Mykonos's south coast is the famous beach scene -- Paradise and Super Paradise's legendary party sands, the calmer golden bays of Elia and Agrari -- and the scenic local way to reach them is the little wooden caiques, not a road taxi. One flat all-day pass hops you boat-to-boat between Ornos, Platis Gialos, Paraga, Paradise, Super Paradise, Agrari and Elia, boarding every 10-15 minutes with no booking needed. Base yourself at the Platis Gialos dock (easy bus from town).
What to expect
You'll arrive at the Platis Gialos dock via a short local bus ride from town and board one of Mykonos's iconic wooden caiques—small, characterful water taxis that have ferried island-goers since 1968. With your all-day pass, you become the architect of your own beach day: hop on every 10-15 minutes to island-hop between seven legendary south-coast stops, from the party sands of Paradise and Super Paradise to the serene golden bays of Elia and Agrari. Each caique crossing is brief and scenic, letting you spend as little or as long as you want at each beach—working your way through multiple swimming spots, tavernas, and coastal moods all in one day. The rhythm is entirely yours: swim, move, explore, repeat, with no tour guide clock dictating when you leave.
The ship's town-plus-beach combo runs $78 and pins you to one beach on its clock. At ~$22 for unlimited beach-hopping all day, the water taxi is the highest-value experience at this port by a wide margin -- direct wins overwhelmingly. The only catch is you arrange your own bus to the dock.
Good to know
Catch a local bus from the ship's town drop-off to Platis Gialos dock (the main hub and easiest boarding point) and buy your EUR 20 all-day pass directly at the pier—no advance booking needed. Plan to depart the dock with at least 90 minutes before all-aboard to account for the return bus ride and any final swim. Bring cash (euros) for the pass, sunscreen, a lightweight cover-up, and a waterproof bag, as the wooden boats are open-air and direct sun exposure is relentless between stops. The caiques run on local rhythm, so confirm the last return departure from your final beach to avoid cutting the buffer too close.