How many days in Rhodes?
Plan 2-4 days for Rhodes. Less than 2 feels rushed once you factor in transfer time; more than 8 drifts into beach-day repetition unless you island-hop.
The minimum
2 days
2 days covers one beach base, the main town, and one snorkel/boat trip β no extras.
The sweet spot
4 days
4 days unlocks a second beach, a half-day boat tour, and proper rest time without a packed schedule.
Slow travel
6 days
6 days enables island-hopping or a multi-day diving / surfing course without rushing.
The headline things to do in Rhodes
From the Rhodes guide β these are the items that anchor a 2-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Rhodes travel guide.
- Rhodes Old Town & the Hospitaller Walls β Old Town, Rhodes Town
The largest inhabited medieval town in Europe (UNESCO 1988) β 4 km of intact 14th-century Knights Hospitaller walls enclosing the cobblestoned old town with 6,000 residents. Walk the entire wall circuit (β¬2 entry, accessed from the Palace) for the full panoramic perspective. The Street of the Knights (Odos Ippoton) β a perfectly preserved 600-metre cobbled street lined with the Inns of the seven medieval Tongues (national chapters) of the Order β is the architectural centrepiece.
- Palace of the Grand Master β Old Town, top of the Street of the Knights
A 14th-century Hospitaller fortress at the highest point of the Old Town β destroyed by a gunpowder explosion in 1856, then rebuilt by the Italians during their 1912β1943 occupation as a summer residence for King Victor Emmanuel III (the rebuild is somewhat fanciful). The 158 rooms now house Hellenistic and Roman mosaics from Kos and the wider Dodecanese, and Hospitaller-era artefacts. β¬10 entry; the upper floors are closed for restoration as of 2025β2026.
- Acropolis of Lindos β Lindos, 50 km southeast of Rhodes Town
The second-most-photographed acropolis in Greece β a 116-metre cliff-top complex layered through three eras: a Byzantine chapel, a Hospitaller fortress, and at the heart, the 4th-century BC Temple of Athena Lindia (the original sanctuary that drew Alexander the Great as a pilgrim). Twin azure bays β St Paul's Bay (named for the apostle's reputed landing) and Lindos main bay β fan out below. β¬6 entry; reach the summit on foot (steep stepped path), by donkey (β¬8, ethics debated), or via private taxi up the back access road.
- Acropolis of Rhodes (Monte Smith) β Monte Smith, 2 km west of Old Town
The ancient Greek acropolis of Rhodes Town β much less restored than the Athenian or Lindian ones β sprawls across Monte Smith hill 2 km west of the Old Town. The stadium (4th century BC, restored), the partly-reconstructed Doric Temple of Apollo Pythios, the small Hellenistic Odeon, and the 200-metre running track are the main remains. Free entry, atmospheric at sunset, and rarely crowded. The view back over the New Town and out to Symi island is exceptional.
- Valley of the Butterflies (Petaloudes) β Petaloudes, 25 km from Rhodes Town
A wooded river valley 25 km southwest of Rhodes Town where, from late June to early September, millions of Jersey tiger moths gather in the millions on the trunks of storax trees β drawn by their distinctive resin. The marked path through the valley climbs 1.5 km past waterfalls; the moths cluster so densely on tree bark that they appear at first as dead leaves, then explode into red flight when disturbed (visitors are asked NOT to disturb them). β¬5 entry JuneβSeptember.
- Mandraki Harbour & the Site of the Colossus β Mandraki, between Old and New Town
The northern harbour where the 33-metre Colossus of Rhodes stood from 280 BC until 226 BC β now flanked by two stone columns topped with a stag and doe (the Rhodian symbols) and three 15th-century Hospitaller windmills. The popular myth that the Colossus straddled the harbour with ships passing between its legs is medieval invention; archaeological consensus places it at the harbour entrance on the eastern side, on what is now Saint Nicholas Fort.
- Archaeological Museum of Rhodes β Old Town, Plateia Mouseiou
Housed in the 15th-century Hospitaller Hospital β itself one of the great surviving Crusader buildings β the museum holds the famous "Aphrodite of Rhodes" (1st century BC marble), Hellenistic and Roman finds from across the Dodecanese, and an extensive medieval collection. The hospital interior is at least as architecturally interesting as the contents. β¬8 entry, in the heart of the Old Town.
- Tsambika Beach & Tsambika Monastery β Tsambika, east coast
A 1 km arc of golden sand on the east coast 25 km south of Rhodes Town β one of the most beautiful beaches on the island, with shallow turquoise water excellent for families. Above it on a 300-metre rock pinnacle stands the tiny 18th-century Tsambika Monastery; locals climb the stepped path for fertility blessings (women who climb barefoot are said to be granted children). The walk takes 25 minutes; the views back over the beach and east coast are extraordinary.
Frequently asked
Is 2 days enough in Rhodes?
2 days is the minimum for a satisfying visit β you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 4, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.
Is 8 days too long in Rhodes?
8 days is on the upper end β most travellers feel it once they've done the headline experiences twice. Either island-hop, take a multi-day course, or split with another base.
What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Rhodes?
4 days is the sweet spot for a first visit β long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 2 usually feels rushed; more than 8 is into slow-travel territory.
Should I add Rhodes to a longer regional trip?
Yes β Rhodes works well as a 2-4-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.