🇬🇷 GREECE TRAVEL GUIDE 2026

Travel in Greece

We stood on the Acropolis at 8am before the crowds arrived and it stopped us completely. We ate in a Monastiraki taverna where nobody spoke English and had the best meal of the trip. We took a day trip to Cape Sounion and watched the sun set over the Temple of Poseidon. Here’s everything we know.

Currency

Euro (€)

Language

Greek

Best entry cities

Athens (ATH)

Plug type

Type F

Best season

Apr–Jun, Sep–Oct

Visa (EU/US/UK)

Not required <90 days

Our coverage

6 articles

Honest guides from two people who've been there

Greece Travel Guides, as we lived them

Greece surprised us in ways we weren’t expecting. We knew about the Acropolis — everyone does. What we didn’t know was how much we’d love the city around it. Athens is chaotic, ancient, ridiculously good for food, and completely underrated as a city break. We kept extending our stay.

This Greece guide covers Athens across 6 articles — a full city guide, the Acropolis without the stress, where to stay, where to eat, the best restaurants and the best day trips out of the city. All written from trips we’ve taken ourselves.

Where we've been

Greece destinations we cover

Athens

Athens hit us like a fist — ancient and modern at the same time, chaotic in the best possible way, and with a food scene that absolutely nobody talks about enough. Our 6 guides cover everything from the Acropolis to the best taverna in Monastiraki.

WHAT TOOLS WE USE

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All our Greece writing

Every Greece article

6 guides across Athens — city guide, Acropolis, where to stay, day trips, food and restaurants. All written from real trips, updated for 2026.

Planning your trip

When to visit Greece

Athens is a year-round city but the experience changes enormously by season. Our honest take on each.

Spring
April — June
Our top pick

Athens in April and May is close to perfect — warm enough for the ancient sites and outdoor eating, cool enough to walk without suffering. Wildflowers everywhere. Crowds are manageable and prices are reasonable. Our favourite time to go.

Autumn
Sept — Oct
Our top pick

September is magic — the summer crowds thin out, the heat is bearable, the sea is still warm and the light on the Acropolis in the late afternoon is extraordinary. October gets cooler but the city feels completely yours. Excellent value.

Summer
July — August
Go prepared

Athens in July and August is genuinely hot — 35–40°C, brutal at midday. The Acropolis in full sun is not a joke. Go at 8am only. The upside: long evenings, rooftop bars and the city is electric. Just plan everything around the heat.

Winter
Nov — March
Underrated

Athens in winter is mild (12–16°C), affordable and practically tourist-free. The museums are blissfully empty. The food scene is fully open. Rain is possible but not constant. A genuinely great option if budget matters and you don't need a beach.

MONEY & COSTS

Is Greece expensive? Here's the truth

Athens is one of the most affordable capital cities in Europe — but prices have risen noticeably since 2022. Here’s what to realistically budget.

Budget
€50
– €70 per person/day
🛏 Hostel or budget hotel
🥙 Street food & markets
🚇 Metro & public transport
Mid-range · most common
€100
– €150 per person/day
🏨 3-star hotel or apartment
🍽 Sit-down tavernas & wine
🎟 Museum tickets & day trips
Comfort / splurge
€200
+ per person/day
🌟 Boutique or Acropolis-view hotel
🍷 Fine dining & rooftop bars
🚗 Private tours & transfers
Our honest take: Athens is still excellent value compared to most European capitals. A proper taverna dinner with wine, mezze and dessert costs €20–30 per person. The Acropolis combined ticket (€30) covers 7 sites and is genuinely worth it. Where costs add up fast: rooftop bars with Acropolis views and hotels in Plaka in peak summer.

EXPERIENCES

Tours worth booking in Greece

Athens has some genuinely great experiences — and some deeply average ones. These are the ones we’d actually book.

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TRAVEL IN Greece

What we wish we'd known before we went

Greece has its own pace, its own rules and its own way of doing things. Most of them are wonderful once you understand them. Here’s what we learned – some of it the hard way.

Book the Acropolis in advance
The combined ticket sells out on peak days — especially in summer. Book online at least 3–4 days ahead in shoulder season, 1–2 weeks in summer. Go at 8am when it opens. We cover the full strategy in our Acropolis guide.
Don't eat on Syntagma Square
The restaurants around the main square and the most obvious tourist streets in Plaka are overpriced and underwhelming. Walk one street back and everything gets better immediately. See our Athens restaurant guide.
Eat late like locals do
Greeks eat lunch at 2–3pm and dinner after 9pm. Restaurants genuinely fill up at 9:30pm. If you eat at 7pm you'll be the only ones there. Lean into the rhythm — it's one of the best things about Athens. Our Athens food guide covers where to go.
Don't visit the Acropolis at midday in summer
It's exposed marble at altitude in 38°C heat with zero shade. People faint. Go at 8am when it opens or in the last 2 hours before closing. Bring water, wear a hat and sunscreen. This is not optional in July or August.
Explore beyond Plaka
Plaka is beautiful but it's the tourist district. The real Athens is in Monastiraki, Psiri, Exarchia and Koukaki — where locals actually eat, drink and live. Our Athens neighbourhood guide breaks it all down.
Don't rush the Acropolis Museum
Most people give it 45 minutes. We spent 3 hours and still didn't see everything properly. The Parthenon Gallery alone deserves an hour. It's one of the best museums in Europe and almost everyone underestimates it.
Order the house wine
In Greek tavernas the house wine — usually served in small carafes — is almost always excellent and costs a fraction of bottled wine. Don't be precious about it. Order a carafe of white with your grilled fish and you'll be very happy.
Don't skip a day trip
Athens is a brilliant base. Cape Sounion, Delphi and the Saronic Islands are all under 2 hours away and add a completely different dimension to the trip. We cover our honest picks in our Athens day trips guide.

