Mykonos to Athens: Ferry or Flight? Times & Prices (2026)

Flight (40 min) vs ferry (2.5–6 h, from €38): a straight 2026 comparison of time, price, luggage and Athens ports — both directions.

Travelling between Mykonos and Athens, you choose between a 40-minute flight and a 2.5–6 hour ferry. The flight wins on raw speed; the ferry wins on price (from €38 vs €60–150), free luggage and far more departures. For most travellers the honest answer is: fly if your time is tight or it's winter, take a high-speed ferry if you want to save money and travel light on luggage rules. Both run year-round and in both directions. Here is the full comparison, with the practical airport-and-port details.

Ferry vs flight at a glance

FlightFerry
Journey time~40 min in the air2.5–3.5 h (high-speed); up to 6+ h (conventional)
Price (one-way)€60–150+from €38
FrequencySeveral daily, year-round10+ daily in season, year-round
LuggageStrict limits, paid checked bagsGenerous, free
Arrives in Athens atAthens Airport (ATH)Piraeus or Rafina port
Best forSpeed, winter, onward flightBudget, luggage, the view

The flight: fastest, but count the door-to-door time

Aegean, Olympic Air and Sky Express fly Mykonos (JMK) ↔ Athens (ATH) daily, year-round, in about 40 minutes. One-way fares typically run €60–150, higher in the August peak and when booked late. The speed is real, but the door-to-door maths trims it: you still need to reach JMK (and Mykonos has only ~30–35 taxis — budget time), check in and clear security, then collect bags and travel into central Athens from the airport. Add it up and a high-speed ferry is closer in total time than the 40-minute figure suggests. The flight's decisive advantages are winter reliability (when ferry frequency drops) and connecting onward from Athens Airport without a transfer across the city. Full schedules and carriers are on our Mykonos flights page.

The ferry: cheaper, more sailings, free luggage

Ferries leave from the Mykonos New Port (Tourlos), about 2 km north of Town, and run to two Athens ports — Piraeus and Rafina — all year, with 10+ daily crossings in summer. High-speed catamarans (Seajets, Golden Star, Fast Ferries) cover it in 2.5–3.5 hours; larger conventional ships (Blue Star) are slower — up to 6+ hours — but steadier in wind and cheaper, from €38. The ferry's quiet wins: luggage is free (no airline weight games), you see the Cyclades en route, and there are simply more departure times to fit your day. The catch is duration and weather — high-speed services are the first to be cancelled in strong meltemi winds. How to reach the port and which boats use it is covered in our airport-to-ferry-port guide and the New Port vs Old Port explainer.

Piraeus or Rafina — which Athens port?

This choice matters more than travellers expect. Piraeus is the big central port, connected to Athens by metro — best if your destination is the city centre or you continue by train. Rafina is smaller and east of the city, but much closer to Athens International Airport (ATH) — so if your real goal is an onward flight out of Athens, arriving by ferry into Rafina can beat Piraeus. Check which port your specific sailing uses before booking; high-speed services serve both depending on operator and time.

Which way are you going? (both directions)

The decision is symmetric, with one practical twist by direction. Athens → Mykonos (the busier search — most people plan this leg first): if you land at ATH and want the beach the same day, the 40-minute flight to JMK is the low-stress choice; if you have a relaxed schedule and luggage, the high-speed ferry from Rafina (closest to ATH) is cheaper and scenic. Mykonos → Athens: flying makes most sense when you have an onward international flight out of ATH the same day; the ferry suits a leisurely return with shopping in Town beforehand. Either way, on a same-day connection leave a generous buffer — see the timing advice in our arrivals and departures guides.

Booking and the meltemi factor

Two things shape the experience more than the headline price. First, the meltemi — the strong northerly wind that sweeps the Cyclades, mainly July and August. It rarely stops flights, but it routinely slows or cancels high-speed catamarans, which are light and bounce in a swell; conventional ships sail through most of it. If your dates fall in a windy spell and the crossing is essential (a connecting flight, a paid hotel night), the flight or a big conventional ferry is the safer bet than a high-speed cat.

Second, book early for the peak. In August both the 40-minute flights and the popular high-speed sailings sell out days ahead, and last-minute fares jump. Reserve as soon as your dates are fixed, screenshot your ticket (it states the Athens port and the Mykonos departure time), and build in a buffer: a delayed inbound or a cancelled cat can cascade into a missed onward connection. If you are pairing this leg with an island-hop or an onward international flight, treat the schedule as something to plan around, not improvise.

How to decide in one minute

  • Choose the flight if: your time is tight, it's winter, you're connecting onward from ATH, or you travel light with carry-on only.
  • Choose the high-speed ferry if: you want to save money, you have checked luggage, you enjoy the sea crossing, or you need a departure time the flights don't offer.
  • Choose the conventional ferry if: it's windy (high-speed risks cancellation), or you want the cheapest fare and don't mind the longer ride.

Whatever you pick, book the August peak well ahead — both flights and high-speed ferries sell out — and price the total journey, not just the headline fare; the transfer cost guide helps with the Mykonos-side legs.

Mykonos–Athens Ferry or Flight FAQ

Is it better to fly or take the ferry from Mykonos to Athens?
Fly if your time is tight, it's winter, or you're connecting onward from Athens Airport — the flight is about 40 minutes. Take a high-speed ferry (2.5–3.5 hours, from €38) if you want to save money, have checked luggage, or need a departure time the flights don't offer. Once you add airport time and the transfer into the city, the high-speed ferry is closer in total time than the 40-minute flight suggests.
How long is the ferry from Mykonos to Athens?
High-speed catamarans take about 2.5–3.5 hours; larger conventional ships take longer, up to 6+ hours, but are cheaper and steadier in wind. Ferries leave from the Mykonos New Port (Tourlos) to Piraeus or Rafina, with 10+ daily crossings in summer, year-round.
How much does it cost to get from Mykonos to Athens?
Ferry tickets start around €38 one-way; high-speed services cost more than conventional. Flights run roughly €60–150 one-way, higher in the August peak and when booked late. Ferry luggage is free, while flights have strict weight limits and paid checked bags — factor that into the real cost.
Which Athens port do Mykonos ferries use — Piraeus or Rafina?
Both, depending on operator and sailing. Piraeus is the central port with a metro link to Athens — best for the city centre. Rafina is east of Athens and much closer to Athens Airport (ATH) — better if you have an onward flight. Check your specific ticket for the port before booking.
Do ferries and flights to Athens run in winter?
Yes, both run year-round, but ferry frequency drops outside summer and high-speed services are the first cancelled in strong winds. In winter the flight (about 40 minutes, daily) is the more reliable link — confirm your specific service before travelling either way.

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