Nafplio
City Guide

Nafplio

Griechenland · Best time to visit: Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €85.00/day
Best season Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct
Language English
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Athens
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Greece's First Capital — A Greatest-Hits Power Walk by the Sea

08:30

Palamidi Fortress

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €8

Start from the Arvanitia car park stairway at opening — the 857 marble steps climb straight up the cliff face before the stone heats up or the tour buses arrive. The morning sun hits the Agios Andreas bastion from the east, throwing long shadows across the eight interlocking Venetian redoubts; this is the shot that puts all of Nafplio — Bourtzi, the terracotta rooftops, the Argolic Gulf — in a single frame. Descend the same stairway back toward the Old Town when the 10:00 coach crowd starts coming up.

Tip: Take the stairway (east side, from Arvanitia), not the paved road — the stairs are quiet, the road is a serpentine with no views. Go straight to Agios Andreas bastion first for the postcard shot before 10:00. Wear grippy shoes: the marble steps have been polished slick by two centuries of feet, and there is no handrail on the sea-facing side.

Open in Google Maps →
10:45

Syntagma Square & the Venetian Old Town

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

From the foot of the Palamidi stairs, walk 10 minutes downhill through Psaromahalas — the old fishermen's quarter of whitewashed alleys, bougainvillea spilling over doorways, and cats asleep on every windowsill. Syntagma opens up suddenly: the Venetian Arsenal of 1713 (now the Archaeological Museum) closes the north end, the Ottoman Vouleftiko mosque (where Greece's first parliament met in 1825) anchors the south, and ochre-and-rose neoclassical mansions line the rest. Loop the square, then drift one block east onto Staikopoulou for the prettiest residential alleys.

Tip: Do not sit at the cafés ringing Syntagma — they charge tourist tariff for mediocre frappé. If you need coffee, step one block east to Staikopoulou. The Vouleftiko façade photographs best at 11:30, when the south-facing stone is fully lit and the square is still in partial shadow — the contrast makes the arched portal pop.

Open in Google Maps →
12:30

Mezedopoleio O Noulis

Food
Duration: 45m Estimated cost: €18

Two blocks east of Syntagma on Moutzouridou — a tiny blue-shuttered mezze house run by Noulis himself, who will cook, serve, and flambé your saganaki at the table. Order the saganaki flambéed in ouzo (€7, the signature move — he sets it alight in front of you), the taramosalata (€5, the best in town — smoky, not sweet), and a small octopus (€9). Small plates, carafe wine, in and out in 45 minutes.

Tip: Arrive right at 12:30 before the sit-down crowd fills the six outdoor tables — no reservation needed at lunch, only at dinner. Order the way locals do: glance at a neighbor's table and ask for a 'mikri' (small) portion of what looks good. Skip the bottled water — the tap carafe is free and perfectly fine.

Open in Google Maps →
13:30

Akti Miaouli Harbor & Bourtzi View

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 5 minutes north from the taverna down to Akti Miaouli — the curved stone harbor promenade lined with wooden fishing caïques. Bourtzi, the 15th-century Venetian island fortress that once guarded the harbor chain, sits 400 meters offshore looking exactly like the postcard you bought at the airport. The view from the shore is genuinely better than boarding the water taxi — Bourtzi's interior is a single bare courtyard currently half-wrapped in restoration scaffolding. Stroll the full length of the quay to the Philhellene monument.

Tip: Stand at the base of the Philhellene monument (opposite the ferry pier) for the classic Bourtzi shot with nothing blocking the silhouette — the other viewpoints have moored boats in the foreground. Skip the €5 water-taxi to the island: the landing is tiny, the interior closes by 15:00, and the photo from shore is the iconic one anyway.

Open in Google Maps →
15:00

Arvanitia Promenade

Park
Duration: 2h30 Estimated cost: €0

Walk 8 minutes south along the waterfront past Agios Spyridon Church (look for the bronze bust of Karaiskakis — the path starts just behind it). The 3-kilometer paved Arvanitia path wraps the entire Akronafplia peninsula along the cliff edge: Aleppo-pine shade on your left, the Argolic Gulf 30 meters below on your right, no cars, no vendors. Halfway around you pass the old Venetian gunpowder magazines and the last wild cove before the peninsula's tip. The sun drops into the sea behind the Palamidi walls around 19:30 and you will finish the loop exactly as it happens.

Tip: Walk counter-clockwise (south side first) so you return facing the sunset, not with it behind you. The best bench is at the rocky outcrop about 1 km in, just past Arvanitia beach cove — in September and October, the sinking sun lines up perfectly with the Bourtzi silhouette from that exact spot for maybe 8 minutes. Bring water; there is no kiosk on the loop.

Open in Google Maps →
19:45

Savouras Psarotaverna

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €38

A 7-minute walk back along the harbor from where the Arvanitia path lets out. This is Nafplio's old-school fish taverna — run by the Savouras family since 1970, checkered oilcloth on the tables, a glass-fronted ice case inside where you pick your fish by eye. Order the grilled barbounia (red mullet, priced by weight — roughly €12 per 100g), a plate of horta (wild boiled greens with lemon and oil, €5), and a carafe of the house Nemea white (€6). Finish with a complimentary loukoumades (honey-soaked dough balls) the kitchen sends out.

Tip: Reserve the night before on +30 27520 27704, or walk in at 19:30 before the Greek dinner hour (21:00) fills the waterfront tables. When you pick your fish, watch them weigh it at the counter and specify how much you want BEFORE cooking — a whole barbouni can run €25 if you don't cap it. Pitfall warning: avoid every seafood taverna on Syntagma Square and the short alleys feeding it — the ones with illustrated multilingual menu-boards and a tout at the door are the classic Nafplio traps, serving €40 frozen sea bass rebranded as 'catch of the day.' Real fish tavernas are on the harbor or tucked behind it, and they never need a tout.

Open in Google Maps →
Trip builder

Plan this trip around Nafplio

Turn this guide into a bookable rail itinerary with FlipEarth.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Nafplio?

Most travelers enjoy Nafplio in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Nafplio?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Jun, Sep-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Nafplio?

A practical starting point is about €85 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Nafplio?

A good first shortlist for Nafplio includes Palamidi Fortress, Akti Miaouli Harbor & Bourtzi View.