Rua da Pena Ventosa in Porto, with colourful houses, stone stairs and Portuguese cobblestone
Photogenic spots · Porto

Porto for the feed

Ten places worth the three percent left on your phone. For the feed, the reel, the memory.

Porto is a city that reveals itself slowly - but some places need no introduction. You know it just by seeing it.

This selection is for travellers with the camera ready. It's not a mass-tourism list - these are the spots where light, texture and angle meet, and where everyone wants to be at least once.

For each, you'll find the best time, the best angle and - whenever possible - a way to live it beyond the photograph.

Spot I

Ponte D. Luís I

Ribeira · Upper deck

The symbol of Porto. Nothing new, you'll say - and you're right. But one thing will change your photo: go early. Before 8 am, no tourists yet, with the fog tracing the Eiffel-school structure.

The best angle isn't from the middle of the deck. It's from the Gaia bank, at the start of the bridge, with the perspective receding into the horizon.

Best time

Early mornings (soft light + still river) or sunset from the Jardim do Morro.

Cyclist crossing the Ponte D. Luís I in morning fog
Photo: Instagram @rawvoltaire. When the fog arrives before the day.
Spot II

Miradouro das Virtudes

Cordoaria · View over the Douro

The most democratic sunset in Porto. There's room for everyone - you sit on the grass, or on the stone steps, and wait. The Douro stretches out in front of you, the rooftops glow orange, and the sky does the rest.

Bring a blanket, a beer, some friends. It's not the most "exclusive" sunset - it's the most real. And the light is cinematic.

Best time

30 minutes before sunset, to get a spot and catch the blue hour afterwards.

Sunset at the Miradouro das Virtudes with people and a fiery sky
Photo: Instagram @capture_lover. Where Porto sits to watch the sun fall.
Spot III

Escadas do Codeçal

· Descent to the Ribeira

No posing here. Just real life: laundry hung between buildings, stone stairs dropping to the Douro, the city opening in layers. It's the Porto that's still Porto, no filter.

Go down slowly, keep stopping. The best frame is halfway down the stairs, with laundry in the foreground and the Gaia bank behind.

Best time

Overcast mornings give you the melancholy tone these stairs ask for.

Escadas do Codeçal with hanging laundry and a view of the Douro
Photo: Instagram @vitor_m_correia. Life going on, with a postcard view.
Spot IV

Capela das Almas

Rua de Santa Catarina · Iconic tiles

Almost 16,000 blue tiles cover every inch of this chapel. At first glance it looks 18th century - but the panels were applied in 1929. Porto knows how to teach you about time.

The perfect angle is from the opposite corner, with the whole façade in frame. Go on a soft-light day so the blues don't blow out.

Best time

Late afternoon, overcast days. Direct sun causes reflections on the tiles.

Woman walking past the blue façade of the Capela das Almas
Photo: Instagram @demas_. Sixteen thousand tiles. An entire façade as canvas.
Spot V

Igreja de Santo Ildefonso

Praça da Batalha · Tiled façade

The more symmetrical sister of the Capela das Almas. Two towers, a wide staircase, and a façade that demands a full frame.

One of Porto's favourite Instagram backdrops - for good reason. The staircase gives you automatic scale.

Best time

Weekday morning before 10 am. Weekends are a race.

Woman looking up at the Igreja de Santo Ildefonso and its tiled façade
Photo: Instagram @sofieliggo. The staircase that frames the shot for you.
Spot VI

Tram 22 & Igreja do Carmo

Cordoaria · Historic tram

Two icons in one frame: the yellow tram on line 22 and the tiled Baroque façade of the Igreja do Carmo. A cliché, but a very good one.

Position yourself on the opposite side of the street and wait for the tram to pass. It takes patience (and a bit of luck) - but when it happens, it's the shot.

Best time

Grey-sky days give more cinematic tones. Check the tram 22 timetable.

Yellow tram line 22 passing in front of the Igreja do Carmo
Photo: Instagram @matteoacitelli. The tram that still runs, in front of the façade that still impresses.
Spot VII

Livraria Lello

Rua das Carmelitas · The most photographed staircase in the world

Yes, there's an entrance fee. Yes, there's a queue. But the curved red staircase, the carved wooden ceilings and the light coming through the skylight still justify the trip.

The trick: book online for a specific time slot and go to the first session of the day. You'll have almost the whole bookshop to yourself for about ten minutes.

Best time

First morning session (9:30 or 10:00 am). Advance booking required.

Wooden staircase of the Livraria Lello seen from below, in yellow and blue tones
Photo: Instagram @josefmagalhaes. Each step is a different colour decision.
Spot VIII

A Pérola do Bolhão

Rua Formosa · A century-old grocer's

Over 100 years as a grocer's, with an Art Nouveau façade that looks made for Instagram before Instagram existed. Two painted female figures, ceramic flowers, gilt lettering.

Don't stop at the façade - go inside. The products in there (cured meats, wines, tinned fish) have the same aesthetic care as the shop itself.

Best time

Early morning, with the shop open and the façade lit from the east.

Art Nouveau façade of the grocer's A Pérola do Bolhão with painted panels
Photo: Instagram @super_porto. A hundred years of façade - and still working.
Spot IX

Rua da Pena Ventosa

· Old quarter

Walking up this street feels like entering a film set. Red, yellow and blue houses, all touching. Uneven cobblestone. That kind of light that only happens in narrow, tall streets.

There's no wrong angle. Go up slowly, shoot from below, or put a silhouette in the frame and let the rest fill itself in.

Best time

Late morning, when the sun comes in sideways between the buildings.

Woman walking up Rua da Pena Ventosa with colourful houses on both sides
Photo: Instagram @virginiasantos_travels. One street, a thousand colours.
Spot X

Half Rabbit

Rua da Madeira · Street art by Bordalo II

A giant rabbit made of rubbish. Literally. Bordalo II is the world's best-known Portuguese urban waste artist, and this rabbit - in Vila Nova de Gaia, right at the gateway to Porto - is one of his most iconic pieces.

Approach slowly. From a distance you see the form; up close you see the tyres, plastics, car parts, nets - all merged into animal. Environmental critique that fits on the feed.

Best time

Afternoon with direct sun - it brings out the colours of the recycled materials.

Half Rabbit, sculpture by Bordalo II in recycled material, on a building façade
Photo: Instagram @guadano. Rubbish becoming art. And art becoming manifesto.
Photo credits

Porto's Instagram community

All photographs in this guide belong to the authors credited in each caption. They were chosen for how each, in its own way, captures the photogenic soul of this city.

Where to sleep between photos?

Our own homes in Gaia and Matosinhos - 10 minutes from most of these spots.

See homes in Porto & Gaia →