Vigo, Spain on a Budget: The 2026 UK Guide

Spain’s biggest fishing port does not get much attention from British holidaymakers. While everyone else heads for Barcelona, the Balearics or the Costa del Sol, Vigo sits in Galicia’s north-west corner, quietly offering some of the best value on the Iberian Peninsula.

The Ciés Islands, reachable by a short ferry ride from the city, hold one of Europe’s finest beaches. The old town costs nothing to wander. The seafood is outstanding: Galicia produces more shellfish than anywhere else in Spain. Daily costs run well below what you would spend in the country’s better-known cities. This guide covers everything you need for Vigo Spain on a budget from the UK.

Getting to Vigo from the UK

Ryanair flies direct from London Stansted to Vigo’s Peinador Airport (VGO) four times a week, with fares from around £60 return if you book ahead. The flight takes 2 hours 15 minutes. For UK travellers who are not near Stansted, flying into Porto (OPO) in northern Portugal — around 91 miles south of Vigo — is the main alternative. Ryanair, easyJet and TAP connect Porto with Bristol, Edinburgh, Leeds Bradford, Manchester and more.

From Porto, Rede Expressos runs a direct bus to Vigo in around 2 hours 15 minutes, with tickets from about €7 booked online. For more flexibility, hire a car at Porto Airport and drive; the journey takes around 1 hour 30 minutes. If you’re planning a wider Portugal trip before or after Vigo, our Portugal travel guide covers the country’s highlights and when to go. You can also find more on getting around Portugal cheaply if you want to combine the two countries.

If neither Stansted nor Porto suits your departure airport, flying via Madrid or Barcelona with a domestic connection to Vigo gives you more departure options across UK airports.

RouteUK AirportsHow to reach VigoApprox cost
Direct (Ryanair)
London Stansted (STN)
Direct to Vigo Peinador (VGO), 4 flights per week, 2h 15m
From ~£60 returnSimplest option. No connection needed. Book ahead for best prices.
Via Madrid (MAD)
Most major UK airports
Fly Madrid, then Iberia or Air Nostrum connection to Vigo (VGO)
Total from ~£80 returnGood option from UK airports outside London. Adds 1–2 hours overall.
Via Porto (OPO)
Bristol, Edinburgh, Leeds Bradford, Manchester, others
Fly Porto, then direct bus (2h 15m) or hire car and drive 91 miles (1h 30m)
Flights from ~£30Plus bus from €7. Also lets you combine Vigo with a night or two in Porto.
Ferry + drive
Portsmouth, Plymouth
Brittany Ferries to Santander, then 4h 30m drive north to Vigo
From £100 per personGood for families with a car. Relaxed pace.
Prices are indicative for 2026. Verify current fares before booking.
Boats docked in Vigo harbour on a bright sunny day in Galicia, Spain
Photo: Pexels / 13492312

From London Stansted, Ryanair flies direct to Vigo (VGO) four times a week. Travellers from other UK cities flying into Porto can take the Rede Expressos bus to Vigo, with tickets from around €7 if you book ahead. The bus journey takes around 2 hours 15 minutes, roughly the same total travel time as the Stansted direct.

To find the best flight prices, set fare alerts early and compare across booking tools. The day you book can make a noticeable difference on short-haul routes to Portugal and Spain.

Getting around Vigo

Vigo is a compact, hilly city and most of the main attractions are walkable from the centre. The old town (Casco Vello), the port, Monte O Castro, and the main shopping streets are all within easy reach on foot. For longer distances, the municipal bus network (Vitrasa) covers the city well. A single journey costs €1.50. If you plan several trips in a day, a rechargeable Vitrasa card gives a small discount. Taxis start at a €3.80 flagfall, making short hops affordable enough.

Playa de Samil, the city’s main beach, is around 5 kilometres from the centre and easily reached by bus. The city is steep in places, so comfortable walking shoes matter more here than in flatter Spanish cities.

Where to stay in Vigo

Vigo has a solid range of accommodation across all budgets. The best-value areas are near Casco Vello and the port, where you’re within walking distance of the main free attractions and the ferry terminal for the Ciés Islands. Self-catering apartments make sense for stays of four or more nights, particularly if you want to save on food costs by cooking occasionally.

TypePrice per nightWhat to expect
Budget hostel
€19–22 (~£16–19)
Shared dorms, often with kitchen facilitiesGood options near Casco Vello and the port area.
3-star hotel
€44–59 (~£38–50)
En-suite, central locationsSolid choice for couples and short breaks in or near the old town.
4-star hotel
€80–120 (~£68–103)
Superior amenities, often harbour viewsGran Hotel Nagari and NH Collection Vigo are among the better options at this tier.
Self-catering apartment
€50–80 (~£43–68)
Kitchen access saves on food costsGood value for stays of four or more nights, especially for families.
Rates are approximate and vary by season. July–August prices can be 25–40% higher.

Free things to do in Vigo

The appeal of Vigo Spain on a budget starts with how much of the city you can see without spending a single euro.

