Rhodes
Grèce · Best time to visit: May-Oct.
Choose your pace
Eight Centuries on Foot — The Essential Rhodes in a Single Day
Mandraki Harbour
LandmarkBegin 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.
Open in Google Maps →Acropolis of Rhodes (Monte Smith)
LandmarkLeave 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.
Open in Google Maps →Tamam Restaurant
FoodWalk 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.
Open in Google Maps →Palace of the Grand Master (Exterior & Moat Walk)
LandmarkWalk 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.
Open in Google Maps →Street of the Knights & Medieval Old Town
NeighborhoodStep 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.
Open in Google Maps →Dinoris Fish Restaurant
FoodYou 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.
Open in Google Maps →Inside the Walls — a Day with the Knights of St. John
Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes
LandmarkEnter the Old Town through Liberty Gate and follow the cobbled lane 200 metres uphill — the twin towers of the Palace loom at the highest point of the medieval city and are visible from the harbour. Arrive at opening to have the 2nd-century Hellenistic mosaics and the marble-paved Knights' Hall almost to yourself; by 11:00 the cruise-ship groups flood in and ruin every photo. The grand upstairs apartments were rebuilt in the 1930s by the Italian occupation as a summer residence for Mussolini, who ultimately visited only once.
Tip: Buy the combined ticket (Palace + Archaeological Museum + Byzantine Museum = 10€) at this ticket desk — it saves you queueing at the other sites later. The must-see mosaics are the 'Nine Muses' and 'Medusa' on the ground floor, both relocated here from the island of Kos; skip the Prehistoric Rhodes room upstairs if you're short on time.
Open in Google Maps →Street of the Knights (Odos Ippoton)
LandmarkExit the Palace's south gate and you step directly onto the Street of the Knights — the entrance is 30 paces across the square, unmissable. This 600-metre cobbled lane is the best-preserved medieval street in Europe; each stone building on the north side was the 'Inn' of a different language group of the Knights of St. John (France, Spain, Italy, Provence, Auvergne), their carved coats of arms still above every door. Walk it now rather than after lunch — the low sun is blocked by the tall facades after 15:00 and the street goes flat and grey for photos.
Tip: Pause at the Inn of France (the grandest, roughly mid-way down on the north side) and look up — its gargoyles and the royal fleur-de-lis survived intact because the Ottomans plastered them over rather than chisel them off. The tiny 14th-century chapel on the north side is usually unlocked and empty; step inside for the pointed Gothic arches, strange to find in a Greek Orthodox city.
Open in Google Maps →Archaeological Museum of Rhodes
MuseumAt the bottom of the Street of the Knights, the imposing stone building ahead of you is the 15th-century Hospital of the Knights, now the Archaeological Museum — the side entrance is 30 seconds away on Museum Square. Before seeing any artefact, climb the stone staircase from the inner courtyard to the first-floor vaulted hall — this was the Infirmary Ward of 1489, one of the oldest working hospital rooms in Europe. The museum's quiet treasure is the 'Aphrodite of Rhodes', a small 1st-century BC marble in the pose of bathing, hidden in a side room on the upper floor.
Tip: Your combined ticket from the Palace gets you in without the second queue — show the stub at the side gate. Do not confuse the two Aphrodites: the larger 'Aphrodite Bathing' statue near the entrance is a Roman copy; the original Hellenistic 'Aphrodite of Rhodes' is smaller, one room further in, labelled simply 'Aphrodite (Rhodes workshop).' It is the one you came for.
Open in Google Maps →Nireas Restaurant
FoodLeave the museum, walk three minutes south through the lanes to Sokratous Square, then turn right onto Agiou Fanouriou — Nireas hides in a jasmine-covered courtyard on the left. Run by the same family for over forty years, this is where Rhodes locals bring visiting relatives for seafood meze: grilled octopus (14€) charred outside and still tender inside, shrimp saganaki (13€) bubbling in tomato and feta, and warm bread to mop up the juices. Order four small plates between two people and you'll be out in 75 minutes, which is exactly the right pace for a day like this.
