Day 10 Braganca to Vila do Conde
This route was brought to you by:
RouteXpert René Plücken (MRA Master)
Last edit: 22-10-2025
On this last day we drive a large part through the Montesinho nature park with its beautiful roads and stunning scenery.
This route is worth 4 stars because the end of the ride is slightly less spectacular than all the other routes.
Animation
Verdict
Duration
8h 27m
Mode of travel
Car or motorcycle
Distance
302.95 km
Countries
Barragem de Paradela
There are no scheduled stops for fuel, food, or drinks. Whenever you have the opportunity, stop at one of the points marked with a POI. Along the way, there are several small villages with restaurants and cafes.
Hotels, landmarks and recommended places to stop to enjoy the view are also indicated with a POI.
The final leg of this fantastic motorcycle holiday takes us to Porto, our final destination, via another beautiful route through Portugal's national parks. These roads are varied and sometimes challenging, with plenty of twists and turns. The panoramic views are breathtaking, and there's plenty to see along the way.
The first part of the journey takes us through Montesinho National Park. Located in northwestern Portugal, in the Trás-os-Montes region, it is one of the largest natural parks in Portugal. The slate and granite mountains form deep valleys, and the clear river water flowing through them provides the perfect habitat for a wide variety of plants and animals. Beautiful roads and stunning panoramas await. Beautiful meadows, sierras, forests, small rivers, mountain lakes, and villages await.
The last part of the route goes through urban areas and partly on the highway to Vila do Condo, the end point of this last day.
Miradouro dos Contrabandistas
Montesinho Natural Park
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Changes may nevertheless have occurred due to changed circumstances, road diversions or seasonal closures. We therefore recommend checking each route before use.
Preferably use the route track in your navigation system. More information about the use of MyRoute-app can be found on the website under 'Community' or 'Academy'.
Changes may nevertheless have occurred due to changed circumstances, road diversions or seasonal closures. We therefore recommend checking each route before use.
Preferably use the route track in your navigation system. More information about the use of MyRoute-app can be found on the website under 'Community' or 'Academy'.
Vila Real
About this region
Vila Real (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈvilɐ ʁiˈal] (listen)) is the capital and largest city of the Vila Real District, northern Portugal. The population in 2011 was 51,850, in an area of 378.80 square kilometres (146.26 sq mi).Vila Real was ranked seventh in the list of Portugal's most livable cities in the survey of living conditions published by the Portuguese newspaper Expresso in 2007.
Read more on Wikipedia
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Ten Day Roadtrip from Spain to Portugal
This route collection describes a 10-day Road trip in the north of Spain and Portugal, a true paradise for motorcycling.
You drive over beautiful mountain ridges and through beautiful valleys. Along the way you drive through beautiful villages and countless nature reserves, great passes with countless curves, tunnels cut out of the mountains and azure blue reservoirs. The roads are fair to good, sometimes unpaved.
What you get to see along the way;
Spanish Pyrenees
Parc Naturel del Cadi-Moixero
Serra del Cadí
Serra de Moixeró
Pedraforca
Serra del Monsec
Collada de Clarà
Parque Nacional de Ordesa y Monte Perdido
Collados del Asón Natural Park.
Parque natural Saja-Besaya
Parque natural de Fuentes Carrionas y Fuente Cobre
Parque natural de la Montana de Riano y Mampodre
Picos de Europa
El Parque regional Montaña de Riaño y Mampodre
El Parque natural de Redes
The Sierra de la Culebra
Parque natural Montesinho
Along the routes there are more than enough nice places to stop for a short or longer period, these are described in the review and with a waypoint and POI included in the routes.
Have fun reading and planning your next motorcycle vacation.
If you have ridden these routes I would like to hear your feedback.
You drive over beautiful mountain ridges and through beautiful valleys. Along the way you drive through beautiful villages and countless nature reserves, great passes with countless curves, tunnels cut out of the mountains and azure blue reservoirs. The roads are fair to good, sometimes unpaved.
What you get to see along the way;
Spanish Pyrenees
Parc Naturel del Cadi-Moixero
Serra del Cadí
Serra de Moixeró
Pedraforca
Serra del Monsec
Collada de Clarà
Parque Nacional de Ordesa y Monte Perdido
Collados del Asón Natural Park.