FOOD & DRINK

Must-try dishes in Greece

Athens completely changed how we think about Greek food. We’d been eating the tourist version for years. The real thing is completely different. These are the 6 dishes we still talk about.

🏛 Athens 🥙
Souvlaki from a proper grill
Not the tourist version. A proper souvlaki from a neighbourhood grill — pork, fresh pita, tomato, onion, tzatziki — costs €3 and is one of the great street foods of the world. We ate three in one afternoon in Monastiraki and have zero regrets.
Full Athens food guide →
🏛 Athens 🐙
Grilled octopus
Sun-dried then chargrilled, served with olive oil and capers. Every taverna does it and when it's done right it's extraordinary. We had the best version in Psiri on a Tuesday night — it was the whole trip in one plate.
Full Athens food guide →
🏛 Athens 🧀
Saganaki
Pan-fried cheese — usually kefalotyri or graviera — with lemon squeezed over. Crisp outside, molten inside, slightly salty. Order it as a starter and you'll order it again as a second starter. One of the dishes we immediately tried to recreate at home.
Best Athens restaurants →
🏛 Athens 🥗
Horiatiki (real Greek salad)
No lettuce. Tomato, cucumber, onion, olives, green pepper, a slab of feta and olive oil. Shockingly simple, shockingly good. The tomatoes in Greece in summer taste completely different to everywhere else. Don't dress it up — it doesn't need it.
Full Athens food guide →
🏛 Athens 🍯
Loukoumades
Greek doughnuts — fried dough balls soaked in honey and sprinkled with cinnamon and crushed walnuts. Hot, sweet, completely addictive. The best ones come from hole-in-the-wall spots in Monastiraki. Find the one with the longest queue of locals.
Full Athens food guide →
🏛 Athens 🌯
Gyros
Pork or chicken carved from a rotating spit, stuffed into pita with tzatziki, tomato, onion and fries inside the wrap. Yes, fries inside. It costs €3–4, it's messy, it's perfect. The best ones we had were from late-night spots in Monastiraki after a rooftop bar.
Full Athens food guide →

Common questions

Greece travel FAQ

Answered honestly from our actual experience in Athens.

How many days do you need in Athens?

Three days is the sweet spot. Day one for the Acropolis and the ancient sites. Day two for the neighbourhoods — Monastiraki, Psiri, Exarchia. Day three for a day trip. Less than 3 days and you'll feel rushed. Our Athens city guide covers exactly how to structure it.

Is Athens safe for tourists?

Yes — Athens is very safe. Pickpocketing exists around Monastiraki market and the metro, so keep bags zipped and in front of you. Violent crime targeting tourists is rare. We always felt completely comfortable, including walking around late at night in most neighbourhoods.

What is the best time to visit Athens?

April, May, September and October are the sweet spots — warm enough for the sites and outdoor eating, not brutally hot, and far fewer crowds than summer. July and August are very hot (35°C+) and crowded. Athens in winter is mild and cheap, though some tourist services reduce.

Do you need to book the Acropolis in advance?

Yes — especially from April to October. The combined ticket (which covers the Acropolis and 6 other sites) sells out on peak days. Book online at least 2-3 days ahead in shoulder season, 1-2 weeks ahead in summer. Go first thing in the morning or late afternoon to avoid the worst heat and crowds. We cover the full strategy in our Acropolis guide.

Is Athens expensive?

No — Athens is one of the most affordable capital cities in Europe. A sit-down meal with wine in a good taverna costs €15–25 per person. A freddo espresso costs €2.50. Even mid-range hotels are reasonable compared to Paris or London. The main expenses are flights and accommodation in peak summer.

What are the best day trips from Athens?

Cape Sounion (the Temple of Poseidon at sunset is extraordinary), Delphi, the Saronic Islands by ferry and Nafplio are all excellent. We cover our honest picks in our Athens day trips guide — we skip the generic list and focus on what's actually worth the journey.

Is Athens worth visiting beyond the Acropolis?

Absolutely. The Acropolis is extraordinary but Athens has so much more — the food scene is one of the most underrated in Europe, the neighbourhoods are endlessly interesting, and the energy of the city is completely its own. Most people who come for 2 days wish they'd stayed for 4.
Ru and Tiago - The Nomadic Hearts
Written by Ru & Tiago
The Nomadic Hearts
✈️ Greece since 2026 📍 Athens 📝 6 articles

We're Ru & Tiago — the two people behind The Nomadic Hearts. We stood on the Acropolis at 8am before the crowds arrived and it stopped us completely. We ate in a Monastiraki taverna where nobody spoke English and had the best meal of the trip. We ordered three souvlakis in one afternoon and felt no shame whatsoever. Every article on this page comes from a trip we actually took — no filler, no places we haven't been. Just honest guides from two people who keep going back.

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