• Get your Camino Frances Guidebook here.
  • For 2024 Pilgrims: €50,- donation = 1 year with no ads on the forum + 90% off any 2024 Guide. More here.
    (Discount code sent to you by Private Message after your donation)
  • ⚠️ Emergency contact in Spain - Dial 112 and AlertCops app. More on this here.

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

O Cebreiro

Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
there is a great albergue there, great view. alot of times in the am is covered in fog. i arrived too early to stay. it is also SO TOURISTY. Bus loads come to this point.
dawn
 
Transport luggage-passengers.
From airports to SJPP
Luggage from SJPP to Roncevalles
hi bc, dawn is right, the albergue is pretty good. Yes, touristy too. That having been said, there r a couple of nice restaurants with actual fireplaces, and pricy private places to stay. The view, when it's not foggy/dark/cloudy, is impressive. The church is pivotal to the history of the Camino. Best, xm 8)
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
Lodgings at O'Cebreiro:

Hostal Frade (982 36 71 04), double: 43e

Casa Carolo (982 36 71 68) double no bath 30e; with bath 36-45 e

Venta Celta (982 36 71 37) double 38e with bath

Hospederia Dan Giralfo de Aurillac (982 36 71 25) Indiv 30e, double 40-50e

Meson Anton (982 15 13 36) double 37e with bath

Casa Valiño (982 36 71 82) double 50e

Best,

xm 8)
 
i also found staying at Ruietland amazing. No one gets up until the music is played at 6am!!! what a great way to start the day.
I choose to stay at the unusual spots, not the regular ones for a great experience.
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-
Visit O'Cebreiro

I think there will be a pilgrimage trail to O'Cebreiro one day to pay homage to the man who resurrected the camino, painted the yellow arrows and spent his lifetime researching the monuments and places along the camino Frances.
Don Elias Valina Sampedro was appointed priest of the parish of Santa Maria La Real of O’Cebreiro in 1959 when he was just 30 years old. Under his direction the church of St Mary’s as well as the ancient inn and pilgrim hospital – which he described as “little more than a dunghill” - were restored and in 1972 O’Cebreiro was declared a Historical Monument.
He concentrated all of his energies on the restoration and reanimation of the camino. In 1967 he wrote his doctoral thesis on - The Road of St James: A Historical and Legal Study. He directed the - Artistic Inventory of Lugo and its Province- six large volumes of an exhaustive description of all the monuments and items that could have any value
“In the 1970’s there survived only a remote memory of the Jacobean pilgrimage” he wrote. In 1971 he wrote the book ‘Caminos a Compostela’.
In 1974 Edwin Mullins published his book “The Pilgrimage to Santiago”. In it he recounts how difficult it was for a pilgrim on foot in the early 1970’s:
“It was more often a question of dropping into village bars and enquiring politely where the old road might be.”
In 1972 only 6 pilgrims were awarded the Compostela.
D. Elias’s guide was published in 1982 and at a gathering in Santiago in 1985 he was entrusted with the co-ordination of all the resources for the camino. “Refugios” were established and he was the first to mark the way with yellow arrows (with paint begged from the roads department).
Ten years later, in 1986, the Santiago Cathedral issued 2,491 certificates. In 1989, the year of the Pope’s visit (and sadly, also the year D Elias passed away) 5,760 compostelas were issued. If you are one of the estimated 200 000 pilgrims to trustingly follow the yellow arrows this year, remember the generous hand that lovingly drew them.
You can see a bust of D. Elias in the churchyard.
 
La Faba

There's a small village called La Faba half way up and about 5k from O Cebriero. Stayed there last year, there's a shop and a refuge and... that's about it. Stopped there as a result of a dodgy tummy on the way from Villafranca. Did the trick and all I had to do was the leave at stupid o' clock to get up for the day's walk to Triacastela!
 
I passed through O Cebreiro on Sunday April 1st, having come through a wonderful blizzard. Didn't try to get accommodation there, but was told later that the Albergue was closed for repairs. I stayed in Hospital de la Condesa that evening, and about 10 people ended up sleeping on the floor there, many of whom wanted to stay at Cebreiro but couldn't find a bed. Can anybody confirm that the albergue is actually closed at present?
I also heard very positive comments on the albergue in La Faba from people who stayed there on April 1st.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Hmm... Cannot comment on the current O Cebriero situation, but I have heard that it's one of the noisier/worst refuges. That said and done, some people have moaned about other refuges I've used (most notably Belorado) and I've never had a problem. I don't think we're in a position to grumble about our surroundings when a) we're doing a pilgrimage and b) we're paying next to nothing for a bed and shower (although when there's no warm water it does make me do my freezing monkey impression - "ooh ooh ah ah!")
 
