🇵🇹 Nazare, Portugal
Mar Bravo
📍 71, Praça Sousa Oliveira, Nazare, 2450-159
tu estancia — Mar Bravo
Pronóstico en vivo para sus fechas · qué hay en · Calidad del aire y polen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Nazare.
La propiedad — Mar Bravo
A sturdy three-star facing the Praia do Norte, Mar Bravo has the feel of a working surf lodge that knows its business. The lobby is tiled and practical, with a reception desk that will hand you a key without fuss, and the real draw is outside: a terrace with unimpeded views of the waves that made Nazaré famous. This place suits independent travellers and surfers who want a clean bed and a direct view of the Atlantic, not boutique extras.
Crónicas de Nazare
Nazaré began as a small fishing village, its name tied to a 12th-century Iberian legend of a mounted statue rescued from the Moors. Its architecture is a plain white-and-blue jumble of fishermen's quarters climbing the cliff to the 17th-century Ermida da Memória. The town's modern identity exploded after 2011, when Garrett McNamara surfed a 24-metre wave off the Praia do Norte, turning Nazaré into the global capital of big-wave surfing. Today it is a split town: the old fishing port clinging to tradition below the Sitio headland, and a new layer of surf-chaser infrastructure wrapped around the lighthouse.
El mejor momento para visitar
Guía completa de Nazare →Los mejores meses
May–June and September–October: warm air of 20–25°C, manageable crowds, good swell in autumn for watching waves, calm seas in late spring for beach lounging.
Peak / Festival Surge
July–August is peak for sunbathers and summer holidaymakers, plus the Nazaré Big Wave season (October–March) draws specialist surfers for the true giants. Hotel prices double in July–August and again during major swells; the main events are the World Surf League Nazaré Tow Surfing Challenge in winter and the Nossa Senhora da Nazaré festival on 8 September.
La temporada del hombro
Late May and September offer 15–30% discounts, 20–22°C air, quieter beaches, and still-good swell for watching the winter waves start to build.
Tiempo y embalaje
Nazaré’s microclimate is notoriously windy, particularly on the cliff top—a warm summer day can turn jacket-cold by late afternoon. Pack a windproof shell and sun hat as a non-negotiable rule, even in June.
Briefing en vivo de la ciudad — Nazare
- The new Nazaré cable car (Ascensor da Nazaré) is now running reliably after a 2024 overhaul, cutting the walk up to the Sitio to 90 seconds – handy for avoiding the steep road closure on Rua do Rio Seco.
- Praia do Norte has had a warning system upgrade: red flags now flash on the lighthouse when a rogue wave set is forecast, so check the digital board by the lifeguard station before heading onto the sand.
- The town council has banned parked campervans on the seafront promenade from May to September, enforcing fines of €100–250; visitors in motorhomes must use the designated site at Avenida do Mar.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Mar Bravo, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a high floor (3rd or 4th) on the back side of the building. Praça Sousa Oliveira is a central square with a good amount of foot traffic and some vehicle noise, so rooms facing away from the square are noticeably quieter. The lift is small, but the upper floors give you better light and less street noise.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground floor rooms (especially the wheelchair-accessible room if you don't need it) – these are closest to the lobby, street, and any lift noise. Rooms directly overlooking the square (likely the front-facing ones) can get noise from cafe patrons and late foot traffic.
Best views
Rooms on the upper floors (3rd and 4th) that face towards the square give a decent view over the square and rooftops towards the coast. The hotel is on a central square, so you can see the tram and town bustle. For a sea view, you'd need an elevated room at the front, but no guarantee of direct ocean.
Quietest floors
Floors 2, 3 and 4 are quieter than floor 1, provided the room does not face the square. The lift is small and experienced by all floors, but upper back rooms get minimal disturbance.
🔊 Noise notes
Praça Sousa Oliveira is the central square in Nazaré – expect cafe chatter, kids playing, and occasional traffic. The lift is small (68 cm door) and creates a thud each time it lands; rooms adjacent to the lift will hear it, especially during morning and evening rushes.
