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Via de la Plata
The Silver Way
The longest Camino route, following an ancient Roman road north from Seville through Extremadura and Castilla y León, splitting at Granja de Moreruela for the final leg to Santiago.
Choose Your Variant
Via de la Plata
The Silver Way
955 km from Sevilla
40 stages
38-42 days · Hard
Sevilla → Santiago de Compostela
The longest Camino route, following an ancient Roman road north from Seville through Extremadura and Castilla y León, splitting at Granja de Moreruela for the final leg to Santiago.
Camino Sanabrés
The Sanabria Way
361 km
38 stages
36-40 days · Hard
Head northwest through Sanabria and Galicia directly to Santiago. Ourense (100km start point) sits on the Minho River, halfway through this variant.
About the Camino Sanabrés
The Vía de la Plata is one of the longest Camino de Santiago routes, stretching nearly 1,000 km from Seville in southern Spain to Santiago de Compostela. The name does not refer to silver. It is often linked to the Arabic word balata, meaning paved road, a reference to the ancient Roman highway that forms the backbone of this route.
This is a route of extremes. It crosses the entire length of western Spain, passing through Andalusia, Extremadura, Castilla y León, and Galicia. Pilgrims walk through olive groves, vast dehesa pastureland, Roman ruins, and some of Spain’s most impressive monumental cities. The route follows the same corridor used by Roman legions to move goods between Mérida and Astorga nearly two thousand years ago.
The Vía de la Plata is notably quieter than other Camino routes. In 2024, fewer than 2% of pilgrims who arrived in Santiago walked this way. The solitude is both its greatest challenge and its greatest reward. Stages can be long, with 20 to 30 km between towns and limited services in between. The route demands self-sufficiency, forward planning, and an honest assessment of your fitness.
After Granja de Moreruela, roughly 700 km into the journey, pilgrims face a key decision. The route splits into two options. You can continue north to Astorga to join the Camino Francés, or head northwest on the Camino Sanabrés through Ourense and into Galicia. Both lead to Santiago, but the landscapes and experiences are very different.
Heat is the defining challenge. Temperatures in Andalusia and Extremadura regularly exceed 40°C in summer. Walking the southern sections in July or August is strongly discouraged. The best months are March to May and September to October. Winter is possible but services in smaller towns may be closed.
This route is best suited for experienced long-distance walkers who value solitude, history, and a deeper sense of pilgrimage. It takes 5 to 7 weeks to complete the full route.
Elevation Profile
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→ Santiago de Compostela
38 stages · 361km to Santiago de Compostela
Full Sanabres from the Via de la Plata split point. Through Sanabria lake country and into Galicia via Ourense.
Mérida - UNESCO World Heritage Site. The ancient Roman city of Emerita Augusta, founded 25 BC. Home to the best-preserved Roman theatre in Spain and the historical starting point of the original Roman Via de la Plata.
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