Lisbon to Porto via Alentejo: A Ten-Day Slow Road Through Portugal   Recently updated!


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Lisbon to Porto via Alentejo: A Ten-Day Slow Road Through Portugal – A Vagabond Life

Lisbon to Porto via Alentejo: A Ten-Day Slow Road Through Portugal

This is the Portugal itinerary for people who want to go deeper. Instead of racing between Lisbon and Porto, you’ll take the scenic route through Alentejo — Portugal’s most underrated region. Roll through endless cork oak forests, explore the Roman temple of Évora by moonlight, taste Alentejo’s full-bodied reds in centuries-old cellars, climb the medieval university towers of Coimbra, and wander the whitewashed hilltop villages that look like they belong in Tuscany. Ten days, one rental car, and a slower pace that lets Portugal reveal itself on its own terms. Estimated budget: €1,100-1,600.

10-Day Itinerary Overview

Route: Lisbon (2) → Évora (2) → Alentejo villages (2) → Coimbra (1) → Porto (3)

Best for: Slow travellers, wine lovers, history enthusiasts, road trippers wanting off-the-beaten-path Portugal

Budget: €1,100-1,600 per person (excluding flights)

Direction: South to north via the interior — a road trip through Portugal’s undiscovered heartland

Getting There & Getting Around

Arriving & Car Rental

Fly into Lisbon Portela Airport (LIS). Pick up a rental car at the airport (€25-40/day, book in advance for best rates). A car is essential for this itinerary — the Alentejo villages are spread out and public transport is limited. Drop the car in Porto at the end of the trip. Visa: Schengen Area — 90 days visa-free for most non-EU travellers.

Driving in Portugal

Portugal’s highways (autoestradas) are excellent but toll-heavy — expect €15-25 in tolls for the full Lisbon–Porto trip. Carry €5-10 in cash for older toll plazas. The Via Verde electronic system works with rental cars (the rental company charges you later). The best roads are the national (N) roads — slower but through beautiful countryside. Parking in Évora and Coimbra is easier than in Lisbon or Porto. Speed cameras are common on highways.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: Lisbon Arrival & Alfama Wandering

☀️ Morning

Arrive in Lisbon, check into your Alfama accommodation. Walk to the Miradouro de Santa Luzia for your first view over the Tagus. Explore Alfama’s alleys — no map, just wander. Visit the castle hill (Castelo de São Jorge, €15 or just walk the free perimeter).

🌆 Afternoon & Evening

Take Tram 28 through Graça and Baixa. Explore Chiado and the elegant streets around it. For your first evening, book a fado dinner at a small tasca in Alfama — Tasca do Chico (no cover) for an authentic, unpolished experience.

Where to eat: Pastéis at Manteigaria (€1.30). Dinner at Tasca do Chico (€12-18 with fado and wine).

Accommodation: Lisbon Alfama (€35-80/night).

Pro Tip: Don’t pack today with sights — you have 10 days. Walk without purpose, get lost in Alfama, and adjust to the rhythm. Portugal rewards the unhurried.

Day 2: Belém & Lisbon’s Monumental Side

☀️ Morning

Drive or Tram 15 to Belém. Visit the Jerónimos Monastery (€10) and the Torre de Belém. Eat warm pastéis de nata at Pastéis de Belém. Walk along the riverfront to the Padrão dos Descobrimentos.

🌆 Afternoon

Explore the Baixa district — Rossio Square, Rua Augusta Arch, and the Elevador de Santa Justa. Visit the Mercado da Ribeira for a final Lisbon feast. Start packing — tomorrow you head into the interior.

Where to eat: Lunch at Mercado da Ribeira (€8-15). Dinner at Zé da Mouraria for grilled sardines (€8-14).

Entry: Jerónimos Monastery (€10), Torre de Belém (€8).

Pro Tip: Pick up your rental car this evening and park it in a Lisbon garage (€10-15/day) — it saves the hassle of collecting it on departure day.

Day 3: Évora — Roman Temple, Bones & Alentejo Wine

☀️ Morning

Drive east from Lisbon to Évora (1.5 hours). Stop at the Baixa da Banheira viewpoint over the cork oak plains — the Montado landscape is Portugal’s most iconic rural scene. Arrive in Évora, a UNESCO World Heritage city, and check into a guesthouse inside the medieval walls.

🌆 Afternoon & Evening

Visit the Templo de Évora (Roman Temple) — the best-preserved Roman monument in Portugal. Walk through the whitewashed streets to the Capela dos Ossos (Chapel of Bones, €5) in the Church of São Francisco, where the walls are lined with the bones of 5,000 monks. Visit the Évora Cathedral for rooftop views. For dinner, taste Alentejo wine at a local adega and order the region’s signature bread-and-coriander soup (açorda) or black pork (porco preto).

Where to eat: Lunch at O Fialho (€15-25, the iconic Évora restaurant). Dinner at Templo da Cerveja or Taberna Típica Quarta-Feira (€12-18, traditional Alentejo). Alentejo red from Herdade do Esporão (€4-6 a glass).

