Sahagún at the end of the Camino Madrid

Camino de Madrid

To end of camino
360.7
Altitude
824

Sahagún at the end of the Camino Madrid

10.10

Bercianos del Real Camino

Services
ATM
Yes
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Correos
Regina Franco 20, 24320, Mon-Fri: 0830-1430 & Sat: 0930-1300, 987 780 207
Grocery
Yes
Medical Center
Yes
Pharmacy
Yes
Train
Yes

You've arrived. Sahagun marks the end of the Camino de Madrid and its junction with the Camino Frances — one of the most walked pilgrimage routes in the world.

The contrast is immediate. Where you may have walked for days seeing no other pilgrim, Sahagun's albergues and bars are full of them. It can feel jarring, or it can feel like rejoining a family you didn't know you'd missed.

Sahagun itself is a handsome Leonese town with several Mudejar-Romanesque churches that are worth your time — San Tirso and San Lorenzo are the standouts, their distinctive brick tower architecture echoing the Moorish influence that once pervaded this part of Castile. The town was historically one of the most important stops on the Frances, and its religious architecture reflects centuries of pilgrim traffic.

Notice

A very nice certificate is available from the Santuario de la Virgen Peregrina on your way out of Sahagún, a type of half-way Compostela. See the map for the location as it is not on the camino proper.

Fiesta

Market day is Saturday. Winter pilgrims can celebrate San Tirso on January 28th. San Juan de Sahagun falls on June 12th and 13th. The Fiesta de la Peregrina is on July 2nd, and San Lorenzo on August 9th and 10th.

History

Sahagun grew around the Benedictine monastery of San Benito, once one of the most powerful monasteries in Spain. The town was a major stop on the Camino Frances for a thousand years. Its Mudejar churches — built by Muslim artisans living under Christian rule — represent a uniquely Spanish synthesis of architectural traditions.

The Road

From here, the road to Santiago continues along the Camino Frances. You're about 365 km from Santiago de Compostela. Options from Sahagun include continuing west on the Frances, or — for the ambitious — diverting north at Leon onto the Camino del Salvador to Oviedo, then following the Camino Primitivo to Santiago. Madrid-Salvador-Primitivo is considered by many experienced pilgrims to be one of the finest Camino combinations available.

Whatever you choose, the hardest part may be this: adjusting to the company of other pilgrims after the profound solitude of the Camino de Madrid.

This guide covers geography, history, trail descriptions, and service warnings. Specific accommodation names, prices, and phone numbers will be added after the route has been walked and verified. Service availability in small villages changes from year to year — confirm locally.

City Map