AttractionWhy it’s worth your time
Casco Vello
Galicia’s most atmospheric old townCobblestone lanes, granite houses, Santa María collegiate church. Free to wander.
Monte O Castro
Best panoramic views of the estuaryFree park, Iron Age ruins, 17th-century fortress remains
Mercado do Progreso
Vigo’s main covered marketFishmongers, cheese stalls, the best window on Galician food culture
MARCO museum
Contemporary art, free entryStriking 19th-century building on Rúa Príncipe. Worth an hour.
Playa de Samil
Main city beach, no admission chargeLong Atlantic strand with promenade and outdoor pools
All five are free to enter. Rúa da Pescaría oysters (see below) cost around €3 for six.

Casco Vello rewards a long morning on foot. The narrow cobblestone streets wind uphill from the port, past granite houses, small squares and tapas bars opening for the lunchtime rush. The Baída de Santa María collegiate church is free to enter during opening hours. Porta do Sol is the city’s central meeting point, connecting the old town with the modern shopping district, and a useful landmark to orient yourself around.

Monte O Castro sits above the city centre and offers the best panoramic views of the Vigo estuary and the Ciés Islands, visible on a clear day. The park is free to enter and has walking paths through the remains of an Iron Age settlement and a 17th-century fortress. It takes around 20 minutes to walk up from the old town. The views at the top are worth every step.

Mercado do Progreso is the city’s main covered market, busy from early morning with fishmongers, cheese vendors and local produce stalls. You are not obliged to buy anything; it is one of the best places to see everyday Vigo life in action and to understand why Galician food has the reputation it does.

Rúa da Pescaría (Oyster Street) is a short stretch near the port where fisherwomen have shucked and sold fresh oysters from the street for generations. Buying half a dozen costs around €3, eaten on the spot with a squeeze of lemon. It is an institution, and one of the best-value food experiences in Spain.

MARCO, the city’s contemporary art museum, has free entry and occupies a striking 19th-century building on Rúa Príncipe. Worth an hour if you want a break from the street.

Playa de Samil is Vigo’s main city beach, a long stretch of Atlantic sand with a promenade, outdoor pools and plenty of space. Entry is free, and it is a perfectly good beach for a day out if the Ciés Islands trip is not in your plans.

Crystal clear turquoise water and golden sand at a beach near the Cies Islands, Galicia, Spain
Photo: Pexels / 29761665

The Ciés Islands are protected as a National Park. Visitor numbers are capped each day, which keeps the beaches in remarkable condition but means you need to plan ahead. If the Ciés are on your list, book the ferry before you book anything else.

The islands are the clearest argument for visiting Vigo over better-known Spanish destinations. Nothing on the Costa del Sol comes close to Playa de Rodas on a calm summer’s day.

The Ciés Islands

The Ciés Islands are the highlight of any trip to Vigo. Playa de Rodas, the main beach on the islands, was named the world’s best beach by The Guardian. On a clear summer’s day, it earns the title: powder-white sand, water the colour of the Caribbean, and national park status that keeps the islands from being overdeveloped.

The islands sit about 14 kilometres from Vigo’s port. Ferries run from mid-March to early November, with more frequent services in July and August. Naviera Nabia operates the main crossing (around 40 minutes, up to five departures a day), with Mar de Ons also running services. Tickets cost €26–29 return per adult, roughly £22–25. Children pay around €14 return.

Book online as far in advance as possible, particularly for summer. The National Park caps daily visitor numbers and ferries sell out weeks ahead at peak season. If you have flexible dates, midweek departures in June or September give you the best chance of getting tickets without months of forward planning.

Day-trippers can walk the island’s trails, snorkel in the clear water, and eat at the one restaurant on Playa de Rodas, though prices there are high. Bring your own food and water if you want to keep costs down. There is no accommodation on the islands; the only overnight option is the campsite, which books out months in advance for summer.

Fresh oysters on ice with lemon slices, typical of Galicia, Spain
Photo: Pexels / 12955611

Galicia’s food culture is one of the best arguments for choosing Vigo over better-known Spanish cities. The region produces more shellfish than anywhere else in Spain, and eating well does not require a large budget. The menu del día, a set lunch of two or three courses with bread and a drink, costs €10–15 in most restaurants near the old town.

For a street-food experience that has no equivalent anywhere else in Spain, head to Rúa da Pescaría. Vigo Spain on a budget starts here: six fresh oysters, shucked to order and handed over with a squeeze of lemon, for around €3.

Where to eat and drink

Galician food is some of the best in Spain, and the good news is that eating well in Vigo does not require a large budget.

Menu del día is the standard way to eat out affordably. Most restaurants near the old town and the port offer a set lunch of two or three courses, bread and a drink for €10–15. Quality is generally high: this is not cheap filler food but proper Galician cooking.

Oysters from Rúa da Pescaría are the bargain of the city. A dozen costs around €5–6, consumed standing up, with a squeeze of lemon. It is an institution that has been going for over a century.

