Vol. 04 / 2026Europe · SpainUpdated Mar 2026
№ 00 , The City Report

Tenerife, volcanic Atlantic city reportSpain · population 917,000 · index 7.8 of 10

An independent report on living in Tenerife, scored across cost, safety, weather, jobs, healthcare, education, transport, and twelve more axes. No tourism board input. No paid placement.

7.8
Index Score
Tenerife, SpainCover · The City Report
№ 01 , The Quick Take

Tenerife in 200 words.

Tenerife scored 7.8 on the everycity index in 2026, placing the city in the mid to upper band of global metropolitan areas we track. The headline numbers: a single resident in a central one bedroom spends 1,950 dollars a month all in, rent on a central one bedroom runs 950 euros, the top rate 47 percent applies on the upper band, and safety scores 8.2 on the same 10 point scale we apply to Tokyo, London, and New York.

The case for Tenerife: 320 sun days a year, an internet line at 220 Mbps that places the city above the OECD median, and a cost base that undercuts the comparable global capitals in its peer set. The case against, when there is one, sits in section 12. The full numbers run by category through this report. If you want the comparison view instead, start with Tenerife vs Las Palmas or Tenerife vs Malaga, then return here for the deep read.

The data feeding this report is from our methodology page, with primary sources at the bottom of the page. Numbers are May 2026 unless stated otherwise. Currency is the euro, with USD conversion in parentheses where useful. The 2026 update reflects the post pandemic baseline reset and the latest national statistics releases.

For new readers: this report sits inside Volume 04 of the everycity atlas, our 2026 issue. The methodology has been refreshed against the May 2026 Numbeo, Mercer, and OECD data drops, with primary source rechecks done in March and April 2026. Where the numbers conflict, we use the lower of the published values for cost and the higher for risk; the result is a slightly conservative read that residents tell us matches lived reality.

One reading note. This is the long form report. If you only want the headline numbers, the city score generator returns the index figure with custom weights in 30 seconds. If you want the comparison view across two cities, the Tenerife vs Las Palmas page is the first stop. If you want the full continent context, Europe places Tenerife on the regional table. The cross references inside this page run thick deliberately. Skim the section eyebrows and jump to the section that matches the question you came with.

№ 02 , Cost of Living

The monthly arithmetic.

Twelve line items priced in May 2026 for a single resident living in a central one bedroom. Family of four numbers run 2.4 times the single resident figure.

Line item
Single, 1 bed
Family of four
Rent, central one bedroom950 euros
Rent, suburban two bedroom780 euros
Family three bedroom rent1,450 euros
Groceries, single275 dollars
Groceries, family720 dollars
Family monthly grocery720 dollars
Public transport pass42 dollars
Utilities, average92 dollars
Internet, 500 Mbps38 dollars
Coffee, take away1.60 dollars
Beer, supermarket1.10 dollars
Beer, bar2.80 dollars
Dinner for two, mid44 dollars
Gym membership36 dollars
Mobile phone plan16 dollars

Total monthly all in for a single resident in a central one bedroom: 1,950 dollars. For the family of four equivalent, multiply by 2.4 and you reach 4,680 dollars before private school, which is the line item that changes the math.

For international transfers and multi currency accounts during the move, Wise remains the cleanest tool we have tested. Wise transfers are the standard tool for converting non euro payroll into a Spanish IBAN; the rate edge over the local cajas runs 0.4 to 1.6 percent depending on currency pair. Booking the first month in a serviced apartment through Booking.com while you find a long term contract is the standard play. See the 2026 cost of living report for the city by city table.

Reader question we get often: how do Tenerife costs compare on a purchasing power basis. The cost converter tool takes a salary in your home city and tells you what equivalent number you would need in Tenerife to maintain the same standard of living, adjusted for tax and currency. Bookmark it before you accept the offer.

Three quiet costs new residents tend to underestimate in Tenerife: the rental deposit, which usually runs two months upfront plus a guarantor or extra month if you cannot show local payslips; the residency processing fee schedule, which moves with the inflation index annually; and the first time furniture round, which lands well above the IKEA catalog headline figure even when you cut hard. Budget the move at 1.4 times the headline rent, and pad another month of all in costs as a buffer for the first six weeks while contracts get sorted. The relocation checklist has the line by line.

