7 Days in Cyprus: The Perfect Itinerary

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Right, so you’ve booked Cyprus. Lucky you. I was properly chuffed when my flight landed in Larnaca because I’d been dreaming about halloumi the size of my face and that ridiculous turquoise water for months. Cyprus delivered.

Here’s the thing though. The island looks tiny on a map, but stuff it with beaches, Roman mosaics, mountain villages, wineries, divided cities, and more cats than I’ve ever seen in one country, and suddenly 7 days feels quick.

This is the itinerary I’d hand a mate flying in next week. Real driving times, actual costs, little tangents that might save you from getting pointed the wrong way down a one-way street in Nicosia (cough, me).

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7-Day Cyprus Itinerary: Quick Facts at a Glance

Capital: Nicosia (the last divided capital in Europe)

Currency: Euro (€) in the south, Turkish Lira (₺) in the north

Language: Greek in the south, Turkish in the north. English is everywhere.

Airports: Larnaca (LCA) and Paphos (PFO). Both work for this itinerary.

Driving side: Left (same as the UK, which is a small miracle)

Plug type: Type G, 230V (UK plugs work, no adapter needed)

Best time to go: April to June, or September to October

Visa: Cyprus is in the EU but not in Schengen. UK travellers get 90 days in 180.

💡 Fact: Cyprus has over 60 Blue Flag beaches, more per capita than almost anywhere in the Mediterranean. The water quality genuinely is that good.

7-Day Cyprus Itinerary Quick Q&As

Is 7 days enough to see Cyprus? Yes, if you drive. You won’t see every corner, but you can comfortably hit Larnaca, Nicosia, Troodos, Paphos, Akamas, and Ayia Napa.

Do I need a car in Cyprus? Honestly, yes. Public buses exist between cities but they’re slow and infrequent. Mountain villages and the Akamas coast are basically unreachable without wheels.

Which airport should I fly into? Larnaca (LCA) for most trips. It’s bigger, has more flights, and sits roughly central. Paphos (PFO) works if you want to start on the west coast.

Can I visit Northern Cyprus on a day trip? Yes. You walk across at Ledra Street in Nicosia with your passport. Rental cars usually need extra insurance to cross the border, so many people just park up and walk across.

How much does a week in Cyprus cost? Mid-range, around £900 to £1,200 (€1,050 to €1,400 / $1,130 to $1,500) per person including flights, food, a shared rental car and decent hotels.

Is Cyprus safe for solo travellers? Very. It’s ranked one of the safest countries in Europe, and I’ve wandered around Nicosia and Paphos alone at night with zero drama.

✋🏼 Must do: Book car hire before you land, especially in summer. Airport desks run out of automatics fast, and they’re not shy about charging you double if you roll up without a booking. I always grab mine through car hire because I can filter by automatic and fuel policy upfront.

🔥 Recommended Tour to get you started: From Paphos: Blue Lagoon, Akamas & Aphrodite’s Baths Trip

Your 7-Day Cyprus Itinerary at a Glance

Cyprus 7 day itinerary made simple
Cyprus 7 day itinerary made simple

Before we dig into the detail, here’s the week in shorthand. One line per day so you can see how it flows before you commit.

Day

Base

Highlights

1

Larnaca

Arrive, Finikoudes promenade, Church of Saint Lazarus, seaside meze

2

Nicosia

Larnaca Salt Lake, Hala Sultan Tekke, cross the Green Line, Büyük Han

3

Limassol

Kykkos Monastery, painted churches, Omodos wine tasting

4

Limassol

Old Town, Medieval Castle, Ancient Kourion, Old Town meze

5

Paphos

Aphrodite’s Rock, Paphos Archaeological Park, Tombs of the Kings

6

Paphos

Akamas Peninsula, Blue Lagoon boat trip, Baths of Aphrodite

7

Fly home

Choirokoitia, Lefkara Village, Ayia Napa Sculpture Park, sea caves

👉 Good to know: This is a clockwise loop starting and ending at Larnaca airport. You could easily flip it the other way (Paphos in, Paphos out) if your flights land you on the west coast instead.

🗺️  Our Essential Tips for Cyprus: Cyprus Travel Tips: 17 Things I Wish I Knew Before My First Trip

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Day 1: Arrive in Larnaca and Ease into Island Time

Larnaca, Cyprus.
Larnaca, Cyprus.

Fly into Larnaca International Airport, pick up your hire car, and head straight into Larnaca city (10 minutes away).

