Destination(s) or Hotel name
RhodesDeparture Airport
Any AirportDeparture Date
Rooms & Guests
Rhodes Holidays

UTC +02:00
Euro
Greek

A complete medieval city
The Old Town is the largest inhabited medieval town in Europe, ringed by four kilometres of walls built by the Knights of St John.

Beaches for every preference
The east coast runs to long, sandy, gently shelving bays, while the west coast is breezier and pebblier.

Sunniest corner of Greece
Rhodes records some of the highest sunshine totals in the country — the ancients dedicated the island to the sun god Helios for good reason.

Easy to get around
Lindos sits about 47 km south of the capital and the airport just 14 km to the west, so a hire car puts the whole island within comfortable day-trip reach along a good coastal road.

Flexible Stay Options
Options range from self-catering to all inclusive holidays, giving flexibility based on budget and travel style.

Family infrastructure
Calm, shallow water sits right off the main east-coast resort beaches, with watersports hire on the sand and quick transfers up to the Faliraki water park.
Why Choose Rhodes
Dining, Ports & Local Hotspots
Perfect Holiday Destination
Travelodeal Travel Tips

The island splits into clear zones, and each one delivers a noticeably different stay — the honest answer is that picking the right base matters more here than on most islands, given the distances involved. Some of the best beaches in Rhodes sit well outside the headline resorts, which is worth factoring in before you commit.
Rhodes Town (the Old Town): The capital's walled medieval quarter holds UNESCO World Heritage status and more than earns it — the Palace of the Grand Master, the cobbled Street of the Knights, and the Archaeological Museum stand a few minutes' walk apart. A morning on foot covers the essentials.
Lindos: About 47 km south of the capital, this whitewashed village climbs beneath a clifftop acropolis crowned by the ancient Temple of Athena Lindia. St Paul's Bay sits just below. It is more boutique and upmarket than the northern resorts, and a strong base for couples who want scenery with their swimming.
Faliraki: Roughly 14 km from Rhodes Town, this is the island's busiest family-and-nightlife resort, with a long sandy beach, full watersports hire, and the big water park on its edge. It consistently offers some of the better value among cheap holidays to Rhodes without the beach quality dropping off.
Kolymbia and Kiotari: Kolymbia on the east coast is calmer and tree-lined, popular with families wanting a quieter pace; Kiotari further south is newer, sandy, and built around modern all-inclusive resorts. Both suit those after package holidays to Rhodes with space to breathe.
Ialysos and Ixia: On the breezier northwest coast near the airport, these are pebblier, windsurf-friendly, and lined with larger hotels — handy for couples who want quick access into Rhodes Town.

Between the walled medieval town, an Italian-era spa, a moth-filled valley, and ancient Doric ruins, there is far more here than the sun lounger.
The medieval Old Town: The Palace of the Grand Master was rebuilt by the Italians in the 1930s and anchors a quarter where the Street of the Knights runs almost unchanged from the 14th century. A morning on foot links the palace, the museum, and the harbour gates.
Lindos Acropolis: The fortified hilltop above Lindos holds the Hellenistic stoa and the Temple of Athena Lindia, with views down over the near-circular St Paul's Bay. The climb from the village is steep but short.
Kallithea Springs: This restored 1929 thermal spa complex, about 9 km from the capital, sets art deco domes, arches, and colonnades around clear swimming coves — a favourite half-day combining architecture with a swim.
Valley of the Butterflies (Petaloudes): From June to September, thousands of Jersey tiger moths gather along a shaded stream valley inland from the west coast. Wooden walkways follow the water uphill through the trees.
Ancient Kamiros and the wine villages: The Doric ruins at Kamiros, sometimes called the Pompeii of Rhodes, sit on the northwest coast, while inland Embonas on the slopes of Attaviros is the island's main wine village. Guests who make the drive consistently rate it among the trip's quieter highlights.