Puente la Reina: top attractions & road trip guide

Puente la Reina is a small Navarre town where the Camino Francés and the Camino Aragonés converge into a single route toward Santiago, marked by a striking eleventh-century Romanesque bridge over the Río Arga. The town's name, meaning "the queen's bridge," refers to the medieval crossing built specifically to help pilgrims ford the river safely.
Set among Navarre's rolling wheat and vineyard country between Pamplona and Estella, Puente la Reina makes an easy stop on a Camino-themed road trip through northern Spain. The old quarter's single main street, lined with pilgrim hostels and stone facades, leads directly onto the bridge itself.
Top attractions
Puente Románico (Romanesque Bridge)

A seven-arched eleventh-century bridge over the Río Arga, built to carry pilgrims safely across the river and still the town's defining landmark.
Iglesia del Crucifijo
A twelfth-century church founded by the Knights Templar, notable for its unusual Y-shaped Gothic crucifix brought by German pilgrims.
Iglesia de Santiago

The town's main parish church on the pilgrim route, with a carved Romanesque portal and a venerated polychrome statue of Santiago Peregrino inside.
Calle Mayor

The narrow porticoed main street of the old town, lined with stone houses, coats of arms, and traditional pilgrim hostels leading to the bridge.
Iglesia de San Pedro

A parish church at the town's edge, near the bridgehead, known for its Gothic image of the Virgen del Puy carved in walnut.
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