Greece · Ionian Islands
Corfu
Base in or near Corfu Town for culture and the best food, add a northwest coast stay (Paleokastritsa or the Sidari to Cape Drastis area) for the dramatic coves and sunsets, and give a day to the boat trip to Paxos or across to Albania.
Overview
Corfu is the greenest of the Ionian islands and the one that feels most like a small country of its own: a UNESCO-listed Venetian old town, cypress-and-olive hills that stay green into summer, and a coastline that swings from sheer limestone coves in the northwest to long sandy beaches in the south. It rewards travelers who want culture and swimming in the same trip.
If you only take one thing from this guide: split your stay. Two or three nights in or near the Old Town, then move northwest for the coves and light. Trying to do Corfu from a single southern resort means an hour of driving before anything interesting begins.
Best for
Couples · First-time Greek-island visitors · Culture plus beaches · Slow drives and coves · Families in the south
Daily itinerary
5 to 7 days
Unlike the volcanic Cyclades, Corfu is lush, forested and architecturally layered by Venetian, French and British rule. You get a genuine old town to get lost in, not just a village and a caldera view.
Best time to visit
The sweet spots are May to mid-June and September to mid-October: warm sea, long light, and far thinner crowds than July and August, when the island fills with charter traffic and the north-coast resorts are at capacity.
- May: Green hills, wildflowers, sea warming; some beach services not yet open.
- June: Excellent all round: warm sea, long days, pre-peak prices.
- July to August: Peak heat and crowds; book hotels and Paxos boats well ahead.
- September: Warmest sea of the year, softening crowds. Often the single best month.
- October: Mild, quieter, some closures begin mid-month.
Things worth knowing
- Orthodox Easter (spring): Corfu Town has famous processions and the "botides" pot-throwing on Holy Saturday.
- Summer classical and Ionian music events in and around the Old Town.
Where to stay
Corfu Old Town (Kerkyra)
The UNESCO-listed heart: Venetian lanes, two fortresses, the arcaded Liston, and the island’s best restaurants and cafes. Walkable, atmospheric, no beach at your door but everything else at your feet.
Best for: First-time visitors · Culture · Food · No car
Limited and expensive parking; summer nights can be lively near the Liston.
Paleokastritsa
The northwest’s postcard: a cluster of turquoise coves under green cliffs, a hilltop monastery, and boat trips to sea caves. Beautiful but busy midday; stay over to get the mornings and evenings to yourself.
Best for: Couples · Swimming in coves · Scenery
Day-trip crowds peak 11am to 4pm; the coves are small.
Sidari and Cape Drastis (northwest tip)
Sandstone formations, the famous Canal d’Amour, and Corfu’s most dramatic sunset headland at Cape Drastis. A good base for the wild northwest coast and boats to the Diapontia islets.
Best for: Sunsets · Rock formations · Northwest exploring
Sidari town itself is package-holiday in feel; the landscape around it is the draw.
Kassiopi and the northeast (Kensington coast)
A pretty harbour village below green Mount Pantokrator, gateway to the northeast’s small pebble coves (Kalami, Agni, Nissaki) lined with excellent seaside tavernas. Quietly upscale.
Best for: Couples · Taverna lunches by the water · Quiet coves
Coves are pebbly and small; a car helps a lot here.
South Corfu (Agios Georgios, Issos, Kavos)
The long sandy beaches and the flat Korission Lagoon. Family-friendly swimming and dunes; Kavos at the tip is a young party resort best avoided unless that is the point of your trip.
Best for: Families · Long sandy beaches · Value
Far from Corfu Town (about an hour); Kavos is party-focused.
