Honestly, five days in Crete are enough to see why everyone raves about it.
Not enough to see everything though, Crete doesn’t work like that.
But enough to slow down, go somewhere that takes effort to reach, eat one disappointing meal and completely forget about it the next night (the one you get it right!), and come home feeling like I’d actually been somewhere.
This itinerary stays in western Crete. One base, Chania, which is exactly where I’d start every time.
From there, you push out : a boat trip to a lagoon that looks almost too blue to be real (the Balos Lagoon), a slow inland day that surprised me more than anything else that week (the village loop that I’ll tell you about), and a village you can only reach by ferry.
Day 5 is a choice between two very different endings. One requires proper hiking shoes and an early alarm. The other just requires sunscreen and a good book.
I’ll let you decide which one sounds more like you.

Quick version of the itinerary
- Day 1: Chania old town — port, artisan streets, Folklore Museum, dinner at Dimos
- Day 2: Balos lagoon by boat from Kissamos
- Day 3: Slow inland loop — Vamos, Georgiopolis, Monastery Agios Georgios, Kournas Lake
- Day 4: Loutro — drive to Hora Sfakion, ferry to Loutro
- Day 5: Elafonissi beach OR Samaria Gorge (choose based on energy, but the second is more impressive!)
Base: Chania.
Best season: May–June or September–October. Car needed for day trips (Day 1 is entirely on foot).
Driving reality: most days include 1 to 2 hours behind the wheel. Day 4 (Loutro) is the toughest, with about 2 hours each way on mountain roads to Hora Sfakion. Day 5 (Samaria) means an early start and a long guided bus ride.

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Where to Stay
Five days is long enough to feel at home, so invest in a good base.
As a couple:
- Serenissima — renovated Venetian mansion, stone walls, candlelit niches, rooftop terrace. From around €170 with breakfast. For romantic boutique vibes, this is the one I’d pick.
- Ionas Hotel — 9 rooms in a 16th-century building in the Splantzia quarter, doubles from €85. Small, personal, genuinely lovely.
- Casa Delfino — 17th-century mansion, mosaic courtyard, hammam, spa. From €190. The full splurge.
These places come highly recommended. I stayed in a villa instead of a hotel for our group trip. Be sure to check availability and current prices when you book.
As a group: Rent a villa on the slopes above Chania. We had 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, a private pool, and a view that stopped conversations. For 8 people the per-person cost was exceptional. Search “Chania countryside villa” on rental platforms.
Budget: Cocoon City Hostel — dorms from €18, private rooms from €40. Very well run.
Day 1: Chania Old Town

Don’t rush to leave on your first day. Chania deserves time.
Morning: The Venetian Port
Start at the Venetian port before the tour groups arrive. Walk out to the lighthouse — further than it looks, but the view back over the city is worth every step.
The current lighthouse dates to the Egyptian period of the 19th century (yes, Egypt governed Crete for a stretch — the history here is wonderfully complicated).

Come back at sunset when the sky turns pink behind it. That’s the real moment.

What stands out about the port is the architecture.
There are buildings from very different eras and styles—Venetian, Ottoman, neoclassical Greek—all side by side.
This city has been many things, so much that even its name has several spellings: Chania, Xania, La Canée, Khaniá. Same place, many stories.
Try Bougatsa Iordanis for breakfast or a morning snack—creamy custard in phyllo, dusted with icing sugar and cinnamon, around €3. Locals line up for it. Simple, no frills, with about a century of tradition. You might walk right past without noticing it.
Mid-Morning: The Streets
Skrydlof Street — the leather street. Real craftspeople working in front of you. Good for bags, belts, sandals.
Zampeliu Street has artisanal boutiques. I found one where they were making pottery right in front of customers, and you could buy it on the spot. I bought a small cup for making milk foam for my morning coffee. Every morning at home, it reminds me of Crete.
The Folklore Museum (around €3 — verify hours locally as they change seasonally) — the most underrated thing in Chania. Easy to walk past. A small house with a hidden courtyard full of plants, completely peaceful, inexplicably empty.
Inside there are rooms dedicated to embroidery and traditional Cretan life, and a woman doing hand embroidery on site whose work you can buy.
My sister bought a beautiful sunflower piece. I didn’t buy one. I still think about it.
Also worth finding: Fort Firkas (free entry, good harbour views) and the Synagogue Etz Hayyim — the only surviving synagogue in Crete, restored in 1999, quiet and moving.
Afternoon
Archaeological Museum of Chania (Halidon 28, around €4 — verify current hours and prices before visiting). Inside a beautifully restored Venetian church. Minoan finds from the western part of the island. Allow 60–90 minutes.
Evening


