If you’ve been searching for the best Tenerife blogs, you’ve probably already waded through a lot of noise. Generic travel sites, recycled tips, the same five photos of Teide. It gets old fast.
What you actually want is someone who knows the island. Someone who’s been here long enough to have opinions, to know which areas suit which types of people, and to write about Tenerife in a way that feels real rather than rehearsed.
That’s what a good Tenerife blog gives you. And there are some genuinely good ones out there, if you know where to look.
I’ve spent a lot of time on this island. I know which blogs are worth bookmarking and which ones are just dressed-up press releases. So here’s my honest take on the best Tenerife blogs right now, and why each one deserves your attention.
Why Tenerife Blogs Are Still Worth Your Time
You might wonder why blogs matter when Instagram and TikTok exist. Fair point. But a 30-second reel of someone jumping into a pool doesn’t tell you how to get there, what it costs, or whether it’s actually worth the drive.
A well-written Tenerife blog does all of that. It answers questions properly. It gives context. It stays useful six months after it was published. And crucially, it’s written by someone who cares, and you can feel the difference.
Tenerife is also a more complex island than most people realise. It has multiple microclimates, a dramatically different north and south, a rich local culture that most tourists barely scratch the surface of, and a year-round expat community with real stories to tell. Good blogs capture all of that. Bad ones just tell you to visit Siam Park.
The Best Tenerife Blogs Right Now
Klaudia’s Corner
Klaudia grew up in Germany and has been living in the south of Tenerife for over 15 years. That’s not a gap year. That’s a life. And her blog reads like it.
She covers daily life on the island with a warmth that feels genuinely personal. Beauty, health, wellness, lifestyle, the kind of topics that might sound soft on paper but are actually really useful when you’re trying to figure out what it’s like to live here rather than just visit. Her photography is honest and warm, not over-edited.
If you’re thinking about relocating to Tenerife, or you want a feel for what everyday life looks like beyond the resort strip, Klaudia’s blog is a good place to start.
The Skipping Verger
This one’s a bit different, and I mean that as a compliment.
John is based in the north of the island, which already tells you something. The north is quieter, greener, and far less talked about than the south. He writes about the history of Tenerife and the Canary Islands with a level of detail you genuinely won’t find anywhere else online.
His posts about British travellers to the islands over the centuries are fascinating. Not in a dry, textbook way, but in a “I didn’t know that, tell me more” kind of way. If you’ve ever stood somewhere on this island and thought, “I wonder what this place looked like 200 years ago,” John’s blog will scratch that itch properly.
John gives us a very unique insight on the history of the island and is based in the North where the grass is definitely greener.
He provides historical articles and stories for the interested reader about Tenerife and the Canary Islands, with detailed information about British travellers to the islands and their experiences over the centuries.
Carmen’s Luxury Travel
Carmen’s blog has been recognised as one of the top 50 luxury travel blogs and websites by Qosy, which is a solid endorsement. But what I like about it is that it doesn’t feel stuffy or out of reach.
She focuses on luxury and family travel, and her Tenerife content is genuinely good. Useful, well-researched, and written with real enthusiasm. She’s built a big following on social media too, which tells you people trust what she says. If you’re planning a higher-end trip to Tenerife and want ideas that go beyond the usual suggestions, Carmen’s worth a read.
Paulina On The Road
Paulina is from Luxembourg and has the kind of restless energy that makes for great travel writing. She spent a few months on Tenerife before moving on somewhere new, and her posts from that time capture something that longer-term residents sometimes miss: the fresh eyes of someone experiencing the island for the first time.
Her site is written in both English and Spanish, which is a nice touch. She documents her travels honestly, including the cultural moments, the small surprises, and the bits that didn’t quite go to plan. That honesty is what makes it readable.
Simple. Tasty. Good.
June’s blog is about food, and she does it properly. She’s a recipe developer, cook, photographer, food stylist, blogger, writer, editor, and publisher. That’s a lot of hats, but the blog holds together well because the passion is obvious.
She shares recipes from around the world, including some genuinely good Canarian and Spanish dishes. Everything is made with local ingredients, which matters here. Tenerife has excellent produce and a food culture that most visitors barely scratch the surface of. If you want to cook something that actually tastes like the island, June’s recipes are a solid starting point.