Transport: Car rental (€25-40/day).

Accommodation: Évora city centre (€40-80/night).

Pro Tip: Visit the Roman Temple by moonlight — it’s free and the 2nd-century columns are dramatically lit, with far fewer people than during the day.

Day 4: Alentejo Wine & the Cork Oak Plains

☀️ Morning

Drive 30 minutes west of Évora to Herdade do Esporão, one of Portugal’s most beautiful wine estates. Take the tour (€15-25) through the vineyards, olive groves, and 14th-century tower. The tasting features their famous Alentejo reds — the Reserva and Monte Velho are exceptional value.

🌆 Afternoon

Continue to Monsaraz (45 min east), a hilltop medieval village where the whitewashed houses and castle walls overlook the Alqueva Dam. Walk the castle ramparts, visit a cork workshop (the region produces 50% of the world’s cork), and watch the sunset over the largest artificial lake in Europe. The Alqueva Dark Sky Reserve offers incredible stargazing.

Where to eat: Lunch at Esporão’s restaurant (€18-25). Dinner at Taverna Os Templários in Monsaraz (€10-15).

Accommodation: Monsaraz guesthouse or quinta stay (€45-90/night).

Pro Tip: The Alqueva Dark Sky Reserve offers stargazing tours (€20-30) with telescopes and local wine — book ahead as they fill up fast in summer.

Day 5: White Villages — Marvão, Castelo de Vide & the Alentejo Interior

☀️ Morning

Drive north from Monsaraz to Castelo de Vide (1.5 hours). This hilltop town is famous for its whitewashed streets, a medieval castle, and the Fonte da Vila — a stunning 16th-century fountain where spring water flows freely. Walk the Judiaria (Jewish quarter) with its distinctive dark slate houses.

🌆 Afternoon

Continue 15 minutes to Marvão, arguably Portugal’s most beautiful hilltop village. Perched on a sheer granite ridge at 860 metres, it offers views across the Alentejo plains all the way to Spain. Walk the castle walls, have coffee on the main square, and just soak in the silence. The drive between these two villages along the N359 is stunning. Overnight in Marvão.

Where to eat: Lunch at João Porto in Marvão (€10-15). Dinner at Dom Dinis in Castelo de Vide (€10-15, excellent local cheese board).

Transport: Car rental.

Accommodation: Marvão pousada or guesthouse (€50-100/night).

Pro Tip: Arrive in Marvão in the late afternoon when the tour buses have left — you’ll have the castle and the whitewashed alleys almost entirely to yourself as the sun sinks over the Alentejo plains.

Day 6: Coimbra — Portugal’s Student Heart

☀️ Morning

Drive north from Marvão to Coimbra (2.5 hours). Park outside the old town and walk up through the narrow medieval streets to the University of Coimbra, one of the oldest in Europe (founded 1290). Visit the Joanine Library (Biblioteca Joanina, €12) — a breathtaking baroque library with carved gilded wood, exotic woods, and a resident bat colony that eats book-damaging insects.

🌆 Afternoon

Visit the Cathedral of Coimbra (Sé Velha) — the Romanesque old cathedral. Explore the narrow alleys of the Alta district and the riverside Baixa. Coimbra has its own style of fado (Coimbra fado), traditionally sung by male university students. For dinner, eat at a riverside restaurant watching the Mondego River flow under the Santa Clara Bridge.

Where to eat: Lunch at Zé Manel dos Ossos (€8-12, famous for its bone-strewn walls and cheap petiscos). Dinner at Galo Preto for traditional Coimbra cuisine (€12-18).

Transport: Car rental.

Accommodation: Coimbra city centre (€35-70/night).

Pro Tip: The Joanine Library is a timed-entry attraction — book online at least 3 days in advance, especially in summer. The entire tour is in Portuguese but the self-guide brochure in English is excellent.

Day 7: Cruise to Porto — Train Through the Douro Valley

☀️ Morning

Drop your rental car in Coimbra and catch the train to Porto (1.5 hours, €15-25). Check into your Porto accommodation in the Ribeira or near Aliados. Spend the afternoon crossing the Dom Luís I Bridge to Vila Nova de Gaia for Port wine tastings at Taylor’s or Graham’s (€15-25). Walk the Gaia riverfront at sunset.

🌆 Evening

Dinner in the Ribeira district — order a Francesinha at a local tasca or grilled fish at a riverside restaurant. Watch the lights come on across the Douro from a pavement cafe in Cais da Ribeira.

Where to eat: Lunch at Mercado do Bolhão (€8-12). Francesinha at Bufete Fase (€9).

Transport: Train Coimbra-Porto (€15-25). Car drop-off in Porto.

Accommodation: Porto Ribeira (€40-90/night).

Pro Tip: The train from Coimbra to Porto passes through Aveiro (the “Venice of Portugal”) and the coastal wetlands — sit on the left for river views as you approach Porto.

Day 8: Porto’s Treasures

☀️ Morning

Pre-book Livraria Lello (€8, 9 AM entry) for the magnificent staircase. Climb the Clérigos Tower (€8) for the best views over the city. Admire the azulejos at São Bento station.

