Corfu
City Guide

Corfu

Greece · Best time to visit: May-Oct.

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €80.00/day
Best season May-Oct
Language English
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Athens
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Two Fortresses, a Thousand Alleys, and the Ionian Glittering Below

09:00

New Fortress (Neo Frourio)

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €4

From the old port, walk uphill past the fish market — the fortress entrance is a five-minute climb through a stone tunnel that opens onto the ramparts. Built by the Venetians in 1577 as a last line of defense against the Ottomans, the New Fortress rewards the climb with the single best panorama on the island: terracotta rooftops tumbling toward the harbor, the Albanian mountains floating just two kilometers across the turquoise strait, and the Old Fortress guarding the opposite headland like a stone fist. Do this climb first while your legs are fresh — it is the steepest ascent of the day, and the morning sun flooding the town below turns every rooftop to copper.

Tip: Arrive right at opening and you'll own the ramparts for a solid 20 minutes before the first cruise-ship groups lumber up the hill. The best photo angle is from the northeast bastion, where the Old Town rooftops and Old Fortress line up with the Albanian coastline behind them. Skip the small café at the top — better coffee waits in the old town below.

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10:45

Campiello Quarter

Neighborhood
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the fortress from the lower gate and within two minutes you are swallowed by Campiello, the oldest residential quarter in Corfu. The kantounia — alleys so narrow your shoulders nearly brush both walls — twist past four-story Venetian townhouses with crumbling ochre facades, iron balconies heavy with jasmine, and laundry strung between shuttered windows. Follow the tallest bell tower on the island to the Church of Saint Spyridon, patron saint of Corfu, whose deep red tower against the blue sky is the most photographed silhouette on the island. Let yourself get genuinely lost — every wrong turn in Campiello leads to a sun-drenched courtyard or a cat asleep on a marble wellhead.

Tip: The most photogenic alley connects Guilford Street to Filarmonikis — look for the stone archway draped in ivy with laundry overhead. Before 11:30, the sun filters through the narrow gaps between buildings in dramatic golden shafts that vanish entirely by midday. If you spot an open courtyard door, peek inside — Campiello residents rarely mind a polite visitor admiring their hidden gardens.

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12:30

Rouvas

Food
Duration: 30min Estimated cost: €10

Walk south through the old market street for three minutes — Rouvas is the unmarked storefront with a glass counter and plastic chairs that every shopkeeper in the neighborhood has eaten at since the 1940s. There is no website, no English sign, and no Instagram presence — just trays of daily-cooked dishes behind glass. Point at what looks good: the pastitsada, braised beef in cinnamon-spiced tomato sauce over thick tubular pasta (€8), is arguably the best-value version on the island. The moussaka (€7) arrives in portions sized for dockworkers. Order at the counter, sit down, and you are back on your feet in twenty minutes having spent under €12.

Tip: Arrive before 12:30 or the best trays will be half empty. There is no English menu — point and smile. Tap water in Corfu is clean and free, so skip the bottled water. If the pastitsada tray is already gone, the daily gemista (stuffed tomatoes and peppers, €6) is the next best move.

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13:30

Liston Promenade and Spianada Square

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €4

Walk east from Rouvas through the old market street — after five minutes the cramped alleys explode into Spianada, the largest public square in the Balkans. Napoleon's engineers modeled the Liston arcade after the Rue de Rivoli: a long colonnade of honey-colored arches sheltering the most elegant café terraces in Greece. Under the arcades, Corfiots nurse a single ginger beer for hours while the world rushes past. Across the green, a cricket pitch — yes, cricket, a relic of British rule that Corfiots adopted with genuine passion — stretches toward the Maitland Rotunda gleaming at the southern end. Walk the full length of the Liston slowly: the early-afternoon sun strikes the arches head-on, turning the stone to warm gold.

Tip: Order a tsitsibira (Corfiot ginger beer, €3–4) at any Liston café — this hyper-local specialty exists nowhere else in Greece and has been brewed here since the British garrison days. Grab a table under the deepest arch for shade and the best people-watching angle. Do not confuse the Liston with the cheaper café strip one block west — the arches are the real thing.

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15:00

Old Fortress (Palaio Frourio)

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €6

Walk east across the Spianada past the cricket pitch — the bridge to the Old Fortress spans a Venetian-carved sea moat, and the approach alone, with sheer walls rising from turquoise water on both sides, is one of the most dramatic entrances on any Greek island. This headland has been fortified since the sixth century; the Venetians rebuilt it into the impregnable citadel before you. Two rocky peaks define the skyline — the word Corfu itself derives from the Greek koryphai, meaning peaks. Climb to the lighthouse on the higher summit for a view that sweeps from the island's eastern beaches to the mountains of mainland Epirus. At this hour, the afternoon light turns the fortress stone to amber and the Ionian below deepens from pale turquoise to cobalt.

Tip: Head straight for the lighthouse summit on the taller peak — skip the lower Church of Agios Georgios, a 19th-century British rebuilding with no original character, and save your legs for the panorama that justifies the entrance fee. The eastern ramparts catch a cooling breeze even on the hottest August afternoons. Bring water — there is no shade on the upper path and no vendor at the top.

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19:00

Rex Restaurant

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €35

Cross back over the fortress bridge and walk three minutes along the Spianada's northern edge — Rex occupies a neoclassical corner where the Liston meets the square, its terrace framing the fortress you just conquered. A Corfu institution since 1932, this is where you eat the dish the island is famous for: sofrito, thin veal slices slow-braised in white wine, garlic, and white pepper, served over mashed potatoes so impossibly creamy they deserve their own postcard (€16). Start with bourdeto, the spicy scorpionfish stew that fishermen's wives invented to use up the morning's unsold catch (€14), and pair it all with a glass of local Kakotrygis white wine (€5). Budget €30–40 for a proper farewell to Corfu.

Tip: Reserve a terrace table for 19:00 — the fortress glows in golden hour and the Spianada fills with Corfiots on their evening volta, making it the best free show in town. Order from the regular menu, not the laminated tourist menu some waiters present first — it costs more and tastes less. One warning to carry with you: the string of waterfront restaurants lining the old port below the New Fortress are tourist traps serving microwaved moussaka at double the price with half the soul — you have already eaten at the right places today, so do not let a harbor view undo your good judgment on the way back to the ship.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Corfu?

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

What's the best time to visit Corfu?

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

What's the daily budget for Corfu?

A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Corfu?

A good first shortlist for Corfu includes New Fortress (Neo Frourio), Liston Promenade and Spianada Square, Old Fortress (Palaio Frourio).