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Rhodes — medieval stone walls and towers of the UNESCO Old City
Greek Islands · 2026 Guide

Rhodes: Medieval City, Perfect Beaches & Real Costs

Rhodes has one of the best-preserved medieval cities in Europe, beaches that actually deliver, and prices that make Santorini and Mykonos look obscene by comparison. This is the complete guide.

The Medieval Old City: One of Europe's Great UNESCO Sites

Rhodes Old Town is the most complete surviving example of a medieval fortified city in the world. Built by the Knights Hospitaller (a crusader order that ruled Rhodes 1309-1522), then occupied by the Ottomans for 400 years, the walled city contains seven kilometres of walls, twelve towers, and an extraordinary density of medieval and Ottoman architecture — all still inhabited.

The Street of the Knights (Odos Ippoton)

The most complete medieval street in existence — 600 metres of 15th-century knight's inns, one for each of the Order's "tongues" (national groups: France, England, Germany, etc.). Cobblestoned, flanked by Gothic stone buildings, ending at the Palace of the Grand Masters. Walk it in the morning before the cruise ships arrive. It is the best single street in Greece.

The Palace of the Grand Masters

The medieval headquarters of the Knights Hospitaller, largely reconstructed in the early 20th century as a holiday palace for Mussolini (who never used it). Impressive scale, extraordinary floor mosaics (brought from Kos), and a decent museum covering the island's history from ancient times. Tickets €8. Allow 1.5-2 hours.

The Turkish Quarter (Socrates Street & the Bazaar)

The Ottoman section of the Old Town — a warren of covered bazaars, the Suleiman Mosque (exterior viewing), the Turkish baths (still functioning), and dozens of shops selling leather goods, ceramics, and spices. Less pristine than the Knights Quarter but more alive — this is where Rhodes Old Town actually functions as a community rather than a museum.

Practical Strategy

The Old Town has two rhythms. 10am-4pm: cruise ship crowds — the main streets are difficult. Before 9am and after 6pm: the city belongs to its residents and overnight guests. Staying inside the walls means you get both versions. Day-trippers get only the crowded one.

Lindos: Village, Beach & Acropolis

Lindos is 50km south of Rhodes Town — a white-washed Dodecanese village clinging to a cliff, an acropolis crowning the cape above it, and two perfect bays framing the peninsula below. The combination of architecture, archaeology, and sea is one of the best in the Aegean.

The Acropolis of Lindos

A 4th-century BC Doric sanctuary (Temple of Athena Lindia) built atop a 116m cliff, later fortified by the Knights Hospitaller. The walk up from the village takes 20-25 minutes on a steep cobblestone path, or €6 by donkey. The views from the top — the village below, the two bays, the open sea — are extraordinary. Entrance €12. Open 8am-sunset. Go before 9am to beat the crowds and the midday heat.

Lindos Village

The village of Lindos has captain's houses built in the 17th century — elaborate whitewashed mansions with pebble mosaic courtyards (choklakia) and painted ceilings. Many are now hotels or restaurants. The village is pedestrian-only and car-free. It is tourist-heavy in summer but genuinely atmospheric — the architecture is extraordinary, and the evening, when day-trippers have left, reveals a quieter character.

Lindos Beach (Megali Paralia)

A horseshoe bay below the acropolis — fine sand, clear water, very photogenic. It gets extremely crowded by 11am in summer. Arrive early or accept sharing the beach with most of Rhodes' tourist population. The smaller St Paul's Bay (Agios Pavlos) on the south side is slightly less crowded and has a dramatic setting where Paul supposedly landed in 51 AD.

The Best Beaches in Rhodes

Best Overall

Tsambika Beach

Long sandy beach backed by the Tsambika monastery on a cliff. Shallow entry, clean water, good facilities. One of the best beaches on the east coast — arrived at from the main road by a 1km path. Much better than Faliraki (the resort area).

Most Dramatic

Anthony Quinn Bay

Named for the actor who fell in love with it while filming The Guns of Navarone (1960s) and bought it. Rocky coves with turquoise water, minimal development, and a protected bay that's perfect for snorkelling. 15km south of Rhodes Town.

Best for Families

Kalithea Springs

An early 20th-century Italian spa complex — colonnaded buildings, mosaic floors — now restored and open as a beach complex. The water is clear, the setting is extraordinary, and the historical context adds interest. €3.50 entry.