Parque natural Saja-Besaya
Parque natural de Fuentes Carrionas y Fuente Cobre
Parque natural de la Montana de Riano y Mampodre
Picos de Europa
El Parque regional Montaña de Riaño y Mampodre
El Parque natural de Redes
The Sierra de la Culebra
Parque natural Montesinho
Along the routes there are more than enough nice places to stop for a short or longer period, these are described in the review and with a waypoint and POI included in the routes.
Have fun reading and planning your next motorcycle vacation.
If you have ridden these routes I would like to hear your feedback.
View Route Collection
10 Routes
3005.97 km
84h 28m
Paradors Pousadas And Iberian Passes
This collection is an end-to-end motorcycle journey across northern Spain and Portugal, shaped deliberately to unfold over eleven days with a clear sense of progression. Each stage builds naturally on the last, carrying the rider from the Atlantic edge of northern Spain, south through Portugal’s mountain heartlands and open plains, before returning north across Spain to finish back on the Cantabrian coast.
The journey begins on the Cantabrian coast, leaving Santander behind and climbing steadily inland towards Cervera de Pisuerga. The opening day sets the tone immediately, trading sea air for rising ground and greener hills as the road threads through northern Spain’s quieter interior. It feels purposeful without being rushed, easing the rider into the rhythm of the tour.
From Cervera de Pisuerga, the route pushes deeper into the Cantabrian highlands, crossing broad upland terrain and remote border regions on the way to Bragança. The scenery becomes more expansive, the roads quieter, and the sense of travelling through less familiar Spain grows stronger as the journey approaches Portugal.
Crossing into Portugal, the character tightens again through Montesinho and the Peneda-Gerês region. Roads fold into wooded hills and granite villages, with more frequent elevation changes and a greater sense of enclosure. This is riding that rewards attention and flow rather than outright speed, and it marks a clear transition into Portugal’s mountainous north.
The route then opens into the Douro highlands, running south towards Viseu. Valleys deepen, viewpoints lengthen and the riding alternates between fast, open sections and more intimate stretches that follow the land closely. The sense of scale increases without losing the feeling of remoteness that defines this part of the journey.
Climbing into the Serra da Estrela plateau, the collection reaches one of its defining high points. Portugal’s highest mountain range delivers wide horizons, exposed passes and a feeling of space that contrasts sharply with the valleys below. This stage stands out for its elevation, light and long views, and it feels like a natural midpoint landmark in the overall journey.
Dropping south from the mountains, the route transitions into the Beiras and Alentejo, carrying the rider from high ground into warmer, more open landscapes on the way to Évora. The roads relax into longer, flowing lines, and the pace of the journey subtly changes without losing interest or intent.
From Évora to Beja, the ride settles fully into the heart of the Alentejo. Cork forests, reservoirs and historic hill towns define the scenery, while the riding becomes smoother and more measured. These stages offer breathing space within the collection, allowing the rider to absorb the scale and atmosphere of southern Portugal.
Turning back towards the Spanish border, the route climbs again through Castelo and the border ridges to Marvão. Elevation returns, views stretch out, and the landscape regains a rugged edge. The dramatic setting of Marvão feels earned, sitting high above the surrounding plains and marking a clear shift back towards frontier territory.
Crossing back into Spain, the journey continues through the serranías and frontier regions of Castile, heading for Ciudad Rodrigo. Historic borderlands, rolling terrain and quiet roads reinforce the feeling of travelling through lesser-known landscapes, with riding that remains engaging through variety rather than intensity.
From Ciudad Rodrigo to Benavente, the route crosses the Castilla y León plains. Big skies, long sightlines and subtle changes in terrain define this stage, providing contrast after the mountains while maintaining a strong sense of direction as the journey turns decisively north.
The final day carries the rider from the Meseta back to the Cantabrian coast, closing the loop at Santander. As greener hills return and the Atlantic air reappears, the transition from inland Spain back to the coast provides a fitting and satisfying conclusion, both geographically and emotionally, to the journey.