🌆 Afternoon

Visit the Serralves Museum (€12-20) or simply wander through the Mercado do Bolhão for last souvenirs. Head up to Jardins do Palácio de Cristal for peacocks and stunning river views. For your last night in Porto, book a table at a traditional porto restaurant and order a bottle of Douro DOC wine.

Where to eat: Dinner at O Paparico (€30-40, traditional high-end) or Taberna dos Mercadores (€12-18, local favourite).

Entry: Livraria Lello (€8), Clérigos Tower (€8), Serralves (€12-20).

Pro Tip: The best Francesinha in Porto is at Bufete Fase — it’s cash-only, has no website, and the owner will judge you if you ask for no egg. That’s how you know it’s the real thing.

Day 9: Douro Valley Day Trip — Pinhão & the Vineyards

☀️ Morning

Take the early train (8:30 AM) from São Bento to Pinhão (2 hours, sit right side). Visit the azulejo-covered Pinhão station, then walk to Quinta do Crasto or take a taxi from Pinhão for a tour and tasting (€15). The terrace at Crasto with its famous infinity-pool view is the quintessential Douro photo.

🌆 Afternoon

Take a sunset rabelo boat trip from Pinhão (1 hour, €15) or walk through the riverside vineyards back to town. Catch the 5 PM train back to Porto (arriving 7 PM). For your final dinner, book a tasting menu at DOP or Antiqvvm for a memorable farewell.

Where to eat: Lunch at Quinta do Crasto’s terrace (€18-25 with paired wines). Dinner at DOP (€35-45 tasting menu).

Transport: Train Porto-Pinhão (€10 each way).

Pro Tip: This makes for a long train day but the Douro Valley in one day is absolutely worth it — bring snacks and wine for the return journey and watch the sun set over the river from the train window.

Day 10: Porto Final Morning & Departure

☀️ Morning

One last morning in Porto. Walk the Ribeira one final time, buy Port wine at the Mercado do Bolhão for gifts, and grab a pastel de nata from Manteigaria Porto. If your flight isn’t until the evening, cross to Gaia and visit one more Port wine lodge you missed — Sandeman or Taylor’s cellars are worth it.

🌆 Departure

The Porto metro from Trindade station reaches the airport in 35 minutes (€2.50). The Porto airport (OPO) is efficient — arrive 1.5-2 hours before for European flights, 2.5 hours for international departures.

Where to eat: Final bifana at Conga (€3.50). A last glass of vinho verde at a Ribeira cafe (€2).
Pro Tip: If you have a late flight, stash your bags at Porto Campanhã station (€3) and take the 30-minute Douro river cruise from Gaia (€15) — it’s a beautiful way to spend your last hours.

Practical Information for Alentejo & Coimbra

Visas & Entry

Schengen Area rules. EU/EEA nationals need ID. Most non-EU visitors get 90 days visa-free. Check current rules before your trip.

SIM Card & Internet

SIM at Lisbon airport (€10 for 10-15 GB). Coverage is good even in rural Alentejo. Many Alentejo quintas have limited WiFi — consider this a feature, not a bug.

Money & ATMs

Euros (€) everywhere. Cards accepted at most places but keep €50-80 cash for rural Alentejo — many village restaurants and the Marvão castle entry are cash-only.

Language & Communication

English is less widely spoken in Alentejo than in Lisbon or the Algarve. Learn a few phrases: Bom apetite (enjoy your meal), Muito bom (very good — for wine!). In Coimbra, the students speak perfect English.

Best Time to Visit

April-June and September-October are ideal. The Alentejo is scorching in July-August (35-40°C). Spring brings wildflowers to the cork oak plains. Autumn is harvest season. Winter is quiet — Marvão is atmospheric in the fog but many smaller restaurants close.

Health & Safety

Very safe throughout. The main hazard is driving on winding rural roads at dusk (watch for wildlife). Alentejo summers are dangerously hot — carry plenty of water and avoid hiking mid-day. Tap water is safe. EU citizens should carry their EHIC.

Budget Summary: 10-Day Portugal Slow Road Itinerary

Estimated Total: €1,100-1,600 per person

  • Accommodation (9 nights): €315-720
  • Car rental (6 days + Coimbra drop): €150-250
  • Tolls & fuel: €60-100
  • Train Coimbra-Porto + Douro day: €35-55
  • Quinta tours & wine tastings: €40-70
  • Museums & attractions: €40-60
  • Meals (10 days): €200-320
  • SIM card & miscellaneous: €25-40

Best Season: April-June or September-October

Recommended For: Slow travellers, road trippers, wine lovers, history enthusiasts

Money-Saving Tip: Buy Alentejo wine directly from the Herdade do Esporão shop — the same Reserva that costs €18 in a Lisbon restaurant is €7 at the cellar door. Overnight in Marvão rather than Évora for cheaper accommodation and a more memorable experience.

Disclaimer: Prices are estimates and may vary by season. Quinta tours and the Joanine Library require advance booking. Always check current visa requirements. This itinerary is for general reference only.