REVIEW · GARACHICO & ICOD DAY TOURS
Icod de los Vinos: Casa del Plátano Entry Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Casa del Plátano · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Bananas have a proper backstory in Tenerife. At Casa del Plátano in Icod de los Vinos, you learn how this crop shaped life on the islands through a historic hacienda setting and English/Spanish explanation panels. It’s a simple visit that feels grounded, not gimmicky, and you can move at your own pace.
I especially like the combination of banana history and seeing plants in real growing conditions during the plantation tour. You also get a Canarian banana included, which makes the whole thing more than just reading and looking. One drawback to plan around: the on-site explanations are in English and Spanish, so French speakers may feel left out.
In This Review
- Key highlights
- Casa del Plátano: Why This Ticket Feels Worth It
- Walking Into an Old Hacienda in Icod de los Vinos
- The Banana Story You’ll Learn from English and Spanish Panels
- The Plantation Tour: Seeing Bananas Grow in Real Conditions
- Varieties, the Included Banana, and What to Do With the Taste Test
- Shopping for Canarian Banana Products Without Overpaying
- Timing Your Visit: Last Entry at 18H30
- Price and Value: Is $5 a Good Deal?
- Who Should Book This Banana Ticket
- Should You Book Casa del Plátano in Icod de los Vinos?
- FAQ
- What is included with the Casa del Plátano entry ticket?
- How long is the experience?
- Where is Casa del Plátano located?
- Is the visit self-guided?
- What languages are available?
- What time do I need to plan for last entry?
- How much does it cost?
- Can I buy food and gourmet products on-site?
- Is there a resident price for Canaries residents?
Key highlights
- Historic hacienda setting in Icod de los Vinos: the building adds atmosphere while you learn.
- Self-guided visit with panels in English and Spanish: easy to set your own rhythm.
- Plantation tour that shows banana growth: you’ll see how the crop develops in practice.
- Included Canarian banana: you get a real taste of Tenerife.
- Banana varieties and a small shop: you can compare types and buy local gourmet products.
- Family-friendly experience: kids usually enjoy seeing bananas growing and in different stages.
Casa del Plátano: Why This Ticket Feels Worth It

Casa del Plátano is not trying to be a big theme park. For the price, you get a focused, hands-on look at the banana story in Tenerife, from how it’s grown to why it matters in the Canaries.
What makes it click is the mix of three things that rarely come together in one stop: you tour an authentic banana plantation, you walk through a historic house, and you learn from clear explanation panels. You’re not sprinting from room to room. You’re taking in the crop at a human scale.
Also, the visit is designed for real time on-site. It’s valid for one day, and you can check availability for starting times, which helps if you’re building a day around other stops in Icod de los Vinos.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Tenerife
Walking Into an Old Hacienda in Icod de los Vinos

Casa del Plátano is located in Icod de los Vinos, in an old hacienda-style house. That matters more than it sounds, because bananas on Tenerife aren’t just an agricultural product to admire. They’re part of how island history was built, and the architecture gives you that context.
As you explore, you’ll be able to take in the architecture of the historic house while you read. The building helps turn the learning into a stroll, not a lecture. Even if you only have a short attention span, the house and its layout make it easier to keep moving.
If you’re traveling with kids, this kind of setting helps. It feels like a place with rooms to explore and things to spot, not just a ticket you scan and forget.
The Banana Story You’ll Learn from English and Spanish Panels

This is a self-guided visit, which means you control the pace. The explanations are shown via panels in English and Spanish, and they’re the backbone of the experience.
Here’s what you can expect to pick up:
- Characteristics of bananas and how people in Tenerife understand the crop
- History of bananas in Tenerife, including how the island became strongly associated with banana growing
- Practical context on how the cultivation process works, explained in an on-site way
Because it’s panel-based, you can linger where you’re curious and skip what doesn’t interest you. That’s a real advantage if you’re not in the mood for a timed, scripted tour.
One caution: if you were hoping for French, be aware that explanations may not cover it. The visit is clearly set up for English and Spanish, so plan on those languages working for you.
The Plantation Tour: Seeing Bananas Grow in Real Conditions

The main reason people love Casa del Plátano is simple: you don’t just read about bananas. You get a tour of an authentic banana plantation.
What you’ll gain from this part is perspective. It’s easier to understand every stage of growth once you can see it in place. When you view the plants and read about cultivation, the process stops being abstract. You’ll understand why banana farming takes structure, timing, and the right setup.
In particular, the experience is designed so you can notice development through different stages. That makes it more interesting than a single viewpoint where everything looks the same.
If you’re the type who likes connecting the dots between food and farming, this is the portion that delivers. You’ll leave with a more realistic sense of what banana cultivation involves, not just a souvenir memory.
Varieties, the Included Banana, and What to Do With the Taste Test

