
Guides · Zakynthos
10 Top Things to Do in Zakynthos, Greece
CEO and co-founder
This guide ranks the 10 top things to do in Zakynthos - the sights that genuinely earn a place on your itinerary whether you have three days or a full week on the island. Each entry includes the exact location, nearest port or transit, driving time from Zakynthos Town, and a practical Pro Tip. We have ordered the list so the most iconic places sit at the top - Navagio Beach, the Blue Caves, and Marathonisi Island - then group the remaining picks by region: south-coast nature spots like Keri Caves and Laganas Bay, west-coast stops at Porto Limnionas and the Mizithres viewpoint, and the cultural anchors of Zakynthos Town and Anafonitria.
Distances on Zakynthos are short but the road network around the western half is winding, so we have flagged which places work best as boat tours from the eastern resorts and which call for a rental car. Several attractions cluster naturally - the Vasilikos Peninsula (Gerakas Beach, plus Marathonisi access from Limni Keriou), the north tip (Blue Caves and Cape Skinari), and the southwest (Navagio viewpoint, Mizithres at Kampi, Porto Limnionas) - so the routing notes will save you backtracking on the narrow inland roads.
Practical context: most boat tours run May to October, the western coast can get rough in shoulder season, and a few of these picks (Marathonisi nesting beach, Gerakas Beach) have access restrictions during loggerhead nesting season (June to October) to protect the turtles. Where rules apply, we have noted them in the Pro Tip.
1Navagio Beach (Shipwreck Beach) - The Most Iconic Sight in Zakynthos

Topping every list of things to do in Zakynthos, Navagio Beach (also known as Shipwreck Beach) is a small turquoise cove walled by 200-metre limestone cliffs on the island's northwest shore. The rusted hull of the freighter MV Panagiotis - run aground in 1980 and now half-buried in white sand - gives the beach its name and makes it one of the most photographed spots in Greece.
The cove is accessible by boat only - tour boats run from Porto Vromi (the nearest harbour, around 30 minutes one way) and from Agios Nikolaos port at the north tip (around an hour). For the famous viewpoint photo, drive instead to the cliff platform near Anafonitria village. Boat tours typically allow 30-40 minutes on the sand. Bring water shoes - the beach is pebbly underwater - and pack out everything you bring in.
Pro Tip: After partial cliff collapses in 2018 and 2022, the official viewpoint platform has been fenced off in places. Use only the marked safe deck and never climb over the railing. The 09:00 boat from Porto Vromi reaches the beach before the cruise crowds arrive at 11:00.
2Blue Caves at Cape Skinari - Sea Caves Carved by the Ionian

At the northernmost tip of the island, the Blue Caves are a string of natural sea grottos hollowed out of the limestone cliffs around Cape Skinari. The water inside glows an electric blue when sunlight refracts through the entrances, and the caves are one of the signature stops on every northern boat tour. The most photographed grotto, the Kianoun Cave, has a low arched entrance that small boats can pass directly under.
Larger excursion boats from Zakynthos Town anchor outside while passengers swim in via swim-stops; smaller speedboats out of Agios Nikolaos port (the small harbour at the north tip, not Zakynthos Town) actually enter the caves. Most operators combine the Blue Caves with Navagio Beach in a half-day loop. The caves photograph best at mid-morning when the sun angle drives the brightest blue glow - tours leaving around 10:30 hit them just right.
Pro Tip: Skip the giant tour boats from Zakynthos Town in favour of a small speedboat from Agios Nikolaos at the north tip - they actually enter the caves rather than just sail past. A 90-minute speedboat trip combining the Blue Caves with Navagio runs about 25-30 EUR per person.
3Marathonisi Island (Turtle Island) - Loggerhead Nesting Beach in Laganas Bay

