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Heraklion, Greece
Heraklion

Crete

Heraklion

Crete's working capital is a two-night culture base, not a beach town: stay inside the Venetian walls near 25th August Street, pair Knossos with the Archaeological Museum, and pick up your hire car here for the rest of the island.

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

Best length

2 nights as a culture base, longer with a car

Airport

Heraklion (HER), ~5km east of the centre

Airport to centre

KTEL bus ~15 min from about โ‚ฌ1.70; taxi ~10 min, โ‚ฌ15-20

Best base

Inside the Venetian walls near 25th August Street

In short

Heraklion at a glance

Heraklion is Crete's working capital and main airport, not a postcard resort town: treat it as a 2-night culture base for Knossos and the Archaeological Museum, stay inside the Venetian walls near 25th August Street, and pick up a hire car here for the rest of the island rather than expecting beaches on your doorstep.

The short version

  • Base yourself inside the Venetian walls near 25th August Street so the museum, the old harbour and the bus station are all walkable.
  • Pair the Palace of Knossos with the Heraklion Archaeological Museum on the same trip; the museum holds the real Minoan finds the site is missing.
  • Take the KTEL bus from the airport, not a taxi, unless you have heavy luggage or land late; it is a 15-minute, roughly โ‚ฌ1.70 hop.
  • Don't expect a beach holiday here; Ammoudara is a 15-minute bus west, and the prettier coast is a hire-car drive away.
  • Two nights is enough for the city and Knossos; collect a hire car on the way out to reach Rethymno, the Lasithi plateau or the south coast.

Heraklion is a working port city first and a tourist town second, which catches some visitors out: there is no pretty harbour resort here, just a busy Cretan capital wrapped in Venetian walls. What it does have is the Palace of Knossos on its doorstep and the islandโ€™s great Archaeological Museum a few streets in from the old harbour, and those two together are the real reason to stop. Base yourself inside the walls near 25th August Street and you can do the city on foot, with the museum, Lion Square and the bus station all within a short walk.

Two nights is the honest figure: one for the old town, the Koules fortress and an evening along the breakwater, and one to pair Knossos with the museum. Go early to Knossos on the number 2 bus, because the restored site is shadeless and fills with coach groups by mid-morning, and remember that the original frescoes you have seen in photographs are in the museum, not at the site. For anything beyond the city, Heraklion is the cheapest place on Crete to pick up a hire car, so collect one as you leave for Rethymno, the Lasithi plateau or the south coast.

Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay, what Knossos and the museum cost, how to get in from the airport, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Heraklion trip

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

Top things to do in Heraklion

Palace of Knossos

Knossos rewards reading about it first โ€” the walls and 'frescoes' are largely Arthur Evans's 1900s reconstruction, so without context you're looking at painted concrete. Pair it with the Heraklion Archaeological Museum, where the real Minoan finds live; note the old official combined Knossos-and-museum ticket has been scrapped, so you now buy each (about โ‚ฌ20 apiece) separately. Get there on the No. 2 bus from outside the museum and go before 10am to beat the cruise coaches and the open-site heat.

About 1.5โ€“2 hoursโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ20

Heraklion Archaeological Museum

Buy the โ‚ฌ20 combined ticket (about ยฃ17) that covers both this museum and the Knossos palace site โ€” it's the same price as the museum alone and valid for three days, so there's no reason not to. See the museum before Knossos if you can: the frescoes, the Snake Goddesses and the Phaistos Disc all came out of the ground at Knossos, and the ruins make far more sense once you've seen the originals here. Allow about two hours; midweek mornings are quietest.

About 1.5โ€“2 hoursโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ20

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Inside the Venetian walls (old town)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The obvious first-timer base: 25th August Street, Lion Square, the Archaeological Museum and the bus station are all on foot, and evenings stay lively without a car. It is the busiest and noisiest part of town, but it saves you transport every day.

Best for: First-timers, culture stays, no car

Browse hotels City centre

Old harbour and Koules side

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A few streets towards the sea, handy if you have an early ferry or want sunset walks along the breakwater. Quieter at night than Lion Square but still a short walk to everything.

Best for: Ferry connections, sea views, walkers

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk from centre

Ammoudara

ยฃ value

The city's nearest proper beach strip, about 15 minutes west by bus or taxi. Choose it only if a swim matters more than old-town atmosphere; it is resort-flat rather than characterful.

Best for: Beach-first stays, families

Browse hotels ~6km west, 15 min by bus

Karteros

ยฃ value

A calmer beach pocket about 8km east, near the airport. Useful for a quiet last night before an early flight, but you will want a car or taxi for anything beyond the immediate seafront.

Best for: Quiet nights, pre-flight stays

Browse hotels ~8km east, near airport

Airport to city centre

Heraklion airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
KTEL city bus to the centre ~15 min about โ‚ฌ1.70 single Cheapest; runs roughly every 15-20 min until late evening
Taxi to the old town ~10 min usually โ‚ฌ15-20 Best with luggage or a late arrival
Pre-booked transfer ~10-15 min from about โ‚ฌ20-30 Worth it for groups or onward resort drops
Hire car collected at airport on arrival from about โ‚ฌ25-40/day in shoulder season Only if you are touring the island, not for the city itself
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: 20-26ยฐC, swimmable sea, manageable Knossos crowds and lower fares than the July-August peak.

High summer is hot and busy, with Knossos exposed and shadeless by midday and accommodation at its dearest. Winter is mild and quiet but flights thin out and some coastal trips close; it suits a museum-and-old-town break rather than a beach trip.

What it costs

UK return flights to Heraklion are seasonal: roughly ยฃ60-ยฃ140 in May, June, September and October when booked ahead, but July-August peak fares and last-minute summer seats push well past ยฃ200. Winter direct flights largely disappear.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Heraklion culture break for one is roughly ยฃ300-ยฃ450 before flights: ยฃ140-ยฃ240 hotel share inside the walls, ยฃ70-ยฃ100 food and local buses, and around ยฃ35-ยฃ45 for Knossos plus the Archaeological Museum. Add a hire car at ยฃ25-ยฃ40 a day if you tour beyond the city.

Heraklion is cheaper than the resort strips: a gyros runs around โ‚ฌ4.50 and a taverna dinner for two with wine sits near โ‚ฌ40-โ‚ฌ50. The fastest way to overspend is eating on 25th August Street itself rather than the side lanes locals use.

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 Greece

See the full Greece guide

Heraklion FAQs

How long do you need in Heraklion?
Two nights is enough to see the old town, the Archaeological Museum and the Palace of Knossos at a sensible pace. Heraklion works best as a culture base or a bookend to a wider Crete trip rather than a week-long stay in itself.
Is Knossos worth visiting from Heraklion?
Yes, but treat it as a pair with the Heraklion Archaeological Museum, which holds the original frescoes and finds. Book a timed Knossos ticket, take the number 2 bus and go early, because the restored site is shadeless and gets very busy by mid-morning.
Do you need a car in Heraklion?
Not for the city itself, which is walkable and bus-served. You do need a car to reach the rest of Crete's beaches and villages, and Heraklion is the best-value place on the island to hire one; pick it up as you leave rather than parking it inside the walls.

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