Is Cruising the Best Way to See the Mediterranean?

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When I boarded a 10-night Mediterranean sailing, I expected a slow, easygoing trip. Turns out, I was wrong.

In just over a week, I visited 11 ports across Turkey, Italy, Greece, Croatia and Montenegro, an itinerary that would have been exhausting if I had attempted it by air and land. It made me realize that cruising can be one of the most efficient ways to see the Mediterranean — especially if your goal is to visit multiple destinations in one trip, rather than to linger in one place.

I love a packed itinerary, and extra stress doesn’t bother me. I’ve slept overnight in airports more nights than I’d like to admit. I’ll take an eight-hour bus ride, followed by three train connections like it’s no problem. But on the cruise, I was able to see plenty without needing to re-pack my suitcase or navigate multiple airports.

I also found that cruises weren’t significantly more expensive than traveling by air or land. Norwegian Cruise Line hosted my sailing on the Norwegian Viva and covered my fare. But when I independently priced a similar trip by other modes of travel, I found it comparable to the cruise’s regular rates.

The Mediterranean’s geography makes transportation tricky

Unlike much of mainland Europe, which is well connected by trains, buses and budget airlines, the Mediterranean is fragmented by islands, peninsulas and borders. Traveling between destinations can be slow, expensive and surprisingly complicated.

Here are the stops I took on my cruise, in chronological order:

  • Istanbul, Turkey: The starting point of our cruise, which is ideal given the number of flights into the city.

  • Kusadasi, Turkey: A short drive from the ancient city Ephesus, which has a strong biblical history.

  • Santorini, Greece: An island famous for its whitewashed buildings with iconic blue domes.

  • Mykonos, Greece: An island known for its lively beach clubs and nightlife, as well as its iconic windmills.

  • Katakolon, Greece: The gateway to Olympia, the birthplace of the Olympic Games.

  • Corfu, Greece: A lush island with some of the prettiest waters in the world.

  • Kotor, Montenegro: A medieval walled city with a strong respect for cats (yes, there’s a cat museum).

  • Dubrovnik, Croatia: As a filming location for “Game of Thrones,” it draws plenty of fans, but it’s long been known as the “Pearl of the Adriatic.”

  • Ravenna, Italy: Famous for its Byzantine mosaics.

  • Zadar, Croatia: A coastal city with impressive public art along its waterfront.

  • Trieste, Italy: Famous for its coffee.

Consider commuting between the Greek islands alone. Traveling from Santorini to Mykonos typically requires a ferry that takes two to three hours and costs about $100 per person, depending on season and ferry type.

Then there are routes that are far more difficult. Getting from Corfu, Greece, to Kotor, Montenegro, is practically impossible without significant backtracking, as there are no direct flights or ferries between the two. The most realistic option is a roughly nine-hour drive.

Cruising’s biggest advantage was time. A one-hour flight usually takes three times that once you factor in travel to the airport, security, boarding, potential delays and baggage logistics. Ferries, trains and hotel check-ins can similarly take longer than you think. Independent travel also means packing and unpacking over and over again.

In Santorini, our ship arrived at 6:30 a.m. I was ready to go immediately. My husband and I hiked from Fira to Oia and back, logging more than 20 miles once all our meandering was factored in.

We maximized every hour until the 10 p.m. ship departure, including watching the sunset in Fira. I got back on board exhausted, scarfed down a second dinner and collapsed. The next morning, I woke up in the same room, refreshed and already docked in Mykonos.

By comparison, independent travel would have required waking up early, packing, checking out, navigating to the ferry port, waiting, enduring hours on the water with luggage, checking into a new hotel and only then starting to explore — already tired.

Cruises aren’t necessarily more expensive

Cruising can be costly, but I found rates to be comparable to other modes of travel. Our 10-night cruise aboard the Norwegian Viva would have cost $5,658 for two people, or about $283 per person per night for an inside stateroom. Balcony rooms are more expensive, but for a packed itinerary where you’re spending very little time in your room, I prefer the lower-cost option.

That $283 rate includes:

Certain extras — like drink packages or spa visits — would add to the cost, but the same could be said for a land-based vacation.

On a cruise, lodging and transit between cities are built into the fare. When traveling independently, both are some of the most expensive line items.

