
From secluded bays to family-friendly shores, discover the Costa Dorada's bucket-list beaches
What's more, with Jet2holidays flying to the Costa Dorada from 12 UK airports and a range of two to five-star accommodation, it's easy to get your beach break sorted. Jet2holidays is always giving you more, to help make planning and booking as smooth as possible. That goes for the PayPal Pay in 3 interest-free payments** option, 22kg baggage and 10kg hand luggage, and return transfers† that are included. Look out for Free Child Places***, and infants under two go free‡.
Here we pick out just some of the region's gorgeous shores to delve into…
Relax on the stunning sands of la Pineda Platja, in Vila-seca
In one of the most picturesque and lively parts of Costa Dorada sits this almost two-and-a-half mile stretch of beach, lined with palms as well as the famous pine trees that give the area its name. It's fab for everything from gentle strolls and paddles to more active games of volleyball, sand football and tennis. Other activities on offer include everything from shoreside Zumba classes to yoga, meditation and mindfulness sessions. The slow slope of sand into sparkling waters makes it ideal for families with young children, while for the real water babies, the exhilarating Aquopolis waterpark is only a short walk from the beach. With plenty of bars, restaurants, toilets and shower facilities lining the pretty promenade, there's no reason not to stay all day.
Explore the calm coastline of Cambrils
With over five miles of Blue Flag beaches, all with gentle waters, Cambrils makes an excellent family-friendly break. Great for water sports such as kayaking, paddleboarding and sailing – especially at the pristine Platja del Cavet Beach, where the Escola Nàutica water sports centre offers windsurfing lessons.
For something more laidback, head to Platja de la Llosa for a series of smaller, but equally beautiful, beaches and coves. Then why not potter around the picturesque, cobbled alleyways of the old town to sample delicious local dishes? While you're in the area, take the opportunity to visit neighbouring Platja de la Pixerota in Mont-roig on the southern border of Cambrils, to enjoy breathtaking views out to the Gulf of Sant Jordi and learn about the fascinating Spanish Civil War bunkers situated in the middle of the beach.
Enjoy family-friendly fun in Salou
As the tourist capital of the Costa Dorada and the epicentre of amusement and entertainment, Salou's beaches are home to good times for kids and adults alike. And being so close to PortAventura World (one of Europe's largest theme parks) means double the fun, when so many of Jet2holidays ' Experience More hotels include park entry, meaning staying and playing is on the cards. Don't miss the stunning Llevant Beach, dotted with colourful sunloungers and umbrellas, where the sea is filled with kayaks and jet skis. In between sunbathing and water sports, you can also enjoy wandering along its pretty promenade of shops, restaurants and bars. For something a little more secluded, take the coastal path to the sand dunes, pine trees and shallow crystalline waters of Platja Llarga, which is great for snorkelling.
This charming beach town is as much a magnet to those looking for lazy beach days as it is for history lovers. A medieval castle forms the backdrop to a swathe of fine golden sand at Platja d'Altafulla, and it's a stone's throw from the famous Roman ruins at Tarragona. You can even borrow a book from the Bibliomar beach library, which also organises workshops and storytelling, or join a yoga or Pilates class on the sands.
Walk down to neighbouring Tamarit Beach, which has its own castle dating back to the 11th century, as well as some friendly beach bars for a cheeky cocktail. Also in the area is family-friendly Coma-ruga Beach in El Vendrell. Its clear waters, palm-lined promenade of restaurants, bars and shops, and natural thermal springs, make for a balanced beach break.
The soft, sloping sands make Platja La Paella a super-safe option for families with children who love spending all day in the sea. As for water sports, there's a designated area for surfers, and a bespoke exit and entry point for jet skis. The nearby marina offers scuba diving, snorkelling, water skiing and boat trips. For those who prefer being on terra firma, there are kids' playgrounds, and a sports zone with four volleyball courts and three beach football pitches, often hosting championships. In summer, sports camps and gymnastics sessions are held here.