Throughout the collection, the choice of Paradors and Pousadas anchors each day in history and landscape. These are not simply places to stop, but destinations that reinforce the character of each region and give the journey a sense of occasion from start to finish.
Taken as a whole, this is a coherent and rewarding Iberian tour: varied without feeling fragmented, demanding enough to stay engaging without becoming tiring, and designed to be ridden as a complete journey rather than a series of disconnected stages. It is best suited to riders who value flow, scenery and progression, and who appreciate the satisfaction of a route that unfolds naturally over time.
The journey begins on the Cantabrian coast, leaving Santander behind and climbing steadily inland towards Cervera de Pisuerga. The opening day sets the tone immediately, trading sea air for rising ground and greener hills as the road threads through northern Spain’s quieter interior. It feels purposeful without being rushed, easing the rider into the rhythm of the tour.
From Cervera de Pisuerga, the route pushes deeper into the Cantabrian highlands, crossing broad upland terrain and remote border regions on the way to Bragança. The scenery becomes more expansive, the roads quieter, and the sense of travelling through less familiar Spain grows stronger as the journey approaches Portugal.
Crossing into Portugal, the character tightens again through Montesinho and the Peneda-Gerês region. Roads fold into wooded hills and granite villages, with more frequent elevation changes and a greater sense of enclosure. This is riding that rewards attention and flow rather than outright speed, and it marks a clear transition into Portugal’s mountainous north.
The route then opens into the Douro highlands, running south towards Viseu. Valleys deepen, viewpoints lengthen and the riding alternates between fast, open sections and more intimate stretches that follow the land closely. The sense of scale increases without losing the feeling of remoteness that defines this part of the journey.
Climbing into the Serra da Estrela plateau, the collection reaches one of its defining high points. Portugal’s highest mountain range delivers wide horizons, exposed passes and a feeling of space that contrasts sharply with the valleys below. This stage stands out for its elevation, light and long views, and it feels like a natural midpoint landmark in the overall journey.
Dropping south from the mountains, the route transitions into the Beiras and Alentejo, carrying the rider from high ground into warmer, more open landscapes on the way to Évora. The roads relax into longer, flowing lines, and the pace of the journey subtly changes without losing interest or intent.
From Évora to Beja, the ride settles fully into the heart of the Alentejo. Cork forests, reservoirs and historic hill towns define the scenery, while the riding becomes smoother and more measured. These stages offer breathing space within the collection, allowing the rider to absorb the scale and atmosphere of southern Portugal.
Turning back towards the Spanish border, the route climbs again through Castelo and the border ridges to Marvão. Elevation returns, views stretch out, and the landscape regains a rugged edge. The dramatic setting of Marvão feels earned, sitting high above the surrounding plains and marking a clear shift back towards frontier territory.
Crossing back into Spain, the journey continues through the serranías and frontier regions of Castile, heading for Ciudad Rodrigo. Historic borderlands, rolling terrain and quiet roads reinforce the feeling of travelling through lesser-known landscapes, with riding that remains engaging through variety rather than intensity.
From Ciudad Rodrigo to Benavente, the route crosses the Castilla y León plains. Big skies, long sightlines and subtle changes in terrain define this stage, providing contrast after the mountains while maintaining a strong sense of direction as the journey turns decisively north.
The final day carries the rider from the Meseta back to the Cantabrian coast, closing the loop at Santander. As greener hills return and the Atlantic air reappears, the transition from inland Spain back to the coast provides a fitting and satisfying conclusion, both geographically and emotionally, to the journey.
Throughout the collection, the choice of Paradors and Pousadas anchors each day in history and landscape. These are not simply places to stop, but destinations that reinforce the character of each region and give the journey a sense of occasion from start to finish.
Taken as a whole, this is a coherent and rewarding Iberian tour: varied without feeling fragmented, demanding enough to stay engaging without becoming tiring, and designed to be ridden as a complete journey rather than a series of disconnected stages. It is best suited to riders who value flow, scenery and progression, and who appreciate the satisfaction of a route that unfolds naturally over time.
View Route Collection
11 Routes
2910.78 km
77h 14m