Sail south from Corfu to its sister islands: into the dramatic Ipapanti and Ahai sea caves of Paxos, a long swim stop off Antipaxos in some of the most luminous turquoise water in Greece, and free time in the pretty harbor village of Gaios. The boat leaves straight from the main Port of Corfu, so cruise passengers can walk on independently. This is the definitive Ionian-blue bucket-list day — but it's a full 9 hours, only viable on a long port call.
What to expect
Depart Corfu Main Port at 08:20 and sail south to Paxos, entering the cathedral-like Ipapanti and Ahai sea caves—dramatic rock formations rising straight from the Ionian. You'll swim in luminous turquoise water off Antipaxos, one of the clearest bathing stops in Greece, with time to float and drift in the mineral-bright shallows. The rhythm then shifts to the pretty harbor village of Gaios for free time to explore tavernas, cafés, and waterfront shops. Return to port by 18:00, nine hours of island-hopping with an onboard multilingual guide and two cave-entry fees included.
Direct and cheap, with a clock warning. No cruise line sells this exact southern-islands day at a comparable price — Ionian Cruises departs the port itself at ~$49, and it's the biggest, longest-running local fleet. The catch: 08:20-18:00 is a 9-hour commitment. ONLY book this if your ship's all-aboard is comfortably after 18:30, and confirm the return time the day-of; a day cruise is independent, so there's no ship to hold the gangway for you.
Good to know
This is a 9-hour commitment (08:20–18:00), so only book if your ship's all-aboard time is safely after 18:30; confirm the return time the morning of departure since it's an independent day cruise with no ship-side buffer. Walk straight from Corfu Main Port to the Ionian Cruises vessel—no coach transfer needed, though one is available for EUR 8 extra. Bring swimwear, sunscreen, a towel, and water; the boat provides the guide and cave access, but you'll want cash or cards for lunch and drinks in Gaios. Since this is a local operator, double-check your ship's phone number the night before so you can call if the boat runs late—you are entirely responsible for getting back in time.