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The 20 hottest European beaches

Ah, summer looks like it's finally here. Escape to one of Europe’s finest expanses of sand, where the sun shines and sea shimmers

A family running on a beach in Spain - feeling smug at their savings (Maria Teijeiro)
A family running on a beach in Spain - feeling smug at their savings (Maria Teijeiro)

1. Brittany: Plage Conguel
At the southern tip of the Quiberon peninsula, far from Brittany’s crowds, lies Plage Conguel, a necklace of blonde sand surrounding a rocky point that, one day, like Quiberon itself, will succumb to the waves and become an island. With one side facing the Atlantic swells and the other overlooking sheltered Quiberon Bay, you can choose belle or sauvage, and at high tide the beach becomes a series of family-sized rocky coves, with views across to Belle-Ile.
Best for: Beachcombers, castle builders.
Details: Just across the road is the lively Camping le Conguel, where a high-season week starts at £685 for a family of four with Matthews Holidays (01483 284044, www.matthewsfrance.co.uk). Sail to Roscoff or St Malo with Brittany Ferries (0871 244 0744, www.brittanyferries.com).

2. Pyrenees: Lac de Mondély
Have you noticed how salty the sea is? Makes you sticky. It’s foul to swallow, too, which you can’t help doing because of the waves. And don’t get me started on wetbikes. Now swap the sea for a lake, and watch the picture change. Clear, fresh water, nothing but your own lazy backstroke to disturb the mirror-calm surface, stirringly wild surroundings and a seaside-standard sandy beach. We're talking about the superb, secluded Lac de Mondély. You can walk right round it in an hour or two on an enchanting path, creaking with crickets, a-flutter with butterflies; swim across the narrow middle in 10 minutes, feeling the warm and cool currents swirling silkily around your knees; or lie back with the smattering of sunbathers on the 150yd strip of soft sand and wonder why everyone else rushes off to that big ocean thing. It’s a mystery.
Best for: Nature-lovers, crowd-haters, toddlers (lovely warm shallows to splash in).
Details: No hotels hereabouts (it’s wild — you can’t have it both ways). For a night or two, stay in charming little Foix, 15 miles to the southeast: Hôtel Lons (00 33 5 34 09 28 00, www.hotel-lons-foix.com) is a decent three-star, with doubles from £48. For longer, get a gîte (gites-de-france.com). Fly to Carcassonne with Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com).

3. Languedoc: Collioure
So seductive is tiny, cobbled Collioure and its small, rocky bay, history claims it cured Matisse of artist’s block — after he visited in 1905, his colour schemes rocked up a notch and his work was never the same again. Now you can’t move for chic art galleries selling his prints and rickety postcard racks rammed with his renditions of the seaside town. Avoid August, when Collioure is mobbed by the French; June and September are quieter, and it’s still hot. Classy, too, with seafood restaurants on the hills overlooking the bay, and small waterfront hotels with ladders to take guests right into the clear water.
Best for: Highbrow holidaymakers.
Details: Casa Pairal is a family townhouse within walking distance of the bay (00 33 4 68 82 05 81, hotel-casa-pairal.com; doubles from £79). Collioure is equidistant from Girona and Carcassonne airports, which are both served by Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com).

4. Provence: Piemanson beach, Camargue
The road to Piemanson snakes through marshland, around lagoons and saltpans, to what seems the isolated edge of the known world, and in summer, a strange and motley crew follows it: travellers and fringe artists, French working families, naturists and others with needs not answered by hotel half-board. Before the dunes, the sands teem with camping cars, caravans and fast-built shacks. It’s a cross between a rock festival and the Final Frontier holiday camp, all dwarfed by the vastness of the elements. The breeze of freedom round bathers and barbecues blows away concerns about facilities (none) and legality. Or it did. Now distant authorities are threatening to clear out any wild campers from 2011, in the interests of eco-neatness. The beach will remain grandiose, but it could be the last year for Europe’s freest seaside holidays.
Best for: The unkempt, convivial and mildly lawless.
Details: To get into the spirit, wild-camp it. If that’s really not you, half an hour away in Sambuc is Mas de Peint (00 33 4 90 97 20 62, www.masdepeint.com), an elegant farmstead with all the style, facilities and comfort lacking on the beach. Doubles start at £209. Fly to Nîmes with Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com).

