Treat transport as weather-dependent
Flights and boats can shift with conditions, so avoid tight same-day onward plans.
The smallest Azores island, shaped by one vast crater and Atlantic solitude.

Corvo is the smallest island in the Azores and one of the most distinctive travel experiences in Portugal. Almost everyone lives in Vila do Corvo, a compact village of narrow lanes, white houses, small cafés, and a pace shaped by weather and ferry schedules. Above the village sits Caldeirão, a vast crater whose floor holds ponds, grazing land, and patterns often compared to a miniature map of the archipelago. The island is simple in infrastructure but rich in atmosphere: a place for walkers, birdwatchers, photographers, and travellers who understand that remoteness is the point. Corvo is often visited as a day trip from Flores, but staying overnight changes the experience, giving you a chance to see the crater before or after day visitors and to feel the quiet once boats leave. It is not an island for a long checklist. It is for one powerful landscape, Atlantic weather, and the rare feeling of being at the edge of everything.
Best time to visit: June to September gives the best chance of boat connections and clearer crater views. Birdwatchers may prefer migration windows in spring and autumn.
Key places to understand Corvo, grouped by what visitors are most likely to plan around.
Caldeirão
Huge crater with lakes, pasture, and Corvo's signature landscape.
Flights and boats can shift with conditions, so avoid tight same-day onward plans.
The crater can cloud over quickly, and morning often gives the best chance of visibility.
Corvo is small. Book lodging early, carry essentials, and keep meal expectations flexible.



Curated activities for Corvo are being added.
You can still browse the full Azores activity catalog while this island's live availability and operators are being curated.