In short
Is Greece a good holiday for UK travellers?
Yes โ direct summer flights run ~3h35 to Athens and straight to the holiday islands from airports all over the UK, there's no visa for a holiday, a mid-range island week costs around ยฃ950 per person, and one country gives you Athens' history plus a hundred-plus islands. The only real planning skill is choosing which island and not trying to do five in a week.
Greece is two holidays sharing one flag. The mainland is Athens โ five thousand years of history packed into a walkable centre, plus the ferry ports that get you everywhere else. The islands are where most UK holidays actually happen, and the single decision that shapes the whole trip is which island: the famous-but-crowded pair (Santorini, Mykonos), the classic Cyclades for first-timers (Naxos, Paros, Milos), the big-enough-to-be-its-own-country Crete, or the green Ionian islands with direct UK flights and no ferries needed. Below we set out, for a UK traveller spending their own money in 2026, exactly what each part suits, what it costs in pounds, and the entry rules straight from GOV.UK.
The short version
- Pick two or three islands at most, not five โ every ferry hop eats half a day.
- Fly into Athens, ferry out, and fly home from your last island (most have an airport) so you never backtrack.
- For a no-ferry beach week, the Ionian islands (Corfu, Kefalonia, Zante) or Crete have direct UK charter flights.
- Conventional ferries (Blue Star) are cheaper, smoother and have open decks โ better than the fast catamarans if you get seasick.
- Always pay in euros, never pounds, at card machines and ATMs to dodge the ~5% DCC markup.
Entry requirements for UK travellers
In short
Do UK citizens need a visa for Greece?
No. British citizens can visit Greece visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period for tourism, family visits or business (GOV.UK). Your passport must have a date of issue less than 10 years before you arrive and be valid for at least 3 months after you leave the Schengen area. Rules can change โ confirm on GOV.UK before you travel.
The paperwork for a Greek holiday is light: no visa, and a passport that clears two Schengen checks. The one that catches UK travellers out is the date of issue โ your passport has to have been issued less than 10 years before you arrive, which an older โ10-year-plusโ passport can fail even when its expiry date still looks fine. One Greece-specific point: carry the actual passport as ID, not a photocopy โ GOV.UK warns Greek police may not accept a copy. You must declare cash of โฌ10,000 or more on entry (GOV.UK).
Key points before you book
- No visa for stays up to 90 days in any 180-day period (GOV.UK).
- Passport: date of issue under 10 years before arrival and valid 3+ months after you leave Schengen (GOV.UK).
- Carry a free UK GHIC for state healthcare plus travel insurance โ the GHIC won't repatriate you (GOV.UK).
- Carry your actual passport โ Greek police may not accept a photocopy (GOV.UK).
- Declare cash of โฌ10,000 or more on entry (GOV.UK).
- Don't take antiquities, site stones or some beach pebbles โ exporting them is illegal (GOV.UK).
- Emergency number across Greece is 112 (GOV.UK).
Passport validity
Your passport must have a date of issue less than 10 years before the day you arrive, and an expiry date at least 3 months after the day you plan to leave the Schengen area. Check the issue date, not just the expiry โ an old passport with more than 10 years between the two dates can fail even if it still looks 'in date' (GOV.UK).
Visas
No visa for a holiday. You can travel visa-free to the Schengen area, including Greece, for up to 90 days in any 180-day period for tourism, visiting family or friends, business meetings, cultural or sports events, and short-term study. Working or staying longer than 90/180 needs separate permission (GOV.UK).
Health
A free UK GHIC (or valid EHIC) covers state-provided healthcare in Greece on the same basis as a local, but GOV.UK is explicit it is not an alternative to travel insurance: it won't cover medical repatriation to the UK, treatment in a private clinic, non-urgent care, or changes to your travel and accommodation. On the smaller islands a serious case can mean a transfer by boat or air to Athens or Crete โ exactly the cost insurance covers and the GHIC does not. No vaccinations are required for a normal holiday; check TravelHealthPro at least 8 weeks before you travel (GOV.UK).
