The hotsprings set we can see today is made up by a reservoir of small dimensions and a channel made up of bonder. The spring water is sulphurous and ferrugous. Under the River Miño waters there are two hot spring pools with water at 50 degrees and five auxiliary baths, some of them are deteriorated.

Its origin dates from the Roman Era and appears in the work by Nicolás Taboada Leal, Medical Hydrology from Galicia in 1877. 

< Crossed by the River Miño on the South… near the ruins of the indicated bridge, on a set of rocks, sprout some springs of water that, kept in two bad pools, are used as baths, so as those from other near springs are used for drink and are used annually by around 600 people of the nearest towns. The water of all these springs is clear and transparent and seems to smell like rotten eggs and  of sulfurous taste in all of them and in some of them, water is so hot that has to be mixed with water from the river to drink it at a convenient temperature. It isn’t known when it was discovered and it  has started being of use but people of the town says it has been since immemorial times>.

It has been recently cleaned and so the suroundings have been improved. There is a wood bridge that facilitates the connection from the road to the hot springs and to the river Miño.