Camino de Santiago (Camino Francés)

The classic Camino de Santiago route, 780km from the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela

Photo by Julia Gerlach on Unsplash
Distance
780 km
Duration
several weeks
Difficulty
moderate
Best months
April to June and September to October

The Camino Francés is the best-known and busiest Camino de Santiago route, running from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port over the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, passing through Pamplona, Burgos and León. It has the fullest network of albergues (pilgrim hostels) of any Camino route.

Route map

Terrain

Varied Spanish countryside: a mountain crossing over the Pyrenees at the start, the flat Meseta plateau through the middle (long, exposed, and mentally the toughest section for many), and green, hilly Galicia in the final stretch. Waymarked throughout with the yellow scallop shell and arrow.

Tips

Get your pilgrim credencial stamped along the way — you need at least two stamps per day for the final 100km to qualify for the Compostela certificate in Santiago. The Meseta (roughly Burgos to León) is flat and can be mentally tough with little shade; many walk it in early morning to avoid the heat. Albergues fill up in peak summer, so an early start secures a bed.

Permits & access

No permit required, though a pilgrim credencial (available at the start or from Camino associations) is needed for albergue access and the Compostela certificate.

Campsites along the route

No campsites added for this route yet.