Quick Facts: Port of Symi | Greece | Symi Harbour (Gialos) | Tender (most ships) | ~5 min walk to Gialos village center | UTC+3 (EEST in summer)
The moment Symi materializes on the horizon β a horseshoe harbour stacked with ochre, rose, and cream neoclassical mansions climbing the hillside β you’ll understand why this tiny Dodecanese island stops cruisers cold at the railing. Ships call at Symi Harbour in Gialos, the lower port village, and your single most important planning tip is this: get ashore early. Symi is small, beautiful, and hit by day-trippers from Rhodes simultaneously β the crowds thin dramatically after 3pm if you can linger.
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Port & Terminal Information
Symi doesn’t have a purpose-built cruise terminal. Ships anchor in the deep harbour at Gialos (Symi Harbour) and tender passengers ashore to the main quayside dock β a broad stone wharf running along the waterfront. Check the landing point on Google Maps before you go so you know exactly where to head back to.
The tender ride itself takes roughly 5β10 minutes depending on where your ship anchors. Allow extra buffer time for tender queues, especially at peak season (JuneβSeptember) when multiple ships share the harbour. Facilities at the quayside are minimal: no dedicated cruise terminal building, no ATMs at the dock itself, no luggage storage. The nearest ATMs are a 3-minute walk along the harbour front in Gialos village. There’s no official cruise shuttle β everything moves on foot, taxi, or water taxi from here.
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Getting to the City

- On Foot β The quayside tender dock lands you directly in Gialos, Symi’s main village. The entire harbour esplanade, restaurants, shops, and the base of the Kali Strata staircase are within a 5β10 minute walk. No transport needed for most of the day’s highlights.
- Bus β A single local bus route connects Gialos to Pedi Beach and to Panormitis Monastery in the south. Buses depart from the main square near the clock tower; frequency is low (2β3 departures per day for Panormitis). Fare: approximately β¬2β4 one way. Check the posted schedule at the square immediately on arrival.
- Taxi β A small fleet of taxis waits near the harbour. Gialos to Pedi is around β¬8β10; Gialos to Panormitis Monastery is around β¬25β30 one way. Agree the fare before getting in β meters are rarely used on Symi.
- Water Taxi β Small caΓ―ques (wooden boats) run from Gialos harbour to Nos Beach, Nanou Beach, and other coves. Fares are typically β¬10β20 per person return, negotiated with the captain at the dock. Ask at the quayside for current operators.
- Rental Scooter β A couple of rental outfits operate near the harbour and charge around β¬25β35/day. Roads on Symi are limited and winding; this is practical only if you’re heading to Panormitis or the southern beaches independently.
- Hop-On Hop-Off β No HOHO service operates on Symi. The island is simply too small.
- Ship Shore Excursion β Worth booking through your ship if you want a guided monastery visit with guaranteed return transport and zero logistics stress. Going independently is easy for the harbour area, but Panormitis requires planning. [Viator:5]
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Top Things to Do in Symi Island, Greece
Symi rewards slow wandering β but these are the experiences worth structuring your day around.
Must-See
1. Gialos Harbour Waterfront (free) β The iconic pastel-painted neoclassical mansions lining the horseshoe harbour are themselves the main attraction. Walk the full esplanade from end to end first thing, before tour groups arrive. 30β45 min.
2. Kali Strata & Chorio (free) β Symi’s famous 375-step staircase climbs from Gialos up to Chorio, the medieval upper village. The views back over the harbour at the top are the best photograph you’ll take all day. The steps are steep β wear real shoes, not flip-flops. 45β60 min round trip.
3. Chorio Archaeological Museum (β¬2) β A small but well-curated museum in the upper village covering Symi’s ancient and Byzantine history, housed in a restored mansion. Often uncrowded while Gialos is heaving below. 30β45 min.
4. Kastro (Symi Castle) (free) β At the very summit of Chorio, the Knights of St John built a fortress incorporating the Church of the Assumption. The walls are ruined but the panorama over the Dodecanese is extraordinary. 30 min.
Beaches & Nature
5. Nos Beach (free) β The closest swimming beach to the port, a 15-minute walk northwest along the waterfront from the tender dock. Small, pebbly, and surprisingly calm for a beach this accessible. 1β2 hrs.
