Granada Coast In English
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Guide · Updated July 2026

Beaches & seasons on the Costa Tropical, month by month

The coast's best beaches, when the sea is warm enough to swim, and what each month is really like — from quiet mild winters to golden September.

The short version

  • The Costa Tropical's beaches are mostly dark sand and pebble with clear, clean water and a dramatic mountain backdrop.
  • Swimming season runs roughly June to October, with the warmest sea in August and September.
  • September is the local secret: warm water, warm air, far fewer people.
  • Check today's sea temperature and beach flag on the home page before you go.

The beaches

  • Almuñécar — several town beaches (San Cristóbal, Puerta del Mar, Velilla), with promenades, chiringuitos and easy parking nearby.
  • La Herradura — a beautiful horseshoe bay, the coast's best spot for snorkelling and diving, with the Marina del Este nearby.
  • Salobreña — long, wild pebble beaches beneath the castle rock (La Guardia and La Charca).
  • Motril & around — Playa Poniente, Playa Granada and Torrenueva; further east, the pretty coves of Calahonda and Castell de Ferro.

When the sea is warm

  • The water is comfortable for most people from about June through October.
  • It peaks near 23–25°C in August and September, then cools slowly into autumn.
  • Spring sea is bracing even when the air is warm — May is for sunbathing more than swimming.

Month by month

  • January–February — quiet and mild; sunny days, cool sea, perfect for coastal walks.
  • March–April — warming up, almond and citrus in the air; beaches near-empty.
  • May — lovely weather, sunbathing season; the sea still cool.
  • June — swimming begins in earnest; long days, not yet crowded.
  • July–August — hot and busy, Spanish holiday peak; go early for a good spot.
  • September — the sweet spot: warm sea, warm air, the crowds gone.
  • October — still swimmable early in the month; golden light.
  • November–December — quiet and calm; beach bars wind down, walkers take over.

Flags & safety

  • Beaches use the standard flag system: green (safe), yellow (caution), red (no swimming).
  • Occasional jellyfish blooms drift in on warm currents — check the daily flag, which we track on the home page.
  • Many town beaches are lifeguarded in high season only.

Facilities

  • Chiringuitos (beach bars) line the busier beaches in season for fresh fish, drinks and shade.
  • Showers, sunbed hire and parking cluster around the main town beaches; the quieter coves have little or nothing, so bring water.

A few tips

  • Come in September if you can — it's the best all-rounder.
  • La Herradura for snorkelling; Salobreña for wild space; the eastern coves for quiet.
  • Check the flag and sea state on our home page before heading down.
  • Dark sand gets hot underfoot at midday — bring sandals.
Good to know This is general information to help you get started, not legal advice. Procedures, fees and forms change — always confirm with the relevant office or an official source (your ayuntamiento, the Oficina de Extranjería, or a gestor) before you act.
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