Athens
Where the Parthenon glows gold at sunset, souvlaki costs less than a coffee, and every rooftop bar comes with 2,500 years of history.
1 day in Athens
Only got 24 hours? Here's how to experience the best of Athens in a single action-packed day.
The Best of Athens in 24 Hours
The Acropolis & Parthenon
Arrive at the Acropolis entrance on the south slope at 8am to beat the heat and the crowds. The Parthenon, Erechtheion with its Caryatid porch, and the Theatre of Dionysus — the birthplace of drama — are all here on this sacred rock above Athens. The combined ticket (€30) covers the Acropolis plus five other archaeological sites for five days. Coffee at Little Tree Books & Coffee on Kavalloti.
Acropolis Museum & Plaka
Walk downhill to the Acropolis Museum (€10) — one of the world's best archaeological museums, built on glass floors above excavations you can see below your feet. The Parthenon Gallery on the top floor recreates the frieze at its original height. Then wander Plaka — Athens' oldest neighbourhood with neoclassical houses, bougainvillea, and tavernas. Lunch at O Thanasis near Monastiraki Square (souvlaki pita, €3.50).
Monastiraki, Rooftops & Psyrri
Watch sunset from a rooftop bar overlooking the illuminated Acropolis — A for Athens on Miaouli Street has the most famous view (cocktails €10–12). Then head to Psyrri for dinner — once gritty, now buzzing with tavernas, street art, and live rembetika music. Try Karamanlidika tou Fani for meze (€8–12 per plate) or Kostas on Platia Agia Irini for the city's best souvlaki (€2.80).
3 days in Athens
A carefully curated route mixing iconic landmarks, hidden gems, street food, culture, and adventure — designed for younger travelers.
The Acropolis & Ancient Athens
The Acropolis
Arrive at 8am — the Acropolis is magical in morning light with fewer crowds. The Parthenon, the Erechtheion's Caryatid porch, the Temple of Athena Nike, and sweeping views over Athens to the sea. The combined ticket (€30) covers the Acropolis plus the Ancient Agora, Roman Agora, Temple of Zeus, Hadrian's Library, and Kerameikos for five days — exceptional value.
Acropolis Museum & Ancient Agora
The Acropolis Museum (€10) is world-class — the Parthenon Gallery recreates the frieze at original height with glass walls framing the actual Parthenon outside. Then walk to the Ancient Agora (included in combined ticket) — the heart of Athenian democracy where Socrates debated. The Temple of Hephaestus is the best-preserved Greek temple anywhere. Lunch at O Thanasis near Monastiraki (souvlaki pita, €3.50).
Plaka, Anafiotika & Rooftop Sunset
Wander through Plaka — Athens' oldest neighbourhood with neoclassical houses and bougainvillea. Climb to Anafiotika — a tiny Cycladic village tucked on the north slope of the Acropolis, with whitewashed houses that look like they belong on Santorini. Sunset drinks at A for Athens rooftop (cocktails €10–12, Acropolis views). Dinner at Avocado on Nikis Street (vegetarian, mains €8–12).
Markets, Street Art & Modern Athens
Central Market & Monastiraki Flea
Explore the Athens Central Market (Varvakios) on Athinas Street — a raucous, aromatic covered market selling fish, meat, olives, cheese, and herbs since 1886. Then walk to Monastiraki Flea Market — antique shops, vintage vinyl, military surplus, and bric-a-brac spill onto Avissinias Square. Sunday morning is the biggest market day. Coffee at Six d.o.g.s on Avramiotou — a creative cafe with a secret garden.
Exarchia — Street Art & Counterculture
Walk to Exarchia — Athens' anarchist quarter and most culturally alive neighbourhood. Every wall is covered in political street art and graffiti that tells the story of Greece's economic crisis and social movements. Browse independent bookshops, record stores, and cafes on Valtetsiou and Kallidromiou streets. Lunch at Vegan Nation (€7–10) or Ama Lachei stou Psyrri (meze, €6–10).
