Villafranca del Bierzo

Camino Frances

To end of camino
180.9
Altitude
519
Services
ATM
Yes
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Grocery
Yes
Medical Center
Yes
Pharmacy
Yes

Villafranca del Bierzo is one of the great Camino towns — a place with enough history, architecture, and atmosphere to justify a rest day. It sits where the Río Burbia meets the Río Valcarce, and the town's position at the entrance to the mountain pass toward Galicia made it a critical stop for medieval pilgrims.

The Iglesia de Santiago, at the entrance to town, has the Puerta del Perdón — the Door of Pardon. In the Middle Ages, pilgrims who were too ill or injured to continue to Santiago could receive the same indulgences here by passing through this door. Villafranca earned the nickname 'the little Compostela' for this reason. The church is Romanesque, simple, and worth a pause — even if you're healthy enough to continue.

The Calle del Agua (Water Street) is the main pilgrim thoroughfare, climbing through the old quarter past churches, noble houses, and the Castillo-Palacio de los Marqueses de Villafranca, a fortress-palace that dominates the skyline.

The Colegiata de Santa María houses a polychrome Immaculate Conception statue. The Iglesia de San Francisco, attributed to the saint himself during a pilgrimage to Santiago, has a fine Mudéjar ceiling.

Multiple albergues, hotels, and restaurants serve the town. The Ave Fénix albergue and its associated restaurant have long been Camino favorites. Wine from the Bierzo is cheap and good. All services available: pharmacy, ATM, supermarket.

Notice

The road from Villafranca through the Valcarce valley has limited services in places. Stock up before leaving. The climb to O Cebreiro begins in earnest after Las Herrerías.

Fiesta

The Fiesta del Cristo de la Esperanza in mid-September is the main celebration. San Lorenzo on August 10.

History

The name tells the story: Villafranca — 'town of the Franks' — was settled by French pilgrims and merchants in the 11th century. Its position at the gateway to the mountain pass into Galicia made it a natural gathering point for pilgrims preparing for the final mountain crossing.

The Puerta del Perdón at the Iglesia de Santiago was granted its privileges by papal bull, making Villafranca one of only a few places on the Camino where the full Santiago indulgence could be obtained without reaching Compostela.

The Road

The camino leaves Villafranca through the Calle del Agua and follows the Río Valcarce upstream toward Galicia. An alternate route via Pradela takes a higher, more scenic path — see the variant description. The main route follows the valley floor, sometimes alongside the road.

Comments

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Alberge Leo er det dejligste lille Alberge. Her er roligt og hyggeligt og en skøn atmosfære. Stedet emmer af god smag og et meget imødekommende personale.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Warning, water supply is temporarily contaminated due to a recent storm flushing ash from a forest fire into the river. Do not drink from any taps or fountains.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

highly rec!! hospitalero was so thoughtful and kind!! a beautiful home converted to an albergue right near the river and the beach!

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Danny the host is welcoming and wonderful. The Hostal and restaurant are beautifully decorated, warm and spotless. The best place we’ve stayed on the entire Camino. Food is fabulous so be sure to eat at the restaurant. Highly recommend!

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Do NOT miss this restaurant in Villafranca!!! I had a fresh, perfectly seasoned ensalasa tomate, followed by secreto, a perfectly seasoned pork. Check out this place!!!

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Everyone needs to eat breakfast at MicroHostel Restaurante La Puerta del Person…you will thank me later. I had the most delicious orange zest bread there

Camino de Sant…

If going over the mountain be careful once you get to a turn off for pradela or Trabedero. It's not well marked but there's a, sign for a bar to the right. Don't go that way, go left to get to Trabedero. We missed it and added an extra few klms to our day. The downhill into Trabedero was brutal.