Quietest Option

Prassonisi

The southern tip of Rhodes — a sand spit connecting a small island, with different sea conditions on each side. One side calm (south) and one rough (north, for windsurfers). Dramatic, remote feeling, very few package tourists.

Beyond the Tourist Trail

Rhodes sees 2+ million tourists annually, concentrated on the east coast resort strip and the Old Town. The west side and interior are largely ignored — which is why they're worth exploring.

Valley of the Butterflies (Petaloudes): A lush valley where thousands of tiger moths gather June-September, attracted by the resin of the Oriental sweetgum trees. A 45-minute loop walk through extraordinary scenery. Entrance €5. Go in the morning before the heat disperses the moths.

Profitis Ilias mountain: The island's second peak (798m) covered in pine forest — a significant contrast to the coastal heat. The mountain has a 1930s Italian hunting lodge (now a hotel), deer, and cool air even in August. Walk up from Eleousa village.

Medieval villages: Emponas (wine production, local tavernas), Siana (honey and souma liqueur), Kritinia (Venetian castle ruins with views) — the interior villages have been little affected by mass tourism.

Where to Stay in Rhodes

Mandraki New Town

Just outside the Old Town walls — convenient, some sea views, easier logistics. Good value compared to inside the walls.

From €60/night
Faliraki · Ixia East Coast Resorts

Package holiday territory — large hotels, pool complexes, all-inclusive. Good value per room for families with children; less interesting as a base for exploring the island's depth.

Best for families

Rhodes Food Guide

The food of the Dodecanese islands reflects centuries of different rulers — Byzantine, Crusader, Ottoman, Italian. Rhodes has developed a distinct cuisine that draws on all of these.

Getting There & Around

Flights: Rhodes International Airport (RHO) — one of Greece's busiest airports in summer. Direct flights from Athens (45 min), plus extensive European charter and scheduled connections. Good value last-minute flights September-October.

Ferry: Connections from Athens Piraeus (15-18 hours overnight), Crete (2.5-3 hours from Heraklion by high-speed), and other Dodecanese islands. Rhodes is the hub of the Dodecanese ferry network.

Getting around: Buses (KTEL) cover the east coast resorts and main villages reliably. For Lindos and independent exploration, rent a car (€35-55/day) or scooter (€20-30/day). Taxis from Rhodes Town to Lindos: €45-55.

Rhodes Real Costs: 2026

ItemBudgetMid-RangeSplurge
Accommodation (nightly)€45-80 (New Town)€90-180 (Old Town)€200-400 (boutique Old Town)
Dinner per person (taverna)€15-22€22-35€40-70
Lindos Acropolis entry€12 — the same for everyone
Palace of Grand Masters€8 — the same for everyone
Car rental (daily)€35€45-55€65-80 (convertible)
Coffee in Old Town€3-4€4-6€6-10 (view café)
Ferry to Marmaris Turkey (day trip)€35-45 return — available from both operators

Rhodes is significantly cheaper than Santorini and Mykonos; comparable to Crete. Field prices verified June 2026.

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Rhodes: Frequently Asked Questions

How many days do you need in Rhodes?+
4-7 days is the sweet spot. Two days for Rhodes Old Town (genuinely could spend more), one day for Lindos, one day for beach exploration. A week gives you time to reach the less-visited west coast and Valley of the Butterflies. If combining with other Dodecanese islands, 3-4 days in Rhodes is a minimum.
Is Rhodes Old Town worth staying in?+
Absolutely yes — it's one of the best-preserved medieval cities in the world. Staying inside the walls gives you the experience before and after the day-trippers leave: atmospheric alleys in the evening when they empty out, sunrise walks with only local cats for company. Prices inside the walls are higher than outside, but the experience justifies a premium of €30-60/night.
Is Lindos worth the trip from Rhodes Town?+
Yes — the Lindos Acropolis is one of the most dramatic archaeological sites in Greece. The white village climbing below it, the twin bays framing the cape, and the ancient ruins at the top make for an extraordinary combination. Very crowded in July-August (arrive before 9am). The walk up from the village is 20-25 minutes or by donkey (€6). Allow half a day minimum; a full day to also swim at Lindos beach.
Is Rhodes better in April or September?+
September is better for swimming (sea at 27°C after summer warming), slightly lower prices, and noticeably fewer crowds than August. April is excellent for archaeology and walking — temperatures 18-22°C, no crowds, everything open, wildflowers everywhere. For both beach and culture, June or September wins. April is for heritage and hiking.
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