Discover nature and seclusion at Platja de l'Arenal in l'Hospitalet de l'Infant
One of the most unique beaches in the Costa Dorada, the sugar-like sands and translucent waters of l'Arenal are split into two parts. There's the northern section with its promenade and the Base Nautica water sports resort, which offers dinghy sailing, windsurfing and kayaking. Then there's the southern part, which can only be accessed via a listed Blue Trail footpath. Here you can enjoy magnificent dunes, marshlands and white pine woodlands around a more tranquil shore.
With Jet2holidays, you can book your trip to the Costa Dorada with lots of package perks thrown in to make getting away even easier. From a low £60 per person deposit* to PayPal Pay in 3 interest-free payments**, 22kg baggage and 10kg hand luggage per person to return transfers†, it's all included. Families can make the most of Free Child Places*** while infants under two go free‡. And with flights included and the choice of two to five-star hotels, Jet2holidays is always giving you more. For more Costa Dorada travel inspiration, and to find and book your ultimate holiday, visit Jet2holidays. Plus, right now, myJet2 members can save £100 per person§ in The Big Jet2 Price Drop (correct at original publish date).
*On bookings made ten weeks or more before departure. Full payment required by balance due date. **Spread the cost over three interest-free payments. Available when booked online, for holidays under £2,000, departing within ten weeks. ***One free child place per two paying passengers. Subject to availability. T&Cs apply, please see www.jet2holidays.com/promotions#FCP2025 for further details. †Unless otherwise stated. ‡Applicable for all infants under the age of two years on the date of return. Infants are not entitled to a flight seat (they must be seated with a parent or guardian) or a 22kg baggage allowance. §£100 per person off holidays for myJet2 members departing until 15 November 2026. myJet2 members will need to be logged into their account at the time of booking for the discount to automatically apply. Book online, via our app, through our call centre or with your travel agent. Please note the discount is not applied to children travelling on a free child place. Terms and conditions apply, please see for details.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Eva Longoria, 50, sizzles in barely-there bikini and sheer romper as she enjoys family getaway in Spain
Eva Longoria put on a sizzling display in a plunging ensemble as she enjoyed a day out in Marbella, Spain with her family. The 50-year-old Desperate Housewives alum - who recently went bra-free during a stroll - was joined by her husband Jose Baston and their son Santiago, seven, as they soaked up the warm sunshine. The actress showed off her toned legs wearing a sheer white romper that had a low plunging neckline on the front. Underneath, the mom-of-one sported a skimpy white bikini top as well as matching bottoms. Eva slipped into a pair of open-toed sandals and accessorized the outfit with a pair of dangly earrings as well as a gold necklace with a cross-shaped pendant on the front. The Hollywood star additionally carried a wicker purse over her left shoulder while a stylish hat was placed on top of her brunette locks that flowed down in light waves. Eva Longoria, 50, put on a sizzling display in a plunging ensemble as she enjoyed a day out in Marbella, Spain with her family The Desperate Housewives alum was joined by her husband Jose Baston and their son Santiago, seven, as they soaked up the warm sunshine Eva - who has been spending most of the summer along the Spanish coast - enjoyed a walk outdoors with her loved ones. At one point, the Land Of Women star flashed a cheerful smile during the lighthearted excursion. She also indulged in a bit of shopping as she visited a nearby vendors and picked up a few items. The star has been spending her time abroad at homes in both Mexico and Spain following Trump's U.S. presidential win late last year. 'I had my whole adult life here,' Eva told Marie Claire about living in California, before opening up about how it has changed over the years. 