Greek Island Hopping from Athens: 5 Cyclades Routes (2026)

Last updated: May 28, 2026
Standing on the Piraeus quay at six in the morning, watching a Seajet catamaran nose its way out toward a horizon stitched with island silhouettes, we always feel the same pull. The Cyclades aren’t one destination, they’re twenty-four distinct experiences arranged across a sapphire sea, all within three to seven hours of Athens. Island hopping the Cyclades is one of the great travel rituals of Europe, and it has never been easier to plan than in 2026.
This guide is our definitive answer to the question we receive more than any other: where do I start, and how do I string it all together? We have built five routes to cover every type of traveller, from the classic first-timer circuit to a genuine slow-travel escape. Every route departs from Athens, either Piraeus or Rafina, and every ferry leg links to a live booking page so you can act immediately.
How Island Hopping Works from Athens
Gateway Ports: Piraeus and Rafina
Athens has two ferry ports. Piraeus is the giant, the busiest passenger port in Europe, connected to virtually every Cyclades island by both conventional (slower, cheaper) and high-speed (catamaran) ferries. Take Metro Line 1 (Green Line) direct from Monastiraki or Omonia to Piraeus station, then walk five minutes to the ferry terminals. Journey time from central Athens: about 35 minutes.
Rafina is smaller, slightly north-east of the city, and around 10 km from Athens International Airport. It’s the smarter choice if you fly in and want to head straight to the islands without crossing the city. Rafina has fast-ferry services to Mykonos, Paros, Naxos, and Tinos, and tickets are often 10–15% cheaper than equivalent Piraeus sailings. The KTEL Attiki bus connects Rafina to Athens airport in about 45 minutes.
Ferry Passes vs. Point-to-Point Tickets
For most travellers doing three to five islands, point-to-point tickets are the better value. Book each leg separately through a single aggregator (Ferryhopper, DirectFerries, or the operator websites) as soon as your dates are fixed. You get full control over timing and can mix operators to find the fastest or cheapest crossing.
Ferry passes (like the Greek Island Hopper pass) make sense only if you’re island-hopping for two weeks or more and visiting six or more islands. The passes don’t always cover high-speed services, which means you could end up on slower overnight ferries when a direct catamaran exists.
Our rule of thumb: book high-speed tickets for long hops (Athens–Mykonos, Athens–Santorini), and use conventional ferries for short inter-island legs where the price difference is significant.
Route 1: Classic First-Timer, Athens to Mykonos to Paros to Santorini (7 Days)
Vibe: Iconic, lively, visually stunning | Best for: First visit, couples, Instagram-driven itineraries
This is the Cyclades greatest-hits circuit. It’s popular for a reason, each island delivers something the others can’t, and the ferry connections are frequent and reliable throughout the season.
Day 1–2, Mykonos: Take the Athens Piraeus to Mykonos ferry (roughly 2.5–5 hours depending on service). Mykonos Town's maze of whitewashed lanes, Little Venice, and the Kato Mili windmills are genuinely spectacular. Stay two nights to allow one full day on Paradise or Elia beach and one evening exploring the bar scene. Read our full Mykonos guide for neighbourhood breakdowns and beach rankings.
Day 3–5, Paros: The Naxos to Mykonos ferry runs in reverse here, catch a direct Mykonos–Paros service (1.5–2 hours). Paros is the ideal halfway island: cosmopolitan enough for great restaurants and nightlife in Naoussa, yet relaxed enough to hire a scooter and spend a morning at Kolymbithres without feeling rushed. Three nights is the right call. See the Paros guide for where to stay.
Day 6–7, Santorini: Sail Athens Piraeus to Santorini via the Paros–Santorini leg (2–2.5 hours). Two nights in Santorini is tight but workable if you pre-book the Oia sunset spot and a caldera boat tour. Fly or sail back to Athens on day 7. The Santorini guide covers the Oia vs Fira debate and how to escape the crowds.
Route 2: Relaxed and Authentic, Athens to Naxos to Paros to Milos (9 Days)
Vibe: Unhurried, local-feeling, great food | Best for: Repeat visitors, foodies, families
This route trades the Instagram icons for something more genuinely Greek. You’ll spend more time at each island and come home with a far deeper sense of the Cyclades than the classic circuit offers.