Tip: Never order 'fresh fish' from the glass case without asking the price per kilo first — even at honest Rhodes tavernas, fresh fish runs 70-90€/kg and one small bass can hit 40€. Stick to the meze: octopus, the saganaki shrimp, fava-bean puree (8€), and a small bottle of house retsina (6€). Ask for the back tables under the bougainvillea arch — they are shaded all afternoon; the street-facing tables bake.
Open in Google Maps →Mandraki Harbour and the Windmills
LandmarkFrom Nireas, walk five minutes east through the medieval lanes to the Marine Gate (Pyli Thalassini), step through the massive arch, and Mandraki Harbour opens up in front of you — the full run of Old Town walls rising from the water on your right. The two bronze deer on tall columns (Elafos and Elafina) mark the harbour mouth, where tradition places the feet of the Colossus of Rhodes. Walk the long stone breakwater out past the three Byzantine stone windmills to the 15th-century Fort of Saint Nicholas — this is the only angle from which you can photograph the complete walled city silhouetted against the Aegean, and afternoon light falls gold and soft on the west-facing walls.
Tip: The 'Colossus stood here' plaque is romantic but speculative — modern archaeologists place the ancient harbour entrance further south. Walk all the way to the tip of the breakwater; most tourists turn back at the first windmill, so the final stretch past the Fort of Saint Nicholas is usually empty, and the last windmill gives the postcard frame with the whole Old Town skyline behind it. Time your return for around 17:30 — the walls begin to turn bronze.
Open in Google Maps →Marco Polo Mansion Restaurant
FoodFrom Mandraki, walk back through the Marine Gate and cross the Old Town south along Pythagora and Agiou Fanouriou — about 15 minutes through lanes now lit only by wrought-iron lanterns. Marco Polo Mansion is a restored 15th-century Ottoman merchant's house, and its garden restaurant is the most atmospheric dinner table on Rhodes: stone walls, lemon trees, one candle per table, and a single short menu that changes weekly. Their slow-cooked rabbit stifado with hilopites pasta (24€) and prawns in ouzo (22€) are the signatures; a glass of red from Rhodes's Emery vineyard (8€) finishes it.
Tip: Reserve 24 hours in advance by phone and specifically request the garden courtyard, not the indoor salon — the indoor room is beautiful but hot in summer, and the magic is all under the lemon trees. PITFALL WARNING: Sokratous and Aristotelous streets are lined with 'sunset-view tavernas' that wave laminated multilingual menus and offer '2 courses + wine for 25€' — these are all tourist traps run by a handful of families serving reheated frozen food, and the view is of other tourists. Walk past every one of them; the real restaurants of Rhodes are in the quiet side lanes with handwritten Greek-only menus.
Open in Google Maps →The White Village on the Cliff — a Day in Lindos
Acropolis of Lindos
LandmarkCatch the 07:45 KTEL bus from Rhodes Town's Rimini Square (7€) for the 90-minute coast-hugging ride to Lindos — it drops you at the village's entrance square. From there, follow the signposted donkey path 15 minutes up through the white lanes, then climb the monumental Hellenistic staircase cut straight into the cliff. The summit holds the 4th-century BC Temple of Athena Lindia and the Knights' fortifications, plus the view that single-handedly made Lindos famous: the perfectly horseshoe-shaped St. Paul's Bay 120 metres directly below, the Aegean stretching east to infinity.
Tip: Start at the Acropolis first thing — by 11:00 the limestone has stored the day's heat and the climb becomes brutal; by 12:00 the cruise-ship buses from Rhodes port arrive and the summit is shoulder-to-shoulder. Stand at the north-east corner of the Temple of Athena platform (not where the selfie crowd gathers at the south) — that one angle gives you the small Byzantine chapel in the foreground and the full bay beyond, the single best photograph on the island.
Open in Google Maps →Lindos Village and the Captain's Houses
NeighborhoodDescend the same donkey path back into the village — the whole of Lindos is pedestrian-only, a labyrinth of lime-washed cubes and blue-painted doors that has barely changed since the 1500s. Wander the lanes between the main square and the sea gate, looking for the carved stone doorways of the 'Captain's Houses' — the fortified mansions of the wealthy 1600s sea-captains, marked by elaborate coats of arms and rope-motif borders. Step into any courtyard with an open door: they all have chochlakia — black-and-white sea-pebble mosaic floors that took months to set by hand.