'Whether it's the homelessness or the taxes, not that I want to s**t on California - it just feels like this chapter in my life is done now.' She continued, 'I'm privileged. I get to escape and go somewhere. Most Americans aren't so lucky. They're going to be stuck in this dystopian country, and my anxiety and sadness is for them.' During her recent time in Spain, the beauty was seen getting her steps in during a power walk in Marbella last week and also glammed up for the Global Gift Gala at Hotel Don Pepe Gran Meliá. The actress showed off her toned legs wearing a sheer white romper that had a low plunging neckline on the front Eva slipped into a pair of open-toed sandals and accessorized the outfit with a pair of dangly earrings as well as a gold necklace with a cross-shaped pendant on the front The Hollywood star additionally carried a wicker purse over her left shoulder while a stylish hat was placed on top of her brunette locks that flowed down in light waves Eva - who has been spending most of the summer along the Spanish coast - enjoyed a walk outdoors with her loved ones She also indulged in a bit of shopping as she visited a nearby vendors and picked up a few items The star has been spending her time abroad at her homes in both Mexico and Spain following Trump's U.S. presidential win late last year She also flaunted her summer-ready body in a fashionable bikini as she spent time by the water - five months after celebrating her 50th birthday in March. While talking to People in April, Eva opened up about the milestone and gushed, 'I'm having a moment. 'My skin's having a moment, I feel like my eyebrows are having a moment, I feel the healthiest I've ever been - it feels amazing.' The actress further reflected on how she has been focusing on her heath and explained, 'I travel, I exercise, I'm running up and down with my 6-year-old.' Eva and husband Jose welcomed their son Santiago in 2018 - who officially turned seven-years-old in June. 'I want to be able to do those things as long as I can. Your life when you're young should be about saying yes to everything. Now that I'm 50, it's about saying no and curating what I want my life to look like.' When it comes to fitness and self-care, the star expressed to Marie Claire that she often does cold plunges, meditation, journaling and also strength-training. 'I wake up with the sun; I'm doing the grounding; I have an Oura ring to track deep sleep; I'm taking magnesium and other supplements.' She continued, 'I'm privileged. I get to escape and go somewhere. Most Americans aren't so lucky. They're going to be stuck in this dystopian country, and my anxiety and sadness is for them' Eva is seen looking at toys as she stopped by one of the many vendors along the Spanish coast this week While talking to People in April, Eva opened up about the milestone and gushed, 'I'm having a moment' 'I want to be able to do those things as long as I can. Your life when you're young should be about saying yes to everything. Now that I'm 50, it's about saying no and curating what I want my life to look like,' the actress explained When it comes to fitness and self-care, the star expressed to Marie Claire that she often does cold plunges, meditation, journaling and also strength-training She continued, 'I'm doing everything. Not because I don't want to age but because I want to age' She continued, 'I'm doing everything. Not because I don't want to age but because I want to age.' While Eva has been spending her time abroad with her family, the star has been keeping busy in front of the camera as well. The beauty recently appeared in the comedic film Alexander And The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip which was released on Disney+ back in March. She starred alongside other cast members such as Jesse Garcia, Paulina Chavez, Cheech Marin and Thom Nemer. And in April, her CNN docuseries Eva Longoria: Searching For Spain premiered and concluded in June following eight episodes. Throughout the series, the actress explored a number of cities in the country including Madrid, Barcelona, Marbella, Galicia and San Sebastian. Eva and husband Jose welcomed their son Santiago in 2018 - who officially turned seven-years-old in June; the actress seen with her son in 2024 in Abu Dhabi And in April, her CNN docuseries Eva Longoria: Searching For Spain premiered and concluded in June following eight episodes Eva expressed in a statement, per CNN: 'Spain's rich culture, passionate people and bold and diverse cuisines have captivated me as long as I can remember, especially knowing that one of my Mexican-American ancestors has deep roots in this remarkable country. 'The opportunity to immerse myself in Spain's many regions, to discover its fascinating history, to indulge in its dynamic culinary traditions and innovations has been nothing short of exhilarating. 'I am so excited to finally share this incredible journey with the world!' Eva is set to travel to France for the upcoming season of Searching For - which will air next year in 2026.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
The Med ‘Isle of Beauty' where a week costs under £500 this summer