Day 1–3, Naxos: Board the Athens Piraeus to Naxos ferry (3.5–5.5 hours). Naxos is the largest and most self-sufficient Cycladic island. Spend three nights: one day on Plaka beach (a 4-kilometre stretch of clean golden sand), one day driving through the Tragea valley to marble-paved mountain villages like Halki and Apeiranthos, and one evening eating graviera cheese and slow-roast lamb in the old kastro. Naxos has the lowest food costs of any island on this list. Full details in the Naxos guide.
Day 4–6, Paros: The Paros to Naxos ferry takes just 25 minutes, the shortest inter-island hop in the Cyclades. Use Paros as your base for a cooking class, a windsurfing lesson at Golden Beach, and a sunset dinner in Naoussa harbour.
Day 7–9, Milos: Paros to Milos takes roughly 2.5 hours on the conventional ferry. Milos rewards slow travellers. Book a full-day boat tour to Kleftiko sea caves and Sarakiniko's lunar white cliffs on day 8, then spend day 9 visiting the coloured fishing village of Klima before sailing or flying back to Athens.
Route 3: Party and Beaches, Athens to Mykonos to Ios to Santorini (7 Days)
Vibe: High-energy, beach clubs, nightlife | Best for: Solo travellers, groups of friends, 20s–30s
If your priority is back-to-back beach clubs, a proper party island, and a dramatic finale, this circuit delivers all three without a dull day.
Day 1–2, Mykonos: Athens Piraeus to Mykonos ferry. Two nights is enough to sample Mykonos's legendary beach club scene (Scorpios, Nammos, Tropicana) and the bar-hopping labyrinth of Mykonos Town.
Day 3–5, Ios: Mykonos to Ios takes around 2–3 hours by high-speed ferry. Ios is one of Greece's most underrated party destinations, small enough to walk everywhere, big enough to have a genuine nightlife strip in Hora, and blessed with Mylopotas beach, a vast arc of sand that hosts both beach clubs and water-sports operators. Three nights here’s the heart of this itinerary.
Day 6–7, Santorini: Ios to Santorini is a 45-minute catamaran hop, one of the quickest inter-island legs in the Cyclades. Use your two nights for the caldera sunset, a wine tour through the volcanic terroir of Megalochori, and the clifftop restaurants of Imerovigli. Fly or ferry back via the Athens Piraeus to Santorini return leg.
Route 4: Quiet and Slow, Athens to Syros to Tinos to Andros (8 Days)
Vibe: Off-the-beaten-track, cultural, local life | Best for: Travellers who want to escape the crowds, culture enthusiasts, autumn travel
The northern Cyclades are perhaps the archipelago's best-kept secret. Syros, Tinos, and Andros are all served by regular ferries from Piraeus, yet they attract a fraction of the visitors that flood Mykonos or Santorini. All three have a permanent, year-round population that keeps local life authentic well outside the tourist season.
Day 1–2, Syros: Ermoupoli, the capital of the Cyclades, is an elegant neoclassical city with a 19th-century opera house, marble-paved Miaouli Square, and the best loukoumades (honey doughnuts) in the archipelago. Two nights gives you time for the upper Catholic quarter of Ano Syros and a half-day at Galissas beach.
Day 3–5, Tinos: A 30-minute ferry from Syros. Tinos is simultaneously a major pilgrimage site (the Panagia Evangelistria church draws thousands of Greek Orthodox visitors) and a brilliant under-the-radar food destination. The dovecotes of the Tarampados valley and the marble-craft villages of Pyrgos are unlike anything else in the Cyclades. Three nights.
Day 6–8, Andros: A 2-hour ferry from Tinos. Andros is lush by Cyclades standards, forested hillsides, rushing streams, and one of Greece's finest contemporary art museums (the Goulandris). The island has a quiet, well-heeled Greek clientele rather than international package tourists, which keeps standards high and prices honest. Return to Piraeus from Andros in around 2 hours.
Route 5: Budget Cyclades, Athens to Paros to Naxos (5 Days)
Vibe: Simple, affordable, genuinely beautiful | Best for: Budget travellers, first-timers on a short break, solo trips
The most cost-effective Cyclades island-hopping trip you can make. Two islands, five days, zero compromise on quality.
Day 1–2, Paros: The Athens Piraeus to Paros ferry takes 3–4.5 hours on the high-speed or 4.5 hours on the conventional ferry, the conventional is often half the price. Paros's Parikia Town has excellent cheap tavernas along the waterfront and a beautiful old Venetian kastro quarter. Two nights.