For dinner: Dimos Restaurant in the port — recommended by friends who’ve eaten their way around Chania every year for 20 years. Blue chairs, wooden tables, simple traditional food, the best view in the port, directly facing the lighthouse. Not a tourist trap.
Alternatively, Taverna Michalis for refined food and exceptional wine. Or Thalassino Ageri (15 minutes east along the coast) for the splurge seafood dinner. Book ahead.
Book restaurants in advance for dinner in high season — the old town fills up.
If you want more photos of Chania, check out my other short itinerary post.
Day 2: Balos Lagoon
One of the most iconic beaches in Crete.
The water is shallow, warm, and turquoise. The sand is made of crushed shells and sea-life fragments—pale and most colorful near the lagoon edges.
There are no proper restaurants, so bring your own food and water. Water shoes help on the rougher parts.
Go by boat. You can also drive there, but only if your rental company allows it (and not many do).
Ferries from Kissamos port, about 40km west of Chania (around €27 adult, €13 child — check current schedules at cretandailycruises.com as these change seasonally). Leave Chania by 8am.
The crossing includes a stop at the Gramvoussa fortress above the lagoon — spectacular views, don’t rush it.
Crowd timing: midday is peak due to day excursions. Morning ferry gets you there first, or if you go with a private boat, I recommend going in the afternoon after 4pm.
Check out here all the ways to get to Balos, in detail
Plan B if boats are cancelled (wind can close the crossing, especially shoulder season): drive to Falassarna, 25km south of Kissamos. It’s a beach with extraordinary clear water and far fewer crowds.
Have lunch in Kissamos and back for Chania sunset.

Dinner: Gramvousa Restaurant
Named after the peninsula, this restaurant is well known for both locals and tourists.
It was recommend to us by our host.
Book well in advance. Even with a reservation, we waited an hour in line. Inside, it’s loud and crowded with an open kitchen where you can watch the staff cook. The food was exceptional, very Greek, and worth the wait.
Day 3: The Slow Inland Loop
Today is a complete change of pace.
Take it easy with a flexible route and no beaches—a loop east through the countryside and back.
Vamos Village
Vamos is a village about 50 minutes east of Chania on the road to Georgiopolis.
Authentic but small and much of it in ruins.
This is a nice 20-minute stop if you’re passing, not worth a special trip. The Vamos Traditional Village complex here is worth knowing about if you ever want a village-based accommodation option in the Chania region.
Georgiopolis
Next stop, is this small beach town just down the road, Georgiopolis.
The beach is modest, but what I loved was a tiny white chapel on the rocks, reached by a narrow stone path stretching across the sea. You walk out on this little causeway with water on both sides.
Whitewashed walls, blue water, the sound of waves.
Pure and quietly Greek. It’s a good lunch stop with tavernas along the seafront offering genuine local prices.
Monastery Agios Georgios
Hidden in the hills, further along, you’ll find one of the most beeautiful hidden gems. We were completely alone here, which almost never happens in Crete.
From the car park, you get some of the most beautiful views on the island.
The monastery is still active, with monks living there. The place calls for quiet. What stays with me are the weathered stone arches under the open sky, the golden walls worn by time, the dry earth, and the scattered ruins.
It’s raw and peaceful in a way only forgotten places can be.
There is no shade whatsoever. We were there in September and felt like we were melting into the stone. Go at the very end of the afternoon or early morning. Cover your shoulders and knees out of respect.
Kournas Lake
On the way back to Chania you’ll find the only freshwater lake in Crete.
Rent a pedalo. Tthey come shaped like colorful cars, which is wonderfully quirky. You’ll pay cash on-site (about €10 per hour). It’s a fun, relaxing hour, and you might even spot some turtles.
Important: it’s a protected ecosystem. Please don’t swim, and keep your distance from any turtles. You’ll likely see others swim anyway — don’t copy them.
Small restaurant on site with good Greek desserts (genuinely good — we had some of the best sweets of the trip here) and a souvenir shop selling pottery.
Evening
The Splantzia quarter in Chania is the neighborhood behind the port where locals really live.
Find a small taverna, order raki and a variety of mezze plates, and let the evening unfold. No reservations, no plans—that’s the whole point today.
Day 4: Loutro
The day that will stay with you longest.
Getting There
Loutro is a village on the south coast with no road access. You get there by boat or on foot, and that isolation is exactly what makes it special.
Drive to Hora Sfakion (Sfakia) on the south coast — about 2 hours from Chania on mountain roads that are beautiful but demanding. From Hora Sfakion, take the short ferry to Loutro (around €6, runs regularly).
Note: Agia Roumeli — the exit point of the Samaria Gorge — is a different south-coast village, also only reachable by boat or on foot. Don’t confuse the two. Hora Sfakion is the practical base for reaching Loutro by car.

Check the return ferry schedule before you go. Missing the last boat means hiking out or staying the night (honestly not the worst outcome, but plan for it either way).
On the drive south, if you take the inland mountain route, watch for a small family-run war museum—a grandfather’s lifetime collection of weapons, uniforms, and military artifacts from the wars that shaped Crete.
It’s a short, interesting stop for anyone even a little interested in WWII history. We found it by chance; if you see the signs, it’s worth spending 30 minutes.
Plan B if the sea is too rough for ferries: the south coast road is beautiful enough to justify the drive regardless.
Spend the day in Plakias instead — a genuine south-coast town with a good beach, honest tavernas, and none of the tourist infrastructure of the north.
Or make it a pure mountain day: drive the White Mountains road and stop wherever looks good.