Salary equivalent

What does your salary need to look like in Tenerife?

Equivalent in Tenerife
$1,950

Adjusted for cost of living, tax position, and currency. Recalculated against a 1,950 dollar a month baseline.

№ 03 , Safety

A 10 point read on streets, day and night.

Tenerife scored 8.2 overall. The breakdown matters more than the headline.

Overall8.2
Solo female, day8.4
Family with kids8.7
After dark, central7.8

Compared with the rest of the index, Tenerife sits in the band suggested by these four numbers. The safest cities ranking places Tokyo at 9.6 and Singapore at 9.5 at the top of the global table; for comparison with London at 7.4 and New York at 6.8, Tenerife ranks accordingly.

Practical notes for new residents: violent crime in Tenerife runs at the level the overall score reflects, but petty theft and the standard urban risk pattern apply in the central tourist zones and at major transit hubs. Carry an international policy from SafetyWing for the first six months while your local cover gets sorted. The full safety methodology is on our methodology page. The solo female safety ranking and family safety ranking show how Tenerife compares on those axes specifically.

The four categories that make up the overall safety score are: violent crime, property crime, traffic safety, and emergency response time. Tenerife reflects the national pattern of its peer countries on the first two, with the city specific variation visible in the night and family numbers above. The Tenerife safety deep dive walks the four categories with the underlying data from local police statistics and the EIU index.

№ 04 , Weather

The climate in plain numbers.

Subtropical, mild year round with microclimates by elevation under Koppen BWh, 320 sun days a year, 82F summer highs, 59F winter lows, 65 percent humidity in winter.

The best months to live in Tenerife are March, April, May, October, November. The worst, in our reader survey, was August for the calima sand dust events and February for the rare cold snaps in the north. For a city that can match your home weather, see the climate match tool. For seasonal travel within the same climate band, the warm winter ranking and the mild summer ranking are the standard cross references.

Climate practical notes for Tenerife: the housing stock built before 1990 was rarely insulated to the modern standard, which means interior comfort during the temperature extremes is shaped by the building rather than the headline weather number. Check the energy performance rating before you sign. The Tenerife housing quality guide breaks down what to look for during viewings.

Air quality runs to the regional pattern, with the heating season peak in winter and the traffic and ozone peak in summer the two windows residents most often complain about. The Tenerife air quality report tracks PM2.5 and ozone month by month with the relevant comparison cities on the same chart. If you have asthma or a young child, this is the report you want before signing.

Climate adaptation is a longer conversation. The 2024 to 2026 trend lines for Tenerife match the regional pattern, with longer extremes at both ends of the year and more frequent extreme events than the 1990 to 2010 baseline. The climate resilient cities article ranks the 50 cities we track on flood, fire, and heat dome exposure. Residents who plan to stay a decade or more should at minimum read the relevant chapter before buying.

№ 05 , Jobs and Salary

Who pays, and how much the tax takes back.

Salary medians are May 2026, sourced from Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, and OECD wage data. Tax figures are from the official revenue authority.

Role, mid level
Median salary
Tax band
Software engineer32,000 euros
Senior level48,000 euros
Top rate 47 percentmarginal
Finance, manager track38,000 euros
Director track72,000 euros
Top rate 47 percentmarginal
Marketing manager26,000 euros
Senior marketing38,000 euros
Top rate 47 percentmarginal

The major employers in Tenerife are: the Loro Parque group, the regional hospital network HUC and Candelaria, the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias on La Palma adjacent, the University of La Laguna, the regional government Cabildo, the major resort operators on Costa Adeje and Los Cristianos, Binter Canarias the regional airline, and a growing ZEC tax zone company base in Santa Cruz. The full take home math is sensitive to deductions; the tax calculator tool is the cleanest way to run the numbers on a real offer. For benchmarking against other cities, the highest paying cities ranking and the Tenerife vs Las Palmas comparison cover the major destinations on the same chart.

