A tiny whitewashed village perched on a cliff above the Ria Formosa lagoon — somehow still untouched by the Algarve tourism machine.

Cacela Velha is the Algarve that guidebooks promise but rarely deliver. No resorts, no golf courses, no cocktail bars with English menus. Just a handful of houses, a 13th-century church, and a crumbling Moorish fortress overlooking the lagoon.
Below the village, a sandbar separates the warm lagoon from the Atlantic. At low tide you can wade across. The beach on the ocean side is nearly deserted even in August — the kind of place where you plant your towel and see nobody for hours.

There is exactly one restaurant in the village. It serves grilled fish, local wine, and a view that no Michelin star could improve. Arrive before noon or you will not get a table.
Getting there: Between Tavira and Vila Real de Santo Antonio. Turn off the N125 at the sign — it is easy to miss, which is rather the point.