Funchal Shore Excursions — Madeira
Bolo do caco — traditional Madeiran flatbread

From Funchal Cruise Port

Best Food to Try in Madeira on a Cruise Day

Espada, lapas, bolo do caco and poncha — Funchal's food identity in one port day.

Distance

10–15 min walk to Mercado dos Lavradores

Travel time

10–15 min walk from cruise terminal

Time needed

1.5–3 hours for market and lunch

Madeiran food is genuinely distinct from mainland Portuguese cuisine and from anything typically encountered on Atlantic cruise itineraries. A single Funchal port day provides access to some of the most characterful Atlantic island food traditions in Europe — if you know what to order and where to find it.

Espada com banana — black scabbardfish (espada) served with banana — is the most distinctively Madeiran dish. The deep-sea fish, caught off the island's underwater cliffs, has an almost gelatinous texture and mild flavour. Paired with banana, it sounds improbable and tastes extraordinary. Find it at tascas in the Old Town or the restaurants around Mercado dos Lavradores.

Mercado dos Lavradores (Workers' Market) on the edge of the Old Town is the essential food destination: a covered market hall with flower stalls, exotic fruit vendors, fish counters and local produce sellers. Arrive before 11am for the full experience before tourist volumes build. Look for poncha (sugarcane spirit with lemon, honey or passion fruit), passion fruit, pitanga and other subtropical fruit.

Bolo do caco — a flat bread cooked on a basalt stone (caco), often served warm with garlic butter — is Madeira's everyday street food and works as a snack or accompaniment to any meal. Lapas (grilled limpets with garlic and lemon) is the mandatory starter. End with a bica (espresso) and a piece of Madeira cake — the island's confection is significantly different and better than the exported version.

How to get there from the cruise port

MethodDetailTimeCost
Walk from cruise terminalFunchal's cruise pier is within 10–20 minutes' walk of the Old Town, Mercado dos Lavradores and the cable car base station.10–20 minFree
Taxi from terminalMetered taxis wait at the cruise terminal. Short city rides are affordable; longer island transfers add up quickly.5–10 min to city centreEUR 5–12
Shore excursion coachLicensed operators with ship-timed departures for island destinations — the safest option for return confidence on long transfers.Door-to-doorTour price
Local bus (Horários do Funchal)Funchal's city bus network is cheap and covers most city districts. Less practical for mountain destinations.10–30 min city routesEUR 1.50–3

Times and costs are indicative. Always keep a 60–90 minute buffer before all-aboard.

Highlights

  • Espada com banana at Old Town tascas
  • Mercado dos Lavradores exotic fruit and fish
  • Lapas grilled limpets — mandatory starter
  • Bolo do caco with garlic butter

Tips

  • Visit the market in the morning — afternoon is quieter but some stalls may have closed
  • Lapas are available at virtually every café near the Old Town — order them as a starter
  • Poncha is strong (around 40% ABV) — a small measure with lunch is the Madeiran way

Prefer a guided tour?

Madeira Food & Culture Tour

Espada fish, poncha, passion fruit and Funchal market — real Madeiran food culture.

View excursion

Madeiran Food Culture from Funchal Cruise Port — FAQs

Is Madeiran food suitable for vegetarians?

Options are available but Madeiran cuisine is heavily seafood and meat focused. Vegetable soups, bolo do caco and some market produce work well.

Where is the best place to eat near the Funchal cruise port?

The Old Town (Zona Velha) has the highest concentration of tascas with genuine Madeiran cooking. Avenida do Mar restaurants are convenient but more tourist-oriented.