The one bucket-list experience that needs no transfer: Bari's medieval old town begins barely 300 m from the cruise terminal. Behind its labyrinth of whitewashed lanes you'll find the Basilica di San Nicola (holding the relics of the original Saint Nicholas, a major Orthodox and Catholic pilgrimage site), the Norman-Swabian castle, and the unmissable Strada delle Orecchiette (Strada Arco Basso), where local nonne sit outside their doorways hand-shaping the region's signature 'little ear' pasta all day long. A licensed street-food walk turns it into a feast.
What to expect
The old town is a genuine working neighborhood — laundry overhead, kids playing, and the pasta-makers at Strada Arco Basso shaping orecchiette on wooden boards outside their homes (buy a bag, and note tourist-facing stalls aren't always the real deal). Inside San Nicola, the crypt holding the saint's relics is moving and quietly grand. Food tours typically fold in panzerotti, focaccia barese, burrata, taralli and a gelato finish. Lanes are flat but cobbled.
Cruise lines rarely sell a strong Bari-city walking tour because the old town is so close, and any ship transfer here is pure markup for a 10-minute walk. Skip the ship entirely for this one: stroll in yourself, or book a licensed local food guide direct for the orecchiette street and the basilica. This is the easy, low-risk, high-reward excursion to pair with a half-day elsewhere.
Good to know
Bari Vecchia is a 10-min walk from the terminal; the Basilica di San Nicola is ~20 min on foot. No transport needed, making this the safest pick if your call is short or tenders are slow. Dress modestly to enter the basilica (shoulders/knees covered). Carry small cash for street food. Food tours often start late afternoon, so confirm timing fits a daytime port call, or do the old town self-guided in the morning.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Bari — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.