Zarautz

Camino del Norte

To end of camino
788.8
Altitude
5

Orio

5.50

Zarautz

5.20

Getaria

Services
ATM
Yes
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Correos
Yes
Grocery
Yes
Medical Center
Yes
Pharmacy
Yes
Train
Yes

The beach in Zarautz, which is not on the marked camino, is the longest beach in the Basque country. This Queen of Beaches as it is known is the largest tourism draw to the town and every Summer the city fills with thousands of surfers who come to compete. The palaces that once lined the beach have all been replaced by apartment blocks but the fort-like Iglesia de Santa Maria la Real still stands. Adjacent to it is the Torre de los Zarautz which is both the bell tower and Museum of Art and History. Inside the church is a tomb to an unknown pilgrim who, realizing his condition was not well enough to get to Santiago, requested an anonymous burial here.

Notice

Zarautz is a popular event town and plays host to several surfing competitions and bike races throughout the summer. Both can put a crunch on the number of beds available.

Fiesta

January: San Sebastián on the 20th, as well as a few wine celebrations throughout the month.
February: Santa Águeda, patroness of the Basque Country, on the 4th. The town also celebrates Carnaval.
May: Santa Marina is celebrated on the 21st.
June: San Pelayo from the 25th to the 27th.
July: Santiago on the 25th.
August: Santa Clara on the 12th, and La Virgen from the 14th to the 16th.
September: Semana Vasca, or Basque Week, from the 1st to the 9th.

History

Very little of Zarautz’s famed fishing past remains. The men here were the dominant whalers of their time until the whales disappeared from the Bay of Biscay. During the 19th century, when seaside palaces were the rage, the bourgeoisie built them here along the promenade.

The Road

The marked way through Zarautz is along the Nafarroa Kalea, about two blocks from the waterfront and parallel to it. As an alternate, you can turn right towards the beach and follow it to the end of town.

Leaving Zarautz can be a confusing affair and the local information office doesn’t do much to clarify matters.

There are two options out of town: ‌

Option 1: The Official Camino to upper Getaria - 5.2

The official camino through the hillside; this option also splits so read ahead to find out more. At the end of the beach or road turn left (south, away from the sea) onto San Inazio Kalea. Keep to the right-hand side and continue a short distance, keeping an eye out for the small road that ramps up to the right and nearly parallel to San Inazio. That road is the one you want, and it will take you upwards.

Near the top, there are signs for the Ermita de Santa Barbara (and an excellent view back east). Not far from the Ermita the camino leaves the road along a path to the right which offers views of the sea. A short distance down this trail the camino joins a different paved road and quickly arrives at a junction. At this point, you have the option of bypassing Getaria entirely. Keep straight for Getaria, or turn sharply left to follow the GR-121. This second option rejoins the first slightly beyond Askizu. ‌

Option 2: The road to lower Getaria - 4.1

The alternate road route along the N-634 coastal road to Getaria. At the end of the Nafarroa Kalea or the end of the beach, turn right and follow the pedestrian path adjacent to the road as it hugs the coastline all the way to Getaria. Simple and straightforward.

City Map

Comments

All Caminos App User (not verified)

This town was booked and we finally found rooms to share at Txiki Polit. It was clean and comfortable.

All Caminos App User (not verified)

Beautiful hostel, bit more pricey but the dorms are small (we were four in a five-bedroom dorm), the bathrooms are modern and clean, nice kitchen on each floor, laundry line. Very nice and helpful host. Would recommend!

All Caminos App User (not verified)

A well made bed with a duvet in a big tent de luxe...for 18E, great view on the sea..., the place to be !

All Caminos App User (not verified)

No cheap accommodation available after noon, I carried on to Askizu

All Caminos App User (not verified)

how does an official end-of-stage city not have a municipal albergue?! the accommodation challenges on this first bit of the camino is really discouraging

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Municipal albergue is still closed in Sept 22, so book ahead into a hostel. Blai Blai hostel is cheapest although still pricey at roughly 30 euro. Was fully booked before opening on the day I came, they had to turn everyone else away.

Camino de Sant…

We went in late March 2022 and BlaiBlai was one of the few places available but it seemed to have good capacity so not essential to book ahead.

Camino de Sant…

Camino de Sant…

Blai blai hostel is real good. Above the hostel is a supermarket. No kitchenette available, only microwave.

Camino de Sant…

We went in late March 2022 and BlaiBlai was one of the few places available but it seemed to have good capacity so not essential to book ahead.