Where to sleep
Domes Miramare, a Luxury Collection Resort
luxury · Moraitika / near Corfu Town
Best for: Couples · Design lovers · Sea-view calm
- Adults-oriented, quiet, polished service
- Beautiful landscaped seafront
- Close enough to Corfu Town for dinner
- Expensive
- Beach is more lawn-and-jetty than sand
- Books out early in shoulder season
Angsana Corfu Resort & Spa
resort · Benitses (southeast of Corfu Town)
Best for: Couples · Spa · Sea views over the hillside
- Dramatic hillside setting and infinity pools
- Strong spa
- Fifteen minutes from the Old Town
- Steep, terraced layout means lots of steps and shuttles
- No walk-in sandy beach
Siorra Vittoria Boutique Hotel
boutique · Corfu Old Town
Best for: Couples · Staying inside the Old Town · No car
- A restored 19th-century mansion in the heart of the Old Town
- Walk to everything
- Quiet garden breakfast under an old magnolia
- No pool or beach
- Old-town access means dragging luggage over cobbles
- Rooms vary in size
The Merchant
boutique · Corfu Old Town
Best for: Couples · Design · Old-town base
- Contemporary rooms in a historic shell
- Excellent location off the Liston
- Good breakfast
- Small property, books up fast
- Street noise on some rooms in high summer
Dogma Boutique Studios (northwest)
value · Northwest coast
Best for: Couples on a budget · Cove-hopping base · Self-catering
- Good value near the northwest coves
- Kitchenettes for flexible eating
- Car-friendly parking
- Simple, not luxurious
- You need a car from here
Essential experiences
Corfu Old Town (UNESCO)
A living Venetian-era town of arcades, churches and squares between two fortresses; a UNESCO World Heritage site since 2007.
Old Fortress (Palaio Frourio)
The seaward Venetian fortress on a rocky promontory; climb the lighthouse point for the classic view back over the town.
Achilleion Palace
The neoclassical palace built for Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Sisi), with statue-lined gardens and views over the south of the island.
Paleokastritsa monastery and coves
A 13th-century clifftop monastery above a cluster of turquoise coves; boat trips run to nearby sea caves.
Canal d’Amour, Sidari
Wind-sculpted sandstone channels and coves at the island’s northwest tip; swim through the narrow "canal" between rock walls.
Mount Pantokrator
Corfu’s highest peak (about 906m) with a monastery at the top and, on a clear day, views to Albania and Italy.
Kanoni and Mouse Island (Pontikonisi)
The much-photographed view of the Vlacherna monastery on its causeway and tiny Pontikonisi beyond, just south of Corfu Town.
Food & drink
- Sofrito: Veal in a garlic, white wine and vinegar sauce; the signature Corfiot dish, a Venetian legacy.
- Pastitsada: Rooster or beef in a spiced tomato sauce served over thick pasta; the Sunday dish.
- Bourdeto: Fish stewed in a fiery red-pepper and tomato sauce; traditionally scorpionfish.
- Kumquat: Corfu’s emblematic citrus, made into liqueur, spoon-sweets and marmalade.
- Tsitsibira (ginger beer): A soft drink left over from the British era, still made locally.
Dinner is late (from 9pm in summer); tavernas away from the Liston and the beach strips are where the Corfiot dishes are done properly.
Where to eat
Venetian Well
fine-diningA romantic courtyard around a Venetian wellhead; changing, ambitious menu. Book ahead.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Rex
institutionA long-running institution just behind the Liston; the reliable place to try the island classics.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Taverna Agni (Agni Bay)
institutionOne of three tavernas on a tiny northeast cove; the classic long seaside lunch. Many arrive by small boat.
Last researched 2026-07-15
Sunrises
Old Fortress lighthouse point
The eastern promontory catches first light over the sea toward the mainland; quiet before the town wakes.
Year-round · Shoots back west over the Old Town rooftops once the sun is up.
Kassiopi harbour, northeast
Facing the strait toward Albania, the northeast coast gets clean sunrises over the water and Mount Pantokrator behind you.
May to September
Sunsets
Cape Drastis
The island’s most dramatic sunset headland: white sandstone fingers dropping into the sea at the northwest tip.
May to September · Unpaved final approach; the cliff edges are unfenced, keep well back. · Golden hour lights the sandstone; wide angle for the fingers of rock.
Afionas / Porto Timoni viewpoint
A ridge above the double bay of Porto Timoni; one of the best sunset panoramas on the island.
May to October · The viewpoint is an easy walk from Afionas village; the beach below is a steeper 20-minute hike, not for after dark.
Kaiser’s Throne (Pelekas)
A hilltop viewing platform, once Kaiser Wilhelm’s favourite, with a near-360 panorama and famous sunsets over the west coast.
Year-round
Day trips
Paxos and Antipaxos by boat
The smaller Ionian islands south of Corfu: sea caves, the blue water of Antipaxos, and pretty Gaios harbour.
About 1 hour each way by fast boat · Full day
Saranda / Butrint, Albania
A passport day trip across the strait: the UNESCO archaeological site of Butrint and the seaside town of Saranda.
About 30 to 75 minutes by ferry to Saranda · Full day
Northwest coast drive
A self-drive loop through Paleokastritsa, Angelokastro, Lakones’ balcony viewpoints, Afionas and Cape Drastis.
