Walking Funchal's Old Town: A Route That Actually Makes Sense
The Old Town (Zona Velha) confuses a lot of first-time visitors. Narrow streets, no obvious signs, and tour groups blocking the painted doors. Here's how I'd walk it if I only had 3-4 hours.
Start: Praça do Município
The main square with the big City Hall building. It's 18th century, back when Madeira wine money was flowing. The black and white stone patterns under your feet are everywhere in Portugal, but these were laid by hand.
The Jesuit Church on the east side is worth 5 minutes inside. Gold-covered baroque interior, completely over the top. Free entry, just don't go during mass.
Rua da Carreira
Head northeast down this shopping street. It's old, touristy, and sells a lot of embroidery. The embroidery is legit though. Madeira's been making it since the 1850s, and the quality is genuinely high.
Skip the souvenir shops selling magnets. Head for Casa do Turista if you want real handicrafts. The courtyard is a nice example of what wealthy Madeiran houses looked like.
The Cathedral
Sé Cathedral is one of the few buildings left from the 1490s. The outside is boring on purpose. White walls, minimal decoration. But inside, there's a cedar ceiling in Moorish style that's worth the detour.
Tip: photographers get better light in the morning.
Mercado dos Lavradores
The market. This is where tourists get ripped off on passion fruit, so let me save you money.
Ground floor has the good stuff. Vegetables, spices, actual locals shopping. The flower sellers in traditional dress are real vendors, not costumes for tourists.
The fish basement is worth a look. Black scabbardfish (espada) looks like something from nightmares but tastes better than most fish you've had. If a vendor offers free fruit samples, they're going to quote you tourist prices. Just say "não obrigado" and walk on.
Into Zona Velha
Cross the main road toward the marina. Enter through Rua de Santa Maria. This is the famous painted doors street.
Since 2010, artists have painted over 200 doors here. Some are brilliant. Some are forgettable. The street itself is narrow, uneven, and crowded midday. Come early or late for photos without crowds.
The Old Chapels
Capela do Corpo Santo is from the 1500s, built by the fishermen's guild. Small, no tourists, feels authentic. Igreja de São Pedro has tile panels showing Saint Peter's life. Neither takes more than 10 minutes.
Food Stop
Zona Velha's side streets have small restaurants (tascas). Some are tourist traps. Some are genuinely good.
Order these:
Avoid restaurants that: Have photos on the menu. Have someone outside trying to seat you. Are on the main painted-doors street (prices are 30% higher).
End: Fortaleza de São Tiago
The yellow fortress at the harbor end. Built 1614 to stop pirates. Now it's a contemporary art museum. The views from the walls are the main draw. Late afternoon light is best for photos.
From here you can see the cable car going up to Monte, the cruise ships, and the whole curve of Funchal's harbor.
The Honest Version
Zona Velha is touristy. You'll know this immediately. But beneath the painted doors and menu-hawkers, there's a real neighborhood. Old men drinking espresso in tiny bars. Laundry hanging from windows. Cats everywhere.
The trick is timing. Morning for the market, late afternoon for the fortress, evening for the restaurants when locals actually eat (after 8pm). Skip midday when cruise passengers flood the streets.
Total distance is maybe 3km. The hills aren't bad. Wear comfortable shoes because the cobblestones are uneven.