The Ggantija Temples on Gozo are older than Stonehenge. Older than the Egyptian pyramids. By about a thousand years. I stood in front of those limestone walls — built around 3600 BC, before anyone had invented the wheel or figured out metalwork — and the first thought that came to mind was: how did they even move these blocks?
That’s the thing about Gozo. You come for the beaches (and they’re good), but the island keeps surprising you with things that have no business being on a 67 square kilometre rock in the middle of the Mediterranean.

Getting to Gozo from Malta takes about 25 minutes by ferry — or less if you book a tour with a private boat transfer. Most visitors make it a day trip, which works fine if you’re efficient. But there’s easily enough here for two days if you want to slow down, and the island feels completely different from the Malta mainland. Quieter. Greener. The kind of place where the bus driver waits if he sees you running.


Short on time? Here are my top picks:
Best overall: Full-Day Gozo Jeep Tour with Lunch & Boat Ride — $94. Covers every major sight with a knowledgeable local driver, includes lunch and a private boat crossing. The one to book if you only have one day.
Best budget: Gozo, Comino, Blue Lagoon & Caves Cruise — $34. A full-day boat tour that hits Gozo, Comino, and the Blue Lagoon for the price of a decent lunch. Hard to beat.
Best for adventure: Full-Day Gozo Quad Tour with Lunch — $131. Same island, completely different experience. You’re driving your own quad bike through dirt tracks and cliff-edge trails that the jeeps can’t reach.
- The Gozo Channel Ferry — Getting There on Your Own
- Guided Tour vs. Going It Alone — the Honest Comparison
- The Best Gozo Tours to Book
- 1. Full-Day Gozo Jeep Tour with Lunch & Boat Ride —
- 2. Gozo, Comino, Blue Lagoon & Caves Cruise —
- 3. Full-Day Gozo Quad Tour with Lunch & Boat Ride — 1
- 4. Gozo Day Trip Including Ggantija Temples —
- 5. Gozo Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour —
- When to Visit Gozo
- How to Get Around Gozo
- Tips That Will Save You Time (and Money)
- What You’ll Actually See on Gozo
- Starting from Valletta
- More Malta Guides
The Gozo Channel Ferry — Getting There on Your Own

If you want to do Gozo independently, the ferry is how you’ll get there. The Gozo Channel Line runs between Cirkewwa on Malta’s northern tip and Mgarr Harbour on Gozo. It takes about 25 minutes, and you only pay on the return trip — the outbound crossing is free.
Ticket prices: Adults pay EUR 4.65 for a round trip. If you’re bringing a car, it’s EUR 15.70 return. You can buy tickets at the terminal or tap your contactless card at the turnstile. There’s no reservation system for foot passengers.
Getting to Cirkewwa: This is the annoying part. Cirkewwa is at Malta’s far northwest corner, roughly 40-50 minutes from Valletta by bus (route TD1 or 41/42). A taxi from Valletta runs about EUR 25-30 each way. If you’re staying in Sliema or Bugibba, budget at least an hour to reach the terminal.
The ferry terminal itself has a small cafe, toilets, and a waiting area. In summer, especially July and August, the car queue can stretch back significantly — arrive early if you’re driving. Foot passengers rarely have issues.
Once you land at Mgarr, you’ll need transport around Gozo. The hop-on hop-off bus is one option. Renting a car or scooter on Gozo is another (small rental agencies operate right at Mgarr). But if you want to see everything in one day without the logistics headache, that’s where the guided tours earn their price.

Guided Tour vs. Going It Alone — the Honest Comparison

I’ve done Gozo both ways. Here’s the honest breakdown:
Independent (ferry + bus or rental): You’ll spend about EUR 5 on the ferry, EUR 5-10 on Gozo buses (the hop-on hop-off is about EUR 22 if you want full-day coverage), and pay separately for any attraction entries. Ggantija Temples are EUR 9. The Citadella museums are EUR 5. Lunch is another EUR 15-20. Total: roughly EUR 55-70 per person, plus 2-3 hours of travel and logistics.
Guided full-day tour (EUR 80-130): Hotel pickup, private boat or ferry transfer, a local driver who knows the one-lane roads, lunch included, and you’ll see 8-10 stops in a day. No worrying about bus schedules or parking. The price difference is smaller than you’d think once you add up independent costs.
For solo travellers or couples with limited time, the guided tour is better value. For families staying on Malta’s north coast who want flexibility, renting a car on Gozo works well. Just be warned: Gozitan roads are narrow, parking in Victoria is tight, and Google Maps occasionally suggests routes that aren’t really roads.
The Best Gozo Tours to Book
I’ve gone through every option available and picked the five that actually deliver. They’re ranked by overall quality and value, not just price.
1. Full-Day Gozo Jeep Tour with Lunch & Boat Ride — $94

