent, keep the sequence simple: solve parking and the approach to Montaña Blanca, climb PNT 07 to La Rambleta with a route permit, add the separate PNT 10 permit for the crater, then follow your descent plan.
Parking and approach
Leave the car at Teleférico del Teide, or use two cars, then walk the easy 4.8 km to Montaña Blanca.
Open logisticsMain ascent PNT 07
This route also needs a permit. It is the main climb to La Rambleta: the longest part of the ascent, with the biggest elevation gain.
Open PNT 07Separate PNT 10
After the ascent-route permit, add a separate PNT 10 permit if you go from La Rambleta to the crater.
PermitsDescent plan
Descend by cable car if it is running, or switch to the walking backup if wind closes it.
Descent optionsOfficial trails
Choose the route by effort, not only by views.
PNT 07: Montaña Blanca to La Rambleta
The main and most popular Mount Teide hiking route. PNT 07 starts at Montaña Blanca parking and finishes at the upper cable-car station, La Rambleta. The last kilometres feel like a true high-altitude climb: slower pace, cold wind, hard breathing and energy-draining volcanic scree.
Permit required. PNT 07 is the recommended first ascent, but it still needs a route permit.
- Distance
- 8.29 km
- Time
- ~5h 55m
- Gain
- +1309 m
- Start
- Montaña Blanca
- Highest
- 3535 m
- Difficulty
- High
PNT 09: Teide and Pico Viejo
A dramatic volcanic route through the huge Pico Viejo crater, lava fields and black landscapes. Officially it is described as a descent, but some hikers reverse it as a harder ascent.
As an ascent, PNT 09 is much harder than PNT 07 and is not recommended for a first Teide climb.
- Distance
- 9.61 km
- Ascent time
- 6-8h+
- Gain
- +1600 m
- Type
- Reverse ascent
- Highest
- 3498 m
- Difficulty
- Very high
Access rules
Permits are part of the route, not admin afterthoughts.
You need permits for every chosen trail
Choose which route you will use to go up, then book the permit for that route and a separate PNT 10 permit if you want to reach the crater. Permits are checked by national park staff on the trail.
Official permit pages
Book through Tenerife ON. You may need to register or log in before selecting a date.
Teleférico
The easiest descent is only easy if it is running.
Buy cable-car tickets in advance on the official Volcano Teide website and check the status before the hike.
Buy cable-car ticketsWhat to know
Why hikers choose it
Cooler night temperatures, easier climbing and first light near the summit. You also avoid a punishing walking descent after a sleepless ascent.
Packing system
Dress for wind, darkness and waiting at altitude.
Parking and route flow
Start at Montaña Blanca. Finish at your car.
The cleanest setup is to park at the lower cable-car station, walk 4.8 km to Montaña Blanca, climb to the summit area, then descend by Teleférico back to the car.
Another good option is two cars: leave one at the start and one at the finish. This is especially useful if you choose a long route or a walking descent.
Field notes