Fortaleza de Sagres clifftop walls above the Atlantic, with the wind rose in the foreground and Cabo de São Vicente lighthouse on the horizon.

Where Henry the Navigator faced the unknown ocean

Fortaleza de Sagres clings to a wind-blasted limestone cliff at the south-western corner of Europe, where Prince Henry is said to have set Portugal's caravels on the course that opened the Atlantic. Your timed entry gets you past the kiosk and onto the kilometre-long clifftop circuit in minutes.

See ticket options
  • 1443 Earliest documented fortifications under Henry the Navigator
  • Europe's SW tip Promontory of Sagres — the last land before the Atlantic
  • 443,691 Visitors in 2024 (MMP official figures)
  • Wind rose 43-metre stone compass, uncovered in 1921

Choose your ticket

Adult

Ages 25+ — or any age without ID for the discount

€22

  • Skip-the-kiosk entry to the entire fortress promontory
  • Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Graça (16th c.) and the wind rose
  • Clifftop circuit (~1 km) with Atlantic views to Cabo de São Vicente
  • Permanent exhibition on the Sagres School of Navigation legend
  • Mobile ticket — no printing needed
Reserve my adult ticket

Reduced (13–24)

Ages 13 to 24 — photo ID required at the gate

€12

  • Same clifftop access as Adult
  • Bring photo ID showing age 13–24 — operator denies discount entry without it
  • Mobile ticket — no printing needed
Reserve my youth ticket

Senior (65+)

Ages 65+ — photo ID required

€12

  • Same clifftop access as Adult
  • Bring photo ID showing age 65+
  • Mobile ticket — no printing needed
Reserve my senior ticket

Family bundle (2 adults · under-13s free)

2 adults — children up to 12 walk in free at the gate

€44

  • 2 adult tickets to the fortress
  • Children up to 12 walk in free — no ticket needed
  • Skip-the-kiosk for the whole group
  • One booking covers the family
Reserve the family bundle
4.4 from 9,800 verified travellers
Visitor (TripAdvisor)
United Kingdom
“Fantastic views over the Atlantic and lovely walks. The wind rose was much bigger than I expected — you don't really see the scale until you walk it. About an hour at a steady pace.”
2025-06-12
Visitor (TripAdvisor)
Netherlands
“Must-see for the views alone. The fortress itself is being renovated in places and the exhibition inside is manageable, but the cliff walk is unforgettable.”
2025-04-22
Visitor (TripAdvisor)
Germany
“Picturesque place to visit. Like an oversized rock garden with plants, birds and flowers, and views in every direction. We spent two hours and still didn't see it all.”
2025-09-03
  • Refund if we can't deliver
  • Cards & Apple Pay
  • Instant confirmation
  • Concierge in your language, 24/7

About Fortaleza de Sagres

Fortaleza de Sagres sits on a flat, wind-scoured limestone promontory at the south-western corner of Europe. The earliest documented fortifications were raised here under the patronage of Henry the Navigator in the 1440s, and from this clifftop Portugal's captains were dispatched down the African coast in the decades that opened the Atlantic. The school-of-navigation legend that Henry founded a formal academy here is contested by modern historians — what is certain is that the prince held court at Sagres and that the place was the operational nerve of Portuguese deep-sea exploration in the mid-15th century.

The fortress was sacked in 1587 by Sir Francis Drake during the Anglo-Spanish War, and was further damaged by the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. What stands today is therefore largely a Vauban-style 18th-century rebuilding, with the inland wall — the long sawtooth bulwark that visitors cross on entering — dating to the reconstruction. The 16th-century Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Graça survives inside the perimeter, modest in scale but the oldest standing building on the promontory.

In 1921 archaeologists uncovered an enormous stone-paved circle, 43 metres across, set into the ground near the church. Its purpose remains disputed: it has been variously interpreted as a 15th-century wind rose used for navigational instruction, a mariners' compass, or a sundial. The structure is now the fortress's most photographed feature and the centrepiece of every tour. Fishermen still cast for sea bream from the basalt cliffs along the southern perimeter — a tradition that pre-dates Henry's arrival.

Today the site is operated by Museus e Monumentos de Portugal (MMP) as a national monument. The visit is largely outdoor: a roughly one-kilometre clifftop circuit, with permanent exhibitions in the gatehouse and the former governor's quarters. Cabo de São Vicente, six kilometres west, is the actual south-western tip of mainland Europe — but Sagres is the cape its lighthouse was built to defend. On a clear afternoon both lighthouses (Sagres and São Vicente) are visible from the wind rose.

