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Limassol, Cyprus
Limassol

Limassol District

Limassol

The one Cyprus base that's a real city: hire a car, stay between the Venetian old town and the marina, and reach Kourion in 20 minutes and the Troodos wine villages by lunch.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 7 Jun 2026

Best length

4-7 nights as a base

Airport

Larnaca (LCA), ~70km east; Paphos (PFO) ~70km west

Airport to centre

Limassol Airport Express €10 (~1h15) or fixed taxi €50-55

Best base

Old town for atmosphere; Germasogeia for beach-and-bars; marina for polish

In short

Limassol at a glance

Limassol is the one Cyprus base that's a real city rather than a self-contained resort: a Venetian castle and old-town lanes at one end, the glossy marina and a 12km seafront promenade at the other, and the best year-round restaurant and nightlife scene on the island in between. It works best as a base with a hire car — the Roman theatre at Kourion is 20 minutes west, the Troodos wine villages an hour inland for a cooler day, and the beaches improve once you leave the grey city sand for Lady's Mile. Stay near the old town for atmosphere and walkable evenings, the Tourist Area/Germasogeia for the beach-and-nightlife strip, or the marina if you want sea-view polish.

The short version

  • Limassol is a city, not a resort — base here if you want bars, restaurants and culture with your beach rather than a self-contained hotel strip.
  • It's the smartest base for the island's best Roman ruin (Kourion, 20 min west) and the Troodos wine villages (an hour inland for a cooler day).
  • Stay near the old town and castle for atmosphere, the Tourist Area/Germasogeia for the beach-and-nightlife strip, or the marina for sea-view polish.
  • The city's own beach is grey, imported sand — for proper swimming, drive to Lady's Mile or Governor's Beach.
  • Fly into Larnaca (LCA), not Paphos: the Limassol Airport Express shuttle is €10 and ~1h15, a fixed-fare taxi €50–€55.
  • A mid-range beach-and-ruins week runs roughly £750–£850 per person including flights; budget travellers can do it nearer £500–£600.

Limassol is the Cyprus base that confuses people who expect a resort. It’s a working city of 100,000-plus, strung along a 12km seafront, with a Venetian castle and lantern-lit old-town lanes at one end, a glossy yacht marina and sea-view towers at the other, and the bars of Saripolou Square keeping the island’s best nightlife going in between. That makes it the one place on Cyprus that’s genuinely alive year-round — restaurants and bars don’t shut for winter the way the resort strips do — but it also means the city’s own beach is grey imported sand, and the polish comes at marina prices. The job of a good Limassol trip is to base somewhere that matches your evenings, and treat the city as a launchpad rather than a sunlounger.

That launchpad is the real argument for Limassol. Ancient Kourion, the cliff-top Roman theatre that’s the best ruin on the island, is 20 minutes’ drive west. The Troodos wine villages — cobbled Omodos, local Commandaria, a meze lunch ten degrees cooler than the coast — are an hour inland for the day. For proper swimming you drive to Lady’s Mile or Governor’s Beach rather than the city sand. All of which means most people should hire a car: Limassol has no airport of its own, so you’re driving in from Larnaca or Paphos anyway, and the wheels unlock the half of the trip that isn’t the seafront.

Below, the structured planning — where to stay between the old town, Germasogeia and the marina, how to get in from Larnaca, a realistic budget in pounds, and the day trips worth the drive — picks up from here.

Plan your Limassol trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Limassol

Kourion (Ancient Curium)

Drive yourself from Limassol — it's about 19km west on the B6 towards Paphos, 25 minutes, and there's a free car park at the gate. Entry is €4.50 (about £3.80), so it's the cheapest big sight you'll see all trip. The clifftop Greco-Roman theatre looking straight out over the Mediterranean is the reason to come; the House of Eustolios mosaics under their modern roof are the other. Go early or late: the whole site is open ground on an exposed headland with almost no shade, and it's punishing at midday in summer.

1.5–2 hours €4.50

Kolossi Castle

Kolossi is a single 21-metre Crusader keep 14km west of Limassol — a 30-minute visit, not a half-day. Entry is just €2.50 (about £2.15), you pay at the gate, and there's no need to book ahead. Climb the tight medieval spiral stair to the flat roof for the view over the vineyards, then read the Commandaria wine story on the way out. On its own it's a quick stop; the smart move is to chain it with the Kourion ruins a few kilometres further west.

About 30–45 minute… €2.50

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Old Town and Castle

££ mid-range

The most characterful base: Venetian castle, lantern-lit lanes, the bars of Saripolou Square and the carob-mill quarter, all walkable and a short stroll from the seafront promenade. Not a beach base — the nearest swimming is the grey city sand — but the best choice if you want atmosphere and dinner on foot.

Best for: Atmosphere, food, walkable evenings

Browse hotels City centre

Tourist Area / Germasogeia

££ mid-range

The long beach-and-nightlife strip east of the centre: the densest run of hotels, beach bars and restaurants, and the liveliest evenings on the island outside Ayia Napa. Better swimming than the old town and a 10-minute taxi from it. Choose it for a classic beach-week base with bars on the doorstep.

