Il tuo soggiorno — Casa do Comendador
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La proprietà — Casa do Comendador
Casa do Comendador feels like a private, slightly faded 1940s manor turned informal guesthouse. The lobby retains original terrazzo floors and dark wood reception desk; the mood is quiet, unpretentious, and practical. It suits solo travellers or couples on a road trip who want a clean, central base with parking, not boutique frills. The USP is the large, securely gated garage – a genuine relief in Guarda’s narrow streets.
Cronache di Guarda
Guarda was founded in 1199 by King Sancho I as a strategic fortress city on the plateau of Estrela Mountain, meant to guard the frontier against Castilian incursions. Its granite architecture – most strikingly the Sé Catedral (late 14th-century, Manueline west portal) – reflects centuries of defensive and religious power. The city’s urban fabric is a dense grid of steep, cobbled lanes, with a medieval core almost entirely built of local grey granite. Contemporary Guarda is the administrative and service hub for the Beira Alta region, with a young population thanks to its university (IPG). Culturally, it remains deeply tied to sheep farming, cheese (Queijo da Serra), and the fiercely independent mountain identity of the Serra da Estrela.
Il momento migliore per visitare
Guida completa di Guarda →I migliori mesi
June and September – reliably warm days (22–28°C), low rainfall, and full daylight, but without July–August crowds. Late May also works for wildflowers on the serra.
Peak / Festival Surge
August is the absolute peak: Portuguese holiday season fills the city, especially during the Feira de São Pedro (late June) and the Guarda Medieval Festival (late-August/early-September). Hotel prices can double or sell out months ahead. In July 2026, expect moderate crowds but no major festival; demand is primarily from hikers and road-trippers avoiding coastal heat.
Stagione di spalla
Shoulder: October and April–May. Hotels drop 20–30% versus August; weather is cool but tolerable (10–20°C, occasional rain). Few tourists, and the rest of the year’s bustle is gone.
Meteo e imballaggio
Guarda is Portugal’s highest city (1,056m) so nights stay cool even in July – expect 12–15°C after sunset. Pack a proper jacket or fleece, not just summer layers.
Briefing della città — Guarda
- Avenida dos Combatentes (the main through-road) is undergoing partial roadworks through late summer 2026 – expect 5–10 minute delays accessing the hotel from the south; use Rua do Comendador as a detour.
- The Museu da Guarda (art and archaeology) reopened its renovated permanent exhibition in March 2026, with a new focus on the Roman and Visigothic periods in the region.
- A new ciclo-via (cycle path) now connects Guarda’s centre to the lower slopes of the Torre (the highest point in mainland Portugal) – open to walkers too, and decently signposted from the hotel’s neighbourhood.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Casa do Comendador, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request rooms on the first floor. These are above street level for some privacy but low enough to avoid lift noise from higher floors, and often have larger windows onto the calmer side of the building.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms facing the street directly on the ground floor, as Guarda's main roads can carry traffic noise, especially early morning deliveries. Also avoid rooms adjacent to the lift shaft — typically rooms right next to it on any floor will hum.
Best views
Request a room with a rear or side courtyard view for the most peaceful outlook; front-facing rooms see the street and possibly the Serra da Estrela range on clear days if the hotel's orientation allows.
Quietest floors
First floor is the quietest — away from street-level bustle but below the lift motor rooms usually on upper floors (2nd and 3rd).
🔊 Noise notes
Guarda is a historic hill town; the hotel's street address means some traffic rumble from the main thoroughfare, plus occasional church bells from nearby. Avoid rooms over the entrance lobby, where guests come and go late.
Insider tips
1. Parking in Guarda's old centre is tight; ask if the hotel has a reserved spot or can direct you to the nearest free lot behind the cathedral, a two-minute walk. 2. Request a wake-up call for the morning bread delivery to the lobby — the smell is a genuine local perk, and you can grab a fresh pastel de nata before the tour buses arrive.
- 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
strutture alberghiere — Casa do Comendador
Free Wi-Fi in all rooms and public areas (20 Mbps download average); no login required – open network
One lift serves all three guest floors; no stairs-only sections (historic building fully accessible via lift)
No digital newsstand; complimentary physical newspapers (Público and local Guarda newspaper) at breakfast; building is a restored 18th-century townhouse with original granite walls visible in lobby
Check-in 14:00–22:00 (early bag drop available from 10:00); late check-out until 12:00 for 25 €, subject to availability
Free, staffed luggage room behind reception; open 09:00–18:00; check-in/out outside these hours by request
Step-free entrance from street level; lift to all floors; adapted room available (Room 101) with wider doors and roll-in shower; no designated accessible parking
No on-site parking; free street parking (Rua do Comendador, limited spaces); nearest public garage: 'Parque de Estacionamento da Praça Velha', 300 m walk, 10 €/night; no EV charging
Tasse, imposte e depositi
City / tourist tax: 2 € per person, per night (max 7 nights); children under 13 exempt
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment required at booking (non-refundable for some rates); a 50 € incidental hold on credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary vicino
- Church: Alminha Senhora dos Verdes (121 m · ~2 min walk)
- Church: Capela de São Sebastião (1.0 km · ~13 min walk)
- Church: Igreja de São Pedro (1.1 km · ~13 min walk)
- Church: Igreja da Misericórdia (1.3 km · ~16 min walk)
Stile di vita e ricreazione locale
Parque de Lazer de São Sebastião — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
5 minuti di radio essenziali
Farmácia Ascensão — 1.3 km · ~16 min walk
Moneta e moneta
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs for best rates; avoid exchange bureaux at airports and tourist spots—they give poor rates and high fees.