Nicknamed the Isle of Beauty, Corsica's dramatic cliffs, hilltop villages and more than 600 miles of coastline attract well-heeled French families, luxury-loving couples and glamorous yachties. Yet this French island southeast of the Côte d'Azur is relatively overlooked by British visitors who, deterred by sky-high summer prices, miss out on the island's turquoise coves, historic citadels and mountains crisscrossed by hiking trails. However, go at the very end of August and those with late-start school terms can grab a great deal on a family holiday. Seven nights' room only at Le Bella Vista, Hôtel Suites & Maisons costs £478pp for four with Thomas Cook, including Gatwick flights with easyJet departing on August 28 — that's less than half the price of the same package leaving four days earlier. Allowance for a small under-seat bag is included, or check in a 15kg case for an additional £98 return. Breakfast for the week can be added for £60pp. The hotel is a two-hour drive north of Figari airport, though taxis are expensive, so you're better off renting a car for the week for about £288 ( The three-star hotel is a short drive from the seafront resort of Porticcio, on the west coast of the island, overlooking the Bay of Ajaccio. The simply decorated duplex apartments sleeping four have sea views, all-white kitchens, a sofa bed for the kids, a mezzanine level with a double bed, and whitewashed exposed beams. There is a seasonal outdoor pool with a café, a bistro serving French-Asian fusion dishes and a fine-dining restaurant, Le Charlie, which earned a Michelin star this year, six months after opening (five courses for £82; Porticcio beach, a ten-minute walk away, is sandy and has ice-cream parlours, cafés and plenty of water sports, including guided kayaking tours of the Corsican coastline (£38; Jet Sensations offers jet ski rental (£43 for 15 minutes) or quad bikes for exploring inland (£82 for an hour; From the beach it's easy to jump on one of the regular 20-minute ferries to Ajaccio, the island capital (£7 return; The city is best known for being the birthplace of Napoleon Bonaparte and has a museum in his former family home (£6; After visiting it wander Ajaccio's smart, pastel-coloured waterfront, upmarket boutiques and picturesque old town with its lavish 16th-century cathedral, where Napoleon was baptised. For a more active day out try Mare e Monti Sud, a 50-mile hiking trail with panoramic sea views that begins near the hotel. Continue south to visit the red-roofed hilltop town of Sartène, which was attacked by pirates in the 16th century and is home to the Corsican Archaeology Museum, tracing the island's history to the Bronze Age (£3; Call in at the Domaine Fiumicicoli estate on the way back to stock up on fruity AOC-designated red wine made with nielluccio and sciaccarello grapes ( • 26 of the best things to do in Corsica • Return Gatwick-Figari flights, departing on August 28• Under-seat baggage allowance• Seven nights' room only at Bella Vista, Hôtel Suites & Maisons ( This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue Feeling flush? If you're inspired to visit Corsica and have more to spend, try one of these… The three-star Golfe Hôtel is on the outskirts of Porto-Vecchio, a historic town on the southeastern coast of Corsica with a 16th-century citadel, trendy marina and beautiful beaches. The quiet hotel is in a Mediterranean villa with a palm-tree-lined outdoor pool, a small fitness room with infrared sauna and a library stocked with board games. A café serves simple dishes and ice cream. Comfortable rooms are decorated in shades of chocolate brown, caramel and pops of ocean blue, and all have sleek wooden floors, contemporary furniture and views of the city or gardens. Details Seven nights' B&B from £1,113pp, including flights and private transfers, departing on August 28 ( • 14 of the best hotels in Corsica The four-star Corsican bolt hole L'A Cheda is tucked away in organic gardens and has 18 rooms in traditional stone buildings. Each is decorated using natural wood and traditional limestone plaster, and has a wooden deck overlooking the greenery. There is a heated outdoor pool with a Finnish sauna, a wellness centre for massages and a bar serving cocktails made with local ingredients. The hotel's acclaimed glass-walled restaurant serves fine-dining Corsican cuisine and hosts jazz brunches, tapas and music evenings and cooking classes. A free shuttle bus runs twice daily to nearby Bonifacio, with its walled citadel, restaurants and lively Seven nights' B&B from £1,965pp, including flights and car hire, departing on August 28 (


Times
6 hours ago
- Times
The charming town in Andalusia that deserves more attention