Safety & security
Greece is generally safe and violent crime against tourists is rare. GOV.UK flags a high threat of terrorist attack globally and says terrorists are likely to try to carry out attacks in Greece, which could be indiscriminate; it also notes a heightened risk of protests, particularly in central Athens, which can turn confrontational. The everyday risks are more ordinary: pickpocketing in the Athens metro and on busy squares, summer wildfires (which can close roads and beaches with little notice), and rough sea or strong Meltemi winds disrupting ferries. Rules can change โ confirm on GOV.UK before you travel.
Local laws & customs
Always carry your passport โ Greek police may not accept a copy, and can ask to see it. Drug penalties are severe, including long jail sentences and heavy fines. Drink-driving is strictly enforced, and rowdy or drunken behaviour can lead to arrest in nightlife resorts. It is illegal to remove or export antiquities, including stones or fragments from archaeological sites and even pebbles from some beaches. Drones are tightly regulated. Some prescription medicines (for example certain codeine-based painkillers) are controlled in Greece โ check before you fly (GOV.UK).
GOV.UK is the official source for Greece entry rules โ always check it before you book.
Read GOV.UK adviceGOV.UK updated 20 Apr 2026 ยท Departly checked 7 Jun 2026
EU entry rules for Greece
Checked 6 Jun 2026The EU's biometric Entry/Exit System (EES) began a progressive rollout on 12 October 2025 and became fully operational on 10 April 2026: on your first trip since then you give fingerprints and a facial scan at the border (a one-off, valid 3 years), and the 90-days-in-180 limit is now counted automatically. Some countries may still ease or pause checks at busy crossings during the rollout-flexibility window, so queues vary. ETIAS โ a separate โฌ20 travel authorisation (free for under-18s and over-70s, valid 3 years) โ is expected in late 2026 and is not required yet. Always confirm on GOV.UK before you book.
- 90/180 rule
- Visa-free stays of up to 90 days in any 180-day period across the Schengen area. Days spent in other Schengen countries count towards the total.
- Passport
- Issued less than 10 years before the day you arrive, and valid for at least 3 months after you plan to leave the Schengen area. Check the issue date, not just the expiry.
- GHIC
- Carry a free UK GHIC for state healthcare on the same basis as a local โ but it is not a substitute for travel insurance, which you still need.
- Roaming
- Post-Brexit, EU roaming is no longer guaranteed free; many UK networks charge around ยฃ2.25/day. Check your tariff or use a travel eSIM.
On health, carry a free UK GHIC (or valid EHIC): it gets you state healthcare in Greece on the same terms as a local. But GOV.UK is blunt that it is not an alternative to travel insurance โ it wonโt fly you home, wonโt cover a private clinic, and wonโt pay for cancellation or lost bags. That gap matters more here than on the mainland: on a small island a serious case can mean a sea or air transfer to Athens or Crete, exactly the cost insurance covers and the GHIC does not. Carry both, and never pay a third-party website for a GHIC; itโs free from the NHS. Rules can change โ confirm on GOV.UK before you travel.
Flights from the UK
In short
How long is the flight to Greece from the UK?
About 3h35 to Athens, ~3h45 to Crete and Corfu and ~4h to Rhodes from London, with another 20โ30 minutes from Manchester or Scotland. From spring to autumn, direct flights run straight to the holiday islands โ Corfu, Crete, Rhodes, Kos, Zante, Santorini and Mykonos โ on Jet2, easyJet, Ryanair, TUI and BA. In winter the island routes thin out and Athens becomes the main door.
Greece is a summer-charter heavyweight, so the booking lever that matters most is when you go. From roughly April to October you can fly direct from a wide spread of UK airports โ Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Bristol and Belfast as well as London โ straight to the holiday islands, no Athens change needed. Off-peak returns to Corfu, Crete or Rhodes can be ยฃ40โยฃ90; July and August carry the biggest premium; and winter strips most island routes back to Athens only, which is why the city is the natural base outside summer.