This is the tour I’d book again without thinking twice. You cross to Gozo on a private boat (already better than waiting for the public ferry), then spend the full day in an open-top jeep with a local driver who doubles as your guide. The route hits the Citadella, the salt pans at Marsalforn, Ramla Bay, Ta’ Pinu Basilica, and the Inland Sea at Dwejra — plus a proper sit-down lunch with Gozitan ftira and local wine.
What makes this better than driving yourself is the local knowledge. The guides grew up on Gozo. They’ll take you to viewpoints and swimming spots that aren’t on any map, and they know exactly when to hit each location to avoid the other tour groups. At $94 per person for an 8-hour day including food and transport, it’s genuinely hard to find a better full-day experience anywhere in the Mediterranean.
2. Gozo, Comino, Blue Lagoon & Caves Cruise — $34

If you want to see Gozo, Comino, and the Blue Lagoon in a single day for the price of two cocktails, this is it. The cruise departs from Bugibba or Sliema, sails past the sea caves with a stop for swimming at the Blue and Crystal Lagoons on Comino, then continues to Gozo where you get a few hours of free time in Mgarr or Victoria.
The trade-off is obvious: you get less time on Gozo itself compared to a land-based tour. This is really a boat day with a Gozo bonus, not a deep exploration of the island. But at $34 per person, it’s the most popular Malta day trip for a reason. The family-run boats get consistently positive feedback, and the crew genuinely help with accessibility (one visitor noted they took time helping elderly passengers on and off the speedboat).
3. Full-Day Gozo Quad Tour with Lunch & Boat Ride — $131

Same island, completely different energy. The quad tour follows a similar route to the jeep tour but on quad bikes, which means you can go places the jeeps physically can’t — narrow farm tracks, cliff-edge paths, rocky coves that the bus travelers never see. The pace is yours to set (within the group), and the guides know exactly which trails to take based on conditions.
It’s more expensive than the jeep option at $131 per person, and you should know it’s more physically demanding. You’re riding for most of the day across uneven terrain. But the feedback is consistently strong — people describe it as the best way to actually explore Gozo rather than just see it from a vehicle window. Lunch is included, the boat crossing is private, and the guides clearly love what they do.
4. Gozo Day Trip Including Ggantija Temples — $92

If you’re going to Gozo for the history — and you should be — this is the tour to book. It’s the only major option that specifically includes Ggantija Temples in the itinerary, along with the Citadella, Azure Window site at Dwejra, and a handful of other stops. The 9-hour day gives you more time at each location than the jeep tours, and the guides on this route tend to lean heavily into the historical and archaeological angle.
At $92 per person, it’s priced similarly to the jeep tour but with a different emphasis. Less off-road adventure, more in-depth exploration. The guide Chantelle gets called out by name in reviews for her knowledge of Gozitan history — the kind of local expertise you just can’t get from a guidebook or an audio tour. If the temples and the Citadella are your priorities, don’t book a jeep tour and hope you’ll fit them in. Book this one.
5. Gozo Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour — $26

The budget option, and a legitimate one. At $26 per person, you get a full-day ticket for the City Sightseeing bus that loops around Gozo hitting all the main stops. The buses run every 45 minutes, so you can hop off wherever looks interesting, explore on your own schedule, and catch the next one.
The recorded audio commentary is solid — informative without being boring. But be strategic about your time. As one experienced visitor put it, get on the first bus of the day and focus on 2-3 stops rather than trying to see everything. Dwejra, Ramla Bay, and the Citadella are the three I’d prioritise. This doesn’t include ferry tickets or lunch, and you need to get yourself to Gozo first, but for independent travellers who want structure without a guide breathing down their neck, it’s ideal.
When to Visit Gozo

