I was standing on the harbour wall in Corfu Town, watching a wooden boat round the headland toward open water, and I thought: that’s the only way to see half of this island. The coves below the cliffs at Paleokastritsa, the sea caves you can’t reach on foot, the tiny white-sand strips that don’t even have names on Google Maps. From the road, Corfu looks like olive groves and Venetian alleyways. From the water, it’s a completely different place.

The Ionian Sea around Corfu is warmer and calmer than the Aegean. That matters if you get seasick easily or you’re bringing kids. Most boat tours run from late April through October, but peak season is July and August when everything sells out fast. If you’re visiting in June or September, you get better prices, fewer crowds, and the water is still plenty warm for swimming.


Best overall: Full-Day Paxos, Antipaxos & Blue Caves Tour — $54. The classic Corfu boat day out. Blue caves, swimming at Antipaxos, lunch in Gaios. Hard to beat.
Best for a special day: Wooden Vessel Cruise with BBQ — $131. Traditional wooden boat, BBQ lunch on board, fewer passengers than the big cruise ships.
Best for romance: Sunset Cruise with Cocktails — $65. Two hours, cocktails, finger food, and Mouse Island lit up in golden hour. Perfect end to a day.
- How Boat Tours in Corfu Actually Work
- Group Cruise vs Private Charter — Which Should You Pick?
- The Best Corfu Boat Tours to Book
- 1. Full-Day Boat Tour of Paxos, Antipaxos & Blue Caves —
- 2. Full Day Cruise in Classic Wooden Vessel with BBQ — 1
- 3. Corfu Private Yacht Cruise — from 0 per group
- 4. Sunset Cruise on a Wooden Vessel with Cocktails —
- When to Go
- Getting to the Boats
- Tips That’ll Save You Time and Money
- What You’ll Actually See from the Boat
- Also in Greece
- More Greece Guides
How Boat Tours in Corfu Actually Work
There are basically three types of boat trips running out of Corfu, and they’re quite different from each other.
Full-day island-hopping cruises leave Corfu Town port between 8:30 and 9:30 AM, head south to Paxos and Antipaxos, and return around 6-7 PM. These are the big ones — large boats carrying 100-200 passengers, with a DJ on the return trip and a bar on board. They stop at the Blue Caves, give you time to swim at Antipaxos beach (the water there is unreal), and drop you in a village on Paxos for lunch. You pay for your own food on the island. Budget around $54-65 per person.

Private yacht and sailboat charters are the opposite. You get a skipper, a boat for your group, and you go wherever you want. Want to anchor in a cove and swim for an hour? Done. Want to sail up the east coast to Kassiopi? Your call. These cost more — around $460 per group for a basic yacht, up to $1,000+ for a sailing yacht — but split between 6-8 people, they become surprisingly reasonable.

Sunset cruises are shorter — usually 2 hours — and they run in the late afternoon. You board a wooden boat near Corfu Town, cruise past the Old Fortress and Pontikonisi (Mouse Island), sip cocktails, eat finger food, and watch the sun go down. No swimming usually, just views and drinks. At around $65 per person, they’re a good option if you don’t want to give up an entire day.

Group Cruise vs Private Charter — Which Should You Pick?
This depends entirely on your travel style and your budget. And I’ll be honest with you: neither is objectively better.
The big group cruises to Paxos and Antipaxos are the most popular option, and for good reason. You get a full day, multiple stops, the Blue Caves, swimming, a village lunch break, and a party atmosphere on the return. The downside? The boats can feel crowded in July and August. Several people mention not having enough shade or seating on the upper deck, and the DJ music on the way back isn’t everyone’s thing. If you want peace and quiet, this isn’t it.
Private charters give you flexibility and space. You choose the route, you choose how long to stay at each stop, and you don’t share the boat with strangers. But you miss the Blue Caves of Paxos (most private yachts stay along the Corfu coast rather than making the longer trip to Paxos). And the cost adds up — even split among a group, you’re looking at $60-130 per person depending on the boat and duration.