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5. Provence: Notre Dame, Ile de Porquerolles
“The French Riviera is concreted over. It’s spoilt.” Such is sophisticated wisdom. You can ponder these words at Notre Dame as you twiddle your toes in water so clear, you can see every twiddle. Before you, a yacht or two bobs about. The beach makes a pretty much perfect arc of perhaps a mile. Pine trees come down the rocks to stop at the edge of the fine sand. There is neither beach bar nor building — if you want a beer or people, they are two miles by foot, back along the track in the port/village. Concrete France lies in another dimension, 20 minutes away by ferry. Twiddle some more, and reach the inescapable conclusion: the only thing that’s spoilt around here is you.
Best for: Barefoot dreamers, recovering cynics.
Details: The sunny, practical Villa Sainte Anne (00 33 4 98 04 63 00, www.sainteanne.com), on the main square of the village, has doubles from £150, half-board. Fly to Toulon-Hyères with Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com).

6. Corsica: Palombaggia
The TV advert for this beach might say: “There’s clear, then there’s Palombaggia clear.” The water here puts the Seychelles to shame. What a backdrop, too: pine forests right up to the sand, craggy rocks like natural piers into the sea, sandy cafes serving moules and vin blanc for lunch. As with any French paradise, consider August off limits — better to go in late summer, as Corsica stays warmer for longer — but limited parking among the pine trees means that some parts of the beach are quiet even in high season. Take your camera: if you cut out the French cafes, people will think you went to the Maldives on your holidays.
Best for: Those still saving to get to the Indian Ocean.
Details: The only hotel within spitting distance of the sea is the gorgeous, farmhouse-style Palombaggia (00 33 4 95 70 03 65, palombaggia.fr), where doubles start at £97. Thomsonfly has seasonal flights to Figari, the island’s most southerly airport (0871 231 4787, thomsonfly.com).

7. Costa Brava: Cala d’Aiguafreda
Few find this jewel, buried at the bottom of a steep single-track lane just north of Begur. The name comes from the sparkling freshwater stream that flows into the sea here, and the tactic is to ignore the tiny armpit of grit that passes for a beach and find a spot on the flat, sun-warmed rocks that embrace the north side of the inlet. From here, after placing your bottle of rosé to cool in a shaded rock pool, you can dive into deep blue waters as still and clear as a glass paperweight before drying off in the resin-scented shade where pine forest meets sea.
Best for: Sand-hating lovers.
Details: Hidden in the trees, but mere feet from the water’s edge, is the romantic Hostal Sa Rascassa (00 34 972 622845, www.hostalsarascassa.com), with just five rooms, a candlelit open-air restaurant and a celebrated Wednesday-night music club. Doubles start at £68 — ask for room 2. The nearest airport is Girona, served by Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com).

8. Costa Verde: La Concha, San Sebastian
Boisterous but beautiful, Victorian La Concha is the Basque country’s (rather more sophisticated) answer to Eastbourne. Elderly Spaniards walk back and forth in the surf while young kids play football on the sand, then eat ice cream with the hunger of POWs. There’s plenty of room for everybody: the caramel-coloured strip of sand is as wide as a runway and nearly half a mile long, or you can walk the paseo alongside mahogany-skinned joggers and inline skaters. It’s a buzzing beachside scene, but with a classic terraced backdrop — like Dickens in the sun. All this in a small town that also happens to have the very best food in Spain (15 Michelin stars shared between eight different restaurants).
Best for: Foodies, traditionalists.
Details: The traditional but unfusty Hotel Niza is right on the front (00 34 943 426663, hotelniza.com), with doubles from £82. EasyJet (easyjet.com) flies to Bilbao; San Sebastian is a 45-minute drive away.