Insider tips
1. Parking: Use the public lot on Rua da Cedovém (5 min walk, 8 EUR/night, open 24/7). Do not bother trying to park on the square itself – far too tight. 2. Check-in tip: If you arrive late, the non-guest Wi-Fi password is available at the reception desk – ask for it to avoid logging in via the web page.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Instalaciones hoteleras — Mar Bravo
Free Wi-Fi throughout (non-guest password at reception); speed 25–40 Mbps down; login via web page no e-mail required
One small lift serves all four floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary print copies of Público at breakfast; no digital newsstand
Standard check-in 14:00–23:00; late check-out until 12:00 for 15 EUR (subject to availability); early bag drop allowed at reception from 08:00
Free at reception desk (no porter service); stored in a locked back office during your stay
Step-free access to lobby from pavement via ramp; wheelchair-accessible ground-floor room available (request in advance); lift is narrow (68 cm door) and may not fit extra-wide chairs
No on-site parking; nearest public lot is on Rua da Cedovém (5 min walk; 8 EUR per night, 24/7 open); no EV charging on premises or nearby public chargers
Tarifas, Impuestos y Depósitos
City / tourist tax: 2.00 per person per night (adults 13+; exempt under 13)
Deposit & card hold: First night charged at booking; 30 EUR card hold for incidentals at check-in
Faith & Dietary cerca de
- Church: Capela da Memória (524 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: Igreja Evangélica Baptista (584 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: Capela de São Pedro (623 m · ~8 min walk)
- Church: Santuário de Nossa Senhora da Nazaré (672 m · ~8 min walk)
Estilo de vida y recreación local
Sub-Vila — 498 m · ~6 min walk
Parque da Pedralva — 804 m · ~10 min walk
Museu Doutor Joaquim Manso — 775 m · ~10 min walk
Teatro Chaby Pinheiro — 726 m · ~9 min walk
5 minutos de radio esenciales
Nearest — 87 m · ~1 min walk
Farmácia Sousa — 177 m · ~2 min walk
Minimercado Carlos — 156 m · ~2 min walk
Centro — 188 m · ~2 min walk
Dinero y moneda
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATM withdrawals from Multibanco machines for best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at Nazaré beachfront or Lisbon airport — they charge poor rates and fees.
Major credit/debit cards widely accepted in shops, cafés and restaurants; contactless and mobile pay common; carry some cash for small market stalls or rural bus fares.
Not expected but appreciated: round up restaurant bills (5-10% for good service), leave small change for taxi drivers, tip hotel staff €1-2 for service.
Comer, comprar y viajar en un presupuesto
Cheap car hire →A bica (espresso) from a pastelaria or café — around €0.80.
A grilled fish or chicken with rice and salad from a local tasca (simple eatery) — roughly €8-10.
A main course like bacalhau à brás or grilled sardines at a modest restaurant — around €12-15.
The main beachfront promenade (Avenida da República) has kiosks selling bifanas (pork sandwiches) and churros, or try the weekly market for snacks.
Pingo Doce and Lidl are common budget supermarkets in Nazaré.
The small pedestrian streets off Praça da República have affordable chain stores and local boutiques; for cheaper basics, head to the Continente supermarket in the shopping area.
Walking is best within the area; local buses (e.g., to the Sítio or nearby beaches) cost around €1.30-2.00 per ride. From Lisbon airport, take the Rede Expressos coach to Nazaré (about €14-18, 2 hours).
Eat lunch at the daily fish market (Mercado Municipal) for fresh grilled fish at low prices; buy local wine from supermarkets rather than restaurants; avoid peak summer months (July-August) when prices spike.
bueno saber — Nazare
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
NazareIn Portugal, 112 connects you to police, ambulance, and fire. For non-urgent police matters, call the local Polícia de Segurança Pública (PSP) in Nazaré at +351 262 569 220. For coastal rescue, contact the local maritime authority (Capitania do Porto) at +351 262 561 600.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Nazare, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Mar Bravo
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 87 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Farmácia Sousa — 177 m · ~2 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →En torno a
Find train tickets →Lisbon Santa Apolónia Station → Nazaré (via Alcobaça)
💡 Change at Alcobaça for a bus to Nazaré. The journey is longer (3+ hours total) but scenic—and you can visit Alcobaça Monastery during your layover.