Half to full day · Half to full day
Daily itinerary
Five days in Corfu: culture, coves and the northwest light
Two nights in or near the Old Town, three on or near the northwest coast. Rent a car from day 3.
- 1
Corfu Old Town
relaxedArrive and settle in the Old Town; coffee under the Liston arcades.Meze near the Old Port.Wander the Venetian lanes, the Old Fortress and Spianada square.Old Fortress point for the light over the town.Classic Corfiot dishes at Rex or a backstreet taverna.The evening volta on the Liston.No car needed today; the Old Town is walkable.Estimate: Swap the fortress for the Archaeological Museum if it is hot.
- 2
Achilleion and Kanoni
moderateTaxi or bus to the Achilleion Palace and its gardens.Back toward town.Kanoni for the Vlacherna and Mouse Island view; a swim below Kanoni.Kaiser’s Throne at Pelekas if you have a car; otherwise Kanoni.Dinner in the Old Town.Early night before the drive north.Car helpful today; feasible by bus/taxi.Estimate: Skip Achilleion for a beach afternoon if palaces are not your thing.
- 3
Move northwest
moderateCollect the rental car; drive northwest to Paleokastritsa.A cove-side taverna in Paleokastritsa.Swim the coves; a small boat to the sea caves.Bella Vista of Lakones over the bays.Dinner near your northwest base.Quiet night.Car from here on.Estimate: Climb to the Paleokastritsa monastery before the crowds.
- 4
The wild northwest
fullAngelokastro ruins and the Afionas ridge.Village lunch in Afionas.Porto Timoni double bay (steep walk) or an easier northwest beach.Cape Drastis for the island’s best sunset.Late taverna dinner.Stars from the northwest coast.Full car day; rough final tracks to Cape Drastis.Estimate: Swap the Porto Timoni hike for Sidari and the Canal d’Amour.
- 5
Slow morning and departure
relaxedA last swim or a drive up toward Mount Pantokrator for the panorama.Lunch en route back.Return the car; last hour in the Old Town.Departure.Leave buffer for returning the car near the airport.Estimate: If you fly late, add the Paxos boat as a full-day option and shift departure to day 6.
Getting around
- Corfu International Airport (CFU) sits just south of Corfu Town, a 10-minute drive from the Old Town.
- Ferries connect Corfu Town with Igoumenitsa on the mainland (about 1.5 hours) and seasonal links to Italy and Saranda (Albania).
- Green KTEL buses reach main towns; blue local buses serve Corfu Town and nearby suburbs.
- A rental car is the best way to reach the northwest coves and viewpoints; roads are winding.
- Taxis and app-based rides operate around Corfu Town.
Things worth knowing
- · Basing in the far south and trying to sightsee the whole island from there.
- · Driving to Cape Drastis fast on the rough final track.
- · Underestimating July/August crowds on the northwest coves at midday.
Budget
| Low | Expected | Comfortable | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation style / per night | €70 | €140 | €300 |
| Food style / per day | €25 | €45 | €90 |
| Local transport / per day | €8 | €35 | €60 |
| Estimate / per day | €5 | €15 | €35 |
Estimate · EUR · 2026-07-15. Accommodation is per room per night (two sharing). Local transport "expected" assumes a shared rental car for part of the trip. Shoulder-season figures; July/August runs higher.
Things worth knowing
Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Corfu?
Five to seven days is ideal. Five lets you split between the Old Town and the northwest coast without rushing; a week adds a boat day to Paxos and more beach time.
What is the best area to stay in Corfu for the first time?
In or near Corfu Old Town for culture, food and walkability, then a night or two on the northwest coast (Paleokastritsa or the Sidari area) for the coves and sunsets.
When is the best time to visit Corfu?
May to mid-June and September to mid-October: warm sea, long light and far fewer crowds than July and August. September often has the warmest sea of the year.
Do you need a car in Corfu?
For the Old Town, no. To reach the northwest coves, viewpoints and quiet beaches, a car for two or three days makes a big difference.
Where is the best sunset in Corfu?
Cape Drastis at the northwest tip is the most dramatic; Kaiser’s Throne above Pelekas and the Afionas ridge over Porto Timoni are also excellent.
Sources (3)
- Old Town of Corfu is a UNESCO World Heritage site · unesco · 2026-07-15
- Corfu overview, attractions and practical information · tourism-board · 2026-07-15
- Butrint archaeological site across the strait in Albania (UNESCO) · unesco · 2026-07-15