No results — no water bodies in Andorra meet the strict criteria for this “complete list.”
Note why the criteria produce no entries. Andorra is very small and sits high in the Pyrenees. Most water there are tiny high‑altitude ponds (estanys), seasonal tarns, or managed reservoirs. Require full, sourced details (name, elevation, GPS, size/depth, official citation, photos) removes many features because they are unnamed, seasonal, or only locally referenced. Hikers searching “Lakes in Andorra” often want maps, access and photos, but the strict data checklist leaves no items that meet every requirement.
Understand the technical and geographic reasons behind the gap. Glacial action in the Pyrenees forms many small cirque ponds rather than big, permanent lakes. Mapping systems also vary: some features are tagged as “pond” or “wetland” or lie just over the border in Spain or France. Several popular water spots in Andorra are actually reservoirs or small groups of tarns, so they don’t match a narrow “official lake” definition even though they attract visitors.
Explore the near matches and related categories that do exist. Popular near matches include the Tristaina lakes (three glacial ponds), the Juclà group of high estanys, and the Engolasters reservoir near Encamp. Also look at alpine tarns, hiking streams, waterfalls, and protected areas such as Comapedrosa and Sorteny. For practical trip planning, focus on these near matches, nearby cross‑border Pyrenean lakes, and reservoirs — then use maps, trail guides and official Andorra tourism sources for precise access, elevation and photo credits.