Marathonisi - shaped like a turtle when seen from above and locally called Turtle Island - is a small uninhabited islet off the south coast in Laganas Bay. It sits inside the Zakynthos National Marine Park and is one of the most important loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) nesting beaches in the Mediterranean. Tropical-feeling vegetation, turquoise shallows, and small sea caves on the western flank make it the most rewarding short-boat trip on the island.
Boat tours leave Limni Keriou and Keri port (15-25 minutes each way) and Laganas (longer, around 30-45 minutes). Most tours give you 60-90 minutes ashore. The protected eastern cove allows daytime swimming but is closed at night to nesting females from May to October. Glass-bottom boats out of Laganas often spot turtles in the bay on the way over - sightings are most reliable in June and July.
Pro Tip: Visit before 11:00 if possible - boat traffic increases sharply through midday and the protected swim zone fills up. Stay strictly inside the buoyed swimming area, never disturb a nest, and skip operators who promise "swim with turtles" - those tours are not legal inside the marine park.
4Keri Caves - Limestone Arches at the Southern Tip

At the southwestern corner of the island, the Keri Caves are a series of dramatic sea-eroded arches and grottos carved into white cliffs below the village of Keri. The same cliffs sit beside Lake Keri, the historic natural pitch lake that supplied tar to the Athenian navy in the 5th century BC. That geology produced the wide rock arches you motor through today on the boat tours.
Small boats from Limni Keriou and Keri port reach the caves in about 20 minutes; tours typically include swim stops in turquoise coves between the arches and views of the Mizithres rock pillars further north. Above the caves, the Keri Lighthouse offers one of the best sunset spots on the island - a tarmac road climbs from Keri village to the cliff edge, where a small taverna serves drinks at the viewpoint.
Pro Tip: Combine the boat tour with sunset at the lighthouse for a full south-coast day - take a 14:00 boat from Limni Keriou, return for a late-afternoon coffee in Keri village, then drive 4 km up to the lighthouse for sunset (around 20:30 in July, 19:00 in October).
5Porto Limnionas - The Fjord-Like Cove on the West Coast

Porto Limnionas is a narrow rocky inlet on the wild western coast - the closest thing Zakynthos has to a Norwegian fjord. Sheer limestone walls drop straight into clear, deep, turquoise water, with no sand and no shallows; you swim by jumping or descending one of the cut-stone ladders along the cliffs. A small family-run taverna at the head of the cove serves traditional Zakynthian dishes and rents sun loungers on the rock terrace.
Access is by car only via a narrow winding road from Agios Leon - allow 35 minutes from Zakynthos Town. The cliffs offer some shade in the morning but bake in the afternoon. The water depth and the absence of a beach mean Porto Limnionas suits confident swimmers; this is not the easiest spot for very small children, though older kids who can jump from rocks love it.
Pro Tip: Arrive before 10:30 to find parking on the cliff above the cove - the narrow approach road backs up by midday in summer and there is no overflow lot. Snorkelling from the rock platforms is excellent: the water visibility regularly hits 20 metres on calm days.
6Laganas Bay & Zakynthos National Marine Park - Where Sea Turtles Nest

Laganas Bay stretches 9 km along the south coast and is the heart of the Zakynthos National Marine Park - the first marine national park in Greece, established in 1999 specifically to protect the largest loggerhead sea turtle nesting population in the Mediterranean. From May to October, around 1,300 turtles come ashore here to lay eggs on the bay's sandy beaches.
The town of Laganas itself is the loud, young-tourist-orientated heart of Zakynthos nightlife, but the bay's western beaches (Kalamaki, Sekania, Daphne, Gerakas) are quieter and more important ecologically. Boat tours from Laganas port take you out to spot turtles in the bay, with sightings most reliable June to August, often combined with a stop at Marathonisi Island. Admission to the marine park itself is free for swimmers.
Pro Tip: Choose tour operators displaying the official ARCHELON or marine park accreditation sticker - they keep proper distance from turtles and follow no-touch rules. Sekania Beach is closed to the public year-round (it is the densest nesting site in the Mediterranean), so skip any operator who promises landings there.
7Zakynthos Town (Chora) & Bochali Castle - Venetian Capital and Hilltop Fortress

