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Delos archaeological site, Greece
Delos archaeological site

Cyclades

Delos archaeological site

How to visit Delos from Mykonos: the boat from the Old Port, the site entry and guided-tour options, and the morning timing that beats the heat on a shadeless island of ruins.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Mykonos Town, Greece

Opening hours

The site opens roughly 09:00 with last entry and return boats tied to the published sailing times (often last boat back around mid-afternoon); usually closed Mondays and not served in rough seas. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

Boat from about โ‚ฌ25 (around ยฃ21) return from Mykonos Old Port, plus site entry from about โ‚ฌ20 (around ยฃ17); guided tours that bundle the boat, entry and a licensed guide from about โ‚ฌ79 (around ยฃ67). Confirm current prices on the official site.

Time needed

Allow a half-day: roughly 30 minutes each way by boat plus 2โ€“3 hours on the island; a guided tour is usually around 3 hours on site.

In short

Visiting Delos archaeological site

Delos is the uninhabited island of ancient ruins about 30 minutes by boat from Mykonos Old Port โ€” the sacred birthplace of Apollo and one of the great archaeological sites of the Aegean. The boat is around โ‚ฌ25 return, site entry about โ‚ฌ20, and guided tours from roughly โ‚ฌ79. Go on the morning sailing before the heat builds: the island has almost no shade and no real shelter, so take water, a hat and sun cover, and time your return boat carefully.

The boat, the ticket and the tour question

Delos is the reason to do more than sunbathe on Mykonos. Itโ€™s an uninhabited island of ancient ruins โ€” the mythical birthplace of Apollo and one of the great archaeological sites of the Aegean โ€” sitting about 30 minutes by boat from the Old Port. Scheduled boats run several times through the morning in season for around โ‚ฌ25 return, and on arrival you pay site entry of roughly โ‚ฌ20. The timetable sets your day: you come back on a fixed sailing, so check the last boat before you set off exploring, because thereโ€™s no other way off.

The real decision is whether to take a guide. You can do it independently โ€” boat plus entry, wander at will โ€” but Delos is huge and sparsely signposted, a sprawl of house mosaics, the Terrace of the Lions and temple foundations that mean far more with someone explaining them. Guided tours from about โ‚ฌ79 bundle the boat, the entry and a licensed guide, and for a first visit thatโ€™s usually money well spent. If youโ€™d rather roam, a good site map or audio guide helps you make sense of the layout.

Going early, and going prepared

This is a site that punishes bad timing. The island is uninhabited, with almost no shade and only minimal facilities, so on the morning boat the light is good and the heat bearable; by midday in July or August the open ground is brutal. Take plenty of water, a hat and strong sun cream, and wear proper shoes for uneven stone. Boats donโ€™t run in rough seas, and the site is usually closed on Mondays, so build in a little flexibility.

Verdict: if ancient history holds any appeal, Delos is one of the most rewarding day trips in the Cyclades, and a striking contrast to Mykonosโ€™s beach-and-bar scene. The catch is purely practical โ€” go on a morning sailing, come prepared for sun and exposure, and keep one eye on your return boat. Get those right and youโ€™ll have one of Greeceโ€™s most atmospheric sites largely to the rhythm of the tide.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Mykonos Town city guide.

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Delos archaeological site FAQs

How do you get to Delos?
By boat from Mykonos Old Port, a crossing of about 30 minutes. Scheduled boats run several times a morning in season for around โ‚ฌ25 return, and the timetable sets your day โ€” you return on a fixed sailing, so note the last boat back before you wander off into the ruins.
Do you need a guided tour?
Not strictly โ€” you can take the boat and buy site entry independently for roughly โ‚ฌ25 plus โ‚ฌ20. But Delos is a vast, sparsely labelled site, and a licensed guide (tours from about โ‚ฌ79 including the boat and entry) turns a field of stones into the story of the sacred island. It's the better choice for most first-timers.
Is Delos worth it, and what should you take?
Yes, if you want more than beaches โ€” it's one of the most important ancient sites in Greece. The honest warning is the conditions: the island is uninhabited, with almost no shade and no shops to speak of, so go on a morning boat and bring plenty of water, a hat and sun cream. Midday in high summer is punishing.

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