6. Nanou Beach (free) β A gorgeous, remote pebble cove accessible only by boat. CaΓ―ques from the harbour run here in 20β30 min. Crystal-clear water, minimal crowds compared to Nos. Book a round-trip with the caΓ―que captain so you don’t get stranded. π Book: Boat Trip to Symi Island with swimming stop at St George Bay 2β3 hrs.
7. St George Bay Swimming Stop (free entry / boat fare varies) β A sheltered turquoise cove that appears on boat excursion routes from Rhodes β you’ll often see the same tours passing through. Worth timing a swim here if you’re on a combined boat trip. π Book: Fast Boat To Symi with a swimming stop at St George's Bay! (Only 1hr journey) 1β2 hrs.
Day Trips
8. Panormitis Monastery (free, donations welcomed) β The most important pilgrimage site in the Dodecanese, dedicated to Archangel Michael, set in a breathtaking bay at the island’s southern tip. The monastery complex includes a Byzantine museum (β¬1), a shop selling Panormitis liqueur, and a courtyard with extraordinary mosaic floors. Getting there by bus or taxi is feasible; going by boat excursion is easier. π Book: Panormitis Monastery Bus Excursion Allow 2β3 hrs including travel.
9. Rhodes Day Trip (from ~$47) β If your ship is based in Rhodes and you haven’t yet visited Symi, or vice versa, fast boat day trips connect the two islands in about 1 hour. π Book: Boat Trip to Symi Island by Fast Boat Full day.
Family Picks
10. Harbour CaΓ―que Boat Ride (β¬10β20/person) β Even young children love a wooden caΓ―que trip around the harbour or to a nearby beach. No booking needed β just negotiate with captains at the dock. 1β2 hrs.
11. Gialos Esplanade Ice Cream Crawl (free / ~β¬3β5) β Multiple gelaterias and kafeneions along the waterfront do proper Greek ice cream. Let the kids lead the procession. 30 min.
Off the Beaten Track
12. Symi Town Cemetery & Neoclassical Mansions, Chorio (free) β Most visitors stop at the staircase top and turn back. Walk further into Chorio’s quieter lanes to find abandoned mansion shells, a 19th-century cemetery, and almost no other tourists. 45 min.
13. Pedi Village & Bay (free) β A sleepy fishing hamlet 2km from Gialos, reachable by bus or taxi (β¬8). A caΓ―que-building tradition survives here. Pedi Beach is sandy and rarely crowded on cruise days. 1β2 hrs.
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What to Eat & Drink

Symi’s culinary calling card is its tiny, intensely sweet Symi shrimp (garides Symis) β so small they’re eaten whole, shells and all, flash-fried in olive oil. Local sponge fishermen have fed the island’s taverna culture for centuries, so fresh seafood is serious business here.
- Symi Shrimp (garides Symis) β the island’s signature dish; order at any harbour taverna; β¬12β18 per portion
- Grilled Octopus β sun-dried then grilled over charcoal; harbour esplanade tavernas; β¬10β14
- Fresh Fish by Weight β priced per kilo at most restaurants; sea bream or red mullet; β¬15β25/kg
- Greek Salad with Symi Capers β local capers are tangier and smaller than mainland varieties; included at most tavernas; β¬7β10
- Loukoumades β honey-drenched fried dough balls, sold from a small stall near the clock tower; β¬3β4
- Symi Liqueur (Mandra) β a local herbal digestif sold in the Panormitis monastery shop and harbour stores; ~β¬8β12 a bottle
- Greek Coffee at a Harbour Kafeneion β sit away from the tourist-facing restaurants, find a kafeneion facing the back streets of Gialos; β¬2β3
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Shopping
The harbour esplanade is lined with shops, but much of it sells the same mass-produced Greek souvenirs you’ll find across the Dodecanese. Spend your money on what’s genuinely local: natural sea sponges harvested by Symi’s traditional sponge divers, hand-painted ceramic goods from island workshops, and bottles of Panormitis monastery liqueur or local honey. Symi-branded olive oil is also high quality and travels well in checked luggage.
Skip the tacky “I β₯ Symi” merchandise and the overpriced “hand-painted” icons that are machine-printed. Look for shops displaying the sponge-fishing heritage β several authentic sponge merchants operate steps from the waterfront and the quality difference from resort-stall sponges is immediately obvious when you pick one up.
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How to Plan Your Day
- 4 hours ashore: Walk the Gialos harbour esplanade β climb the
ποΈ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast β book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
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π Getting to Symi Island, Greece
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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