REVIEW · QUAD / ATV ADVENTURES
guided quad tour of Tenerife’s Teide volcano
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by FUN TEIDE QUAD · Bookable on GetYourGuide
If you like big views and small effort, this quad tour fits. You start near Valle San Lorenzo and climb to around 2400 meters for wide-open Teide views, including the volcano at 3718 meters, the highest point in Europe. It is the kind of active sightseeing day that feels both scenic and practical.
What I like most is the new quad setup and the way the team keeps it fun without skipping safety. The other big win is the 360-degree perspective at altitude, where clear weather can even let you spot islands around the Canary archipelago. One thing to consider: you need the right driving paperwork and gear, including your driver’s license plus an international driver’s license, plus closed-toe shoes.
Your ride is guided, and it runs with a small group feel. You get headset support, the guide explains how to drive, and the circuit is described as suitable for beginners as well as experienced riders. Just remember it is not for everyone: there are limits for age, height, pregnancy, and weight.
In This Review
- Quad Teide tour key points
- Valle San Lorenzo to the Teide area: how the ride unfolds
- Why 2400 meters matters for panoramic Teide views
- Quads at the heart of it: new bikes, control, and comfort
- Safety rhythm with a pro guide and included headset
- Small-group feel and multilingual guidance
- Price and value: is $136 per group up to 2 worth it?
- Weather reality on Tenerife: clear skies boost the island views
- Who this Teide quad tour is best for
- Should you book the guided quad tour of Tenerife’s Teide?
- FAQ
- Where does the quad tour depart from?
- How long is the guided quad tour?
- What does the price include?
- Do I need an international driver’s license?
- Are sandals allowed?
- Is the tour suitable for children?
- What languages are available with the live guide?
Quad Teide tour key points

- New quad bikes designed for a smooth, confidence-building ride
- 360-degree panoramic views from altitude, with Teide always in the picture
- Professional guide who teaches you how to drive, even if it is your first time
- Headset included so you can actually hear instructions during the tour
- Small group experience for a calmer, more controlled adventure
Valle San Lorenzo to the Teide area: how the ride unfolds

This guided quad tour of Tenerife’s Teide volcano starts in Valle San Lorenzo, then pushes you up toward the Teide area for big elevation and even bigger sightlines. The whole point is to get off the beaten path without needing hiking legs for every meter. You are on a quad, but you still get that clear “we’re getting higher” feeling as the terrain changes.
The route is built around a circuit approach, not a chaotic free-for-all. Your guide provides the instructions you need before you’re out there. That matters because the tour is positioned as beginner-friendly, so you are not expected to arrive as a pro rider. You will also want to pay attention early on, because once you start moving you will be busy enjoying the views and keeping your line.
At the top of the climb, you reach about 2400 meters, where the air feels different and the horizon opens up. From that altitude, you can see the volcano known as El Teide, which rises to 3718 meters. The experience is simple in concept: you get elevation, you get perspective, and you get a front-row seat to one of Europe’s most famous peaks.
There is a real “island road trip” feel here too, even though you are on four wheels. Instead of bouncing between viewpoints in a vehicle with long gaps, you are moving through the terrain as part of the sightseeing. That makes the time feel packed, but not rushed.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Tenerife
Why 2400 meters matters for panoramic Teide views

The best part of this excursion is the way the scenery expands as you climb. The tour is designed around 360-degree panoramic views at altitude, which is exactly what you want when you are on Tenerife and Teide is the star. At 2400 meters, your perspective stops feeling like you are looking at a single viewpoint. It starts feeling like you are standing inside the island’s geometry.
Clear weather is a key detail. When conditions cooperate, you can see many of the other islands that make up the Canary archipelago. That is not a small promise, because it turns the day from a Teide-only moment into a wider “look how the islands stack up” experience. If the visibility is less than perfect, you still have the altitude and the Teide presence in the landscape, but the distant island spotting may be reduced.
There’s another reason the climb is worth it even if you are not chasing distant islands. Higher elevation changes how the terrain reads. The volcanic areas around Teide tend to look more dramatic from above and from a distance. You will likely notice the contrast between the darker volcanic ground and the lighter sky, and it makes photos easier to frame.
Also, Tenerife is not a flat show. The sense of scale is part of the magic. When you see El Teide from the road and from a higher viewpoint, you get a better mental map of the island. That makes the experience more than just pretty pictures.
Quads at the heart of it: new bikes, control, and comfort