Flights from the UK
Short/medium-haul โ around 3h30 to mainland and the nearer islandsGreece is a summer-charter heavyweight, so from roughly April to October direct flights run not just to Athens but straight to the holiday islands โ Corfu, Crete, Rhodes, Kos, Zante, Santorini and Mykonos โ from a wide spread of UK airports on Jet2, easyJet, Ryanair, TUI and BA. In winter the island routes thin right out and Athens becomes the main year-round door.
Fly from
Main arrival airports
- ATH Athens (Eleftherios Venizelos)
- HER Heraklion (Crete)
- CHQ Chania (Crete)
- RHO Rhodes
- CFU Corfu
- JTR Santorini (Thira)
- JMK Mykonos
- SKG Thessaloniki
- KGS Kos
- ZTH Zakynthos (Zante)
When to go
In short
When is the best time to visit Greece?
Late April to mid-June and September to mid-October. You get 21โ28ยฐC, warm seas, manageable crowds and prices roughly 20โ40% below the JulyโAugust peak. Avoid high summer if you can โ 30โ37ยฐC, packed islands and the strongest Meltemi winds, which can cancel fast ferries. Winter is really an Athens-and-mainland season.
When to go
Sweet spot: Late April to mid-June and September to mid-October. You get 21โ28ยฐC, warm-enough seas (the water is bathwater-warm by September after a summer of heating), manageable crowds, and prices roughly 20โ40% below the JulyโAugust peak on the same island. May and late September are the sweet spot โ good for both sightseeing and the beach, with shorter queues at the Acropolis and Knossos.
July and August are peak: 30โ37ยฐC, packed islands, the highest prices and ferries that book out โ and high summer also brings wildfire risk and the strongest Meltemi winds, which can cancel the fast catamarans for days. If you must travel then, the Meltemi at least cools the Aegean islands, but choose a base with a sheltered side. Winter strips most island flights and ferries back to a skeleton service and many island tavernas and hotels close, so NovemberโMarch is really an Athens-and-mainland season โ great for the city sights without the heat or queues.
The shoulder seasons are the sweet spot for almost every kind of Greece trip โ late September even gives you bathwater-warm seas after a whole summer of heating. The one season to be deliberate about is high summer: July and August are 30โ37ยฐC, the islands are packed, prices peak, and the Meltemi โ the strong northerly summer wind in the Aegean โ can ground the fast catamarans for days while the bigger conventional ferries still sail. If you can only travel then, the Meltemi at least cools the Aegean islands; just pick a base with a sheltered side and build ferry slack into the plan. Winter flips the logic entirely: most island flights, ferries and tavernas wind down, so November to March is an Athens-and-mainland season โ ideal for the city sights without the heat or the queues.
What it costs
In short
How much does a week in Greece cost from the UK?
Around ยฃ950 mid-range per person for a couple sharing a week on one island, and roughly ยฃ1,100โยฃ1,300 on a budget. UK return flights run ~ยฃ40โยฃ90 off-peak to the charter islands. On the ground, budget on ยฃ45โยฃ60 a day, mid-range ยฃ80โยฃ130 โ and Santorini and Mykonos cost noticeably more.
What it costs
UK return flights to Greece run from about ยฃ25โยฃ60 off-peak on a budget carrier booked ahead, ยฃ150โยฃ300 in the school holidays or at short notice, and more on BA at busy times. The summer charter islands (Corfu, Crete, Rhodes, Kos, Zante) have direct returns from many UK airports for around ยฃ40โยฃ90 in spring and autumn; July and August carry the biggest premium, and winter strips most island routes back to Athens only.