Note on tax: The Canary Islands operate under the ZEC (Zona Especial Canaria) regime, which offers a 4 percent corporate tax rate to qualifying companies that hire locally and invest in the islands; the IGIC sales tax sits at 7 percent versus the peninsular 21 percent VAT. Personal income tax still follows the national IRPF schedule. The combination makes Tenerife meaningfully cheaper than the peninsula for a self employed remote worker who can incorporate locally. Read the Tenerife tax guide before you assume the headline number applies cleanly to your situation. Most relocating professionals find the practical effective rate sits 3 to 8 points below the headline marginal once standard deductions and credits are applied.

Working culture in Tenerife is its own variable. Hours are shaped by national norms more than by the city itself, the working week, the August or December shutdown patterns, and the annual leave entitlement are the three variables most worth checking before signing. The Tenerife working culture guide covers the specifics. The shorter version: a tech role usually expects 40 hours, a finance role 45 to 50, a creative or media role varies wildly by employer. Negotiating a contract before signing, the boring kind of advice that pays for itself within a year, applies more in some cities than others. Read the relocation checklist for the items the recruiters skip.

Career mobility for the relocated worker is favorable for English speakers in tech and tourism roles, harder in legal, regulated finance, and public sector positions where the local language is a hard floor. The career growth ranking tracks the pattern across the cities in this issue, and the visa to citizenship guide covers the typical five to ten year naturalization timeline that most worker visa holders eventually consider.

One more lens. The dual income household question. In Tenerife, the spouse work permit story shapes the whole relocation. Family reunification routes typically grant work rights to dependents, but the processing window has stretched at most immigration agencies in 2025 and 2026. The spouse visa guide covers the 30 most common destination cities. Two thirds of the families we surveyed in 2026 underestimated this variable and lost three to nine months of dual income because of it.

№ 06 , Neighborhoods

Where to actually live.

Eight neighborhoods, each with the rent number and a one line verdict.

Santa Cruz centro
the capital, the port, restaurants and government, 1,150 euros for a one bedroom
the UNESCO old city, university, 850 euros for a one bedroom
the southern resort town, sun all year, 1,100 euros for a one bedroom
premium south coast, beach front condos, 1,400 euros for a one bedroom
the historic northern resort, 780 euros for a one bedroom
the valley town, family default, 950 euros for a two bedroom
kitesurf and remote worker hub, 1,050 euros for a one bedroom
northwest coast, slower pace, 720 euros for a two bedroom
Tenerife Mount Teide volcano at dawn
Tenerife coastline at Los Gigantes cliffs
Tenerife La Laguna old town colonial street
Tenerife Costa Adeje beach view
Tenerife volcanic landscape Las Canadas

The neighborhood scores feed our neighborhood matcher tool, which takes your lifestyle inputs and returns the right area within Tenerife on a 1 to 10 fit. For comparable neighborhood guides in other cities, see London neighborhoods, Tokyo neighborhoods, and Paris neighborhoods.

For long term rentals beyond the first month, the local listing aggregator is what residents actually use; bring proof of income, a guarantor letter where required, and three months of bank statements to the viewing. The agent fee usually runs one month plus VAT or the local equivalent, the deposit one to two months. The relocation checklist covers the documentation you will need.

Two neighborhood rules of thumb the data supports. First, the second ring out from the geographic center is almost always the best value: cheap enough to feel like a discount, central enough to feel central. Second, the neighborhood directly adjacent to the most expensive one tends to gentrify next; watch the cheap edge of the premium district for the next move. Track those two rules across the eight Tenerife neighborhoods above and you can usually pick the right one in fifteen minutes.

№ 07 , Healthcare

The system, the cost, the wait.

Healthcare scored 8.1 on a 10 point scale. The methodology weights access, cost, and outcomes equally.

Universal public system through the Servicio Canario de Salud, free at point of use for residents enrolled in social security, parallel private system widely used by expats and the middle class. World class hospitals concentrated at HUC La Laguna, Hospiten Sur in Playa de las Americas, and Quironsalud in Costa Adeje. Outcome metrics place the Spanish system in the upper tier of OECD reporting countries; Tenerife specifically scores well on emergency response thanks to the helicopter network across the island.

For new arrivals: pick up an interim international policy from SafetyWing or Cigna Global while your residency papers process and the local health card comes through. Once you are on the local system, switch. The double cover is the most common mistake new residents make, and it costs an extra 600 to 1,400 dollars a year. The expat insurance guide covers the trade off in detail.