Tip: The most spectacular Captain's House open to the public is the Papakonstantis Mansion (1626) on Akropoleos Street — look for the carved Byzantine ship above the lintel; push the wooden door, you can step into the courtyard. Ignore the 'traditional Greek sandals made here' shops on the main lane — they are Chinese imports sold at 60€; the genuine leather workshops are tucked in the quiet lanes near the Captain's Houses.
Open in Google Maps →Church of the Panagia of Lindos
ReligiousTwo minutes back toward the main square, a small arched doorway on the right opens into a walled courtyard — easy to walk past if you aren't looking. The Church of the Assumption of Panagia was built in the 14th century and completely frescoed in 1779 by a local painter named Gregorios of Symi: every wall, every vault, every square inch is covered in Byzantine-style saints and a full Last Judgement across the west wall. The floor is a chochlakia pebble mosaic — same technique as the mansions, but made sacred.
Tip: Photography without flash is permitted — most visitors don't know this and sneak photos, so ask the caretaker openly and you'll get a nod. Look straight up at the central dome: the Christ Pantocrator has been darkened by centuries of candle smoke, but the surrounding prophets still have their gold leaf intact. Cover shoulders and knees to enter — they will turn you away at the door otherwise.
Open in Google Maps →Kalypso Roof Garden Restaurant
FoodKalypso is three minutes from the church, on the narrow Akropoleos lane that runs through the village — climb the external stone staircase to the roof. The terrace looks straight up at the Acropolis walls you just climbed and straight down over the whitewashed rooftops: the best lunchtime view in Lindos. For a quick village lunch, order a pork gyros pita (8€), a Greek village salad with barrel feta (10€), and a cold Mythos (4€); locals actually eat here, which is rare on any Lindos rooftop.
Tip: Take any rooftop table on the left side as you come up the stairs — those face the Acropolis directly, while the right-side tables look inland at nothing. Skip the 'seafood platter' (35€, frozen) and the overpriced moussaka; stick to the gyros, the salad, or the grilled village sausage. Finish with a single free shot of house raki, brought on request.
Open in Google Maps →St. Paul's Bay
ParkFrom the village's southern edge, follow the signposted stone path 10 minutes downhill to St. Paul's Bay — the path opens onto the cliff and the near-enclosed horseshoe cove drops below you as you descend. Named for the Apostle Paul, who is said to have landed here in 58 AD during a storm, the bay is a natural harbour protected on three sides by sheer cliff — water that shifts from pale jade to deep navy as the seabed plunges. Swim in clear, almost flat water, then dry off under a tamarisk tree beside the tiny whitewashed chapel on the south cliff.
Tip: Walk to the far end of the beach past the small beach bar — the pebble cove on the south side, reached by a short scramble over the rocks, is nearly empty even in August, and the water there is deeper and cooler. Take the tamarisk shade at the north end instead of renting a 15€ umbrella set; shade is free and just as good. Never leave valuables on the sand unattended — there are regular theft reports in peak summer.
Open in Google Maps →Mavrikos Restaurant
FoodClimb back up from the bay into the village (15 minutes) and arrive in the main square — Mavrikos has run under the same family since 1933 and sits directly on the plateia beneath a giant plane tree. This is the table where Lindos's evolution into a global destination was recorded on a menu: you can still order the grandfather's octopus in red wine (24€) alongside his grandson's sea bass carpaccio with bergamot (22€). Sit at a square-side table in the open air and watch the village go from daytime white to evening gold; the Acropolis lights up overhead around 21:00.
Tip: Book by email at least three days ahead and explicitly request a 'plateia' (square) table outside, not the indoor room — the outdoor magic is the entire point, and walk-ins are always seated indoors first. Order the octopus stifado (the signature dish since 1933) and a half-litre of the house Lindos white (9€). PITFALL WARNING: Never rent a donkey ride up to the Acropolis — the animals are famously overworked and underfed, Greek and international NGOs have been campaigning against the practice for years, and it's 4€ vs a 15-minute walk you've already done happily. Also ignore the laminated-menu tavernas on the road out of the village: they exist only to intercept tourists running for the last bus.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around Rhodes
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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).