As per info. from AGACS, the albergue at O'Cebreiro has been closed since mid-January, due to repairs. They've put up a temporary albergue with approx 50 beds next to it, with AC/heater. Please refer to the article below for further info.

Best,

xm 8)




Instalan casetas en O Cebreiro para que pernocten peregrinos

El albergue de la Xunta está cerrado por obras desde hace meses

Las construcciones, con dos baños y recepción, tendrán calefacción y aire acondicionado

Dolores Cela | lugo

Los operarios trabajaban ayer a marchas forzadas para poder tener listas las dos casetas provisionales, que contarán con entre 45 y 50 camas, en las que pernoctarán los peregrinos en O Cebreiro. La Sociedad de Xestión Xacobeo decidió instalarlas, junto con otras dos en las que irán los servicios y una más de recepción para suplir durante esta Semana Santa al albergue, que se encuentra fuera de servicio por obras.

Las casetas, que dispondrán de calefacción y de aire acondicionado, fueron trasladadas a lo largo de la semana a O Cebreiro en tráileres. La nieve dificultó su instalación. Las colocaron en uno de los laterales del albergue. El sistema para ocupar las camas disponibles será, casi con seguridad, el que se sigue en todos los de la Xunta, por riguroso orden de llegada y en función de unas preferencias establecidas entre los diferentes tipos de romeros que realizan el camino a pie, en bicicleta, a caballo o por otros medios.

Aumento de peregrinos

Durante estos días de Semana Santa se incrementó considerablemente el número de peregrinos que llegan a O Cebreiro, en relación con las semanas precedentes. Pese a que colocaron carteles desde Ponferrada avisando del cierre del albergue, aún llegan algunos contando con pasar la noche en el albergue.

El edificio del albergue cerró sus puertas a mediados del pasado mes de enero para ser sometido a obras de reforma que supondrán una inversión de 330.612 euros. Los trabajos fueron adjudicados a la empresa Orega, que tardará varios meses en ejecutarlos. Inició la renovación de cubierta con peregrinos dentro.

La reforma del inmueble supone un importante cambio, que afecta no sólo a la cubierta del edificio, sino a su diseño interior. Las obras se hacían necesarias debido a la humedad y a las filtraciones.

Desde enero y posiblemente hasta hoy, el poblado prerromano de O Cebreiro permaneció sin oferta pública de camas para los peregrinos. Las pernoctas en los dependientes de la Sociedade de Xestión Xacobeo son, por el momento, gratuitos. Galicia es la única comunidad que no cobra por el uso de sus instalaciones, a diferencia del resto de las atravesadas por el Camiño de Santiago, en que sí lo hacen.
 
New Original Camino Gear Designed Especially with The Modern Peregrino In Mind!
Camera has been off and on (mostly off) for weeks despite my emails to RTV Galicia which tried to help. Did not know albergue was under repair.

O Cebreiro has been a high point (!) in my pilgrimage last year. Albergue is nice, noisy a bit, admits more than pilgrims but the view is astounding.
The morning I left OCebreiro was the day the hurricane passed over this part of Spain in September 2006. Winds stopped us dead in our tracks and rain was such that I almost lost my passeport, my credencial and the content of my wallet. In fact it rained from that day on to the end of my camino... 10 days in a row, except almost one day in Portomarin...

Wish I could do it again!

Change the world one loan at a time - visit Kiva.org to find out how
 
Didn't realise the weather took such a drastic turn! I finished on September 7th, last year and had very little by the way of bad weather!
 