Day 3–5, Naxos: Hop over on the Paros to Naxos ferry (25 minutes, around €8–12 per person) and give yourself three nights. Naxos has the cheapest self-catering accommodation, the longest free beaches, and the most rewarding car or quad-bike hire of any island in the Cyclades. The Naxos to Mykonos ferry and Naxos–Athens services run daily so you can return to Athens on day 5 easily. Check the Athens Piraeus to Naxos timetable for the return leg.
Route Summary Table
| Route | Days | Vibe | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Athens → Mykonos → Paros → Santorini | 7 | Iconic & lively | First-timers, couples |
| Athens → Naxos → Paros → Milos | 9 | Relaxed & authentic | Foodies, families, repeaters |
| Athens → Mykonos → Ios → Santorini | 7 | Party & beaches | Groups, solo 20s–30s |
| Athens → Syros → Tinos → Andros | 8 | Quiet & cultural | Crowd-avoiders, autumn travel |
| Athens → Paros → Naxos | 5 | Budget & beautiful | Short breaks, tight budgets |
Booking and Practical Tips
Book ferries before accommodation. Ferry availability determines your dates, especially for peak season departures from Piraeus. Lock in your crossing times first, then book hotels around them.
Arrive at the port early. Greek ports are organised by gate number and ferry name, check your boarding pass for both. We recommend arriving 40–45 minutes before departure for catamarans and 60 minutes for large conventional ferries.
Pack a daypack for island days. Check your main luggage at your accommodation and explore each island with a light bag. Cobbled alleys and uneven steps make large suitcases a genuine nuisance.
Hire a car or quad on larger islands. Naxos, Milos, and Andros are too large to explore on foot or by bus alone. Budget €30–45/day for a small car. Paros and Mykonos are manageable with buses and taxis for beach-hopping.
Use a ferry map to visualise the routes. Our Cyclades ferry map shows every inter-island connection and travel time at a glance, useful for customising any of the five routes above.
Mix with a 7-day itinerary article. If you want a day-by-day breakdown for the classic circuit, our Cyclades 7-day itinerary covers every morning and evening in detail.
Travel insurance. Ferry delays and cancellations due to meltemi winds (a strong north wind common in July–August) can disrupt tight schedules. A policy with trip-interruption cover is worth it for multi-island itineraries.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many days do you need to island hop the Cyclades?
A minimum of 7 days lets you visit two or three islands comfortably. Ten to fourteen days is ideal for covering three to four islands without feeling rushed. Spending at least two nights on each island is our recommended minimum so you can actually settle in rather than just passing through.
What's the best island-hopping route for first-timers?
The classic Athens (Piraeus) to Mykonos to Paros to Santorini circuit is the most popular starting point for a reason. It covers the three most iconic Cycladic experiences, cosmopolitan buzz, authentic village life, and volcanic caldera sunsets, on a single 7-day loop with reliable daily ferries between each stop.
Should I pre-book ferries for a Cyclades island-hopping trip?
Yes, especially in July and August. High-speed catamaran tickets on popular routes like Piraeus–Mykonos and Santorini–Piraeus sell out weeks in advance in peak season. We recommend booking all ferry legs at least three to four weeks ahead for travel between mid-June and mid-September. Shoulder season (May–June, September–October) is more forgiving, but booking a week out is still wise for overnight or weekend sailings.
Should I leave from Piraeus or Rafina?
Piraeus, about 10 km south-west of central Athens, serves the widest range of Cyclades routes including Mykonos, Paros, Naxos, Santorini, Milos, Syros, Tinos, and Ios. Rafina, roughly 30 km north-east of Athens, is closer to the airport and also has fast ferries to Mykonos, Paros, Naxos, and Tinos, often at slightly lower prices. If you land at Athens International Airport and head straight to the islands, Rafina saves travel time.
What’s the best time of year to go island hopping in the Cyclades?
Late May through June and September through early October are the sweet spots: warm water, fewer crowds, lower prices, and reliable ferry schedules. July and August are the busiest and most expensive months but have the most frequent sailings. April and early May are quiet, occasionally windy, and the cheapest, ideal for budget travellers who don’t mind that some beach bars are still closed.
→ Cyclades ferry map | 7-day Cyclades itinerary | Santorini guide | Mykonos guide