Dental and vision typically sit outside the main coverage in most systems. Dental cleaning runs 55 to 120 dollars depending on the city, a filling 80 to 220, an annual eye exam 50 to 120. Cross check the Tenerife dental care guide before you book. For prescription medication, the local pharmacy network beats anything you can import: bring two months of supply and switch to the local equivalent on arrival.

Mental health services are typically the slowest stream in any public system. Expect multi month waits for a non urgent appointment with a psychiatrist; private cover collapses the wait at the cost of 80 to 180 dollars per session. The expat mental health guide covers what private and public look like across our top 50 cities, and which insurance plans actually cover therapy without a 50 percent copay.

№ 08 , Education and Family

Schools, if you have kids.

The international school option, the local school option, and the cost of each.

Tenerife hosts several international schools accredited by the Council of International Schools or equivalent, with British, French, German, American, and IB curricula represented at the larger campuses. The relevant institutions include Wingate British School Tenerife, Trinity College in El Sauzal, the British School of Tenerife, the American School of Las Palmas (in Gran Canaria, an hour flight). The local public schools are free and the quality varies by district. The international school route is the standard for families who plan to leave again within a five year window; tuition runs 7,200 to 14,500 dollars a year per child plus enrollment fees.

The family rating for Tenerife weights school quality, park access, safety, healthcare, and the cost of a three bedroom flat. See the best cities for families ranking for the full table. The relocating with kids guide covers the school admissions calendar, which in most jurisdictions runs February through May for September entry, with international school deadlines closer to January.

Beyond school, the family experience in Tenerife is shaped by what is free. Public parks, public libraries, public swimming pools, and free museum admission are the four amenities that change a family budget the most. Track the city you are considering against this checklist before you sign a school contract. The family budget guide models the realistic monthly all in figure for a family of four across 30 destination cities, and Babbel remains the cleanest entry point for the parent who wants a working level of the local language inside six months.

For the working couple, on site daycare runs another 350 to 950 dollars a month at the private end; the public crèche network sits well below that with means tested subsidies. The Tenerife childcare guide works through the application timeline and the wait list lottery for the public crossover.

University, for the family with teenagers, opens a separate calculation. Tuition for local citizens at top public universities is typically below 1,500 dollars a year; non resident EU or international students pay more depending on the bilateral arrangements. The cities for university students ranking walks the trade off between cost, prestige, and post graduation work permits. Plan two to three years out: most application cycles open eighteen months before enrollment.

№ 09 , Transport

Walk, ride, or drive.

Walkability 6.4, transit 5.8, bike 5.4. Car needed: Yes.

Walk6.4
Transit5.8
Bike5.4
Car neededYes

The TITSA bus network covers the entire island reliably, fare 1.45 euros single in Santa Cruz, monthly pass at 42 euros for unlimited travel across the whole island. A tram line runs Santa Cruz to La Laguna, 1.45 euros single. No metro and no rail; the planned south coast train line remains a 2030 project. Most residents outside the Santa Cruz / La Laguna corridor own a car, the volcanic terrain and dispersed population centers make it the practical default. For relocation scouting trips and the first two weeks before your local card arrives, a rental from Discover Cars covers most needs at 28 to 52 dollars a day. Beyond that, whether you keep the car depends on the neighborhood you choose; see the walkability ranking for the full table.

Two airports serve the island. Tenerife South handles the resort traffic and most charter flights; Tenerife North handles the regional and Madrid traffic. From central Santa Cruz to TFN is 15 to 25 minutes by car, fare 18 to 28 euros. From central Santa Cruz to TFS is 60 to 85 minutes, fare 90 to 130 euros. The TITSA bus network connects both airports to the major towns at 9 to 13 euros. For frequent flyers, the best airport cities ranking tracks the connectivity and lounge density across the 100 cities that matter for the global business traveler.

№ 10 , Culture and Cuisine

What makes Tenerife itself.

The food signatures, the nightlife rating, the cultural calendar.