Psyrri & Gazi Nightlife
Dinner in Psyrri — Karamanlidika tou Fani for cured meats and meze from Constantinople tradition (€8–12 per plate). Then walk to Gazi — Athens' main nightlife district around the old gasworks (Technopolis). Bars like Noel (Christmas-themed year-round), Baba Au Rum (cocktails, regularly on World's 50 Best), and clubs along Voutadon Street keep going until sunrise. Cover €5–10.
Temple of Zeus, Panathenaic & Farewell
Temple of Zeus & National Garden
Start at the Temple of Olympian Zeus (combined ticket) — only 15 of the original 104 massive columns remain, but the scale is humbling. Hadrian's Arch marks the boundary between ancient and Roman Athens. Then walk through the National Garden — a shady oasis with a duck pond, botanical garden, and the Zappeion exhibition hall. Coffee at Couleur Locale rooftop near Monastiraki (espresso €3).
Panathenaic Stadium & Kolonaki
Walk to the Panathenaic Stadium (€10) — the marble stadium rebuilt for the first modern Olympics in 1896, on the site of the ancient Games. Stand on the track and imagine the crowd. Then explore Kolonaki — Athens' most elegant neighbourhood at the foot of Lycabettus Hill. Browse the boutiques, galleries, and cafes around Patriarchou Ioakim Street. Lunch at Paradosiako on Voulis (traditional meze, €7–10).
Farewell Souvlaki & Views
Final Athens dinner at Kosta on Platia Agia Irini — a souvlaki counter that's been open since 1950 and serves arguably the best souvlaki in the city (€2.80 for a pita wrap). Or splurge at Spondi (Michelin-starred, tasting menu €95) or Nolan (Greek-Japanese fusion, mains €16–22). Farewell drinks back at A for Athens or 360° Bar for one last illuminated Acropolis panorama.
7 days in Athens
A full week to go deep — from famous landmarks to local neighbourhoods, day trips, hidden gems, and proper local immersion.
The Acropolis & Ancient Athens
The Acropolis
Arrive at 8am for morning light and fewer crowds. The Parthenon, the Erechtheion's Caryatid porch, the Temple of Athena Nike, and views to the sea. Combined ticket (€30) covers six sites for five days — the Acropolis, Ancient Agora, Roman Agora, Temple of Zeus, Hadrian's Library, and Kerameikos.
Acropolis Museum & Ancient Agora
The Acropolis Museum (€10) recreates the Parthenon frieze at original height with the actual Parthenon framed through glass walls. Walk to the Ancient Agora (combined ticket) — where Socrates debated. The Temple of Hephaestus is the best-preserved Greek temple. Lunch at O Thanasis near Monastiraki (souvlaki pita, €3.50).
Plaka & Rooftop Sunset
Wander Plaka — neoclassical houses and bougainvillea. Climb to Anafiotika — a Cycladic village on the Acropolis slopes with whitewashed houses. Sunset at A for Athens rooftop (cocktails €10–12, Acropolis views). Dinner at Avocado on Nikis Street (vegetarian, mains €8–12) or Scholarchio in Plaka (taverna since 1932, mains €8–12).
Markets, Museums & Street Art
Central Market & Monastiraki Flea
Athens Central Market (Varvakios) on Athinas Street — fish, meat, olives, and herbs since 1886. Walk to Monastiraki Flea Market and Avissinias Square — antiques, vinyl, vintage cameras. Sundays are biggest. Coffee at Six d.o.g.s (creative cafe with secret garden, espresso €3).
National Archaeological Museum
Metro to the National Archaeological Museum (€12) — the world's finest collection of Greek antiquities. The Mask of Agamemnon, the Antikythera mechanism (ancient computer), the bronze Poseidon, and thousands of years of human achievement. Allow 2–3 hours minimum. It's easily the equal of the British Museum or Louvre for ancient Greek art.