My advice? Don’t plan anything heavy on day one. Drop your bags, walk the Finikoudes Beach promenade (palm trees, dodgy sunbeds, very good frappé), and wander over to the Church of Saint Lazarus. Yes, that Lazarus. The building is 9th century and the vibe inside is genuinely moving.

For dinner, grab meze at a seaside taverna. Start as you mean to go on.

Where to stay: Les Palmiers Beach Hotel or Flamingo Beach Hotel, both walkable from the promenade. Booking.com usually has the best rates for Larnaca outside peak summer.

🔹 Tinker’s Tip: Do your laundry and stock up on water at the Metro supermarket near the seafront before you leave Larnaca. You’ll thank me when you hit the mountains.

🗺️  Related Article: Sun, Sand, and More: Why Cyprus Should Be Your Next Travel Destination

Day 2 & 3: Larnaca Salt Lake to Troodos Mountains

Troodos Mountains, Cyprus
Troodos Mountains, Cyprus

Day 2 Morning: drive 15 minutes west to Larnaca Salt Lake. Between November and March you’ll see flamingos (thousands of them, pink and honking, with the beautiful Hala Sultan Tekke mosque on the shore). In summer the lake dries into a white crust, still weirdly pretty. More detail in my Larnaca’s salt lake guide.

From there, it’s an hour up the motorway to Nicosia. Park in the old city (the car park near the Venetian walls is easiest) and walk.

The best thing you can do in Nicosia is cross the Green Line. Pop your passport out at the Ledra Street crossing, walk through, and you’re suddenly in a different world. Turkish coffee, call to prayer, the gorgeous 16th-century Büyük Han caravanserai full of craft stalls. Have lunch on the northern side (pide and kebabs, very good and very cheap) then wander back.

Afternoon: the Cyprus Museum on the southern side is excellent if you like archaeology. If not, the Leventis Municipal Museum does social history well and takes 45 minutes. Full lowdown in my Nicosia’s divided capital post.

Day 3: Troodos Mountains

Pack a jumper. Seriously. The mountains are 10 degrees cooler than the coast.

Leave Nicosia early and head to the Troodos Mountains. The drive is stunning (winding roads, pine forests), though the satnav will lie to you at least twice. Plan for an hour and a half, not the 50 minutes it claims.

First stop: Kykkos Monastery. The mosaics are insane, the courtyard is peaceful, and the tiny chapel at the top has 360-degree views. Dress modestly or they’ll hand you a wrap at the door.

Drive on to Omodos, a wine village with cobbled streets and grandmas selling glyka tou koutaliou (spoon sweets, basically fruit preserved in sugar syrup, absolutely delicious). Do a wine tasting at one of the small family wineries. Try Commandaria if they offer it. It’s the world’s oldest named wine, sweet as anything, and weirdly addictive.

Late afternoon, drive down to Limassol. About an hour.

👉 Good to know: There are ten UNESCO-listed painted churches dotted around Troodos. Don’t try them all. Agios Nikolaos tis Stegis near Kakopetria and Panagia Forviotissa (Asinou) are the most striking, and both sit on the route back to the coast. Cyprus UNESCO World Heritage Sites has the full rundown.

Day 4: Limassol and Ancient Kourion

Cyprus - Your Next destination
Limassol

Limassol surprised me. I’d heard it was “just the business city” and I almost skipped it. Don’t skip it.

Morning: walk through the Old Town and grab coffee on Agiou Andreou Street. Pop into the Medieval Castle (tiny but fun, allegedly where Richard the Lionheart got married).

Late morning: drive 20 minutes west to Ancient Kourion. This is, for my money, the best archaeological site in Cyprus. The Greco-Roman theatre sits right on a cliff above the Mediterranean. The mosaics in the House of Eustolios are world-class, the baths are well-preserved, and the whole place is properly atmospheric. Entry is €4.50 (about £3.80 / $4.80). Prices correct as of April 2026.

Back to Limassol for dinner. The marina area is nice but a bit touristy. I preferred eating in the Old Town, where a proper meze spread for two runs you around €35 to €45 (£30 to £38 / $38 to $48).

💡 Fact: The Greco-Roman theatre at Kourion still hosts live performances every summer, including Shakespeare plays and opera nights. It’s one of the oldest working theatres in the world, dating back to the 2nd century BC, and the acoustics are so sharp you can hear a whisper from the top row.

🚕 Just incase you want some Airport Transfer in Cyprus: Welcome Pickups

🗺️ Recommended Read: Handpicked Tours & Experiences

Recommended Tours from GetYourGuide

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Day 5: Drive to Paphos via Aphrodite's Rock

Paphos hidden gems!
Paphos hidden gems!