My take: do the Paxos day cruise and a sunset cruise if you have two days. The day trip shows you the wider Ionian, and the sunset cruise is pure Corfu. If you only have time for one, the Paxos trip is the better value.
The Best Corfu Boat Tours to Book
I’ve gone through the tours available from Corfu and picked four that cover different budgets, styles, and itineraries. All of them have strong track records with real travellers.
1. Full-Day Boat Tour of Paxos, Antipaxos & Blue Caves — $54

This is the one everyone does, and honestly, it deserves the popularity. You board at Corfu Town port early morning, cruise south to the Blue Caves (the boat actually goes inside, which is a bit of a thrill), then on to Antipaxos for swimming in water so clear it doesn’t look real. After that, you dock at Gaios village on Paxos for a couple of hours — enough time for lunch at a waterfront taverna and a quick wander through the narrow streets.
At $54 per person for what’s essentially a 6-10 hour day, this is outstanding value. The boat is large and has a bar, though drinks and food cost extra. A heads up: the music on the return journey is loud. Some people love the party vibe, others find it a bit much. Sit on the lower deck if you want a quieter ride back. The full-day Paxos and Blue Caves tour is run by Ionian Cruises, one of the most established operators on the island.
2. Full Day Cruise in Classic Wooden Vessel with BBQ — $131

If you want something with more character than the big cruise boats, this is it. You board a traditional Greek wooden vessel — the kind that looks like it belongs in a film — and spend about 6.5 hours cruising the Corfu coastline. The route follows the coast rather than heading to Paxos, stopping at swimming spots and sea caves along the way. The BBQ lunch is cooked on board, which is a huge upgrade over the “find your own lunch” approach of the bigger tours.
At $131 per person, this costs more than the Paxos cruise, but you get included food, a smaller group, and a more relaxed pace. It’s the kind of tour where you actually feel like you’re on holiday rather than being herded between stops. The wooden vessel cruise with BBQ is perfect for couples or small groups who care more about the experience than ticking off islands.
3. Corfu Private Yacht Cruise — from $460 per group

For groups of 4-8, a private yacht charter changes the maths completely. At $460 for the group, split between six friends, that’s about $77 each for a custom itinerary along the Corfu coast with a skipper who knows every hidden cove and quiet swimming spot. You choose the duration — anywhere from 2 to 8 hours — and the route is entirely up to you.
The yacht comes with snacks and drinks, snorkelling gear, and a skipper who doubles as a local guide. This isn’t a cheap inflatable dinghy either — it’s a proper motor yacht. The main trade-off is that you won’t reach Paxos or Antipaxos (too far for most private charters), but you’ll see parts of the Corfu coast that the big tour boats skip entirely. If you’re a family or a group of friends, the private yacht cruise around Corfu is hard to beat for flexibility.
4. Sunset Cruise on a Wooden Vessel with Cocktails — $65

Not everyone wants to spend a whole day on a boat, and that’s completely fine. This 2-hour sunset cruise packs a lot into a short window. You board a traditional wooden vessel near the Old Port, cruise past Pontikonisi (the tiny island that locals call Mouse Island), swing by the Old Fortress, and watch the sun drop while sipping cocktails and nibbling on Mediterranean finger food — all included in the $65 price.
It’s genuinely romantic without being cheesy about it. The boat is small enough that it feels intimate, the crew knows their stuff, and the route is designed to catch the light at the best angles. If you’re in Corfu for a few days and want a low-commitment boat experience, this sunset cruise with cocktails is the perfect complement to a full-day excursion earlier in the trip.
When to Go
Boat tours run from roughly mid-April through the end of October. But the experience varies wildly depending on when you visit.

June and September are the sweet spot. Water temperatures are comfortable for swimming (23-26C), the tour boats aren’t packed to capacity, and prices are lower than peak season. September has slightly warmer water than June because the sea has had all summer to heat up.
July and August are the busiest months. The popular Paxos day cruises sell out days in advance, private charters need to be booked weeks ahead, and every swimming stop is shared with a dozen other tour boats. It’s still beautiful, but be prepared for crowds and higher prices. Book early if you’re visiting in peak summer.
April-May and October are hit or miss. The weather is usually pleasant enough for a cruise, but the sea can be rougher and some swimming stops feel cold. Fewer boats run these months, and some operators have reduced schedules. The upside? You might have an entire beach to yourself.
Getting to the Boats
Almost all boat tours depart from Corfu Town’s New Port (Neo Limani) or the Old Port area nearby. If you’re staying in Corfu Town, it’s walkable. From Sidari, Kassiopi, or the resort areas on the south coast, most tour operators include bus pickup — check before you book, because some charge extra for transfers (around EUR 10-20 for a taxi if pickup isn’t included from your area).

