The irreducible Mykonos that lives on every postcard -- the 16th-century Kato Mili windmills on the hill, the colorful overhanging houses of Little Venice, the sculptural white Panagia Paraportiani church, and the bougainvillea maze of Chora. From the Tourlos cruise terminal the SeaBus drops you at the Old Port in about 8-12 minutes, and the wandering itself is free. This is the low-risk near-port fallback that fits any clock and never leaves you stranded from the ship.
What to expect
You'll ride the SeaBus from Tourlos cruise terminal to Mykonos's Old Port in 8-12 minutes, arriving in the heart of Chora. From there, the wandering is yours: climb toward the iconic Kato Mili windmills on the hill, lose yourself in the narrow whitewashed lanes lined with bougainvillea, pause at the sculptural white Panagia Paraportiani church, and absorb the candy-colored overhanging houses of Little Venice that define every postcard image of the island. The rhythm is entirely self-directed—there are no admission fees to Chora itself, so you move at your own pace, lingering where the light hits or the mood strikes.
The ship's Old Town walking tour is $57 for a town that has no admission and sits a short SeaBus hop from the pier. A guide adds little here -- skip it: take the EUR 2 SeaBus and wander for free, or add the VIOMA tasting above. This is the rare card where independent isn't just cheaper, it's effectively free; the ship's only edge is a guided narration most first-timers won't miss.
Good to know
The SeaBus departs every 15 minutes on ship arrival and costs just EUR 2 (~$2.20) each way, making a round trip roughly EUR 4; budget 4-5 hours total to explore Chora without rushing, leaving comfortable buffer time to catch a return bus back to Tourlos before all-aboard. Wear sturdy walking shoes for the steep hill to the windmills and narrow, uneven Venetian streets; bring sun protection and water, as the white stone reflects intense midday heat and there's little shade in the maze. Skip the ship's $57 Old Town walking tour—you'll see the same landmarks independently for a fraction of the cost, and a guide adds negligible value in a town with no paid entry and straightforward navigation.