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9. Balearics: Las Salinas, Ibiza
All sand dunes and surf, located in a nature reserve, this mile-long, bow-shaped stretch of beach has long been a favourite with the island’s hipper crowd. From the yachty-totty mooring up for lunch at the Jockey Club to the club dancers who descend in the afternoons to top up their tans, this is the place for people-watching. On arrival, turn left and keep walking until you reach Sa Trinxa. Owned by an Ibiza stalwart, Jon Sa Trinxa, — who is often to be found providing the hazy soundtrack, too — it’s the perfect place for a jug of sangria and a dance in the sand, while a smattering of “fashion nudists” (it’s all about the piercings) makes for an adults-only atmosphere.
Best for: Fashionistas, hippies, hedonists.
Details: The recently renovated Boutique Hostal Salinas (00 34 971 308899, www.hostalsalinas.com) is 10 minutes’ amble away and has doubles from £90 in winter, rising to £196 in peak season. Airlines flying to Ibiza include EasyJet (easyjet.com) and Monarch (0871 940 5040, flymonarch.com).

10. Balearics: Platja Illetes, Formentera
A test of resolve, this one: the further you can carry your coolbox, the greater the rewards, because Illetes spit just gets quieter and quieter. To be fair, no beach on Formentera is busy — the Balearic island makes Shetland look congested — but Illetes’s northerly coves are particularly peaceful, as there are no facilities beyond the final cafe and clothing becomes optional. That doesn’t mean it’s only the sandals-and-sandwiches brigade here. There’s a good mix of young families, bikinied beauties and cossieless locals. Clothed or not, they all come for the sandy nooks, lagoon-still sea and unpretentious atmosphere.
Best for: Grown-up sun worshippers, little splashers.
Details: You can’t stay on Illetes. The nearest town is La Sabina, and the Apartamentos Sabina Playa (00 34 914 413 091, apartamentossabinaplaya.com; open May to October) has studios from £43 a night. Fly to Ibiza (as above), then take one of the frequent ferries from Ibiza Town (30 minutes, £32 return).

11. Capri: Blue Grotto
The coastline of Capri is backed by high cliffs and studded with pebbly coves, rocky ledges and sea caves, as befits the legendary home of the Sirens. The most famous cove is the Blue Grotto, which provides a route into a deep cave and lagoon where sunlight reflected through the crystal water casts an ethereal, mesmerising glow. You can join a boat trip from Anacapri or rent your own rowboat, but the adventurous swim in, late in the day, after everyone else has left. Magical.
Best for: Sirens and romantics.
Details: The individually styled Villa Eva (00 39 081 837 1549, www.villaeva.com; doubles from £80) is surrounded by gardens and allows you to experience the glitz of Capri without the price tag. Breakfast is served by the grand-piano-shaped pool, and turreted walls provide views through to the pine-forested headland. Flying to Naples with British Airways (0844 493 0787, ba.com) or EasyJet (easyjet.com), then take the half-hour ferry (£28 return; snav.it).

12. Sardinia: Cala Luna
There’s an argument that you should hike to Cala Luna. True, it’s nearly four miles, in baking sun, and you might lose focus and fall off a 300ft cliff, especially if you go gaga over the died-and-gone-to-heaven views. But what’s the point of hearing about discovering a roadless cove like this, then hopping on a tourist boat to get there? The beach is in sleepy eastern Sardinia, and it’s a half-mile crescent of spotless sand strung with pink oleander and pitted with romantic grottoes. Cars conk out at Cala Fuili, four miles north — hence that panoramic (if mildly precarious) hike. The boat? Oh, all right, then: it glides down daily in summer from Cala Gonone, the nearest resort (from £12 return).
Best for: Climbers, cavemen, castaways.
Details: Jutting out from the clifftop above Cala Gonone, Hotel l’Oasi (00 39 078 493111, www.loasihotel.it) serves up fab family-cooked Sardinian feasts and has sea-view doubles from £74, B&B, in June. The nearest airport is Olbia, served by Jet2 (0871 226 1737, jet2.com) and EasyJet (easyjet.com).