Malta gets seriously hot in July and August — 35C+ with almost no shade on Gozo’s cliffs and ruins. If you’re doing a jeep or quad tour, you’re exposed to the sun all day. I’d avoid the peak summer months unless you’re primarily there for swimming.
Best months: April through June and September through October. Temperatures sit around 22-28C, the sea is swimmable (especially September when it’s warmest), and you won’t be fighting for space at the Blue Lagoon with 500 other day-trippers.
Winter: November through March is quiet but not dead. Some tours don’t run, and the ferry schedule is reduced. But the Citadella, temples, and churches are open year-round, and you’ll have them nearly to yourself. The weather can be rainy and windy — one guide apparently made the best of a stormy day by keeping spirits up, which says something about the guide quality on these tours.
Time of day: Take the earliest ferry (around 5:45 AM in summer, 6:15 AM in winter) or book a tour with morning pickup. By noon, every beach and viewpoint on Gozo is at capacity. The temples and Citadella are best in the first hour or the last — softer light, fewer people, and you can actually hear the guide.
How to Get Around Gozo

Gozo is small — only 14 km by 7 km — but the terrain is hilly and the roads wind through villages with no bypass. Walking between major sights isn’t realistic unless you’re very fit and have a lot of time.
By bus: Gozo has its own bus network (routes starting with 300-series numbers) operating from Victoria’s bus station. Services are cheap (EUR 1.50 single, EUR 2 in winter) but infrequent outside of Victoria. The hop-on hop-off tourist bus is more practical for sightseeing.
By rental car or scooter: Several agencies in Mgarr Harbour and Victoria rent cars from about EUR 25-35 per day. Scooters are around EUR 15-20. Driving is on the left (British legacy). Parking in Victoria is difficult, and some coastal roads to places like Wied il-Ghasri are barely one lane wide.
By taxi: Available but not abundant. Agree the price before you get in. From Mgarr to Victoria costs about EUR 10-12. From Mgarr to Dwejra (Azure Window site) about EUR 15-18.
By tour: The simplest option. The jeep tours, quad tours, and tuk-tuk tours handle all the navigation. You just sit and watch the island roll past.

Tips That Will Save You Time (and Money)

Bring cash. Some smaller shops, cafes, and the occasional attraction on Gozo still don’t take cards. Victoria has ATMs, but Dwejra and the beaches don’t.
Wear proper shoes. Not flip-flops. The Citadella, Ggantija, and most coastal paths involve uneven stone, gravel, and steps. I watched someone in sandals nearly go down at the Inland Sea.
Book lunch if your tour includes it. The Gozitan ftira (a flatbread topped with tomato, capers, tuna, and olive oil) is the local speciality. Most guided tours include a sit-down lunch with local food and wine, and it’s genuinely a highlight rather than the usual tour-group sandwich.
Don’t try to see everything. Seriously. Gozo has about 15 “must see” spots, and trying to hit them all in 6-7 hours turns the day into a sprint. Pick your priority — beaches, history, or the coastal scenery — and let the rest go. You can always come back.
Swimming gear is non-negotiable. Even if your plan is temples and churches, you’ll pass a cove with water so clear you can count the pebbles on the bottom, and you’ll want to jump in. Every tour makes at least one swimming stop. Be ready.
Sunscreen. Lots of it. There is almost no natural shade on Gozo outside of the churches and the Citadella. The limestone cliffs reflect heat and light. I’ve seen people turn lobster-red in under an hour, especially on the boat crossings.
What You’ll Actually See on Gozo

Gozo packs a lot into a small space. Here’s what the main sights actually involve, so you can decide what matters to you.
Ggantija Temples are the main event if history interests you at all. Built around 3600 BC — that’s roughly 1,000 years before the Great Pyramid of Giza and about 1,100 years before Stonehenge. They’re the oldest free-standing structures in the world. The site is small (you can walk it in 20-30 minutes), but the interpretation centre gives excellent context. Entry is EUR 9, and it’s worth every cent. These megalithic temples were a place of worship for over a thousand years. The builders used limestone blocks weighing up to 50 tonnes and moved them without wheels, metal tools, or draft animals. Nobody is entirely sure how.
According to ancient legend, Gozo may be the island of Ogygia from Homer’s Odyssey — the place where the nymph Calypso held Odysseus captive for seven years, promising him immortality if he’d stay. There’s a cave above Ramla Bay called “Calypso’s Cave” that’s been associated with the story since at least the 1st century AD. Is it actually Ogygia? Almost certainly not. But standing there looking out over Ramla’s red sand beach, you can see why people wanted to believe it.

