La Voz de Lanzarote: The Local News Site Every Visitor Should Know About

La Voz de Lanzarote: The Local News Site Every Visitor Should Know About

Ada vidodo

What Is La Voz de Lanzarote?

La Voz de Lanzarote presents itself as a leading local digital newspaper covering news from Lanzarote and the Canary Islands. It covers breaking stories, local incidents, tourism updates, cultural events and community life in both Spanish and English. Its editorial policy refers to its founding in 1985, and it remains a useful source for current local news and island developments. It is not a tourist guide. No beach rankings, no top ten restaurants, no curated holiday tips. What it has is current local information: what residents are dealing with, what towns are talking about and what is happening on the island this week. Its English version makes it particularly accessible for visitors who want current island updates without having to navigate Spanish.

Why Should Tourists in Lanzarote Care About Local News?

Most Lanzarote travel information was written before you arrived. It is accurate, but it is also historical. La Voz de Lanzarote is regularly updated. When something happens on the island today, it tends to be there today. This matters more than it sounds. Town fiestas, last-minute market changes and public service issues may appear in local news before they appear in general tourist guides. If you want to know what is actually going on in Lanzarote this week, local news is genuinely the best source for that. La Voz de Lanzarote is available in English as well as Spanish. Its English version makes it more accessible for English-speaking visitors, including many UK and Irish travellers. For anything important, the Spanish version with browser translation often gives fuller detail, but the English option is a very practical starting point.

What You Actually Find When You Go There

The homepage is a live news feed regularly updated throughout the day. On any given day it typically features Lanzarote local news covering tourism industry stories, incidents and road disruptions, public service updates, cultural events in Lanzarote and weather-related reports. Stories from specific municipalities appear regularly: Arrecife, Costa Teguise, Puerto del Carmen and Tías, Playa Blanca and Yaiza, Teguise, Tinajo, Haría and San Bartolomé. The tourism section is the most relevant for visitors. It covers what is being discussed about Lanzarote as a destination right now: visitor numbers, hotel and restaurant developments, industry debates and how tourism is changing on the island. The culture and events section is worth bookmarking separately. Local festivals, concerts, exhibitions and community events in Lanzarote often appear here before they appear anywhere a tourist would normally look.

The Situations When It Is Actually Worth Checking

Before a drive across the island Planning to drive from Playa Blanca to Mirador del Río, or from Puerto del Carmen to Timanfaya National Park? A two-minute scan of local headlines could save you a longer delay. Traffic incidents, local disruption and event-related changes may appear in local news before they appear in general tourist guides or travel apps. Lanzarote is easy to drive but the road network is limited. If a main route slows down, there are not always obvious alternatives. Knowing before you leave is considerably better than finding out when you are already in it.

When the Lanzarote weather looks unusual

Lanzarote weather is famously reliable but the island still gets serious wind, calima, rough seas and occasional heat warnings. La Voz de Lanzarote covers weather-related stories and the local response to unusual conditions. For official Lanzarote weather warnings, AEMET is the correct source. La Voz gives you the on-the-ground context around whatever is happening.

If you are staying in Lanzarote longer than a week

For a short beach break, checking La Voz once or twice is plenty. If you are in Lanzarote for two weeks, working remotely, spending a winter here or visiting regularly, it becomes genuinely interesting. You start to see the actual rhythm of the island: what the towns are dealing with, what locals are debating, what is changing. That is the version of Lanzarote that most tourists never quite reach, and it is quite a good one.

What La Voz de Lanzarote Is Not For

It is a local news website, which means it is great for context and awareness and not the right place for emergencies or official information. If something urgent is happening, 112 is the emergency number in Spain and that is the only source you should be using in that situation. Weather warnings belong on AEMET. Flights and ferries go through your airline or operator directly. La Voz is the thing you check before you need any of those.

One Thing Worth Knowing Before You Read It

Local news sites report accidents, road incidents, service problems, politics and crime because that is literally what local news is. A Lanzarote travel guide shows you the best version of the island. La Voz shows you the everyday version, which occasionally includes things going slightly wrong. Lanzarote is a relaxed, popular and well-visited destination. One headline about a local disruption does not change that. Read La Voz de Lanzarote as useful background information, not as a sign that the holiday was a mistake. And always check the date of any article before acting on it. Local news moves fast and something from three days ago may no longer reflect the situation on the ground.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is La Voz de Lanzarote? A local digital newspaper covering Lanzarote and the Canary Islands. It publishes breaking news, tourism stories, cultural events, local incidents and community stories in both Spanish and English, and its editorial policy refers to its founding in 1985. Think of it as the island's version of a local paper, except it is updated throughout the day rather than once a morning.

Is La Voz de Lanzarote in English? Yes, there is an English version. It is not always as detailed as the Spanish one, so for anything that actually matters to your plans it is worth opening the Spanish version too and running it through browser translation. Takes about thirty seconds and gives you considerably more to work with.

Is La Voz de Lanzarote useful for tourists? Yes. Particularly useful for finding out about local events this week, checking for disruptions before a long drive across the island, and discovering cultural things happening that no tourist guide has caught up with yet. The longer you are staying, the more you will find yourself going back to it.

What Lanzarote news does La Voz cover? A broad mix. Tourism industry news, local incidents, cultural events, public service stories, weather coverage, sport and community life. It covers the whole island and goes into individual municipalities too, so if you are staying in Arrecife, Tías, Yaiza, Teguise, Tinajo, Haría or San Bartolomé you can search for stories specific to where you are.

Can I use La Voz for emergencies? No. It is a news website. For emergencies in Spain the number is 112 and that is the only source you should be using in that situation.

Is La Voz better than a travel blog for Lanzarote? They are doing completely different jobs. A travel blog was written before you arrived and tells you what to do. La Voz was updated this morning and tells you what is happening. You need both.

To Wrap Up La Voz de Lanzarote is the kind of thing most tourists never think to look at and occasionally wish they had known about. It is not trying to sell you a beach holiday. It is the island talking to itself, and that turns out to be surprisingly useful information when you are visiting. Bookmark it before you land. Check it when something looks unusual or when you want to find something happening locally that nobody thought to put in a guide. That is the right way to use it.

facebook link twitter link

Latest posts

booking picture
21.05
The First IRONMAN Lanzarote Was in 1992. Here Is the Story Behind It.The First IRONMAN Lanzarote Was in 1992. Here Is the Story Behind It.
Lanzarote is a tiny volcanic island with wind that takes things personally. Somehow it became Europe's oldest IRONMAN destination. This is how that happened.
booking picture
15.05
Best Things to Do in Lanzarote in the Evening
Lanzarote does not shut down after sunset. It just changes mood.
booking picture
14.05
Cinemas in Lanzarote: Where to Watch a Film
Yes, Lanzarote has cinemas. No, you do not have to watch it dubbed into Spanish. Here is where to go.
booking picture
13.05
What to Buy in Lanzarote: 12 Local Souvenirs Worth Taking Home
Not a fridge magnet. Not a plastic cactus. Here is what to actually buy.