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13. Croatia: Bonj ‘Les Bains’, Hvar
This supercool beach club (sunbeds £24pp, cabanas from £31pp) on Croatia’s trendiest island is about scene, rather than sand — you step straight from its graceful bathing deck into the turquoise waters of Amfora Bay. The pure-white 1930s colonnade, shaded by scented pine stands, was built so the jet set had somewhere to strut while soaking up the stunning views of the surrounding Adriatic isles. These days, Kevin Spacey and Giorgio Armani help ensure that the vibe remains ultra-glam. Sunbathe, swim, book a seafront massage or nibble sushi on the muslin-draped teak terrace. It’s like a tiny slice of St Tropez without the sleaze.
Best for: Stars, star-spotters.
Details: The sleek, sophisticated Adriana (00 385 21 750200, suncanihvar.com), a pleasant stroll away from the beach club, has doubles from £180, B&B. The most convenient airport is Split: airlines flying there include Jet2 (0871 226 1737, jet2.com) and EasyJet (easyjet.com). Hvar is a two-hour, £4 ferry ride (www.jadrolinija.hr).

14. Greece: Panormos, Mykonos
Of course, everybody comes to Mykonos for the action — the sunset hour at Little Venice, when swollen crowds lift G&Ts in unison, and the mad nightly carousing. Trouble is, when you need to recuperate next day, the most popular (southern) beaches can be an awful squeeze. Bohemian Panormos, on the northern coast, is relatively overlooked (possibly because it’s a £9 cab ride from town), but it’s a winner: a breezy sweep the colour of Wall’s vanilla ice cream, its dunes discreetly dotted with nudes. Add a hippie-chic shack, the Panormos Beach Bar (www.panormosbeach.gr), and a few Frisbees, and you could be here all summer.
Best for: Club casualties, claustrophobes.
Details: Stacked on the western headland, the Cycladic-white and stone Club Albatross (00 30 22890 25130, www.albatros-mykonos.com) has doubles from £58. Fly to Mykonos with EasyJet (easyjet.com).

15. Greece: Papafrangas Cove, Milos
Milos is one of the least known Cyclades islands, yet it has some of the chain’s most stunning beaches and snorkelling locations. It’s a working island, geologically diverse, with weird rock formations and hot springs galore, and the coastline is indented with secret lagoons, grottoes and crystal-clear fjords. At Papafragas, a narrow strip of sand leads down to an aquatic chasm beneath high white cliffs. Swim through the calcite-encrusted sea caves or, if you’re feeling daring, climb up and practise jumps and dives from the giant rock archway above. Smooth, white rock ledges are perfect for sunbathing afterwards.
Best for: Wild swimmers, wilder jumpers.
Details: The very friendly Andreas (00 30 22870 41262, www.andreas-rooms.gr) has triple studios for £40, with stunning views and a boat for trips to other islands. Fly to Santorini with EasyJet (easyjet.com), then catch the high-speed ferry to Milos (two hours, £30 return; www.greece-ferries.com).

16. Cyprus: Polis
If you want to kick back, chill out and detox without paying a fortune, this is the perfect spot. Fringed with eucalyptus trees that come down to the (pebbled) shore, it is about a mile from Polis town and has a ramshackle taverna serving decent food and beer, a spotless ablutions block and, er, that’s it. Most people camp: Swiss Family Robinsons let the kids run among the trees (mercifully free of climbing frames and swings); stranded hippies potter among the rocks. Avoid high season (it becomes a local teenage party spot) and visit in September and October, when you’ll be able to enjoy it at its sparsely populated, charmingly alternative best.
Best for: Detoxing on a shoestring.
Details: The Polis camp site is open from May to October (00 357 268 15080) and costs £4pp per night. There are several hotels in Polis town and Lachi, a nearby fishing village. Fly to Paphos with BA (0844 493 0787, ba.com), EasyJet (easyjet.com) or Thomas Cook (thomascook.com).

