Aerial view of Santa Maria beach and turquoise water on Sal Island, Cape Verde

Sal · Cape Verde

Sal Island, where most journeys begin

Flat, sun-soaked and endlessly blue — Sal is the gateway island for most Cape Verde arrivals, with the country’s busiest airport and its most famous beach town.

Sal is the island most travellers meet first. Amílcar Cabral International Airport on Sal is Cape Verde’s main long-haul gateway, so even if your dream is Santo Antão’s mountains or Fogo’s volcano, there is a good chance your trip opens with Sal’s wide skies and salt-flat horizons.

Don’t mistake “flat” for “dull.” Sal trades drama for reliability: more than 350 sunny days a year, warm Atlantic water, steady trade winds beloved by kite and windsurfers, and Santa Maria — a relaxed beach town built around one of the finest stretches of sand in West Africa.

Sun loungers on a white-sand Sal beach beside turquoise water

Why visit Sal

Sal is the easy answer for a first Cape Verde trip: short transfers, the widest choice of hotels and all-inclusive resorts, dependable weather year-round, and water sports on tap. It is ideal for beach holidays, families, winter-sun escapes from Europe, and anyone who wants to dial in quickly and slow down.

Best beaches on Sal

Santa Maria beach is the headline — kilometres of pale sand shelving into clear water, with fishing boats landing the day’s catch by the pier. For something quieter, head along the coast toward Ponta Preta, a wilder break popular with experienced surfers and photographers chasing golden hour. For a full archipelago view, see our best beaches in Cape Verde guide.

Things to do

Beyond lying gloriously still on the sand, Sal rewards the curious: kitesurfing and windsurfing lessons, catamaran sunset cruises, quad and buggy tours across the salt flats, snorkelling and diving over reefs and wrecks, and seasonal boat trips to spot turtles and, in spring, humpback whales offshore.

Local tip: Sal is windiest from roughly November to May — brilliant for kiters, occasionally breezy for pure sunbathers. If you want the calmest sea, late summer and early autumn are gentler. Plan around your priorities and we’ll match the dates for you.

Action-minded travellers should read our Cape Verde kitesurfing guide and diving & snorkelling guide; you can also browse and book activities through our local excursions & tours page.

Where to stay

Sal has the broadest accommodation range in Cape Verde, from large beachfront all-inclusive resorts to boutique guesthouses in Santa Maria and self-catering apartments. Couples often choose adults-only resorts; families lean toward big pools and kids’ clubs; independent travellers like apartments near the beach. See where to stay in Cape Verde and all-inclusive resorts for the full picture.

Getting there & getting around

Most visitors fly direct into Sal from the UK and Europe; see our Cape Verde flights guide for routes and arrival islands. On the ground, distances are short: pre-book an airport transfer, hire a car for a day of exploring, or use taxis and aluguer shared vans between Santa Maria and Espargos.

Sal or Boa Vista?

It’s the most common Cape Verde question. In short: Sal has more infrastructure, nightlife and water sports; Boa Vista is bigger, emptier and more desert-island. We compare them side by side in Sal vs Boa Vista, and if you have time for both, our island-hopping itinerary shows how to combine them.

Build a Sal-based Cape Verde journey

Tell us your dates and travel style and our local team will shape a Sal itinerary — hotels, transfers, water sports and day trips — or extend it across the islands.

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Frequently asked questions

Is Sal a good first island to visit in Cape Verde?

Yes. Sal has the main international airport, the widest choice of hotels and resorts, short transfers and the most reliable year-round sunshine, which makes it the easiest island for a first Cape Verde trip. Many travellers base on Sal and add a day trip or a second island.

What is the best time to visit Sal?

Sal is warm and sunny all year. November to May brings stronger trade winds that windsurfers and kitesurfers love, while late summer and early autumn tend to have calmer seas for swimming and snorkelling. See our seasonal guides for month-by-month detail.

How many days do you need on Sal?

Three to four days is enough to enjoy Santa Maria beach, take a couple of excursions and unwind. A full week suits a relaxed beach holiday or a water-sports trip, and gives time to add a day trip or hop to a neighbouring island.

Is Sal good for families?

Very. The calm, shallow areas of Santa Maria beach, family-friendly resorts with pools and kids’ clubs, short transfers and gentle excursions make Sal one of the easiest Cape Verde islands for travelling with children.

Sal or Boa Vista — which is better?

Choose Sal for more restaurants, nightlife, water sports and infrastructure; choose Boa Vista for bigger, emptier beaches and a quieter desert-island feel. Our Sal vs Boa Vista guide breaks down the differences in detail.