A quad tour stands or falls on the machine. Here, one of the stated highlights is a new quad, and that’s a big deal for comfort and confidence. Newer, well-kept bikes usually mean smoother handling and fewer distractions while you learn. You want your attention on the road and the guide’s cues, not on weird mechanical surprises.
The guide gives you advice on how to drive the quad, and the circuit is described as suitable for everyone. That tells me the tour is set up for learning and controlled riding rather than technical racing. In plain terms: you should come expecting instruction, not chaos.
A practical tip from the tour rules: wear closed-toe shoes. Flip-flops and sandals are not allowed, and bare feet are also not allowed. That is not just about comfort. It is about foot protection and grip while you’re climbing on, staying balanced, and handling the bike through varied terrain.
Weight and size limits also matter for comfort. The tour is not suitable for people over 331 lbs (150 kg) and not suitable for people under 110 cm. If you are near the edge of those limits, it is worth double-checking so the ride feels safe and stable rather than awkward.
And if you are new to quads, do yourself a favor and listen carefully at the start. Once you start, you will be balancing speed, turns, and the general “keep moving and look where you’re going” mindset. The better you follow the guide’s instructions early, the more fun the later views become.
Safety rhythm with a pro guide and included headset

This is a guided tour, and that makes the experience feel organized. The guide is a professional and is responsible for both the riding instructions and the flow of the group. That includes teaching you what you need to know whether you are a beginner or you already ride.
You also get a headset included. That small detail can make a huge difference, especially in open areas where you might otherwise miss directions or timing cues. With a headset, you can actually concentrate on driving and the scenery at the same time, instead of constantly stopping to ask what’s next.
Because it is a small group, instructions are likely easier to track than in a big crowd. You can keep your attention on the person in front, and your guide can keep a closer eye on how people are handling the quad and turning habits.
Now, safety rules are also clearly stated. Alcohol and drugs are not allowed. That is standard for good reason, but it’s worth noting because it helps keep the experience fair and controlled for everyone on the ride. If you’re the type who likes to arrive hydrated and alert, you’ll fit right in.
Also, the tour is not suitable for pregnant women and not suitable for children under 6. The height requirement (under 110 cm) and the driver’s age minimum (drivers under 18) are there for safety and control. This is an activity where the body position and bike handling need to be predictable.
Small-group feel and multilingual guidance
One of the quiet advantages here is how many languages the live guide can work in: Albanian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, and English. That means you are not stuck with a tour where only one language works and everyone else just nods along. If you choose English or any of the other listed languages, you can expect instructions you actually understand.
The tour is also described as a small group. In practice, that usually means fewer bikes in motion at once, calmer pacing, and less time waiting around. When you are climbing up toward Teide and aiming for the best viewpoints, you want the group to move as one unit, not as a scattered set of independent riders.
The best kind of group tour is one where you feel guided but not micromanaged. From what’s provided, this one aims for that balance: you get coaching, you get safety support, and then you get to enjoy the ride and the views.
If you are traveling with a friend or partner, the structure fits well because the price is listed per group up to 2. That can be a nice way to share the experience without paying for a solo tour when you do not need it.
Price and value: is $136 per group up to 2 worth it?
The price is listed at $136 per group up to 2, and the tour duration is about 3 hours. On the surface, that’s not “cheap,” but quad tours in volcanic terrain are not slow museum experiences either. You are paying for a ride-ready setup (including headsets), a professional guide, and a route designed to reach high viewpoints where you can actually see Teide.
Value comes down to two things: shared cost and included essentials. If you go as a pair, the per-person cost effectively drops a lot compared to a solo arrangement. Add the fact that headsets are included, and you are not looking at extra rentals or add-ons just to follow the guide.
You also get the benefit of being guided to the altitude zone. That is where the big views happen, at around 2400 meters, with Teide visible nearby. If you tried to DIY it, you’d need a lot of planning around the right gear, the right route, and safe riding conditions. The guide removes that mental load.
One consideration: you still need the right driving documents and gear. The tour requires a driver’s license plus an international driver’s license, and it requires closed-toe shoes. If you show up without those, the day won’t work for you, so budget for that paperwork first.
If you’re the kind of traveler who wants active sightseeing, this price can feel fair. If you want a passive, low-movement day, you might find it pricey for what is essentially an outdoor riding session.
Weather reality on Tenerife: clear skies boost the island views
Teide-area weather can change fast, and this tour makes clear that clear conditions bring extra payoff. When it is clear, you can see many of the other islands in the Canary archipelago from the altitude zone.
So here’s the practical way I’d think about it. If you book this tour on a day with good visibility, you’ll get that extra “wow, look at the horizon” factor. If not, you still get the climb, the panoramic effect from 2400 meters, and the Teide viewpoint at 3718 meters. The volcano view is the anchor of the day either way.
To get the most from your timing, plan to go when you have a decent weather window. If your whole trip has mixed forecast days, you might choose this activity on your best-visibility day. That’s how you maximize return on the time you spend traveling and gearing up.
Who this Teide quad tour is best for