Exarchia & Strefi Hill
Walk through Exarchia — Athens' anarchist quarter with political street art on every wall. Browse record stores and cafes on Valtetsiou and Kallidromiou. Climb Strefi Hill (free) for a neighbourhood sunset view. Dinner at Ama Lachei in Psyrri (meze, €6–10 per plate) or Seychelles in Metaxourgio (trendy taverna, mains €10–14).
Temple of Zeus, Olympics & Kolonaki
Temple of Zeus & Hadrian's Arch
Start at the Temple of Olympian Zeus (combined ticket) — only 15 massive columns remain of the largest temple in Greece. Hadrian's Arch nearby marks the boundary between ancient and Roman Athens. Walk through the National Garden — shady oasis with a duck pond, botanical garden, and Zappeion hall. Coffee at The Vintage Rooftop on Normanou.
Panathenaic Stadium & Lycabettus
The Panathenaic Stadium (€10) — marble rebuilt for the 1896 Olympics. Stand on the track and imagine the roar. Walk to Kolonaki — Athens' elegant neighbourhood with boutiques and galleries. Then hike Lycabettus Hill (20 min from Kolonaki or funicular, €10 return) for the highest panoramic view of the city, the Acropolis, and the Saronic Gulf.
Psyrri Dinner & Live Music
Dinner in Psyrri — Karamanlidika tou Fani for Constantinople-tradition cured meats and meze (€8–12). Then find a rembetika bar — the Greek blues, born in the 1920s among refugees. Stoa Athanaton near the central market has live rembetika Wednesday–Saturday. Or head to Baba Au Rum in Psyrri (World's 50 Best Bars, cocktails €12–14).
Day Trip — Temple of Poseidon at Sounion
Coastal Bus to Cape Sounion
KTEL bus from Pedion tou Areos park to Cape Sounion (€6.90, 2 hours, coastal route). The drive hugs the Attic Riviera — swimming spots, seaside tavernas, and the Saronic Gulf glittering to your left. Arrive at the Temple of Poseidon (€10, combined ticket) perched on a cliff 60 metres above the Aegean. Byron carved his name on a pillar here in 1810.
Temple & Swimming
Explore the temple ruins — the columns framing the deep blue Aegean is one of Greece's most iconic views. Swim at the small beach below the temple (free access, crystal-clear water) or at a beach along the coast in Lavrio or Legrena. Lunch at a taverna in the Sounion area — grilled octopus (€12), horiatiki salad (€7), and a carafe of retsina (€4).
Sunset at Poseidon & Return
Stay for sunset at the Temple of Poseidon — watching the sun drop into the Aegean between the marble columns is genuinely one of the most beautiful sunsets in Europe. Lord Byron thought so too. Catch the last bus back to Athens (check schedules, usually around 7pm in summer). Dinner in Athens at Nolan (Greek-Japanese fusion, mains €16–22) or Kostas souvlaki.
Piraeus, Islands & Athens Riviera
Aegina Island Day Trip
Metro to Piraeus, then ferry to Aegina (€9, 75 minutes by conventional ferry or €14 for 40-minute hydrofoil). Aegina is the closest Saronic island — pistachio groves, a charming harbour, and the Temple of Aphaia (€6), one of the best-preserved ancient Greek temples. Rent a scooter (€15/day) to explore the island. Swim at Marathonas Beach or Moni islet.
Aegina Harbour & Seafood
Lunch at the Aegina harbour — fresh fish tavernas line the waterfront with tables right on the quay. Grilled whole fish by weight (€30–40/kg), Greek salad (€6), and cold Mythos beer (€3). The island produces the best pistachios in the Mediterranean. Visit the Church of Agios Nektarios, one of the largest in Greece, or just swim at one of the island's quiet pebble beaches.
Glyfada & Athens Riviera
Ferry back to Piraeus, then tram to Glyfada or Voula on the Athens Riviera — the southern coast where Athenians go for beach bars and seafood. Walk along the coast, swim at the free public beaches, and have dinner at a seaside taverna. Balux on Asteras Beach (cocktails €10) or Mourayo (traditional fish taverna, mains €12–18) for sunset over the Gulf.