Daily budget per person
| Gyros / souvlaki wrap | โฌ3.50โโฌ5 / ยฃ3โยฃ4 |
|---|---|
| Taverna dinner for two (mageirefta + house wine) | โฌ40โโฌ60 / ยฃ34โยฃ52 |
| House wine, 500ml carafe | โฌ5โโฌ11 / ยฃ4.30โยฃ9.50 |
| Local beer (500ml) | โฌ4โโฌ6 / ยฃ3.50โยฃ5 |
| Acropolis ticket (flat year-round) | โฌ30 / ยฃ26 |
| Athens airport metro to Syntagma | โฌ10 / ยฃ8.60 |
| Athens airport taxi, flat day fare | โฌ40 / ยฃ34 |
| PiraeusโSantorini ferry (from) | โฌ46.50 / ยฃ40 |
The single biggest day-to-day saver is eating one street back from the harbour or main square: a gyros wrap is โฌ3.50โโฌ5 (about ยฃ3โยฃ4) and a proper taverna meal a fraction of the waterfront price. Order the daily 'mageirefta' (the slow-cooked tray dishes behind the counter) rather than ร la carte grills and a couple eats very well for ยฃ25โยฃ35.
The numbers above are honest mid-2026 figures converted at โฌ1 = ยฃ0.86, so a gyros wrap really is about ยฃ3โยฃ4 and the flat Acropolis ticket ยฃ26. The single biggest day-to-day saving is eating one street back from the harbour or main square, and ordering the mageirefta โ the slow-cooked tray dishes behind the counter โ rather than ร la carte grills: a couple eats very well for ยฃ25โยฃ35. The big variable is the island itself. Naxos, Paros, Crete and the Ionian are sensibly priced; Santorini and Mykonos are a different tier, where the same dinner and the same room can cost two or three times as much.
A realistic first itinerary
Greece tempts UK travellers into a five-islands-in-a-week loop, and on this geography that's a transit blur, not a holiday โ every ferry hop swallows half a day. The honest minimum for a first 'classic Greece' trip is Athens plus two islands over 10 days. The single best money-and-time move is to fly into Athens, ferry out to your islands, and fly home from the last island (most have an airport) so you never backtrack to Athens. This is the ferry trip, not the road trip.- 1Days 1โ2
Athens
Pre-book a timed Acropolis slot for first thing, then the Acropolis Museum, the Plaka and Anafiotika lanes, and a rooftop sunset facing the rock. Stay around Plaka, Monastiraki or Koukaki, all walkable to the sites.
- 2Day 3
Ferry from Piraeus
Take a morning Blue Star ferry from Piraeus into the Cyclades โ slower and cheaper than the high-speed catamarans, with open decks and far less seasickness.
- 3Days 3โ6
Naxos or Paros
Base on a 'real' island with long sandy beaches, a working town and hill villages โ Naxos for the best beaches and Mount Zas, Paros for whitewashed Naoussa and easy onward ferries.
- 4Day 7
Short hop to Santorini
A 2โ3 hour ferry brings the caldera island within reach for the postcard finale, without making it the whole trip.
- 5Days 7โ10
Santorini
Stay in Oia or Imerovigli for the caldera view, but escape the cruise-day crowds by walking the FiraโOia caldera path early and eating in Pyrgos or Megalochori inland. Fly home from Santorini (JTR) rather than ferrying back to Athens.
The honest cut for a 7-day version is to drop one island and run Athens plus a single Cyclades base, or โ better for a first-timer who wants the beach not the boats โ fly direct to one island (Crete, Corfu or Kefalonia) and stay put. The thing to resist is the five-islands-in-a-week loop; on this geography, with half a day lost to each ferry, thatโs a transit blur, not a holiday.
Where to base yourself
In short
Which Greek island should I choose for a first trip?
For first-timers, the Cyclades have the classic look and the easiest ferries: Naxos for the best beaches, Paros as the social hub, Milos for quieter, photogenic coast โ plus a couple of nights on Santorini for the caldera if you want the postcard. For a no-ferry beach week with direct UK flights, the Ionian islands (Corfu, Kefalonia, Zante) or Crete are better. The mistake is doing five islands in a week.
Athens
Five thousand years of history in a walkable centre โ the Acropolis, the Agora, the Acropolis Museum and a brilliant food and rooftop-bar scene. Base in Plaka, Monastiraki or Koukaki to walk to everything; skip a hotel out by the airport or in Omonia. Two nights is plenty for a first visit, then ferry out.