The Citadella in Victoria is the fortified hilltop city that served as Gozo’s last line of defence for centuries. The current walls were rebuilt by the Knights of Malta after the catastrophic Ottoman raid of 1551, when corsairs led by Dragut and Sinan Pasha enslaved nearly the entire population of Gozo — between 5,000 and 6,000 people were taken. Only about 40 elderly residents were left behind. The Knights decided that never again would the population be caught outside the walls, and for years, every Gozitan was required to sleep inside the Citadella each night.
Today it holds a cathedral, several small museums, and the best panoramic views on the island. Walking the ramparts takes 30-40 minutes, and on a clear day you can see all the way to Sicily. Free to enter the fortification itself; individual museums are EUR 5 each or there’s a combined ticket.

The Azure Window (Dwejra) collapsed into the sea on 8 March 2017 during a storm. If you’ve seen photos of the famous natural limestone arch — or watched that Game of Thrones wedding scene from Season 1 — that’s what it looked like. It’s gone now, but the Dwejra area is still one of Gozo’s most dramatic coastal spots. The Inland Sea (a shallow lagoon connected to the open Mediterranean through a narrow cave) is here, and the snorkelling and diving around the collapsed arch site is actually some of the best in the Mediterranean. The underwater remains have created an artificial reef that’s already attracting marine life.

Ta’ Pinu Basilica is a pilgrimage church in the countryside near Gharb. The story goes that a local woman heard the voice of the Virgin Mary here in 1883. Whether you believe that or not, the church itself is striking — Romanesque Revival architecture sitting completely isolated in open farmland. The interior is covered in ex-voto offerings (paintings, crutches, baby clothes) left by people who believe their prayers were answered here. It’s free to visit and takes about 20 minutes.
Ramla Bay is Gozo’s largest sandy beach, and the sand is a distinctive rusty orange-red colour. It’s the best swimming beach on the island, with decent facilities (sunbeds, a cafe, toilets) and usually manageable crowds outside of August. The water is shallow for a long way out, making it good for families. Calypso’s Cave overlooks the bay from the hill above, though the cave itself is currently closed for safety — you can still get the viewpoint.

Marsalforn Salt Pans are carved directly into the coastal rock, and some families have been harvesting salt from the same pools since at least Roman times. The checkerboard pattern of pools stretching along the cliff edge is genuinely beautiful, especially in early morning light. Free to visit, and you can buy locally harvested salt (including flavoured varieties with chilli, herbs, or citrus) from vendors near the pans.
Starting from Valletta

Almost every Gozo tour includes pickup from Valletta, Sliema, Bugibba, and other major hotel areas on Malta. If you’re based in Valletta, expect a 40-50 minute drive to either the ferry terminal (Cirkewwa) or the private boat departure point, depending on the tour.
The drive north passes through most of Malta, and your guide will usually use the time to cover the basics of Maltese history and geography. It’s a productive start to the day rather than dead time.

If you’re planning a longer Malta trip, pair the Gozo day with other island highlights. A walking tour of Valletta covers the Knights’ legacy, the Co-Cathedral of St John, and the Grand Harbor fortifications — and you’ll appreciate the Citadella on Gozo more once you understand the Knights’ role in Maltese history. For beaches closer to your base, Comino’s Blue Lagoon is either included in your Gozo boat tour or bookable as a separate half-day trip.


More Malta Guides
If you’re spending a few days on Malta, Gozo is the day trip that everyone recommends — and for once, everyone is right. But the main island has plenty of its own. A walking tour of Valletta is the best way to get oriented in the capital, especially if you want to understand the Knights of St John and how they shaped every building you’re looking at. The walking tours across Malta cover everything from food to wartime history. And if the Blue Lagoon on your Gozo day wasn’t enough, the best tours across Malta page has options for Comino-only trips, harbour cruises, and more.
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