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How to Train for the Camino Português (Even If You're Not Fit)

Good news first: the Camino Português is one of the gentler long-distance walks, and ordinary people of all ages and fitness levels finish it every week. You do not need to be an athlete. But the difference between a walker who trained a little and one who didn't isn't fitness — it's suffering. A few weeks of easy preparation turns a painful slog into a genuine pleasure. Here's the honest, doable version.

The only thing you really need to train: walking, in your shoes

Forget the gym. The Camino is walking, so you train by walking — in the exact shoes and socks you'll wear on the trail. This does two things: it builds the right endurance, and (more importantly) it breaks in your feet and footwear together, which is what actually prevents the blisters that ruin Caminos.

A simple 6–8 week build-up

If you have a couple of months, this is plenty:

Short on time? Even 3–4 weeks of regular walking beats nothing enormously.

Train your feet, not just your legs

The legs cope. It's the feet that quit. So:

Don't overthink the rest

The honest bottom line

You're not training to be fit enough to survive the Camino — almost anyone can finish it. You're training so you enjoy it: so your feet are happy, your shoes are broken in, and your body knows what consecutive walking days feel like. A few weeks of easy walks in the right shoes is the whole secret.


Walk lighter and the training matters even less — with your bags carried ahead and beds booked, the Camino asks far less of your body. See how it works →


Before you go

A few practical bits worth sorting before you travel.

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