Good for: History, city energy and a launchpad for the islands
Crete
Big enough to be its own holiday โ Venetian Chania and Rethymno, the Palace of Knossos, the Samaria Gorge and beaches from family-calm to pink-sand Elafonissi. Don't try to 'do' Crete in two nights; give it five or more and pick a base in the west (Chania) or centre (Heraklion/Rethymno) rather than dashing end to end.
Good for: A week or more on one island with history, hiking and beaches
The Cyclades (Naxos, Paros, Milos)
The classic whitewashed-and-blue postcard Greece with the easiest ferry logistics. Naxos has the best beaches and a real town, Paros is the social hub with great onward connections, and Milos is the quieter, photogenic alternative with its lunar Sarakiniko coast. These are the 'first-timer' islands to build a hop around.
Good for: First-trip island-hopping and beaches with character
Santorini & Mykonos
The famous two โ Santorini for the caldera and Oia sunset, Mykonos for the nightlife and designer beach clubs. Both are stunning and both are expensive, crowded and, on cruise days, overwhelming. Worth a couple of nights as part of a hop, but a poor choice as a relaxed week-long base unless budget is no object.
Good for: The postcard shots and nightlife, in short doses
The Ionian (Corfu, Kefalonia, Zante)
Greener, lusher islands off the west coast with direct UK charter flights and shorter transfers, so they suit a no-ferry beach week. Corfu mixes Venetian old town with resort coast, Kefalonia has the Myrtos and Antisamia beaches, and Zante has the Shipwreck cove. Best for families who want one flight, one transfer and a pool.
Good for: Fly-and-flop beach weeks with no ferries
These are country-level bases โ the beach-by-beach and village-by-village detail (which bay on Naxos, where to stay in Chania) belongs on the individual island and city guides. The pattern to follow: match the base to the holiday you actually want. If you want history and energy, itโs Athens and the Cyclades; if you want one flight, one transfer and a pool, itโs the Ionian or Crete; and if you want the postcard shots, take Santorini and Mykonos in short doses rather than as a week-long base.
Getting around
In short
How do you get around the Greek islands?
By ferry โ Greece has almost no useful trains. From Piraeus (Athens' port) and Rafina, conventional ferries like Blue Star are cheaper, smoother and have open decks, while high-speed catamarans are faster but dearer and bumpier. PiraeusโSantorini starts around โฌ46.50. Book ahead in summer, and the Meltemi wind can ground the fast boats. On each island, hire a car or quad for a day or two; in Athens use the cheap metro. Drive on the right.
Getting around Greece
Greece has almost no useful intercity rail, so the network that matters is ferries. From Piraeus (the port of Athens) and Rafina, conventional ferries like Blue Star are slower but cheaper, smoother and have open decks โ better for first-timers and anyone prone to seasickness โ while high-speed catamarans (SeaJets and similar) are faster, dearer and keep you indoors. PiraeusโSantorini starts around โฌ46.50 and runs 5โ8 hours by conventional ferry; the small-Cyclades hops between neighbouring islands can be โฌ6โโฌ8. Book ahead in July and August on Ferryhopper or directly, as popular sailings sell out and the Meltemi wind can cancel high-speed boats while the bigger conventional ferries still sail. On the islands themselves, a hire car or quad for a day or two beats sparse local buses for reaching the good beaches; in Athens, the metro is cheap and links the airport, Piraeus and all the central sites. Drive on the right.
- Ferries, not trains, connect Greece โ Piraeus and Rafina are the two Athens ports.
- Conventional ferry (Blue Star) is cheaper, smoother and has open decks; high-speed catamarans are faster but dearer and bumpier.
- PiraeusโSantorini from ~โฌ46.50 (5โ8h conventional); small-Cyclades hops can be โฌ6โโฌ8.
- Athens airport metro (Line 3) reaches Syntagma in ~40 min for โฌ10; the flat day taxi fare is โฌ40 (โฌ55 midnightโ5am).
