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Paros Ferries
Ticket Prices & Reservations
Book Paros Ferry Tickets with ANEK, Blue Star Ferries, Hellenic Seaways, Sea Jets or Aegean Speed Lines for ferries sailing from Paros to Amorgos, Aegiali, Katapola, Anafi, Astypalea, Donoussa, Folegandros, Heraklion, Ios, Iraklia, Kalymnos, Kastelorizo, Kos, Koufonissi, Leros, Mykonos, Naxos, Nisyros, Patmos, Piraeus, Rafina, Rhodes, Santorini, Schinoussa, Sikinos, Syros, Thirassia, Tilo and Tinos online in advance to enjoy the cheapest available ferry ticket price.
The price you see is the price you pay. There are no hidden extras or surprises such as added fuel surcharges or booking fees and we do not charge you anything extra for paying with a Visa Electron card. The price we quote you for your selected Paros passenger or car ferry ticket, onboard accommodation and vehicle type is all you will pay, and that's a promise.
To obtain a Paros ferry ticket price and book your ferry ticket securely online please use the real time ferry booking form on the left. You are also able to add a hotel at your destination, or anywhere else, to your ferry ticket when completing your ferry ticket reservation. |
More About Paros
PAROS, along with its larger neighbour Naxos, forms the hub of the main central group of Greek islands known as the Cyclades. The Cyclades seem the epitome of the Greek islands, with their white cube houses,crystal seas and long sandy beaches. Paros is one of the best of them.
The lack of a large airport has ensured that Paros hasn't buckled under the pressing demands of cut-price package tour companies. Instead, Paros caters for the more independent tourist and, with its good ferry connections, Paros is a long-time favourite of young campers and backpackers.
The capital of Paros, Parikia, lies in a huge sheltered bay and it is also the island's main port with frequent ferry connections to many other islands. Paros also has ideal conditions for windsurfing and many international competitions are held in Paros island resorts.
Paros is a Greek island that will suit those looking for a quiet destination with a good tourist infrastructure but slightly off the beaten track. Its central location and excellent ferry connections also makes Paros an ideal base for Greek island hopping.
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The great long waterfront at PAROIKIA, or PARIKIA, is the Paros island capital of some 2,000 people. The arriving visitor sees little in the way of Greek island charm. Cheap cafes, tavernas and trinket shops concertina in both directions away from the central harbour which has a tarted up windmill at its mouth, a popular meeting place for travellers. Parikia harbour attracts around 30 ferries a day in the high summer season often appears bursting to the seams.
To the east of Parikia lies an unwelcoming swathe of asphalt and concrete littered with parked cars and lorries. The road bottlenecks at a narrow, scruffy beach at LIVADIA, backed by tamarisk trees and a clutch of tavernas and bars on the landward side of the busy Parikia road before fragmenting into a warren of one-way streets.
To the west of Parikia, a line of restaurants stand behind a monotonous sea wall until it all peters out at a small shingle beach, a few old windmills lost among the flourishing fast food cafes that now line the shore.
The resort at Parikia has grown fourfold in recent years and it shows. But away from the waterfront, it is a different story. Following the brown signs to the Traditional Settlement takes the visitors to a wide paved square with a small triangular park and the remarkable restored cathedral of Ekatontachoni.
Behind that is the Archaeological Museum, then a labyrinth of alleys jam packed with an interesting mix of shops, galleries, cafes and whitewashed houses, but strangely only a single supermarket.
At the heart of Parikia are the walls of the Venetian Kastro, marked on the seaward side by terraces of stone draped with foliage and flowers and inland by a 13th century Venetian castle and surrounded by dozens of picturesque churches stuffed with treasures.
Paroikia is basically a busy port, with seafront tavernas aimed at tourists just passing though, either waiting for an outgoing ferry or just arriving on an incoming one. There are some quiet beaches further round the bay to the north at Krios and Agios Fokas but they are small and undistinguished.
Although the port of Parikia has only a small and often crowded beach there are several to be found nearby. Some are within easy walking distance and have accommodation too. Anyone looking for a beach holiday in Parikia would be better off opting for the eastern side of the town where there are a number of beached strung around the west-facing bay. A good road runs right around the bay behind all the best beaches and out to the headland at Agios Fokas.
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Best Paros Ferry Ticket Price Guarantee
Best Price Guarantee - We always offer you our lowest available ANEK, Blue Star Ferries, Hellenic Seaways, Sea Jets or Aegean Speed Lines passenger and car ferries ticket price to and from Paros. There are no hidden extras or surprises such as added fuel surcharges or booking fees and we also we do not charge you anything extra for paying with a Visa Electron card. The price we quote for your selected Paros ferry ticket, onboard accommodation and vehicle type is all you will pay, and that's a promise!
In the unlikely event you find the same all inclusive Paros ferry ticket cheaper in the brochure of any other tour operator we promise that we will do our best to beat that price or offer you the choice of requesting a refund. To book Paros car and passenger ferry tickets please click here. |
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Customer Care, Telesales & Contact Us
At ferryto.co.uk you are able to obtain live Paros ferry ticket prices, check availability and book car and passenger ferry tickets to and from Paros at our lowest available ticket price.
Ferryto.co.uk is part of the world's largest online ferry ticket distribution network providing the ability to book over 80 major European ferry operators including to Paros and to over 1,200 other ferry routes throughout the UK, France, Spain, Ireland, Holland, Eastern Europe, the Mediterranean, the Baltic and North Africa.
For more information, answers to frequently asked questions or to contact us directly please click here. |
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