Kerameikos, Gazi & Modern Athens
Kerameikos & Benaki Museum
Visit Kerameikos (combined ticket) — Athens' ancient cemetery and potters' quarter. The Sacred Way to Eleusis began here. Then walk to the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture (€12) on Koumbari Street — a chronological journey from prehistory to modern Greece in a beautiful neoclassical building. The Byzantine art collection and the 1821 Revolution rooms are exceptional.
SNFCC & Faliro
Bus to the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Centre (SNFCC) — Renzo Piano's stunning waterfront complex housing the National Library and National Opera. The park and gardens are free and beautifully designed with a canal, playground, and olive groves. Take the free shuttle boat back along the coast. Lunch at the SNFCC restaurant or food trucks (€6–10).
Gazi Nightlife
Gazi — Athens' main nightlife district around the old gasworks (Technopolis). Start at Noel for cocktails (Christmas-themed year-round, €10–12), then hit Baba Au Rum (World's 50 Best Bars, €12–14). Clubs along Voutadon and Iera Odos streets — Gazarte rooftop, six d.o.g.s., and Romantso are consistently good. Cover €5–10, drinks inside €8–12.
Last Souvlaki, Shopping & Farewell
Thissio & Filopappou Hill
Walk through Thissio — the neighbourhood directly below the Acropolis with the best street-level views. Climb Filopappou Hill (free) for a panoramic viewpoint that includes the Acropolis, Ancient Agora, and Piraeus harbour in the distance. It's quieter and more peaceful than the Acropolis itself. Coffee at a cafe on Apostolou Pavlou pedestrian walkway.
Last Shopping & Souvenirs
Last shopping in Monastiraki and Plaka. Buy Greek olive oil from the Central Market (€8–12 for premium extra virgin), natural sponges, worry beads (komboloi), and Greek sandals from the workshops on Pandrossou Street. Visit Mastihashop for mastic products from Chios island — unique to Greece. Final souvlaki at Kostas on Platia Agia Irini (€2.80).
Farewell Dinner & Acropolis Views
Farewell dinner at Strofi in Makrygianni (traditional taverna with Acropolis views, mains €12–18) or Diporto Agoras — a hidden basement taverna under the Central Market with no sign, no menu, and ouzo straight from the barrel (cash only, meze and wine €15). One last Acropolis rooftop view at 360° Bar or Couleur Locale before you leave.
Budget tips
Combined ticket
The €30 combined ticket covers the Acropolis, Ancient Agora, Roman Agora, Temple of Zeus, Hadrian's Library, and Kerameikos for 5 days — buying separately would cost €65+. Essential purchase.
Souvlaki everything
A souvlaki pita (€2.50–3.50) is a full meal — grilled meat, tomato, onion, tzatziki, chips, wrapped in pita. Kostas, Bairaktaris, and O Thanasis are the holy trinity.
Free Sundays
Most state museums and archaeological sites are free on the first Sunday of the month from November to March, plus certain national holidays. Check dates before your trip.
Water refill
Athens tap water is safe and comes from mountain reservoirs. Refill at water fountains (vrysaki) throughout the city. Bottled water at tourist spots costs €1.50–3.
Metro deals
A 5-day tourist ticket costs €9 for unlimited metro, bus, and tram. Single tickets are €1.20. The metro doubles as a museum — Syntagma and Acropoli stations display archaeological finds.
Riviera beaches
Free public beaches along the Athens coast tram line — Glyfada, Voula, Varkiza. No need for expensive island ferries for a beach day.