- Book summer ferries ahead โ sailings sell out and the Meltemi wind can ground the fast catamarans.
The mental model to drop is the European rail trip โ Greece doesnโt have one to speak of, so ferries are the connective tissue and the Athens metro is the only train that really matters (it links the airport, the port at Piraeus and all the central sites). Book summer sailings ahead, prefer the conventional boats if anyone gets seasick, and on each island hire a car or quad for a day or two: the best beaches are almost always beyond where the sparse local buses go.
Staying connected & covered
Most UK networks now bill around ยฃ2.25 a day to use your data in Greece โ roughly ยฃ15โยฃ16 for a week, ยฃ32 for a fortnight โ because post-Brexit EU roaming is no longer guaranteed free. Check your tariff first, and if the daily charge adds up, buy a Greece eSIM that switches on the moment you land; itโs especially handy for checking live ferry times when the Meltemi is blowing. The other thing to sort is cover: your GHIC and travel insurance do different jobs, and on the islands the insurance gap is wider than usual.
Stay connected in Greece
Post-Brexit, free EU roaming is no longer guaranteed โ most UK networks now charge around ยฃ2.25/day to use your allowance in Greece (about ยฃ15โ16 for a week, ยฃ32 for a fortnight). A travel eSIM is usually cheaper and gives you data the moment you land, which matters when you're checking live ferry times.
- Check your UK tariff first โ some Three, iD and Smarty plans still include EU roaming free.
- A typical 5โ10GB Greece eSIM costs about ยฃ8โยฃ12, beating a week of daily roaming charges.
- eSIMs install before you fly via a QR code on any eSIM-capable phone.
Travel insurance for Greece
A free UK GHIC gets you state healthcare in Greece, but it won't fly you home, won't cover a private clinic, and won't pay for cancellation or lost baggage. On a small island a serious case can mean a sea or air transfer to Athens or Crete โ exactly what insurance covers and the GHIC does not. GOV.UK and the NHS both say to carry travel insurance on top.
- Single-trip European cover starts at roughly ยฃ3โยฃ10 for a healthy younger traveller on a short trip.
- Annual multi-trip cover pays off if you travel abroad twice or more a year.
- If you'll hire a quad, scooter or car on an island, check the policy covers it โ many exclude two-wheelers.
Money
Greece in 2026 takes cards and Apple/Google Pay almost everywhere in cities and large resorts, but a cash culture persists on smaller islands, at village tavernas, beach kantinas, kiosks (periptera) and for tips โ so carry โฌ30โ50 in small notes and coins, and don't assume the remote beach taverna has a card machine. Withdraw from bank-branded ATMs and avoid standalone Euronet machines, which push high fees. The one rule that saves UK travellers real money: when an ATM or card machine asks whether to charge in pounds or euros, always choose euros. Choosing pounds triggers Dynamic Currency Conversion โ a hidden markup of up to ~5% โ and your own UK card or a fee-free travel card always beats it. Tipping is modest: round up the bill or leave 5โ10% in cash for good service.Fee-free travel money
Skip the airport exchange desk โ a fee-free travel card gives you the real exchange rate abroad.
Before you fly
The two Greece-specific moves that save real money and stress are booking summer ferries ahead (popular Cyclades sailings sell out, and you want flexibility if the Meltemi cancels a fast boat) and ordering a free GHIC before you go. Pre-book UK airport parking too โ itโs almost always cheaper booked ahead than on the day โ and sort your Greece eSIM before you leave so you land connected.
Airport parking & lounges
Pre-book your UK airport parking or a lounge โ it's almost always cheaper booked ahead than on the day.
How we know this
How we know this
- GOV.UK foreign travel advice โ Greece โ entry, passport, visa, health, safety and local laws (print page)
- NHS โ Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) โ the GHIC is free and is not a substitute for insurance
- Ferryhopper โ Greek ferry routes & fares โ ferry schedules, operators and prices for 2026
- Athens International Airport & OASA โ official airport metro, bus and taxi costs and times
GOV.UK last updated 20 Apr 2026.