Alfama is the medieval Moorish heart of Lisbon, a tangle of staircases, laundry-strung alleys and miradouro viewpoints far too steep to cover on foot in a port-day window. An open electric tuk-tuk hauls you up to Castelo de Sao Jorge, Portas do Sol and Santa Luzia for the iconic red-roof-and-river panoramas. The cruise dock literally sits at the foot of Alfama, so this is the lowest-risk, walk-off-and-go option of the day.
What to expect
You'll board an open electric tuk-tuk at the cruise dock—no shuttle, no fuss—and climb the steep medieval alleys of Alfama as the vehicle winds through a tangle of laundry-strung staircases and narrow cobbled streets. The route hauls you up to three iconic miradouro (viewpoint) stops: Castelo de Sao Jorge, Portas do Sol, and Santa Luzia, each delivering panoramic shots of Lisbon's signature red rooftops spilling down to the river. At each vantage, you'll have time to photo and breathe the sea-salt air before the tuk-tuk descends back through the Moorish quarter to the dock. The whole rhythm unfolds in 1–2 hours depending on which tour you choose, leaving you with hours to explore Belem or the city on foot.
The ship's 3.5-hr Panoramic Lisbon & Belem coach is $104.99. A focused Alfama/viewpoints tuk-tuk at $16-$32 covers the most photogenic, hardest-to-walk part of the city for a fraction of that. Direct wins on price and access. Fair caveat: the ship coach also tacks on Belem, so if Belem is a must-see for you, pair this tuk-tuk with a short ride or walk out there yourself.
Good to know
The cruise dock sits at Alfama's literal foot, so you walk off the ship and onto a tuk-tuk—book direct with Tuk On Me (operator RNAAT 485/2014 registered with Turismo de Portugal) to lock in €15–€30 per person rather than the ship's €104.99 coach. In a 6–8 hour port window, the 1–2 hour tuk-tuk tour leaves ample buffer time; simply confirm your return time with the driver to ensure you're back at the dock with 30+ minutes before all-aboard. Wear comfortable shoes for the few steps between tuk-tuk stops, bring sunscreen and a hat for the open-air exposure at each viewpoint, and have small euro bills or a card ready for the operator if paying on-site rather than pre-booking.