Lisbon Sete Rios Bus Terminal → Nazaré Bus Station
💡 Book online in advance for peak season (July-August) — seats sell out. From Nazaré station, Mar Bravo is a 10-minute walk downhill or a €5 taxi.
Mar Bravo Hotel (Praia area) → Nazaré Sítio (top of cliff)
💡 A single ride costs €1.20 cash. Skip the wait by buying a return ticket — valid all day. Great for sunset views over the big-wave spot.
Lisbon Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS) → Mar Bravo Hotel, Nazaré
💡 Pre-book with a local company like Nazaré Shuttle or use Uber for a fixed €60-65. Avoid airport taxi touts—rates are higher and less reliable.
Preguntas frecuentes
What are the best rooms at Mar Bravo?
Request a high floor (3rd or 4th) on the back side of the building. Praça Sousa Oliveira is a central square with a good amount of foot traffic and some vehicle noise, so rooms facing away from the square are noticeably quieter. The lift is small, but the upper floors give you better light and less street noise.
Which rooms should I avoid at Mar Bravo?
Avoid ground floor rooms (especially the wheelchair-accessible room if you don't need it) – these are closest to the lobby, street, and any lift noise. Rooms directly overlooking the square (likely the front-facing ones) can get noise from cafe patrons and late foot traffic.
Is Mar Bravo noisy?
Praça Sousa Oliveira is the central square in Nazaré – expect cafe chatter, kids playing, and occasional traffic. The lift is small (68 cm door) and creates a thud each time it lands; rooms adjacent to the lift will hear it, especially during morning and evening rushes.
Which rooms have the best views at Mar Bravo?
Rooms on the upper floors (3rd and 4th) that face towards the square give a decent view over the square and rooftops towards the coast. The hotel is on a central square, so you can see the tram and town bustle. For a sea view, you'd need an elevated room at the front, but no guarantee of direct ocean.
What are insider tips for staying at Mar Bravo?
1. Parking: Use the public lot on Rua da Cedovém (5 min walk, 8 EUR/night, open 24/7). Do not bother trying to park on the square itself – far too tight. 2. Check-in tip: If you arrive late, the non-guest Wi-Fi password is available at the reception desk – ask for it to avoid logging in via the web page.
What time is check-in at Mar Bravo?
Check-in at Mar Bravo is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Mar Bravo have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi throughout (non-guest password at reception); speed 25–40 Mbps down; login via web page no e-mail required
Is there a city or tourist tax at Mar Bravo?
2.00 per person per night (adults 13+; exempt under 13)
Where can I eat cheaply near Mar Bravo?
A grilled fish or chicken with rice and salad from a local tasca (simple eatery) — roughly €8-10.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Mar Bravo?
Walking is best within the area; local buses (e.g., to the Sítio or nearby beaches) cost around €1.30-2.00 per ride. From Lisbon airport, take the Rede Expressos coach to Nazaré (about €14-18, 2 hours).
When is the best time to visit Nazare?
May–June and September–October: warm air of 20–25°C, manageable crowds, good swell in autumn for watching waves, calm seas in late spring for beach lounging.
Principales atracciones en Nazare
💡 Rent a sun lounger for €5 if you want comfort. The beach gets packed by midday in summer; come early or late afternoon.
💡 Go on a Sunday to get in free. The museum is small—allow 45 minutes. Pair it with a wander through the adjacent streets for the real vibe.
💡 Walk up via the winding lanes behind the church—it's a workout but you'll see the best azulejo tiles. Bring water; there's no shade on the terrace.
💡 Arrive before 10am for the best light and fewer crowds. Bring binoculars; the surfers look tiny from the top.
💡 Walk around the fort walls for the best angle on the waves. Check the surf forecast; on calm days it's still scenic but less dramatic.