Rhodes
City Guide

Rhodes

Griechenland · Best time to visit: May-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €100.00/day
Best season May-Oct
Language English
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Athens
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Eight Centuries on Foot — The Essential Rhodes in a Single Day

08:30

Mandraki Harbour

Landmark
Duration: 1h30min Estimated cost: €0

Begin at the very spot where the Colossus once stood — the bronze deer Elafos and Elafina mark the tip of Mandraki Harbour, and the three 15th-century Knights' windmills and the squat Fort of St. Nicholas catch the east-facing morning light before the first cruise-ship tenders dock at 10:30. Walk the full length of the breakwater out to the fort, then back along the yacht basin for the classic head-on view of the medieval walls. Arrive by 08:30 and you have the harbour almost to yourself.

Tip: At 09:00 stand on the breakwater halfway to the fort, turn back, and frame the three windmills with the medieval walls behind — sun is over your right shoulder and the water is glass. After the 10:30 cruise-tender surge this shot is impossible; the Colossus-stood-here plaques you see are tourist fiction — archaeologists long ago ruled the harbour entrance too narrow for the statue's stance.

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10:30

Acropolis of Rhodes (Monte Smith)

Landmark
Duration: 1h30min Estimated cost: €0

Leave Mandraki heading west along Eleftherias Avenue and climb residential Diagoridon Street for 25 minutes — British admiral Sydney Smith used this hill in 1802 to watch Napoleon's fleet, and locals still call it Monte Smith. Three restored Doric columns of the Temple of Apollo stand against pure Aegean blue, and the partially reconstructed ancient stadium and odeion below are free to wander and almost always empty. Morning is non-negotiable: the climb is genuine, the columns face east, and by 13:00 the sun flattens them into silhouette.

Tip: Shoot the Temple of Apollo from the west side looking back toward the columns with the sea beyond — at 11:00 the raking light carves every fluting in the marble. Descend via the ancient stadium rather than the way you came; the 1930s Italian reconstruction is intact enough to run a lap on, and you will share it with no one.

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12:30

Tamam Restaurant

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €22

Walk 25 minutes downhill east through quiet residential streets, enter the Old Town through the Liberty Gate (Pyli Eleftherias), and find Tamam tucked on tiny Georgiou Leontos lane — a creative Greek kitchen serving under bougainvillea in a medieval courtyard that locals use as their everyday lunch spot. Order the slow-cooked lamb kleftiko with orzo (€16) and a plate of fava (€7), or the grilled octopus (€18) if you need seafood. Sit-down but fast, and a €20-€25 bill leaves you headroom for dinner.

Tip: Ask for a courtyard table when you arrive; the indoor room is pleasant but the courtyard is the reason locals come. Every restaurant on parallel Sokratous Street with a laminated six-language menu and photos of every dish is charging 40% more for worse food — rule of thumb: if the waiter speaks to you in English before you speak, keep walking.

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14:00

Palace of the Grand Master (Exterior & Moat Walk)

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 4 minutes northwest up Ippodamou Street and the Palace of the Grand Master rises in front of you — the 14th-century Knights Hospitaller fortress that survived the 1856 gunpowder explosion that levelled half the Old Town, only to be rebuilt by Mussolini in the 1930s as a summer residence for himself and the king. We are viewing exteriors only: enter the dry moat at d'Amboise Gate on the north-west side and walk the full ditch counter-clockwise to St. Anthony's Gate. The scale of the walls from inside the moat beats anything on offer in the interior tour you are skipping.

Tip: Almost no one walks the moat — the queue for the interior is always at the main gate, while the moat path is empty in high summer. At the south-east corner of the moat, look up: you can see the 1480 cannonball scars from the Ottoman siege still embedded in the masonry, level with your eye.

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15:00

Street of the Knights & Medieval Old Town

Neighborhood
Duration: 4h Estimated cost: €5

Step out of the moat through the Palace's south gate and the cobbled Street of the Knights (Odos Ippoton) opens in front of you — 600 metres of Gothic façades exactly as the Knights Hospitaller built them between 1309 and 1522, restored by Italian architects in the 1920s and more convincingly medieval than most towns in Italy. Walk Ippoton down to Museum Square, then push south through the Sokratous bazaar, past the pink Mosque of Suleiman, onto Hippocrates Square with its Ottoman Kastellania fountain, and east to the Gate of St. Paul on the harbour walls. The afternoon light works with you the whole way — every honey-coloured stone glows after 17:00.

Tip: At 18:30 climb the Clock Tower of Roloi (€5) for the single best rooftop view in Rhodes — Old Town, Mandraki and Monte Smith all in one frame with the setting sun behind you. Walk Ippoton east-to-west going uphill for the photograph, not downhill: the angle compresses the Inns of the Tongues into a single Gothic corridor.

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19:30

Dinoris Fish Restaurant

Food
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €50

You have already arrived — Dinoris sits on Museum Square inside a 1530 Knights Hospitaller stable, operating as a fish taverna since 1960 and still run by the founding family. Sit in the vaulted stone room or, better, the square-side terrace under the plane tree, and order the shrimp saganaki (€18), the grilled whole sea bass (€32/kg from the morning Mandraki auction), and a carafe of white Athiri from a Rhodian vineyard. A three-course dinner with wine runs €45-€55 — the most memorable meal you will eat inside an actual medieval Greek stable.

Tip: Reserve at least 24 hours ahead in summer (email gets faster replies than phone) and ask specifically for a terrace table on the square — the vaulted room is atmospheric but you came to Rhodes to eat outdoors. Avoid every 'fisherman taverna' on Sokratous five minutes away: they charge Dinoris prices for farmed fish from the mainland, and the 'complimentary ouzo' waiters wave at you from the doorway always lands on the bill at €8 a shot.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Rhodes?

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

What's the best time to visit Rhodes?

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

What's the daily budget for Rhodes?

A practical starting point is about €100 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Rhodes?

A good first shortlist for Rhodes includes Mandraki Harbour, Acropolis of Rhodes (Monte Smith), Palace of the Grand Master (Exterior & Moat Walk).