Loutro Itself
I expected crowds since Loutro is on every “hidden gem of Crete” list.
But what I found was quiet.
A tiny crescent bay, a handful of whitewashed buildings, tavernas right on the water, a small pebble beach, and the deepest blue sea you’ll see all trip. No cars here because there are no roads.
Friends who visit Crete every year told me to stay two nights. I didn’t listen, and I regret it.
For a day trip, give yourself as many hours as the ferry allows.

Check out my complete guide for visiting Loutro for more recommendations on site.

Day 5: Choose Your Adventure
Your final day. Two very different options.
Option A: Samaria Gorge
The big hike: 16km descending from the White Mountains to the Libyan Sea. Tough on the knees but amazing to see.
You can make it on your own but it would be a very, very long day. (I explained it all in the separate guide for the Samaria Gorge Hike).
Instead, book a guided tour. Guides pick you up from your hotel (early — ours left at 5am from a different base; from Chania expect similar). The bus to the trailhead at Xyloskalo takes about 1.5–2 hours.


Samaria Gorge with Ferry & Entry Fee
The guide takes care of the complicated logistics — including the bus to the entrance, the ferry from Agia Roumeli, and the return transport — so you can simply enjoy the hike without worrying about timing or connections.
(Get Your Guide is the most flexible way of booking)
A guide structures the whole day: which kilometre marks to hit by which time, the ferry logistics at the end. Without that structure, the return — crowded boats, timing pressure — can become stressful.
A guide also secures your place on the ferry back, which genuinely fills up. If going independently, buy ferry tickets in advance.
What to expect on the trail:
- You start at 1,230m altitude and descend to sea level over 16km
- The first stretch: high mountain views that stop you in your tracks
- The middle: forest, open spaces, the gorge narrowing gradually
- The last 2km take you through the Iron Gates (Sideroportes), where walls close to about 3.5 meters apart and rise 300 meters above you. It’s worth every step to get here.
- Don’t count on buying food along the trail—bring your own snacks. There are water points, but it’s smart to carry extra.
- Wear proper hiking shoes with ankle support. The constant downhill is tough on your ankles without them. I wore regular trainers and definitely felt it the next day.
- Keep your entry ticket—you hand it in at the exit so they know everyone made it out. If someone gets injured inside, they actually send donkeys to carry them out. Yes, really.

At the end: take the ferry from Agia Roumeli to Hora Sfakion, then bus back to Chania. Before the ferry, go to the beach at Agia Roumeli — after 16km the sea will feel like a miracle. Bring a change of clothes for the ferry ride back.
One detail that stayed with me: on the return ferry, we briefly stopped at Loutro.
Even from the boat, in that sheltered bay, you could see the complete calm — while 20 minutes earlier we’d been in open sea with waves. Two completely different worlds, 20 minutes apart.
Option B: Elafonissi
If the gorge feels like too much, or if four days of activity has already taken its toll, Elafonissi is the perfect ending.
It is located at 76km from Chania, about 1h45 through the White Mountains.
Leave by 8am. Car parks fill by 10am in summer. By 11am it’s crowded.
Elafonissi beach has shallow, warm, turquoise water. The sand has a pinkish tint from crushed shells — most vivid at the lagoon edges. Wade across the sandbar to the quieter island side.
Bring everything: food, water, sunscreen. The sand gets ferociously hot — water shoes prevent the undignified hopping-around-in-agony experience. The kiosks are basic.
Leave by 2–3pm. You will be back in Chania for a final shower, a last walk along the port at golden hour, and a proper goodbye dinner.
What This Itinerary Doesn’t Cover
Five days in western Crete leaves most of the island for another trip.
- 7-day Crete itinerary → — adds Rethymnon, Heraklion, and Knossos
- 2-3 week Crete itinerary → — three different bases, the full island
- Complete guide to Crete → — start here for the overview
Deeper guides for what’s in this itinerary:
- Hiking the Samaria Gorge — full guide
- A guide to Loutro → — including where to stay and why you should
- Best boat trips in Crete → — Balos, Loutro, and more
- Best beaches in Crete → — Elafonissi, Falassarna, and the south coast
Practical Details
Getting Around
Car essential. Budget €35–50/day in shoulder season, more in July–August. Book ahead, prices are higher in last minute.
Day 4 has the most demanding driving — about 2 hours each way on winding mountain roads to the south coast. Beautiful, but not motorway driving.
We rented with SunriseCars and were happy with them, but you can also compare prices on DiscoverCars.
Best Season
May–June: wildflowers, Samaria freshly open, manageable crowds.
September–October: warm sea, smaller crowds, harvest season food. Our personal favourite.
July–August: beautiful but busy — book everything well in advance.

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Hi, I’m Ersilia

Toulouse, France

Originally from Romania

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As a Romanian expat living in the heart of southern France, I guide English speakers to discover authentic French experiences without the language barrier. My unique perspective as both a local and an expat allows me to share insider tips, cultural insights, and practical advice that you won’t find in typical guidebooks.
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