Budget breakdown
Daily costs per person in euros. Athens is one of Europe's cheapest capitals — incredible value for history, food, and nightlife.
| 🎒 Budget | ✨ Mid-Range | 💎 Splurge | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation Hostels → boutique hotels → Acropolis-view suites | €15–30 | €60–120 | €180+ |
| Food Souvlaki & tavernas → meze restaurants → fine dining | €8–15 | €20–35 | €50+ |
| Transport Metro & walking → taxis/Beat app → day trip transport | €2–5 | €8–15 | €25+ |
| Activities Free sites & hills → combined ticket → guided tours | €0–10 | €15–30 | €50+ |
| Drinks Retsina & beer → wine bars → cocktail bars | €4–8 | €10–18 | €30+ |
| Daily Total $32–74 → $123–237 → $365+ | €29–68 | €113–218 | €335+ |
Practical info
Visa & Entry
- Greece is in the Schengen Zone. EU/EEA enter with ID. US, Canadian, Australian citizens get 90 days visa-free
- Athens Airport (ATH): Metro Line 3 to Syntagma (€9, 40 min), X95 bus to Syntagma (€5.50, 60 min), or taxi (flat rate €40 to centre)
- Airport metro tickets are expensive at €9 — if traveling with others, share a taxi for better value (€40 flat rate)
Getting Around
- Metro (3 lines), buses, trams, and trolleys. Single ticket €1.20 (90-min validity), 24h pass €4.10, 5-day tourist ticket €9
- Athens is very walkable — most archaeological sites and neighbourhoods are within 30 minutes of each other on foot
- Beat (local Uber alternative) is widely used for taxis. Download the app. Fares are metered and affordable (€3–8 within the centre)
Connectivity
- Cosmote, Vodafone, and Wind offer prepaid SIMs from €10 for 5–10GB at the airport or Germanos/Public shops
- Free WiFi in most cafes, restaurants, and public spaces. Athens WiFi hotspots cover Syntagma and Monastiraki squares
- EU roaming is free for EU residents. Greek 4G coverage is excellent in the city and on most islands
Money
- Euros. Cards accepted at most restaurants and shops, but small tavernas, kiosks (periptera), and market stalls are often cash-only
- ATMs everywhere. Alpha Bank and Eurobank have the lowest fees. Avoid Euronet ATMs — commission rates are brutal
- Tipping: round up or leave 5–10% at restaurants. Not expected at cafes or tavernas with counter service. No tip for taxis
Health & Safety
- Athens is safe for tourists. Watch for pickpockets on the metro (Line 1 especially), at Monastiraki, and on crowded buses
- Summer heat is serious — June to August regularly hits 35–40°C. Visit ruins early morning, rest midday, drink lots of water
- Emergency: 112 (general), 100 (police), 166 (ambulance). Pharmacies (farmakeio, green cross) are on every block
Packing Tips
- Comfortable walking shoes with good grip — the Acropolis marble is polished and slippery, Athens streets are uneven
- Sunscreen, hat, and sunglasses are essential April–October. Light clothing but bring a layer for evening breezes
- A refillable water bottle — Athens tap water is excellent and refill fountains are throughout the city
Cultural tips
Athens runs on its own clock, with its own gestures and rituals. Eat late, share meze, and never show an open palm.
Greek Time
Greeks eat dinner at 9–10pm, go out at midnight, and don't leave clubs until 5am. If you arrive at a restaurant at 7pm, you'll be eating alone. Embrace the rhythm.
Coffee Culture
Greeks take coffee seriously. Freddo espresso (cold) and freddo cappuccino are the summer staples. A Greek coffee (ellinikos) should be sipped slowly — never gulp it. The grounds stay in the cup.
Meze & Sharing
Greek dining is communal — order multiple meze plates and share everything. Saying "no" to food from a Greek host is borderline offensive. If offered, eat. They will keep offering.
Respect the Sites
Don't take marble pieces from archaeological sites — it's illegal and carries heavy fines. Don't sit on ancient ruins or touch mosaics. Security is watching and they will fine you.
Name Day Culture
Greeks celebrate name days (the saint's day of their name) as much as birthdays. If you learn someone's name day is today, say "Chronia Polla" (many years). They'll love you for it.
The Moutza
Never show an open palm with fingers spread toward someone — it's the "moutza," one of the most offensive Greek gestures. Use a closed hand for "stop" or "five" instead.
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