This guided quad tour is best for people who want an active way to experience Tenerife without complicated logistics. If you enjoy driving on scenic routes and want strong views, you’ll probably love the combination of elevation and guidance.
It also fits first-timers in the right way. The tour is described as suitable for everyone, and the guide provides driving advice whether you’re a beginner or not. That suggests they are ready to teach and keep you on a safe, controlled path.
You should also consider the restrictions before you book:
- Not suitable for children under 6
- Not suitable for pregnant women
- Not suitable for people under 110 cm
- Not suitable for drivers under 18
- Not suitable for people over 331 lbs (150 kg)
If you’re traveling with limited mobility, or you’re looking for a gentle stroller-style activity, this is probably not your day. But if you can comfortably handle an outdoor riding session and you meet the requirements, it’s a straightforward way to see Teide from a perspective most people only imagine.
Should you book the guided quad tour of Tenerife’s Teide?
Book it if you want a guided Teide experience that mixes active driving with real elevation. The new quad setup, headset support, and professional multilingual guide are all practical signals that this is built for comfort and safety, not just spectacle. Add in the planned 360-degree viewpoints around 2400 meters, and you’re getting a lot of sightseeing energy into a 3-hour outing.
Skip it if you do not want to ride at all, or if the driving requirements are a problem for your situation. This tour depends on you having the right license and the right footwear. It also has clear limits for age, height, pregnancy, and weight, so check those early.
If you fit the requirements and you’re aiming for Tenerife’s biggest visual payoff, this FUN TEIDE QUAD option is a strong choice.
FAQ
Where does the quad tour depart from?
The tour departs from Valle San Lorenzo.
How long is the guided quad tour?
The duration is 3 hours.
What does the price include?
The activity includes a headset.
Do I need an international driver’s license?
Yes. You need your driver’s license and an international driver’s license.
Are sandals allowed?
No. Sandals or flip flops are not allowed, and bare feet are not allowed. Closed-toe shoes are required.
Is the tour suitable for children?
No. It is not suitable for children under 6 years, and drivers must be 18+. It is also not suitable for people under 110 cm in height.
What languages are available with the live guide?
The live guide is available in Albanian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, and English.


