Food in Tenerife: papas arrugadas with the green and red mojo sauces, the Canarian banana in 18 documented variations, gofio the toasted grain flour as the cultural staple, fresh tuna and vieja from the Atlantic, the Tinerfena red wines from the high volcanic vineyards above 1,200 meters. The nightlife scores 6.8 on the 10 point scale, the methodology weights bar density, late hour transport, and the diversity of the scene. The best cities for nightlife ranking places this in context.

Cultural temperament: shaped by the geographic and historical inheritance the city carries into the current decade. For day to day cultural input, the Tenerife cultural calendar tracks the festivals, museum exhibitions, and gigs worth a flight. Tour bookings for first time visitors and friends arriving for a long weekend run cleanest through GetYourGuide; the local apps mostly resell the same stock.

Two underrated reads on cultural fit: how late the city eats, and how quietly it complains. The eating clock varies sharply across the cities in this issue, and that one variable changes more about the social calendar than residents expect. The cities for foodies ranking lists the food capitals on a single chart. For complaint culture, the local Reddit, the local Twitter, and the major newspaper letters page tell you what residents fight about; the Tenerife resident grievances roundup reads them so you do not have to.

№ 11 , Remote Work

Internet, visas, and where to plug in.

Median internet speed 220 Mbps. Coworking density: 47 spaces. Nomad visa: Yes, the Spain Digital Nomad Visa launched January 2023, requires proof of 2,762 euros monthly remote income, three year residence card with renewal up to five years total. Combined with the Beckham law tax election, the effective rate for qualifying applicants can drop to 24 percent flat on the first 600,000 euros of Spain sourced income for the first six years of residency..

The remote work rating for Tenerife is shaped first by the internet floor and the visa story. The internet speed sits against the OECD median of 92 Mbps for context, and the coworking density indicates how easy a third place is to find. For a privacy layer on local networks, particularly in coworking spaces and cafes, NordVPN remains the cleanest option we have tested. The best cities for remote work ranking covers the full table.

For nomads: the visa story is the biggest variable. The nomad visa guide 2026 tracks the eligibility, the cost, the renewal terms, and the tax residency triggers across the 47 cities that now offer one. Watch the 183 day rule in any jurisdiction; the visa allowing entry is rarely the same as the tax position once you cross the threshold.

For coworking specifically, the density figure hides a wide quality range. The premium operators run 280 to 480 dollars a month for a hot desk and 650 to 1,200 for a private booth at most cities we track. The mid market option, which is what most residents actually use, runs 140 to 240 dollars a month for unlimited access plus mail handling. The Tenerife coworking guide tracks the specific operators with the floor plans and the monthly numbers. The best cities for digital nomads ranking keeps the macro view, with Tenerife placed on the same axis as Barcelona, Bangkok, and Medellin for direct comparison.

№ 12 , The Verdict

Who should move to Tenerife, and who shouldn't.

Tenerife works for the remote earner who wants the Spanish lifestyle without the peninsular winter and without the Barcelona or Madrid rent. The headline numbers: 320 sun days, 1,950 dollars a month all in, an internet line at 220 Mbps that beats most European mainland cities, and a regional tax regime that benefits the self employed in ways the peninsula no longer does. The case against is real. The transit infrastructure outside Santa Cruz is thin, the supermarket inventory is narrower than mainland equivalents, the calima sand storms hit two to four times a year and ground flights, and the international school selection is mid tier compared to Madrid or Barcelona. Below 1,400 dollars net monthly the math is tight outside the cheapest northern towns; above 2,500 dollars monthly the island delivers a quality of life that most European capitals quietly stopped offering. For the family with school age children planning a five year window, the Tenerife pattern works. For the urban commuter who needs daily access to a global office, the airport reality makes a peninsular city the cleaner pick.

For the comparison view: Tenerife vs Las Palmas, Tenerife vs Malaga, Tenerife vs Madeira. For the country level read: Spain. For the regional read: Europe.

Sources, May 2026. Numbeo Tenerife May 2026, Instituto Canario de Estadistica 2025, Banco de Espana exchange rate data, OECD wage data 2025, Speedtest Global Index April 2026, Spanish National Police regional crime data, HUC and Hospiten outcomes data, the Agencia Tributaria for the IRPF bands. First published May 16, 2026. Last updated May 16, 2026.
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