17. Madeira: Porto Santo
It’s simple. The southern shore of this tiny island is five miles of pure gold. You walk, slowly, with sand between your toes, getting tanned by the strong southern sun and cooled by the gentle breeze from the Atlantic. About 400 miles to the east, beyond blue waters warmed by the Gulf Stream, is Casablanca. A few miles to the southwest, and more accessible, is Madeira. There’s a museum dedicated to Christopher Columbus; if you think that sounds interesting, think again. The beach is the island’s only selling point — but that’s more than enough.
Best for: Two hand-in-hand romantics.
Details: The brash five-star Pestana Porto Santo Beach Resort (00 351 291 144 000, pestana-porto-santo.com), right on the sand, has doubles from £65, B&B. You can fly via Funchal, Madeira’s capital, to Porto Santo with TAP (020 87591166, flytap.com); or fly to Funchal with EasyJet (easyjet.com) or Jet2 (jet2.com), then take the two-hour ferry (£46 return; www.portosantoline.pt).

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18. Lithuania: Palanga
This is a cracking little resort town with a white, sandy beach, pine forests, sand dunes and fizzing nightlife. There are dozens of bars and restaurants along pedestrianised Basanaviciaus Street, everyone speaks English, and it’s as cheap as you’ll find in Europe. Behind the beach are the dune-side Botanical Gardens and a terrific amber museum, while the big day out is a drive down the Curonian Spit, a fragile frond of sand dunes, forests and villages. Head here between mid-June and mid-September, when temperatures are in the high twenties.
Best for: A beach party with a difference.
Details: Stay at the 46-room Palanga Hotel (00 370 8460 41414, www.palangahotel.lt; doubles from £102, B&B, in summer), a Scandinavian designer-style place surrounded by pine trees. With luck, direct flights to Palanga will be reinstated; until then, Ryanair (0871 246 0000, ryanair.com) flies to Kaunas, 150 miles away.

19. Germany: Sylt
Like the Swiss navy, the German Riviera sounds a bit of a joke, yet here it is, and it’s great. Sylt, a sandbar in the North Sea, is remote — so far north it’s almost more Danish than Deutsch — but the cloud-dappled skies, rearing cliffs, floury sands and Michelin-starred cooking have seduced the likes of Claudia Schiffer and Boris Becker. The supermodel-good-looking stretch is below the giant Uwe Dune, at Sturmhaube/Rotes Kliff — here, Sylt’s signature basket chairs (Strandkörber) come with holders for champagne glasses. Swim, stroll in the surf, collect shells, and end up at La Grande Plage (grande-plage.de) around sunset for foaming pils and fries.
Best for: Nature-lovers, gourmands.
Details: Walter’s Hof (00 49 4651 98960, www.walters-hof.de) has a gourmet restaurant, sea views towards Sturmhaube/Rotes Kliff and one-room apartments for two from £254. Air Berlin (0871 500 0737, airberlin.com) flies to Sylt via Dusseldorf.

20. Holland: Terschelling dunes, Frisian Islands
The Frisians are little more than a string of sand bars along the northern coast of Holland. On Terschelling, 20 miles of hourglass-fine sand and marram grass dunes offer a surprising sense of wilderness for such a densely populated country. Huge skies, low-tide mudflats and biblical sunsets will all return you to your senses, while a network of mountain-bike tracks makes getting to the remotest beaches easy, even at the height of summer, when all-night beach parties and wild camping make this island popular with Holland’s hippie youngsters.
Best for: Cyclists, nudists, party freaks.
Details: Ocean views abound at the Terschelling Stayokay Hostel (00 31 562 442338, www.stayokay.com/terschelling), about half a mile from town and right on the dunes, with dorm beds from £20pp. There’s a beach bar, too. Take the train to Amsterdam through Eurostar (0843 218 6186, eurostar.com), then change for Harlingen, where a regular ferry crosses to Terschelling in two hours (£32 return; www.doeksen.nl).

By Stephen Bleach, Katie Bowman, Vincent Crump, Susan d’Arcy, Joseph Dunn, Richard Green, Chris Haslam, Anthony Peregrine, Nick Redman, Daniel Start, Nigel Summerley and Ruby Warrington