After the plantation portion and the house learning, you’ll have the chance to see different banana varieties. This is where the experience feels a bit like a mini science-and-food lesson at the same time.
Then there’s the payoff: the ticket includes a Canarian Banana. That included snack matters because it turns your visit into a full loop. You learn about the crop, you see how it grows, and then you taste the product connected to Tenerife.
A small extra value point: when you taste it on-site, you’re more likely to notice flavors and textures that you might miss if you bought bananas later at your hotel. You’ll also be better prepared if you decide to shop afterward, because you’ll know what you liked.
Shopping for Canarian Banana Products Without Overpaying
There’s an on-site store where you can purchase local gourmet products made with bananas from the Canary Islands. Purchasing isn’t included in the ticket price, but it’s easy to treat the shop as a bonus rather than a requirement.
The best approach is to set a small budget before you walk in. That way, you can buy one or two items you’ll actually use at home, like:
- banana-based treats
- local sweets or snacks tied to the island’s banana crop
If you’re traveling with food lovers, the shop is also a good place to bring the story home. Even a small purchase helps you remember that this isn’t just a stop with photos. It’s a real agricultural product with local brands and flavors.
Timing Your Visit: Last Entry at 18H30
This visit is valid for one day, and you can choose a starting time based on availability. Since it’s self-guided, you can spend more time in the house learning from the panels or more time in the plantation area, depending on what you like most.
Just keep the practical limit in mind: the last entry is at 18H30. If you’re trying to fit it into a busy day, plan backward. Arriving early in your time window gives you more breathing room to read at a comfortable pace and not feel rushed.
A good strategy is to treat it as a main activity in your day, not a quick add-on. You’re paying for understanding, not just access.
Price and Value: Is $5 a Good Deal?
$5 per person is a low price for a visit that includes both:
- entry to Casa del Plátano
- a Canarian banana included with the ticket
What makes the value strong is the mix of experiences for the cost. Many low-cost attractions only deliver one dimension (mostly reading, mostly photos, or mostly a short walk). Here, you get the historic house setting, explanation panels in English/Spanish, and a plantation tour.
And that banana included isn’t just a token. It gives you a tangible connection to what you’re learning. If you’re a budget traveler, this is the kind of stop where the price matches the effort you put in.
If you’re traveling as a group, the value gets even better because you can split time how you like. Everyone can focus on what interests them—history, farming process, banana varieties, or the snack.
Who Should Book This Banana Ticket

This works best if you like small, grounded experiences over big set-ups. It’s a strong choice for:
- families with kids who enjoy seeing plants in real life
- food-minded travelers who want the link between farming and what you eat
- travelers who like self-paced visits where panels do the explaining
- anyone building a day in Icod de los Vinos and wants a meaningful, on-topic stop
It’s also good if you don’t want to commit to a long guided program. You can go at your own speed, and the visit is designed to fit into a one-day plan.
Should You Book Casa del Plátano in Icod de los Vinos?
I’d book this ticket if you want more than a photo stop. For the money, you’re getting an on-site banana education tied to a real plantation tour, plus the included banana taste. The historic hacienda setting makes the learning feel like it belongs there.
Skip it only if you strongly need explanations in a language other than English or Spanish, or if you prefer fully guided storytelling with no self-guided components. Otherwise, Casa del Plátano is a smart, low-cost way to understand why Tenerife and bananas belong together.
FAQ
What is included with the Casa del Plátano entry ticket?
The ticket includes entry to Casa del Plátano and a Canarian banana.
How long is the experience?
The ticket is valid for 1 day, and the visit is self-guided at your own pace.
Where is Casa del Plátano located?
It’s in Icod de los Vinos, Tenerife, Spain.
Is the visit self-guided?
Yes. It’s a self-guided visit with explanation panels in English and Spanish.
What languages are available?
The explanation panels are available in English and Spanish.
What time do I need to plan for last entry?
The last entry is at 18H30.
How much does it cost?
The price is $5 per person.
Can I buy food and gourmet products on-site?
Yes. You can purchase local gourmet products in the shop, but purchases are not included in the ticket price.
Is there a resident price for Canaries residents?
Canary resident price is available at the box office directly.



