Here’s how much my hypothetical air-and-land itinerary cost:

Hotel costs: $2,350. I priced out a hypothetical independent trip using midscale hotels, such as Hilton DoubleTree properties, in the same cities on the same nights as the cruise.

Santorini was the most expensive, with hotel rates averaging over $450 per night during peak season, according to TripAdvisor.

Primary transportation costs: $2,200. I added the most practical transportation options between destinations, which included a ferry between Santorini and Mykonos, renting a car to drive up the Adriatic coast from Kotor to Trieste, Italy with stops in Dubrovnik and Zadar, and flying the cheapest available flights between certain cities, often on Ryanair.

Food costs: $800. I also budgeted $40 per person per day for food, which felt conservative compared with the all-you-can-eat nature of cruise dining.

Tips and airport rides: $310. I also accounted for tipping at hotels and estimated taxi costs for rides to and from airports. For tips, I factored in a couple of dollars each night to housekeeping and the bell desk, especially if the bell desk is storing my bags after checkout. (On cruises, tips are almost always built into your cruise fare.)

The final cost: Based on my estimates, the air-and-land-based itinerary would have been about $5,660 — almost exactly the same as the cruise fare of $5,658. And that comparison didn’t factor in the convenience of being transported to your next stop while you sleep.

Prices can vary depending on when and how you book, and it’s possible to find better rates on either type of trip. But overall, I found the price differences could be relatively small, while the time savings were enormous.

The most valuable amenity on a Mediterranean cruise isn’t the food or entertainment. It’s how long the ship stays in port.

We were in Santorini from 6:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., which allowed for a full, active day without feeling rushed. Meanwhile, I watched other cruise ships arrive in the early afternoon and depart by early evening (barely enough time to even take the cable car up to Fira before heading back!).

Before booking, travelers should look not only at where a cruise goes but how long it stays. Cruise lines typically publish port schedules on their websites, and tools such as CruiseMapper can help make comparisons.

A NerdWallet analysis found that among cruise lines with three or more Santorini port stops in July 2026, Norwegian Cruise Line, Celebrity Cruises and Windstar Cruises had the three longest times spent in port.

My ship, the Norwegian Viva, spent 15 hours and 30 minutes in Santorini (though exact durations vary by itinerary). In contrast, another cruise ship averaged just five hours in Santorini, giving passengers far less time to explore.

When Mediterranean cruising doesn’t work

Cruising is not the right choice for every itinerary.

You won’t get multiple days in one place. Destinations that require multiday hikes or deep inland exploration are often impractical from coastal ports. While I loved my stops in Croatia, my favorite part of the country, Plitvice Lakes National Park, was too far inland to fully enjoy on a cruise schedule.

Few cruises stay in port overnight, which is problematic if you want to soak up the nightlife in places like Mykonos and Ibiza.

After spending one day hiking in Kotor, Montenegro, and discovering a cheese shop in the mountains with goats roaming around outside, I immediately knew I wanted to return. In that sense, cruising works well as a sampler, helping travelers decide which destinations merit a future, longer stay.

Tender delays can cut into your travel time. When I was in Montenegro, a storm forced the tender boats to pause for about an hour before the worst weather passed. Once the tenders started running again, the lines were long. Still, I’ll take a tender delay over a plane or train delay any day.

Cruise Ship, Ship, Transportation
Sally French in front of the Norwegian Viva in Dubrovnik, Croatia. (Photo by Hamilton Nguyen)

Am I a cruise convert now?

I really started to appreciate the convenience of sailing when our return flight departing from Trieste, the final port on our itinerary, was canceled with little notice. With no viable alternative flights, we took a roughly two-hour train to Venice Marco Polo Airport for a replacement flight. That train was delayed by an hour (of course), and we nearly missed our flight.

It was a sharp reminder of what I had avoided for 10 days: flight disruptions, luggage hauling and logistical dependencies.

I still love independent travel, and I’m definitely not converting to cruise-only life. But after comparing costs and stress levels, I can’t deny that cruising made seeing multiple Mediterranean destinations in one trip far easier than trying to replicate the same itinerary independently.

For travelers who want to see multiple Mediterranean destinations efficiently, cruising deserves serious consideration — even from people like me who never thought they’d say that.

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