It's hard to set foot in the Plaza de España in Vejer de la Frontera without a sense of expectation. Allow me to draw back the curtain. Greeting you at the heart of the plaza is an ornamental fountain — tiles, finials, lanterns, the lot — fed by four ceramic frogs. Around it, seats with more colourful tiling and wrought-iron backs are shaded by tall, slender palms. There's chatter from café customers and optimistic sparrows, orange trees and bougainvillea adding fragrance and colour, and a sweep of cobbles leading round past the whitewashed buildings in front of the town hall and up a ramp to a medieval archway. In other words, it is a perfect stage set, and the fact I have yet to witness any Vejeriegos breaking into a spontaneous chorus or serenading the crowd from a balcony must only, I feel sure, be down to bad timing on my part. But then Vejer, near the Atlantic southwestern coast of Spain, does have a habit of playing tricks with visitors' expectations. When a 24-year-old James Stuart rolled into this hilltop Andalusian town in 1980 in his VW Beetle, he was hoping only for a cheap base for himself and his surfboard, handy for the Costa de la Luz breakers a few miles away. Bread and milk were still delivered by donkey then and the Moorish old town was becoming run-down and abandoned as residents moved into newer houses. Stuart found an old building on the plaza that had been on the market for four years and snapped it up for £1,000. Forty-five years on that old building is the heart of La Casa del Califa, one of five hotels he owns in Vejer and nearby, along with a local holiday-home rental service, five restaurants and a hammam — all kept busy by the steady stream of visitors here for the charms of a place that he helped to put on the map. Padstow has Rick Stein; Vejer has James Stuart. Well, sort of. As empire-building goes it's been more organic than strategic. 'It became a lifelong project without that being the plan,' he says. 'Now I can't leave it. I can't sell it — it's my life.' After Stuart moved in, he worked as a guide, taking visitors on bicycle tours of this lesser-known region, before turning his home into a B&B. He managed to buy adjoining properties — some in ruins — and eventually, in 2001, transformed the collection of medieval buildings into the 21-room Casa del Califa, which soon earned its reputation as one of Andalusia's most charming boutique hotels. Two of its sister properties are neighbours: the quieter eight-room Las Palmeras opened in 2015, the only hotel in town with a swimming pool; the swisher Plaza 18 opened its six 19th-century rooms in 2020. Like a patient older sibling, La Casa del Califa has had to wait for Stuart's full attention, and it finally came last year, in the form of a top-to-toe makeover, its first in 25 years. 'I was never able to invest a lot — the hotel grew little by little — so it became a bit of a jumble,' Stuart says. 'Now we've tried to refine it, making everything more sumptuous, more cohesive.' That's easier said than done in a hotel made up of buildings from the 10th to the 16th centuries; it takes me a few days and a few wrong turns to make sense of the narrow staircases, connecting hallways, surprising courtyards and ancient archways. It's hotel design by way of MC Escher and Lewis Carroll. You think you've entered at the ground floor but, because Vejer stands on a hill, much of the hotel is downstairs — apart from the rooms that are upstairs, of course. 'The hardest thing has been the plumbing,' Stuart says. There are bedrooms in what were once stables, and restaurant tables in former water cisterns and grain silos. 'I've never changed the volume of the spaces, just adapted them.' • The easy way to see Andalusia's beautiful, history-packed villages It's his interior designer wife, Ellie Cormie, who can take credit for the updated decor. Gone are the desks and harder surfaces; in their place are linens, velvets and brocades draped over easy chairs, antique wall hangings and headboards. The strong Moroccan influence remains, especially in the fittings and artwork — unsurprising given that Morocco lies just across the Strait of Gibraltar. It is also evident in the popular Jardin del Califa restaurant, with its menu of pastilla pie and rice-and-beef maqluba, patio seating and new hanging gardens. But Africa and the Levant are well represented too, in photos, rugs and artefacts collected by Stuart's father during his time in Botswana, Syria and beyond. 'The caliphate of Damascus was the original one that sent tribes along the North African coastline to reach here,' Stuart says. Hence the hotel name. Among the antiques and saturated colours are paler fabrics, exposed stone walls and fun, fronded lampshades. In the Africa suite under the eaves — which I share with my husband and son (it was once Stuart's family apartment) — there's an old steamer trunk, bentwood armchairs upholstered with patterned hide, large rugs on the terracotta floor and framed black-and-white portraits of African people. Through the windows on one side we catch wafts of conversation, smoke and the tinkling fountains of Plaza de España; on the other side we can see all the way to Africa, the Atlas mountains