The capital of the island, locally called Chora, was levelled by the 1953 Ionian earthquake and rebuilt in the same Venetian-influenced style. The result is an attractive harbour town with arcaded streets, the marble-paved Plateia Solomou (the main square, named after the national poet Dionysios Solomos who was born here), and the rebuilt Church of Saint Dionysios with its prominent 19th-century campanile.
The Museum of Solomos and Eminent Zakynthians on St Mark's Square holds local 18th and 19th-century art and the tomb of the poet himself. Above the town, a 15-minute drive (or a 45-minute uphill walk) leads to Bochali Hill, where the walled remains of the Venetian Castle of Zakynthos sit among pine trees with sweeping views back over the harbour. Castle entrance costs 4 EUR.
Pro Tip: Time your Bochali visit for late afternoon - the castle gates close at 19:30 in summer (15:00 in winter), and the cafes on the road below the castle have the island's best view of the sun setting behind the Peloponnese mountains across the strait.
8Gerakas Beach - Pristine Sand on the Vasilikos Peninsula

Gerakas, on the southern tip of the Vasilikos Peninsula, is one of the most beautiful beaches on Zakynthos and one of the most strictly protected. A long crescent of fine cream-coloured sand backs onto pale ochre clay cliffs, sitting inside the Zakynthos National Marine Park as a designated loggerhead nesting beach. As a result, sun loungers are restricted to the front third of the beach, the back is roped off, and the entire beach is closed to visitors from sunset to sunrise (May to October) to protect nesting turtles.
A small visitor centre at the entrance run by ARCHELON (the Sea Turtle Protection Society of Greece) is worth 10 minutes for the educational displays and to learn how to spot a nest. The beach itself is reached by a sloped sand path from the parking area; one taverna sits at the entrance. Water entry is shallow and gradual, making Gerakas a strong family pick when you respect the rules.
Pro Tip: Visit Monday to Friday outside July-August for a near-empty beach. Never walk on the marked-off section, never use flash photography near the dunes, and never dig in the sand outside the public swimming area - active loggerhead nests sit just below the surface.
9Mizithres Rocks & Kampi Cross - The Sunset Cliffside Viewpoint

Above the village of Kampi on the western edge of the island, a panoramic cliff terrace looks out at the Mizithres - two distinctive cone-shaped rock pillars rising from the sea below the cliffs - and across the Ionian to the silhouette of Kefalonia on a clear evening. A large stone cross, built by villagers in memory of locals who lost their lives during the Greek Civil War, marks the highest point on the terrace and gives the spot its other name, the Kampi Cross.
A handful of cliff-edge tavernas serve traditional Zakynthian food (rabbit stifado, fresh sardines, local wine) with the same view, and the road climbs gently from Maries village - allow 35 minutes by car from Zakynthos Town. The terrace is unfenced in places, so keep children close to the inland side. Sunset turns the cliffs gold, and on a clear night the lights of Kefalonia twinkle to the north.
Pro Tip: Arrive 90 minutes before sunset to claim a cliff-edge table at one of the tavernas. Bring a fleece even in summer - the wind picks up sharply at 350 metres above the sea once the sun drops, and the temperature can fall 8-10 degrees within an hour.
10Anafonitria Monastery & Volimes Village - The North's Cultural Heart

Inland from the Navagio viewpoint, the small village of Anafonitria is built around a 15th-century monastery that holds a special place in Zakynthian Orthodox life: this is where Saint Dionysios, patron saint of the island, lived as a monk in the 17th century. The fortified compound retains its medieval defensive tower and a small chapel decorated with post-Byzantine frescoes; the saint's old cell is preserved as a tiny museum behind the main church.
A few kilometres further north, Volimes is famous for handmade textiles - rugs, embroidered tablecloths, local kefalotyri cheese, and thyme honey from the surrounding hills. The drive itself is part of the pleasure: olive groves, dry-stone walls, and views over the western escarpment. Combine both stops with the Navagio viewpoint and the Mizithres terrace at Kampi for a complete west-coast day.
Pro Tip: Anafonitria Monastery requires modest dress - long trousers or skirts and shoulders covered. Wraps are available at the entrance for visitors who turn up in beachwear, but bring your own to skip the queue. The monastery is open 08:00-13:00 and 16:30-19:30; entry is free.