One thing to know: pickup logistics can be slightly chaotic for the big Paxos tours. Some operators list a pickup point, then change it after you’ve already booked. It’s worth confirming the exact meeting point the day before — either by email or through the tour platform’s messaging system. Show up 15 minutes early to avoid stress.
If you’re arriving by cruise ship and docking at the Corfu cruise terminal, the port is about a 10-minute walk to where the day cruise boats depart. Several tours specifically cater to cruise ship passengers with adjusted timing to match ship schedules.
Tips That’ll Save You Time and Money
Book at least 3-4 days ahead in summer. The Paxos day cruises fill up fast in July-August. Sunset cruises are smaller boats and sell out even faster. In June and September you can sometimes book the day before.
Bring cash for lunch on Paxos. The restaurants in Gaios village are good but not cheap — expect EUR 15-25 for a meal. Some take cards, but a couple of the best waterfront spots are cash-only. There’s an ATM in the village but the queue is long when tour boats arrive.

Sunscreen, hat, and a towel. Obvious? Maybe. But I’ve seen plenty of people on deck at 2pm looking like lobsters. The boats have some shade, but the swimming stops don’t. Some tours provide towels, most don’t — check before you go.
Seasickness meds if you’re prone. The Ionian is calmer than the Aegean, but the crossing to Paxos takes about 90 minutes and the open water section can be choppy. Take medication 30 minutes before boarding, not after you start feeling green.
Sit on the right side of the boat heading to Paxos for the best views of the Corfu coast as you depart. Coming back, sit on the left (port side). Or just grab the top deck early — it fills up fast.

What You’ll Actually See from the Boat
Corfu’s coastline is more varied than most Greek islands. The west coast is steep and dramatic — towering cliffs dropping straight into deep water, sea caves carved into the limestone, and tiny coves that only a small boat can reach. The east coast is gentler, with pebbly beaches, olive groves reaching down to the shore, and views across to the Albanian coast (which is surprisingly close — you can see individual buildings in Saranda).

The Blue Caves near Paxos are the star attraction on most full-day tours. The boat slows down and enters the caves (the bigger boats fit, barely), and the light reflecting off the white limestone floor turns the water an impossible shade of electric blue. Even if you’ve seen the Blue Caves in Zakynthos, these are worth seeing.
Antipaxos is a tiny island south of Paxos with two beaches — Voutoumi and Vrika — that consistently show up on “best beaches in Greece” lists. And they earn it. The water is Caribbean-clear over white sand, and the swimming stop here is usually the highlight of the Paxos day cruise for most people.

If you stick closer to Corfu on a private charter, the Paleokastritsa coast on the west side is arguably the most beautiful stretch. Six bays, crystal water, a clifftop monastery looking down on it all. And the sea caves around there are accessible by small boat — some charters will let you kayak in.





Also in Greece
If Corfu is part of a bigger Greek trip, the other Ionian islands are easy to reach from here. Paxos and Antipaxos are the obvious ones (and you’ll see them on the day cruise), but Lefkada is just a ferry ride south and has some of the best beaches in the Mediterranean. On the mainland side, Parga and the Sivota Islands are reachable on a separate day cruise from Corfu — the Blue Lagoon near Sivota is worth the trip if you have a second day to spare. And if you’re into island-hopping, the Lakka Village route via Paxos takes you to the quieter northern end of the island where most travelers don’t bother going. For something completely different, the Corfu food and cultural tour is a solid pick for a non-boat day — get off the water and into the kitchens.
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More Greece Guides
Corfu’s boat tours showcase the Ionian Sea at its most dramatic, but the Aegean islands offer a completely different palette. The Santorini caldera cruise trades green cliffs for volcanic black rock, and the Zakynthos boat tours to Shipwreck Beach deliver the most photographed coastline in the country.
If you are heading to the Dodecanese after Corfu, the Rhodes boat tours run everything from Symi crossings to full-day coastal cruises, and the Kos island cruises are the cheapest multi-island days in Greece.