shimmering in the distance. • The 25 coolest hotels in Andalusia Alongside its lovely new interiors, what Casa del Califa has always had is phenomenal views. Stuart's favourite room is No 12, a relatively modest double with a tasselled canopy over the bed, lots of windows and direct access to one of the hotel's panoramic terraces. You might think that a hilltop town would have views coming out its ears, but Moorish settlements like this were built more for protection from enemies and the elements than for panoramas and public viewpoints. Step through La Casa del Califa's front door, however, and look out the other side — from bedrooms, terraces and especially the rooftop tea-and-cocktail joint La Teteria del Califa — and you realise that you've landed one of the best seats in the town's natural amphitheatre. Royal-icing-white houses step sedately down the slope, their rosy dawn blush becoming a shades-on dazzle by noon. Below the town are rice fields, marshes and grazing retinto cattle; beyond them the oak-draped Sierra de los Alcornocales, the sea and another continent. It's not unlike Santorini in terms of spectacle — just without the eye-watering prices and queues of selfie-seekers. Not that streetside Vejer is short on eye candy. We have the Plaza de España for starters, but for mains and pud we get stuck in to the delicious tangle of medieval streets — glimpses of leafy patios through open doors; little independent boutiques and galleries; café tables on ramparts or in the shadow of the mosque-turned-church; a 15th-century castle with its Moorish arches and tropical gardens. Sure, it's touristy, and Airbnb has ruffled feathers here as it has elsewhere, but most visitors are Spanish and the tourism seems well managed. There are parallels with hippyish Tarifa, southeast along the coast, and Chefchaouen, the Moroccan mountain town with which Vejer is twinned, but Vejer is the boho sophisticate of the three — the place for grown-up hippies. • Read our full guide to Spain Strolls and cerveza stops and low-key sightseeing make Vejer the sort of place where it's easy to lose track of time. But we make sure that we keep our appointment at the hammam. Moorish Vejer didn't have one, but Stuart opened his where one would have been, near the mosque, and Cormie has decorated it with artisan wood and brasswork from Marrakesh. In the pleasingly dark and echoey space we dunk our way round the pools — from tepid to hot, to soap and salt scrub in the steam room, to a gaspingly cold plunge under a star-punctured dome. A sweet mint tea for the road and we're drifting back out into the street, feeling as zen as only grown-up hippies can — especially ones who've dried their cossies in the possibly-not-artisan spinny machine. On a previous visit to Vejer, in October 2019, we ventured out of town for surf lessons at El Palmar, a 20-minute drive away, and to explore the installations by Turrell, Eliasson and Abramovic at Fundacion NMAC, the brilliant pine forest sculpture park ten minutes' drive away. We visited Barbate — not because it was Franco's favourite seaside spot, but for its El Campero restaurant, which does masterful things with every part of a tuna — I still remember the exquisite fatty gill. Next time maybe we'll bring our walking boots for the trails around Vejer or sign up for a foodie tour with Annie B — like Stuart, a Scot adopted by the town as one of its own. This time we combine history with swimming and sandcastles by the dunes on Cape Trafalgar. And one evening we join a walking tour of Vejer with Juan Jose Ruiz. It's in Spanish, but he gives us an English-language pamphlet and recaps for us along the way, so we get the gist. He leads the group through the old town, taking us to courtyards and corners we might otherwise have missed, regaling us with ancient tales of thieves, ghosts, star-crossed lovers and the mysterious cobijadas — emblematic women of the 16th-century town who showed just one eye from behind a black veil. But every walking tour needs a twist, and Ruiz's is that he performs his as a walking minstrel, complete with a hooded cape, little leather bootees and a guitar to accompany his sung stories. It's … unconventional, but somehow it works. So it's not strictly true that I've never seen a Vejeriego burst into song. And it's not just Plaza de España — all the town's a stage. This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue Liz Edwards was a guest of the Califa Group, which has B&B doubles at La Casa del Califa from £108, mains at El Jardin del Califa from £12 and at Califa Tapas from £9 and 90-minute hammam sessions from £35pp ( She was also a guest of Vueling, which flies to Malaga from £39 ( and Marimantas Vejer, which has walking tours from £10 ( Do you have a favourite town in Spain? Let us know in the comments