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Vue du sanctuaire d'Apollon à Naxos.
Naxos, Greece Worth it

Temple of Apollo (Portara)

Worth it, and easily so, mostly because it asks for so little of your time while giving such a strong sense of having arrived somewhere. On its own it is not a deep archaeological visit, so the smart move is a short stop folded into a Chora walk rather than a trip built around it.

Photo: Jean Housen (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

The Temple of Apollo, which almost everyone just calls the Portara, is the giant marble doorway on Palatia islet that you see as your ferry pulls into Naxos. It takes maybe half an hour to walk out and back, but do not write it off as a photo stop. The ruin, the water, and the view back toward Chora add up to one of the best arrivals in the Cyclades.

Is Temple of Apollo (Portara) worth it?Worth it

Worth it for

  • First-time visitors, photographers, sunset chasers, and anyone arriving by ferry
  • Travelers who like ancient sites but do not want a long, museum-style stop

You can skip if

  • You want detailed ruins, full signage, or a complete archaeological complex to explore
  • You are coming at peak sunset and dislike crowds more than you enjoy the view
Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Temple of Apollo (Portara)

We weighed recent Naxos traveler opinion on the Portara against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • Free, and the Naxos sunset spotReported by many

    The giant marble doorway on the islet by the port is free and a ten-minute walk out across the causeway, no ticket or guide needed. It is the answer to where to watch the sunset on Naxos, so it draws a crowd then; come early or late if you want it quieter. The temple behind it was abandoned mid-build in ancient times, which is why only the frame remains.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

It's free

No ticket needed for Temple of Apollo (Portara)

The Portara is free and you just walk to it: about ten minutes across the causeway from the ferry port, best done early or at sunset. The single marble threshold framing open Aegean sky is striking on its own, and no ticket or guide is needed to stand in it. It is the classic Naxos sunset gathering spot, so expect company at golden hour.

A local guide or walking tour adds the story of the sixth-century temple abandoned mid-build and the Ariadne legend, folding the Portara into a loop through the Kastro, but the doorway itself needs no ticket.

Which ticket should you buy?

If you are only after the sunset and a few photos, go self-guided. Book a walking tour if you want the Portara to make sense next to Chora and the wider story of Naxos.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Self-guided Portara visit Independent access to the open-air monument, the causeway, harbor views, and the photo spots around Palatia islet. Budget travelers, ferry-day plans, and anyone staying in or near Chora.
Naxos Old Town and Portara walking tour A guided walk that usually ties the Portara together with the harborfront, Bourgos, the Kastro, and the old lanes of Chora. First-time visitors who want some context without giving a whole day to one site.
Private archaeology or mythology walk A closer look at the unfinished temple, Archaic Naxos, and the Ariadne, Theseus, and Dionysus stories tied to Palatia. History-minded travelers and families who want the monument to be more than a photo.
Naxos highlights day tour A short Portara stop alongside other island sights such as mountain villages, ancient marble sites, or inland landmarks. Travelers on a tight schedule who want the Portara worked into a broader Naxos route.
Palatia islet, Naxos Town (Chora) 843 00, Greece View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What You Are Looking At

The Portara is the doorway of a temple that was never finished, started around 530 BC under the Naxian tyrant Lygdamis. Naxos was rich at the time, mostly from its marble, and the plan matched that confidence: a sanctuary roughly 59 meters long and 28 meters wide.

Lygdamis lost power around 524 BC and the work stopped for good. What is left is the gate itself, four marble blocks of about 20 tons each, plus foundations and the ghost of a much bigger building. The marble was hauled in from the Flerio quarry inland. One detail worth knowing: the doorway faces roughly toward Delos, the island that mythology calls Apollo's birthplace, which is why it is usually tied to him.

Temple of Apollo on the islet Palatia, near Naxos Town. Let him build Naxian ruler Lygdamos, about… Photo: Zde (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Why It Matters

There are no rooms to wander and no signs on every stone here. The pull is simpler than that. Four huge slabs of marble stand alone on a low rock, harbor on one side, open Aegean on the other, and that framing does most of the work.

Palatia also sits deep in local myth, the Ariadne, Theseus, and Dionysus stories. So the visit lands somewhere between archaeology, island identity, and a very good place to watch the day end.

The Visit Experience

From the port or the lanes of Chora it is a short, flat walk out along the causeway that has linked the islet to town since 1919. The last stretch is uneven stone with a few steps, so shoes with grip beat slick beach flip-flops.

Sunset is the famous slot, and it does deliver. It is also when the crowd thickens and people bunch up under the gate for the same shot. Come early in the morning instead if you want quiet, softer light, and room to move.

At Vinci beach in Naxos Chora, sunset behind neighboring Paros island, Palátia peninsula with… Photo: Manfred Werner (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

How To Fit It Into Naxos

Treat the Portara as one stop on a Chora walk, not a plan for half your day. String it together with the harborfront, the Grotta area, Bourgos, and the Kastro lanes, then eat once the light has gone.

The catch is the exposure. There is almost no shade, the wind off the water can be strong, and in midsummer the stone bakes by early afternoon. Carry water, take your photos, and save energy for the old town, where the slower, denser side of Naxos actually lives.

Temple of Apollo (Portara): FAQs

Yes. The Portara is an open-air landmark with no ticket gate, freely accessible day or night. Access can close off during works or rough weather, so check locally if you are unsure.

For most people 20 to 40 minutes is plenty, including the walk out. Add time if you are waiting around for sunset or shooting it from different angles.

Very. It sits on Palatia islet at the mouth of the harbor, a short walk from the ferry area and the Chora waterfront along the causeway.

Sunset is the classic pick and also the busiest. Morning is the call if you want a calmer visit and cooler air.

Plenty of people walk out after dark, and it is a common part of an evening stroll. Just take care on the causeway in wind, low light, or rough seas.

The Municipality of Naxos and Small Cyclades site has background on the monument: https://www.naxos.gr/the-temple-of-apollo-portara/?lang=en. For island buses, see KTEL Naxos: https://naxosbuses.com.

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