🏆 Algarve wins 82 OVR vs 76 · attribute matchup 4–4
Portugal
82OVR
Faroe Islands
76OVR
Algarve
Portugal
Faroe Islands
Faroe Islands
Algarve
Faroe Islands
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Algarve
The Algarve is one of the safest tourist destinations in Europe. Violent crime is extremely rare and petty theft is the primary concern — primarily pickpocketing at crowded beach car parks and tourist restaurants. Portugal consistently ranks in the top 5 of the Global Peace Index. Solo female travellers generally find it very comfortable.
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands are one of the safest destinations in the world for tourists. Crime is essentially negligible. The real hazard is the environment — cliff edges with no guardrails, sudden fog, high winds, and cold North Atlantic seas. Respect the weather and the landscape, and you will be fine.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Algarve
The Algarve has the sunniest climate in continental Europe — 300 days of sunshine annually, warm dry summers, and mild winters. The sea is warm enough for swimming from May through October (17-24°C). The western Algarve around Sagres and Lagos receives more Atlantic wind and cooler temperatures than the sheltered eastern Algarve around Tavira.
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands have a hyper-oceanic climate — remarkably mild for their latitude but relentlessly wet, windy, and foggy. The cliché "four seasons in one day" was practically invented here. Summer highs rarely exceed 13°C, winter lows rarely drop below 3°C. Rain, drizzle, and sideways wind are not exceptional events — they are the baseline. June and July bring near-"white nights" with 19-20 hours of usable light but rarely clear skies. Pack waterproofs and windproofs regardless of season.
🚇 Getting Around
Algarve
A rental car is the most practical way to explore the Algarve — the coast and inland areas are spread over 200km east-to-west, and many of the best beaches and villages are only accessible by car. The IP1/EN125 main coastal road links all major towns. Public buses (Eva Transportes) connect coastal towns adequately, and the Faro-Lagos/Faro-Tavira rail line is useful for town-to-town travel.
Walkability: Individual towns — Lagos Old Town, Tavira, Silves, and central Faro — are pleasant and very walkable on foot. The Fishermen's Trail (Trilho dos Pescadores) is a superb multi-day clifftop walking route from Odeceixe south to Burgau. The coast road is not walkable end-to-end; a car or bus is needed between destinations. Albufeira and Vilamoura resort areas are bikeable but not particularly interesting for walking beyond the beach.
Faroe Islands
A rental car is effectively essential for exploring the Faroe Islands beyond Tórshavn. The main islands are connected by an impressive network of sub-sea tunnels (some with roundabouts beneath the ocean), toll roads, and bridges. Ferries and a subsidised helicopter service reach the outer islands. Public buses exist but schedules are infrequent outside the capital.
Walkability: Tórshavn is fully walkable within its compact city centre. Outside the capital, a car is necessary — villages are often kilometres apart on single-track roads and trailheads have no public transport access.
The Verdict
Choose Algarve if...
you want Europe's most dramatic Atlantic coastline — golden limestone sea stacks at Ponta da Piedade, 300 days of sunshine, Cabo de São Vicente where the Age of Discovery launched, Silves' Moorish castle, and cataplana seafood that defines the coast
Choose Faroe Islands if...
you want a North Atlantic outpost — basalt cliffs, grass-roof villages, sub-sea tunnel roundabouts, puffins on Mykines, and weather that changes every 20 minutes
Algarve
Faroe Islands