REVIEW · TENERIFE
Tenerife Guided Quad Bike Tour to Teide National Park
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That road-feel is the whole point. On this guided 600cc quad tour, you’ll get strong performance for a ride across Tenerife’s volcanic terrain, plus real time with the scenery inside Teide National Park. I also like the built-in education, with the guide (including Edward on some departures) explaining what you’re seeing as you climb. One thing to consider: it’s active and bumpy on purpose, so if you want a totally smooth, relaxed tour, this may not be your best match.
You’re in a small group, and the guide keeps the traffic moving with clear instructions. The stops are practical too, especially the photo-and-view moment at Mirador Zapatilla Évora. If the weather turns bad, you’ll still have what you need to keep riding.
In This Review
- Key Highlights Worth Marking on Your Map
- The 3-Hour Teide Quad Route: What the Ride Actually Feels Like
- Safety Setup You’ll Be Glad You Have
- Climbing Toward Teide: 2,400 Meters and a Different Kind of Quiet
- Teide National Park Stops: Craggy Rocks and Real Photo Time
- Mirador Zapatilla Évora Sunset: The View Everyone Remembers
- The Quad Itself: New Power, Clear Expectations
- Guides and Team: English-Friendly, With Real Personality
- Photos at the End: Budget for Them If You Want the Proof
- Price and Value: Is $114 Worth It for Teide?
- Who This Quad Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book the Tenerife Guided Quad Bike Tour to Teide?
- FAQ
- How long is the Tenerife guided quad tour to Teide National Park?
- What’s included with the tour?
- Where do we meet for the tour?
- Do I need a driver’s license?
- What are the age requirements?
- What should I wear or bring?
- Is it allowed to bring a cellphone or record audio?
- Is there a weight limit for the quad?
- Can I cancel for a refund?
Key Highlights Worth Marking on Your Map

- 600cc quad confidence for spirited but guided driving
- Teide National Park craggy terrain with frequent viewpoint stops
- Guides who explain the geology (including how this volcanic country formed)
- Mirador Zapatilla Évora stop for big-sky sunset views
- Safety-first traffic control with helmets and gloves included
- Professional photos available at the end for those who want them
The 3-Hour Teide Quad Route: What the Ride Actually Feels Like

This is a true half-day adventure in miniature: about 3 hours total, covering a ~50 km route from the Granadilla de Abona area up toward Teide National Park. Even with a short duration, it doesn’t feel like a drive-by tour. You get enough time climbing to feel the altitude and enough time inside the park’s rockier sections to make the effort worth it.
Expect the route to shift quickly from greener areas with rolling hills to the more barren, moon-like volcanic zones as you near Teide. You start with a safety briefing, then set off as a group behind the guide. The ride is the experience, but it’s not chaotic. The guides manage pacing and spacing so you can focus on driving instead of constantly wondering what comes next.
Because it’s a guided quad tour, you’re not just collecting views. You’re also watching the terrain change in front of you and learning what those changes mean.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Tenerife.
Safety Setup You’ll Be Glad You Have

Before you go anywhere near Teide’s rougher ground, you get a proper start: helmets and gloves are included, and the guides give clear instructions that help first-timers feel at ease. In the reviews, strong emphasis shows up on how safe the guides made people feel, and that matters here because you’re mixing uneven ground with real road driving.
A few practical rules to plan around:
- Bring your driver’s license (mandatory).
- Wear closed-toe shoes. Bare feet aren’t allowed.
- Don’t bring cellphones or any audio recording gear.
- Avoid drinks in the vehicle, and no alcohol or drugs.
One small but important detail: a sweatshirt is recommended. That’s not just comfort theater. Higher altitude around Teide can feel colder, and you’ll likely appreciate an extra layer once you’re out of the warmer lower areas.
Also, quads have a max carry weight of 160 kg. If that’s relevant for you or your riding partner, it’s worth double-checking before you go.
Climbing Toward Teide: 2,400 Meters and a Different Kind of Quiet

At around 2,400 meters above sea level, the vibe shifts fast. This is where Tenerife stops feeling like a beach-and-hot-sun island and starts feeling like volcanic country. Teide has a long dormant history in the human timeframe, but the land still looks and behaves like it’s telling a story about pressure, eruptions, and time.
This is also where the guide’s explanations pay off. Instead of just saying volcano, the tour gives you context on the island’s ~70-million-year-old volcanic geological history. When you can connect that story to what you’re driving over—rock texture, uneven formations, and the stark changes as you climb—it clicks. The view becomes more than pretty; it turns into information you can actually use.
And yes, the weather can matter. On days when you’re in clouds, it may rain on the way up. The good news is that rain jackets are provided when needed, so you’re not stuck improvising with whatever you packed that morning.
Teide National Park Stops: Craggy Rocks and Real Photo Time

Inside Teide National Park, the terrain is the star. You’ll spend time on the rougher and uneven rock formations, and that’s the part that makes quad driving feel different from just standing at a viewpoint. You’re not only looking at the geology—you’re literally moving through it.
The tour also includes multiple short stops for photos and facts. One review specifically notes stops twice with the guides sharing interesting information at each pause. That structure is what keeps it from turning into a long, straight drive where you forget what you just learned five minutes later.
Practical tip for your photo brain: since cellphones aren’t allowed, you’ll rely on the guide taking pictures (if that service is offered on your departure). If you want personal photos, plan around the tour’s camera moments rather than expecting to grab your phone when you see something perfect.
Mirador Zapatilla Évora Sunset: The View Everyone Remembers