Pulpo a la gallega (Galician octopus, served on a wooden board with olive oil, paprika and sea salt) costs €12–18 as a main course. The market area near the port has some of the best options at the lower end of that range.

Albaríño is Galicia’s celebrated white wine, produced in the nearby Rías Baixas wine region. A glass in a bar costs €2–3. It pairs brilliantly with shellfish and is one of the best-value quality wines you will find anywhere in Europe.

For self-catering, the Mercado do Progreso has excellent fresh produce at local prices. A small supermarket run for breakfast supplies will cost a few euros.

How much does Vigo, Spain cost per day?

Vigo Spain on a budget is genuinely achievable. A traveller staying in a hostel, eating the menu del día and focusing on free sights can comfortably come in under €70 per day, excluding flights. Mid-range costs climb once you add a hotel, restaurant dinners and the Ciés Islands ferry, but you are still spending a fraction of what Barcelona or Madrid would cost for the same quality of experience.

Traveller typePer day estimateWhat that covers
Budget
€50–70 (~£43–60)
Hostel, breakfast from a bakery, menu del día for lunch, buses, free sightsCiés Islands day (€26–29 ferry) pushes this over €80 on that day.
Mid-range
€100–140 (~£86–120)
3-star hotel, sit-down meals, Ciés Islands or a guided tour, evening wineComfortable without being lavish. Works well for a long weekend.
Comfortable
€160–220 (~£137–189)
4-star hotel, all meals at restaurants, wine, day trips, incidentalsStill well below equivalent spend in Barcelona or San Sebastián.
Rates based on May 2026 prices. Exchange rate approx £1 = €1.17. Flights are excluded.
Narrow cobblestone street with historic stone buildings in an old town in Spain
Photo: Pexels / 35114418

The old town’s narrow streets and tapas bars are worth an entire morning. The cobblestones and granite buildings are distinctively Galician rather than the whitewashed Andalusian aesthetic most people picture when they think of Spain.

To time your visit for the best balance of weather and value, knowing when to book can make a significant difference to what you pay for flights and accommodation.

Best time to visit Vigo

Vigo sits on the Atlantic coast and the weather reflects that: wetter and cooler than southern Spain, but rarely extreme. The city is genuinely worth visiting year-round, depending on what you want from a trip.

May and June offer the best combination of mild weather (18–22°C), longer daylight hours and prices that have not yet hit peak summer levels. The Ciés Islands ferries are running from mid-March, crowds are manageable, and accommodation costs less than in high season.

July and August are the warmest months (up to 25°C) but also the busiest. The Ciés Islands ferry books out quickly. If you visit in peak summer, book the ferry as soon as your travel dates are confirmed.

September and October are arguably the best-value months. Temperatures stay pleasant (18–22°C), prices fall after the school holidays, and the Ciés Islands are still accessible until early November.

SeasonTemperatureWhat to expect
May–Jun
18–22°C
Best overall valueCiés Islands open, manageable crowds, prices below August peak
Jul–Aug
Up to 25°C
Peak beach seasonWarmest weather; book Ciés Islands ferry months in advance
Sep–Oct
18–22°C
Best value after summerPrices fall after school holidays; Ciés still accessible until November
Dec–Feb
8–14°C
Cheapest time to visitLowest flights and hotel prices; Ciés closed; Atlantic rain likely
Temperature averages are approximate. Galicia is wetter than southern Spain year-round.

December to February is the cheapest time to visit. Flights and hotels cost noticeably less. The Ciés Islands are closed out of season, and Galicia’s winter brings rain. But the city itself remains lively, the seafood is exceptional year-round, and for a short urban break it works well. Browse our full destination guides if you’re comparing European city break options.

Frequently asked questions

Is Vigo Spain on a budget possible for UK travellers?

Yes. Ryanair flies direct from London Stansted from around £60 return. Travellers from other UK airports can fly to Porto and take the bus. Hostels cost from €19 per night and most of Vigo’s best attractions are free.

What is Vigo best known for?

Vigo is best known for the Ciés Islands, whose Playa de Rodas was named the world’s best beach. The city is also famous for its fresh seafood, particularly oysters and Galician octopus.

How do I get from Porto to Vigo?

Rede Expressos runs a direct bus from Porto’s Maia bus station to Vigo in around 2 hours 15 minutes, with fares from around €7. You can also hire a car from Porto Airport and drive the 91 miles in roughly 1 hour 30 minutes.

Do I need to book the Ciés Islands ferry in advance?

Yes. Ferries sell out fast, especially in July and August, and the National Park caps daily visitor numbers. Book online as soon as your dates are confirmed, through Naviera Nabia or Mar de Ons.

Is Vigo safe for tourists?

Vigo is generally a safe city for tourists. Take the usual precautions in busy areas and the port district at night.

What language is spoken in Vigo?

Vigo is in Galicia, where both Spanish (Castilian) and Galician are official languages. Most locals speak both, and English is widely understood in hotels, restaurants and tourist areas.




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