The hook
Most amateur riders never sit on a horse trained to Grand Prix. In Portugal you can book a week of doing exactly that. Lusitano schoolmasters at the country's best dressage centres can teach piaffe, passage, pirouettes and flying changes to riders far below the horse's own level. The horse knows the work; you bring the seat and the willingness to learn.
That's the proposition. Spend a week feeling the high-school movements you've watched on YouTube. Come home with the muscle memory for half-halt, with a more secure independent seat, with a clearer understanding of what collection should actually feel like. No other classical riding destination outside Vienna or Saumur gives an amateur this kind of access, and Vienna and Saumur don't take amateurs.
Why Portugal
The Lusitano breed is built for collected work in a way warmbloods aren't. Powerful hindquarters, naturally elevated movement, an arched neck, a willingness to engage. The closest living relative to the original Iberian war horse, refined over centuries for mounted bullfighting, classical dressage and farm work. Five Lusitanos rode in the 2020 Tokyo Olympic dressage ring.
Portuguese trainers are also quietly world-class. Many came through the Portuguese School of Equestrian Art or the Cadre Noir at Saumur. They specialise in producing schoolmasters that teach, which is a different skill from competing.
Practical reasons to go: year-round riding climate, mild winters, two-and-a-half hours from London, no jet lag, English widely spoken among instructors. Lower budget threshold than people assume; a week of intensive Grand Prix-level lessons can be done from £1,400.
Who it's for
Skill-builder riders. This is a training holiday, not a sightseeing one. You'll be in a dressage school, not on a hack. The reward is technical, not scenic.
Confident riders considering buying a Lusitano. A week riding several Lusitanos at different stages is the best test-drive available.
Owners of warmbloods who want to feel collection on a horse built for it. A week of correct piaffe and passage on a schoolmaster will transform how you ride your own horse afterwards.
Returners who've been out of regular dressage lessons and want intensive contact time with a good trainer.
Less ideal for: beginners who can't yet sit a canter independently, riders looking for a relaxing scenic week, anyone hoping to do this without working hard.
When to go
Year-round option, which makes Portugal unusual. March to June and September to November are the sweet spot: warm but not punishing, fewer tourists, full instructor availability. July and August are hot. Lessons often shift to early morning and evening. Prices peak. December to February offer the lowest prices and quieter centres.
What a week looks like
A typical 5 to 7-day intensive at Alcainça or Monte Velho:
- Two lessons per day, sometimes one ridden plus one lunge, sometimes two ridden
- Group sizes 1 to 4 for ridden, often 1-on-1 for lunge
- Different schoolmaster on different days as your trainer reads your progress
- Rest day mid-week
- Optional non-riding activities: trail rides at Monte Velho and Quinta do Falcão, sightseeing in Lisbon or Évora, wine tastings in Alentejo
- On-site or nearby en-suite accommodation
- Most meals included
Expect to be tired by day three. Two lessons a day is more than most amateur riders are used to. The work is mentally as much as physically demanding.
Working equitation: the underrated extra
If you're going to Portugal, ask about working equitation. It's a discipline native to Iberia: dressage test followed by a gymkhana-style obstacle course (bridges, gates, ditches, jumps), then sometimes cattle work in team events. It uses the same collected work as dressage but applies it to a working context. Riders who try it usually come home wanting more. Alcainça, Quinta do Falcão and MSA all offer it. Worth a day or two within a week of pure dressage.
Practical info
- Flights from UK: Lisbon, 2h45, multiple daily from London, Manchester, Edinburgh, Bristol, Birmingham
- Most centres: 30 to 90 minutes drive from Lisbon
- Currency: Euro (€)
- Pack: own boots, half-chaps, helmet, gloves, breeches. Centres typically supply tack.
- Hire car: useful but not essential. Most centres arrange airport transfer.
Saddl insider tips
- Be honest about your level when booking. Lusitano schoolmasters are sensitive and the trainers will match horse to rider carefully. Overstating ability leads to a frustrating week.
- New to dressage? Alcainça or MSA suit better than Monte Velho's full-immersion intensity.
- If you're aiming for piaffe specifically, ask which horses can teach it. Not all do, even at top centres.
- Two lessons a day is more than amateurs typically ride. Plan a rest day mid-week and accept you'll be sore.
- The Lisbon airport transfer is the most common booking confusion. Confirm exact pickup point and time with the centre directly, not through the agency.
- Don't try to combine this with serious sightseeing in the same week. The work is too intense to also do tourism well.