Walk the stone streets of a complete Roman city flash-frozen by Vesuvius in 79 AD: the forum, frescoed villas, the brothel, and the haunting plaster casts of the dead. This is the single reason this port exists, and a licensed archaeologist is what turns acres of rubble into a vivid murder-mystery of the ancient world. Pompeii is ~30-40 min from the terminal by direct Circumvesuviana train or transfer, so it fits a 6-8 hr window with margin; the 2-hr guided slot leaves time for the train both ways.
What to expect
You'll walk the stone streets of Pompeii as they were in 79 AD—through the forum, past frescoed villas, the brothel, and the haunting plaster casts of bodies caught mid-life when Vesuvius erupted. Your licensed archaeologist guide transforms acres of rubble into a vivid forensic narrative, making the ancient world click into place over two focused hours. The group stays small (max 20 people), and if you're 10 or more, everyone gets a headset so even the back rows catch every detail. You'll move at the pace of someone who understands what you're seeing, not rushing—the difference between walking through a ruin and reading a murder mystery written in stone.
Direct wins big. The cruise line's guided Pompeii tour runs $100-160 pp; Askos delivers the same licensed-archaeologist, skip-the-line experience for ~$54 all-in -- roughly half. Even the ship's no-guide 'Pompeii on your own' transfer is $60-80 and still makes you pay the ~EUR 18 entry separately. Only catch: you arrange your own train/transfer (~EUR 3 each way), which is the trade for saving $50-100 per person.
Good to know
Book directly on Askos's FareHarbor site and meet at Porta Marina Superiore; the Pompeii Express skip-the-line ticket is included in the €49.50 price, saving you entry fees. Allow 30–40 minutes by direct Circumvesuviana train each way from the terminal (~€3 return), plus the 2-hour guided tour, leaving comfortable margin in a 6–8 hour port window. Your only logistical job is booking the train or arranging a private transfer yourself—the ship's Pompeii tours cost $100–160 pp for the same archaeologist experience, making direct booking roughly half the price and worth the self-transfer effort. Build in at least a 30-minute buffer before all-aboard; trains are frequent and reliable, but the walk back to the pier matters.