Crete
Maritime Museum of Crete
A small, cheap museum inside the Firka Fortress at the mouth of Chania's Venetian harbour — model ships, naval history and the moving Battle of Crete rooms, in under an hour.
Where
Chania, Greece
Opening hours
Roughly 09:00–17:00 in summer, with shorter winter hours and some seasonal or holiday closures. Always confirm current hours/prices on the official site.
Tickets
From about €4–€5 for a standard adult ticket; reduced rates usually apply for students and seniors.
Time needed
About 45 minutes to an hour, longer if you linger on the fortress walls for the harbour views.
In short
Visiting Maritime Museum of Crete
A quick, cheap stop at the harbour mouth rather than a half-day museum. It sits inside the Venetian Firka fortress, so you get ship models and a solid Battle of Crete section plus the postcard view back across the harbour from the walls. Go early or at golden hour for the light, allow under an hour, and just walk up — no booking needed.
What you actually get inside
Set the right expectation and you’ll enjoy this far more. The Maritime Museum of Crete isn’t a grand, half-day institution — it’s a compact collection housed in the Venetian Firka fortress at the western mouth of Chania’s harbour, and that setting is half the point. You walk through rooms of ship models, navigation instruments, old photographs and naval artefacts that trace Crete’s seafaring history from antiquity onward, and the displays are clearly laid out without being overwhelming.
The section most people remember is the one on the Battle of Crete in 1941, which handles the German airborne invasion and the Cretan resistance with real weight. It’s a genuinely affecting stop if you have any interest in the war, and it gives the building meaning beyond its model cases. Allow around three-quarters of an hour to an hour; this is a place you absorb rather than rush, but it won’t swallow your morning.
Timing it and pairing it well
There’s no need to book — you buy a low-cost ticket at the door, and queues are rare. What’s worth planning is the light. Because the fortress sits right on the harbour, the walls give you the classic view back across the quay to the Venetian lighthouse, and that view is at its best in early morning or the golden hour before sunset rather than under flat midday sun.
Slot it into a harbour walk rather than treating it as a standalone outing. Wander the full curve of the quay out toward the lighthouse, drop into the museum, then lose an hour in the old-town lanes and the covered Municipal Market behind the waterfront. Avoid stacking it against another ticketed sight the same day — Chania rewards a slow harbour morning more than a packed itinerary. Confirm the current opening hours before you go, as they shrink noticeably outside the summer season.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Chania city guide.
More to see in Chania
Book the essentials
Tours & tickets
Maritime Museum of Crete FAQs
Do you need to book the Maritime Museum of Crete in advance?
Is the Maritime Museum of Crete worth visiting?
Where exactly is it?
Ready to book?
Check tickets & tours