I stayed in the albergue in O'Cebriero in Oct 06 and it was the nosiest albergue we stayed in, with lots of singing and laughing in the kitchen. Everyone was welcome and lots of tinto was shared. However, at 2200 the noise stopped abruptly. The hospitalera put us older crowd in the upstairs rooms. (4 bunks per room.) and put the young crowd in the lower level. It was a totally enjoyable experience. Ultreya John
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-
The La Faba refugio is much quieter than the one in O Cebreiro and because stupid me took the high level route from Villafranca del Bierzo, I didn't have enough energy nor patience in that hot afternoon to make it all the way to O Cebreiro. Turns out it was a good decision to stop in La Faba; there's an equipped kitchen, an empty chapel, a well-stocked shop, kind locals, no hint of commercialization anywhere. (It seems to be a good idea to avoid the obvious places.) I just woke up really early and made it to O Cebreiro just as the sun was rising up in the East. Great walk except for that nasty chained dog in Laguna del Castilla.
 
I was happy to learn that the albergue is being remodeled. In 2002, we were assigned to the upper level room, and as we started to unpack, my walking partner began to have a strong allergic reaction. One quick look around revealed the source -- a large amount of mold on the ceiling. We had to leave.

We were lucky to find a room nearby -- here's one vote for the Venta Celta. At the time it was run by a Basque woman who had done the Camino and wanted to be involved. But two years ago the guy in charge told us she was trying to sell it, so I assume that by now it has changed ownership. Does anyone know about that?

The restaurant part of the establishment is very nice, and has a big stone fireplace that we have enjoyed on several occaions. I don't know if the menu is still the same, but when we were there it was simple and plentiful and set -- caldo gallego, tortilla espanola, ensalada, wine and bread. But the dessert was the piece de resistance -- queixo do cebreiro (local cheese) served with local honey. It was out of this world and we have been back on subsequent caminos, just for the cheese.

If you choose to avoid staying in O Cebreiro, I echo some of the suggestions here -- we have stayed in Ruitelan on the way up and though the attic room we stayed in was in questionable condition, we enjoyed every other aspect of our stay -- the meal, the comraderie, etc. By staying this far along, you will have plenty of energy to continue past O Cebreiro.

So, if you walk beyond O Cebreiro, there is a very very nice private albergue in Fonfria (phone listed on the mundicamino website). That's about 12 km from O Cebreiro. It has some small rooms and some larger ones, the bathrooms are spotless, and there's lots of hot water and even some heat if I remember correctly. The owners also run a restaurant/bar on the road and they serve a pilgrim meal at a reasonable time for pilgrims. I highly recommend the place.

And p.s. -- time for a memory -- Fonfria is where the famous "pancake lady" comes out of an old stone house and sweetly offers pilgrims her homemade pancakes and then hounds them mercilessly for several euro if they take her up on the offer. Call us suckers, but we complied. My partner later wondered whether she had been sent out by central casting to dupe us, she was a perfect character for the role!
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
Ditto to all u said, Mark. That albergue, for all u stated, is one of the best ones. O'Cebreiro is a great place to visit, particularly its historic Celtic pallozas and church, Sta Maria de O'Cebreiro, where Don Elias Valino, a most important person in the 20th century history of the Caminos, was a parish priest. There's a monument there erected to his memory. It may make a nice stop to think of the man who came up with the yellow arrows, camino asociaciones, credenciales, and refugios, as well as so many other things we benefit from, in our Caminos. Best, xm 8)
 
uh, I forgot, there's an awesome view from O'Cebreiro, when it's not foggy...Do consider the possibility of spending some time there, overnight, or not, it's worth it. Best, xm 8)
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-

Most read last week in this forum

My name is Henrik and I will be coming down to SJPdP from Sweden on March 26 and start walking on March 27. I don't really have any experience and I'm not the best at planning and I'm a little...
When I hiked the Frances Route this happened. I was hiking in the afternoon just east of Arzua. I was reserved a bed at an albergue in Arzua, so I had already hiked all the way from San Xulien...
I'd like some recommendations about where to find the most current and up to date information about albergues that are actually open. I'm currently walking the camino Frances, and I can't even...
I am finalizing my packing list for Frances, and do not want to over pack. (I am 71) I will be starting at SJPdP on April 25th to Roncesvalles and forward. I was hoping on some advise as to...
First marker starting from Albergue Monasterio de la Magdalena in Sarria (113.460 km) Start: 2023.9.29 07:22 Arrival: 2023.9.30 13:18 walking time : 26 hours 47 minutes rest time : 3 hours 8...
A local Navarra website has posted a set of photos showing today's snowfall in the area around Roncesvalles. About 15cm of snow fell this morning surprising pilgrims on the way...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Top