Best for: Beach weeks, nightlife, hotel-strip convenience

Browse hotels 10-15 min east of centre

Limassol Marina and Agios Tychonas

£££ premium

The polished, premium end: sea-view apartments and upscale hotels around the yacht marina, fine-dining restaurants and the smartest seafront stretch. Stylish but pricey, and a taxi from the old town's atmosphere. Pick it for sea views and gloss over local character.

Best for: Sea-view stays, couples, premium polish

Browse hotels Marina / east of centre

Mesa Geitonia / Panthea

£ value

Quieter inland residential districts away from the seafront, where rooms and apartments are noticeably cheaper and the supermarkets and tavernas are where locals actually eat. Best with a hire car — you'll drive to the beach — but the value play for a longer or family stay.

Best for: Value, longer stays, families with a car

Browse hotels Inland, 5-10 min drive to seafront

Airport to city centre

Limassol airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Limassol Airport Express shuttle from Larnaca (LCA) ~1h15-1h30 €10 / about £8.60 adult (€5 child) Hourly; buy at the airport counter or onboard
Fixed-fare taxi from Larnaca (LCA) ~50-60 min €50-€55 day / about £43-£47 (€60-65 at night) Government-fixed fare; best for groups or late arrivals
Limassol Airport Express shuttle from Paphos (PFO) ~1h about €10 / £8.60 If your cheapest fare lands at Paphos instead
Hire car from Larnaca or Paphos airport ~50-60 min drive from €20-€30/day / £17-£26 booked ahead Best if you want Kourion and the Troodos villages
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: 25-30°C, a sea that's warm enough to swim from May into November, and prices below the July-August peak. Spring brings the Troodos villages alive and the Kourion theatre is bearable rather than baking. The Limassol Wine Festival (late August/early September) and the spring Carnival are the two events worth timing a trip around.

August is the month to avoid if you can: Limassol averages around 34°C, it's humid, the Tourist Area is at its busiest and priciest, and the ruins at midday are punishing. The city's edge is its long shoulder season — the sea stays swim-warm into late October, and as a real city Limassol stays open and lively year-round, unlike the resort strips that shut down. Winter is mild but not a beach trip; come for the food, wine villages and an empty seafront.

What it costs

UK return flights to Cyprus run from about £65-£90 off-peak on a budget carrier booked ahead, £150-£280 in the school holidays or at short notice. For Limassol, Larnaca (LCA) is the closer airport, but Paphos (PFO) fares are often cheaper and only a similar drive away — compare both and weigh the transfer.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A UK couple doing 7 nights in Limassol, mid-range and out of high season, spends roughly £1,550-£1,700 all-in (~£775-£850pp): about £180 on two off-peak flights, ~£600 on a mid-range double near the seafront, ~£440 on food and drink, ~£200 on a week's small hire car plus fuel, ~£90 on Kourion, the castle and a Troodos day, and ~£50 on two eSIMs plus insurance. Budget travellers staying inland in Mesa Geitonia and eating in tavernas land nearer £1,100-£1,200.

Limassol's seafront and marina restaurants are the priciest on the island — a fish meze on the marina can hit €25+ a head. Walk two streets back into the old town or out to a village taverna and a full meze runs about €15-€20 (£13-£17). The other saver is the airport: the €10 Limassol Airport Express beats a €50+ taxi unless you're a group.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

Compare car hirevia DiscoverCars

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Also in Cyprus

See the full Cyprus guide

Limassol FAQs

Is Limassol a good base for a Cyprus holiday?
Yes, if you want a city rather than a resort. Limassol is the island's most cosmopolitan town, with the best year-round restaurant and nightlife scene, and it's central for day trips — Kourion is 20 minutes west, the Troodos wine villages an hour inland, and Paphos or Ayia Napa each under an hour and a half. The trade-off is that the city's own beach is grey imported sand, so you'll drive to Lady's Mile or Governor's Beach for proper swimming.
Where should I stay in Limassol?
Near the old town and castle for atmosphere and walkable evenings, the Tourist Area or Germasogeia for the beach-and-nightlife strip with hotels on the doorstep, or the marina and Agios Tychonas for sea-view polish at a premium. Inland districts like Mesa Geitonia are cheaper if you have a hire car and don't mind driving to the seafront.
How do I get from the airport to Limassol?
Limassol has no airport of its own, so you arrive via Larnaca (LCA), ~70km east, or Paphos (PFO), ~70km west — both about an hour's drive. The Limassol Airport Express shuttle costs €10 (about £8.60) and takes around 1h15 from Larnaca; a government-fixed taxi is €50-€55 by day. If you want to reach Kourion and the Troodos villages, hire a car at the airport instead.
What's the best day trip from Limassol?
Ancient Kourion, 20 minutes west — the cliff-top Roman theatre is the best ruin on the island, with the sea behind it, and entry is about €4.50 on the gate. The other is the Troodos wine villages an hour inland: cobbled Omodos, local Commandaria wine and a cooler mountain day, doable self-drive or on a small-group tour from around €70.

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