CEO and co-founder
Tomas is the co-founder and director of Trip1, an European company specializing in reservation services. He launched the company in 2025 with a focus on building scalable, efficient operations.
10 Top Things to Do in Zakynthos, Greece - FAQ
No - a realistic plan covers 4-5 attractions per day. The west coast (Navagio viewpoint, Mizithres at Kampi, Anafonitria Monastery, Porto Limnionas) easily fills one full driving day. The south coast (Marathonisi Island, Keri Caves, Laganas Bay, Gerakas Beach) easily fills another. The Blue Caves and northern boat tour is a half-day from Agios Nikolaos port. Add Zakynthos Town and Bochali Castle for another half-day, and you have a comfortable 3-4 day itinerary that lets you actually swim, eat, and enjoy each stop.
Group by geography to avoid backtracking. Day 1: Vasilikos Peninsula (Gerakas Beach, then Marathonisi Island via Limni Keriou, then Keri Caves and Keri Lighthouse for sunset). Day 2: Northern boat tour from Agios Nikolaos port covering Blue Caves and Navagio Beach by sea. Day 3: West coast loop by car (Navagio viewpoint at Anafonitria, Anafonitria Monastery, Volimes, Mizithres Rocks at Kampi, ending at Porto Limnionas). Day 4: Zakynthos Town and Bochali Castle, plus a relaxed Laganas Bay swim. This sequence keeps the long-driving day at the end.
None require advance tickets. Boat tours - the Blue Caves and Navagio loop, Marathonisi tours from Limni Keriou, and Keri Caves trips - do sell out in July and August, so book a day ahead at the harbour booth or through your accommodation. Bochali Castle and Anafonitria Monastery sell tickets at the gate (4 EUR and free, respectively). Gerakas Beach and Porto Limnionas have free public access; you only pay for sun loungers (8-15 EUR per pair) if you want them. Reserve sunset tables at Kampi tavernas by calling that morning in peak season.
Budget around 180-260 EUR per person for a four-day itinerary covering everything. Boat tours are the largest line item: a half-day Blue Caves and Navagio speedboat from Agios Nikolaos runs 25-35 EUR, a Marathonisi cruise from Limni Keriou is 15-20 EUR, and a Keri Caves trip is similar. Bochali Castle entry is 4 EUR. A small rental car (essential for the west coast) costs 30-50 EUR per day in shoulder season plus fuel. Tavernas average 15-20 EUR per main course meal. Beach loungers add 8-15 EUR per pair if you want them.
Several worthy stops sit just outside the top 10. Banana Beach on the eastern coast is the longest sandy beach on the island and a family favourite, with full taverna and watersport infrastructure. Tsilivi Waterpark is a reliable rainy-day backup for kids. The Helmis Natural History Museum in Agia Marina holds a notable shell and fossil collection. From Agios Nikolaos port, day trips to Kefalonia (Sami, Melissani Cave) are easy and rewarding. The bronze statue of poet Dionysios Solomos at Plateia Solomou makes a quick cultural photo stop in central Zakynthos Town.
Yes - they are the two best stops on the south coast and most boat operators in Limni Keriou and Keri port run a combined half-day or full-day cruise covering both. Allow 4-5 hours for the combined trip including swim stops at the turquoise pools off Marathonisi Island and the cave arches off Keri. Add lunch at a Limni Keriou taverna afterwards, then drive 4 km up to Keri Lighthouse for sunset to round out a complete south-coast day.
Only partially. KTEL buses connect Zakynthos Town to Laganas, Tsilivi, Argassi, Alykes, and Vasilikos several times daily, which covers Zakynthos Town, Bochali Hill (a short taxi from town), Laganas Bay, and Gerakas Beach. The west coast (Porto Limnionas, Mizithres at Kampi, Anafonitria Monastery, Volimes) and the northern Blue Caves are not realistically bus-accessible. A rental car or an organised tour is the practical option for these. Combined boat tours from Laganas, Limni Keriou, and Agios Nikolaos cover the rest from the sea.