One of the most memorable parts is the stop at Mirador Zapatilla Évora. The tour builds in a chance to catch a sunset that lights up the skies across Tenerife and the wider Canary archipelago.
This stop works because it changes the tempo. After driving, you’re off the quad for a moment, letting your senses catch up: cooler air, dramatic shadows across rocky ground, and that slow shift where the view goes from bright to cinematic. If you time this right, you leave with photos you’ll actually look at later.
If you’re the type who likes a clear plan, pay attention to timing on your departure day. Sunset timing can vary, and your tour’s exact moment-to-moment pace will be influenced by weather and road conditions.
The Quad Itself: New Power, Clear Expectations

The “wow” factor here is the quad power. You’ll feel 600 CC performance as you zoom across Tenerife’s volcanic terrain. For many people, this is their first quad experience, and the guides set expectations early: what you’ll do, how you’ll drive, and how you’ll stay safe as the group moves.
You also get basic kit right away:
- Helmet
- Gloves
And if conditions need it, you may get additional outer layers like coats if you want them.
A quick heads-up: quads may be set up in small-group configurations. Reviews mention cases where people ended up sharing a quad. I’d recommend checking when you book whether you’ll drive your own quad or share, especially if riding separately is important to you.
Guides and Team: English-Friendly, With Real Personality

The tour guide experience is a major strength. Your guide can be Italian, Spanish, English, or German, and the local knowledge is part of why the ride feels more meaningful than a simple thrill.
One name stands out from the experience feedback: Edward, praised for being informative about Mount Teide when you arrive at the park area. That kind of explanation is what turns a great view into a reason to remember the day.
On top of the guides, the bike shop team also gets credit for welcome and support. That matters because the whole thing runs smoother when you feel oriented from the start—where to meet, how to gear up, and what to do with your driver’s license and shoes.
Photos at the End: Budget for Them If You Want the Proof

Professional photos are often part of the quad-tour rhythm. During the ride, a guide may take pictures of the group. At the end, you can purchase the set for an extra 20 euros.
Is it worth it? Based on the tone of feedback, yes—especially because you’re not using your phone during the ride. If you like having a souvenir that shows you actually doing the activity, I’d mentally set aside the money rather than trying to decide on the spot.
If you prefer to travel light and skip photo extras, you can still enjoy the ride itself; the photos are optional.
Price and Value: Is $114 Worth It for Teide?

The listed price is $114 per group up to 1, and the tour is built for a small group with a duration of 3 hours. While that may not sound like long, the value is in three things you’re actually paying for:
- A guided quad experience to a specific, high-demand destination (Teide National Park), not just a scenic drive.
- Included safety gear (helmet and gloves) and professional supervision, including traffic control.
- Time at viewpoints that would be harder to access and time correctly on your own, especially for a first-time quad rider.
You’re also paying for the fact that the guide turns driving into learning. The geology talk about Tenerife’s volcanic history plus the stop at Mirador Zapatilla Évora are the moments that make it feel like more than a thrill ride.
If you’re already comfortable driving a quad and you want pure adrenaline, it may feel expensive. But if you’re trying to do Teide without wrestling with routes, logistics, and first-day driving nerves, this tends to be good value.
Who This Quad Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
This is a strong match if you:
- Want an active way to see Teide and the volcanic terrain
- Like guided explanations (geology, what you’re looking at)
- Are okay with driving on uneven ground
- Appreciate a small-group pace rather than a big-bus crowd
It may not be the best choice if you:
- Want a fully relaxing, sit-and-stare tour
- Are sensitive to motion or bumpy conditions
- Need to use a cellphone during the activity (cellphones are not allowed)
- Don’t meet the driver requirements (drivers under 18 aren’t suitable)
The tour isn’t suitable for children under 7 years, and driving requires a driver’s license and rules around age.
Should You Book the Tenerife Guided Quad Bike Tour to Teide?
If your goal is to do Teide National Park with more energy than a standard sightseeing day, I’d book it. The combination of 600cc quad power, guided safety, and viewpoint stops makes this one of those activities where the memory comes from doing, not just looking.
The main decision point is your comfort level. If you’re fine with active driving, following instructions, and dressing for cooler higher-altitude weather, you’ll likely have a great time. If you want smooth roads, phone freedom, or a slow pace, pick a different kind of Teide tour.
My practical advice: if you’re sensitive to weather, pack for wind and chill and trust that rain gear may be available. And if you care about photos, set aside the extra 20 euros so you don’t feel stuck later.
FAQ
How long is the Tenerife guided quad tour to Teide National Park?
The tour lasts 3 hours.
What’s included with the tour?
You get the quad bike, plus helmets and gloves.
Where do we meet for the tour?
Start is listed as customers arriving directly at the venue, and the tour ends back at the meeting point. Pickup is optional, with guests waiting outside their hotel.
Do I need a driver’s license?
Yes. A driver’s license is mandatory.
What are the age requirements?
The tour isn’t suitable for children under 7 and it’s not suitable for drivers under 18.
What should I wear or bring?
You need closed-toe shoes and your driver’s license. A sweatshirt is recommended.
Is it allowed to bring a cellphone or record audio?
No. Cellphones and audio recording are not allowed.
Is there a weight limit for the quad?
Yes. Quads can carry a maximum weight of 160 kg.
Can I cancel for a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
