Practical information

Address
Fortaleza de Sagres, 8650-360 Sagres, Vila do Bispo, Portugal
Hours
Daily 09:30–17:30 (last entry 17:00). Closed January 1, January 22 (municipal holiday), Easter Sunday, May 1, December 25.
Getting there
By car: 90 minutes from Faro via the A22 motorway, exit at Lagos and follow the N125 / N268 west. Free parking 200 m from the entrance. By bus: Vamus / EVA bus from Lagos to Sagres village (~50 min), then 15-minute walk to the fortress. There is no train station at Sagres.
Time needed
60–90 minutes for the clifftop circuit. Photographers should add 30 minutes for the wind rose and the cliff edges. Add an hour if you continue 6 km west to Cabo de São Vicente lighthouse.
What to wear
Sturdy walking shoes — the limestone is slippery when damp. A windbreaker even in summer (the Atlantic wind on the promontory is constant). Sun protection: there is almost no shade once you leave the gatehouse.
Accessibility
The main access road and the area around the wind rose are level and accessible. The cliff perimeter has uneven stone paths and is not wheelchair friendly throughout. Email us before your visit for the routing notes.

About our service

Sagres Fortress Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing official tickets directly from Museus e Monumentos de Portugal, the official operator. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official ticket site is bilheteira.museusemonumentos.pt.

Frequently asked

What are the opening hours?

Daily 09:30 to 17:30, with last entry at 17:00. The fortress is closed on January 1, January 22 (Vila do Bispo municipal holiday), Easter Sunday, May 1, and December 25.

Where exactly is Fortaleza de Sagres?

On the Promontory of Sagres at the south-western tip of mainland Europe, in Vila do Bispo municipality, Algarve. Address: 8650-360 Sagres, Portugal. About 90 minutes by car west of Faro airport.

Is this the same place as Cabo de São Vicente?

No — but they're close. Sagres Fortress sits on the Promontory of Sagres. Cabo de São Vicente, the actual south-western tip of continental Europe, is 6 km further west and crowned by a separate lighthouse. Most visitors do both in one trip.

Did Henry the Navigator really found a school of navigation here?

The picturesque legend of a formal 15th-century 'School of Sagres' with mathematicians and cartographers in residence is contested by modern historians. What is documented is that Prince Henry held court at Sagres in the mid-15th century and that Portuguese voyages of discovery were dispatched from this coast under his patronage.

What is the wind rose (rosa dos ventos)?

A 43-metre stone-paved circle uncovered by archaeologists in 1921, near the Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Graça. Its original purpose is disputed — proposals include a 15th-century navigational instructional aid, a mariner's compass, or a sundial. It is now the fortress's most photographed feature.

How long does a visit take?

Most visitors spend 60 to 90 minutes on the clifftop circuit. Photographers and birdwatchers often stay two hours. The walk is roughly one kilometre on uneven limestone.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — children love the cliff views and the wind rose — but the cliff edges along the southern perimeter are unfenced in places. Keep small children at hand at all times. There is no playground or kids' programme on site.

Is the site wheelchair accessible?

The main access road, the area around the wind rose, and the gatehouse are level and accessible. The cliff perimeter has uneven stone paths and is not wheelchair friendly throughout. The interior of the Igreja da Graça has a step.

How do I get there without a car?

Vamus / EVA runs a bus from Lagos to Sagres village (~50 minutes). From the village it's a 15-minute walk south to the fortress entrance. There is no train service to Sagres.

Is there parking?

Yes — free parking is available 200 m from the entrance. It fills quickly on summer afternoons; arrive before 11:00 or after 15:30 for the best chance.

Is there food on site?

There is a modest cafe / snack bar near the entrance serving coffee, sandwiches and cold drinks. For a proper meal, return to Sagres village (3 km) where restaurants serve fresh fish and percebes (gooseneck barnacles) from the cliffs below.

Can I take photographs?

Yes, throughout the site. No tripods without a permit. Drones are not permitted inside the fortress walls.

What should I wear?

Sturdy walking shoes — the limestone is slippery when damp. A windbreaker year-round (the Atlantic wind is constant). Sun protection: there is no shade once you leave the gatehouse.

Can I see fishermen on the cliffs?

Yes — local fishermen still cast for sea bream from the basalt cliffs along the southern perimeter, a tradition that pre-dates Henry the Navigator. Watching them from a safe distance is part of the visit.

What can I see from the fortress on a clear day?

Looking west, the Cabo de São Vicente lighthouse 6 km away. Looking south, open Atlantic — the next land is Morocco. Looking east, the curving Algarve coast back toward Lagos.

Can I change my visit date?

Email us at least 48 hours before your booked slot and we'll re-book to any open slot at no charge. Inside 48 hours, same-week swaps are not always possible.

Is there a refund if I can't make it?

Tickets are issued for a specific date and are non-transferable once issued. If your plans change, reply to your confirmation email at least 48 hours before your date and we will rebook your visit.