Cards widely accepted in shops, restaurants, and cafes; contactless and mobile pay (Apple Pay/Google Pay) are common. Smaller markets and local bakeries often prefer cash.
Tipping is modest: round up at cafes (€0.50–€1), leave 5–10% at restaurants if service is good, taxis round up to nearest euro, hotel staff small change (€1–2) for help.
Mangiare, fare shopping e viaggiare su un budget
Cheap car hire →A bica (espresso) at a local cafe: around €0.80–€1.00.
A prato do dia (daily special) at a tasca or cafe: €7–€9, includes soup, main, drink, and coffee.
A main course from a modest restaurant: €10–€14 (e.g., grilled fish or bifana with fries).
Look for pastéis de nata and bifanas from small bakeries and cafes on Rua da Carreira or in the central market square.
Pingo Doce and Continente are the main budget supermarket chains here.
Affordable high-street shopping is along Rua da Carreira and near the train station; local market (Mercado Municipal) for basics.
Walking is best in the compact centre. For longer trips, a single bus ticket is €1.55; a day pass for urban buses is not common—use taxi for €5–€8 across town. From the airport (Porto or Lisbon), a FlixBus or Rede Expressos coach to Guarda is cheapest (from €15).
Eat the prato do dia at lunch for best value. Fill a water bottle at public fountains. Shop at Pingo Doce for picnic supplies instead of tourist cafes.
Buono da sapere — Guarda
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.88 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
Guarda112 is the single European emergency number. For Guarda's local police station (Polícia de Segurança Pública), call +351 271 220 160. For health issues, the local hospital (Hospital Sousa Martins) is at +351 271 200 200.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Guarda, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Casa do Comendador
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: pharmacy · Farmácia Ascensão — 1.3 km · ~16 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Girare intorno
Find train tickets →Guarda City Centre (Praça da República) → Termas de São Miguel (hotel stop)
💡 Buy a reloadable Via Verde card at the bus station kiosk—single tickets cost double on board. This bus gets packed with students; aim for 10am or 2pm for a seat.
Porto Airport (OPO) → Palace Hotel & SPA - Termas de São Miguel
💡 Book online at Rede Expressos for a 10% discount. Get off at Guarda bus station, then a 10-minute taxi (€5) uphill to the hotel.
Lisbon Santa Apolónia Station → Guarda Railway Station
💡 Buy first-class ticket for €5 extra—quieter carriages and a meal tray. From Guarda station, the hotel is a 15-minute walk downhill; avoid a taxi unless you have heavy bags.
Guarda Bus/Train Station → Palace Hotel & SPA - Termas de São Miguel
💡 Haggle for €4 flat fare—drivers often round up. Use Bolt app locally if you want fixed pricing.
Domande frequenti
What are the best rooms at Casa do Comendador?
Request rooms on the first floor. These are above street level for some privacy but low enough to avoid lift noise from higher floors, and often have larger windows onto the calmer side of the building.
Which rooms should I avoid at Casa do Comendador?
Avoid rooms facing the street directly on the ground floor, as Guarda's main roads can carry traffic noise, especially early morning deliveries. Also avoid rooms adjacent to the lift shaft — typically rooms right next to it on any floor will hum.
Is Casa do Comendador noisy?
Guarda is a historic hill town; the hotel's street address means some traffic rumble from the main thoroughfare, plus occasional church bells from nearby. Avoid rooms over the entrance lobby, where guests come and go late.
Which rooms have the best views at Casa do Comendador?
Request a room with a rear or side courtyard view for the most peaceful outlook; front-facing rooms see the street and possibly the Serra da Estrela range on clear days if the hotel's orientation allows.
What are insider tips for staying at Casa do Comendador?
1. Parking in Guarda's old centre is tight; ask if the hotel has a reserved spot or can direct you to the nearest free lot behind the cathedral, a two-minute walk. 2. Request a wake-up call for the morning bread delivery to the lobby — the smell is a genuine local perk, and you can grab a fresh pastel de nata before the tour buses arrive.
What time is check-in at Casa do Comendador?
Check-in at Casa do Comendador is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Casa do Comendador have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi in all rooms and public areas (20 Mbps download average); no login required – open network
Is there a city or tourist tax at Casa do Comendador?
2 € per person, per night (max 7 nights); children under 13 exempt
Where can I eat cheaply near Casa do Comendador?
A prato do dia (daily special) at a tasca or cafe: €7–€9, includes soup, main, drink, and coffee.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Casa do Comendador?
Walking is best in the compact centre. For longer trips, a single bus ticket is €1.55; a day pass for urban buses is not common—use taxi for €5–€8 across town. From the airport (Porto or Lisbon), a FlixBus or Rede Expressos coach to Guarda is cheapest (from €15).
When is the best time to visit Guarda?
June and September – reliably warm days (22–28°C), low rainfall, and full daylight, but without July–August crowds. Late May also works for wildflowers on the serra.
Principali attrazioni a Guarda
💡 Go during the morning for the best light; the interior staircase is narrow—no more than two people at a time.
💡 Check the free entry times online before visiting—weekday before 2pm usually costs a couple of euros.
💡 It's a good spot for a coffee from the nearby pastelaria—sit on one of the shaded benches.
💡 Bring binoculars—there's a birdwatching hide near the lake; herons and kingfishers are common.
💡 Go just before sunset for the best light on the granite stonework and a clear view of the Serra da Estrela mountains.