What Makes a Tenerife Blog Actually Good?
Honestly, it comes down to whether the person writing it actually knows the island. You can tell within a few paragraphs. The good ones have specific details, real opinions, and a sense of place. They mention the smell of the pine forests around Vilaflor, or the way the light hits the cliffs at Los Gigantes in the late afternoon. The not-so-good ones feel like they were written from a Wikipedia page and a Google image search.
A good Tenerife blog also respects the reader’s time. Short paragraphs. Clear answers. No padding. If you’re trying to find out whether the north or south of the island suits you better, you want a straight answer, not three paragraphs of vague enthusiasm before the writer gets to the point.
Should You Start Your Own Tenerife Blog?
If you’re spending time here and you enjoy writing, honestly, yes.
The best travel content doesn’t come from professional travel writers on press trips. It comes from real people sharing real experiences. If you visited a restaurant that blew you away, found a quiet beach that nobody seems to know about, or figured out the bus system after three confusing attempts, that’s worth writing about.
According to Statista, there are over 600 million blogs on the internet, but the ones that actually get read are the ones that feel personal and specific. Tenerife is a big topic with a lot of angles. There’s room for more good voices.
Frequently Asked Questions About Tenerife Blogs
What are the best Tenerife blogs to read before a holiday?
For practical holiday planning, Carmen’s Luxury Travel and Paulina On The Road are both solid. For a deeper feel of the island, The Skipping Verger gives you history and context that most travel blogs skip entirely.
Are there Tenerife blogs written by people who actually live there?
Yes. Klaudia’s Corner and Simple. Tasty. Good are written by people who live on the island full-time. That makes a real difference. They write about things that are actually happening, not just the highlights reel.
Which Tenerife blog is best for someone thinking about moving there?
Klaudia’s Corner is probably the most personal and warm for that.
Are there Tenerife blogs written in English?
Yes, all of the blogs listed here are written in English, or have English versions. Paulina On The Road is bilingual, in English and Spanish, which is handy if you’re also trying to improve your Spanish before a move.
What’s the difference between a Tenerife travel blog and a Tenerife lifestyle blog?
A travel blog tends to focus on visiting the island: what to see, where to eat, how to get around. A lifestyle blog is more about what it’s actually like to live there. Both are useful, just for different reasons. If you’re planning a two week holiday, a travel blog is probably more relevant. If you’re thinking about relocating, a lifestyle blog will tell you far more.
Can I submit my own Tenerife blog to be listed?
Yes. If you run a Tenerife travel or lifestyle blog and you think it’s worth sharing, you can get in touch via The Tenerife Forum contact page and they’ll take a look before adding it to the list.
A Few Things Worth Knowing About Tenerife Itself
Since you’re here, it’s worth saying: Tenerife is one of those places that rewards curiosity. The more you look into it, the more interesting it gets.
The island gets around 12 million visitors a year, but most of them stay in the south and never see the north. The north is greener, cooler, and has a completely different character. Towns like La Orotava and Garachico are genuinely beautiful in a way that the resort areas simply aren’t. The Anaga Rural Park in the northeast is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and one of the most dramatic landscapes in Europe, yet most visitors have never heard of it.
The food is also better than its reputation suggests. Papas arrugadas with mojo sauce is the obvious one, but the local wine scene is quietly excellent, and the fresh fish in the smaller coastal towns is some of the best you’ll eat anywhere.
Good Tenerife blogs cover all of this. They go beyond the obvious and give you the island as it actually is, not just as it appears in a brochure.
One Last Thing
If you find a Tenerife blog you love, share it. Good writing deserves an audience, and Tenerife deserves better than another generic travel listicle.
The blogs listed here are written by people who genuinely care about the island. That comes through in every post. And that, more than anything else, is what makes them worth reading.







3 Comments
Thank you ever so much for the mention ! This is amazing ,truly very much appreciated.
You’re welcome Klaudia. You run a fantastic blog and it’s a pleasure to include it in our list.
This so great!! Thank you!