Check out after breakfast. Today’s drive is 45 minutes along the scenic B6 coastal road, with one big stop en route.

Petra tou Romiou (Aphrodite’s Rock) is exactly what it sounds like: a large rock in the sea, where legend says the goddess was born from the foam. Is it a bit of a tourist trap? Yes. Is it still worth stopping for a swim in that gin-clear water? Also yes. The pebble beach is hard on the feet, so bring water shoes if you’ve got them.

Arrive in Paphos by lunch. Check in, dump your bags, then spend the afternoon at Paphos Archaeological Park. The Roman mosaics at the House of Dionysos are genuinely world-class. Give yourself at least two hours. Entry is €4.50 (£3.80 / $4.80).

Late afternoon: the Tombs of the Kings. A short drive or a 20-minute walk from the park. Despite the name, no actual kings are buried here. It’s a 4th-century BC necropolis carved into solid rock, with eerie underground chambers and Doric columns. Sunset is magic.

Dinner at Paphos harbour. Touristy, but the sunset over the castle makes up for it.

🔹 Tinker’s Tip: Buy a combined Paphos attractions pass at the Archaeological Park ticket office. It’s €8.50 (£7.20 / $9.10) and covers the Park, the Tombs of the Kings, and Paphos Castle, saving you about a third versus paying separately. Valid for 3 days too, so you can split them up if two hours of mosaics is your limit.

🔥 Recommended Travel Insurance (a must!): Visitors Coverage

🗺️ All Guides to Insurance

Day 6: Akamas Peninsula and the Blue Lagoon

Akamas Peninsula
Akamas Peninsula

This might be my favourite day of the whole week.

The Akamas Peninsula is a wild, protected stretch of coast north of Paphos. No resorts, no roads paved past a certain point, just cliffs, scrub, and impossibly blue water. The jewel is the Blue Lagoon, a shallow inlet where the sea goes every shade of turquoise you can imagine.

You’ve got two options:

  1. Boat trip from Latchi. Easier and more relaxing, 3 to 5 hours with swimming stops. Book in advance. I grabbed mine via day tours which had a decent range of operators.
  2. Drive it yourself in a 4×4. More adventurous, dusty, unpaved roads, but you get to the Baths of Aphrodite and quiet coves the boats skip.

Either way, budget for a long swim. The water is stupid clear, like snorkelling in a swimming pool that’s forgotten it’s the sea.

Back to Paphos for dinner. Early night. Tomorrow is a big drive.

🔹 Tinker’s Tip: If you’re doing the boat, pick an afternoon slot, not morning. The light on the Blue Lagoon after 2pm is unreal, and the morning boats are rammed with the big tour groups.

🗺️  Fancy a road trip: Visit our Road Trip Hub

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Day 7: Drive East to Ayia Napa (or Fly Home)

Your last day depends on your flight. If you’re heading home from Paphos, easy. Drop the car and fly out.

If you’re flying from Larnaca, make the drive east into a proper day out. About 2 hours straight through, or 3 to 4 if you stop.

  • Stop 1: Kourion Beach for a morning swim if you didn’t get enough on Day 4.
  • Stop 2: Choirokoitia, a UNESCO Neolithic settlement (fascinating if you like proper old ruins, though the site is quite sparse). Entry €2.50 (£2.10 / $2.70).
  • Stop 3: Lefkara Village for lunch and a wander. Famous for lace-making and silversmithing, and the cobbled streets feel like they haven’t changed in 200 years. Try the loukoumades (honey-soaked doughnuts) from a bakery on the main square.
  • Stop 4: Ayia Napa. Even if you skip the clubs, the Sculpture Park overlooking the sea is free, weird, and genuinely lovely. If you’ve got a spare hour, the sea caves on the Cape Greco side are spectacular.

Then on to Larnaca airport, an easy 45-minute run down the motorway.

Driving Times Between Stops

A little cheat sheet I wish I’d had on my first trip. These are real driving times, not whatever Google Maps optimistically tells you.

Route

Drive Time

Distance

Larnaca airport to Larnaca city

15 minutes

10 km

Larnaca to Nicosia

1 hour

50 km

Nicosia to Troodos (Kykkos)

1 hr 45 mins

85 km

Troodos to Limassol

1 hour

55 km

Limassol to Paphos

1 hr 15 mins

70 km

Paphos to Blue Lagoon (Latchi)

40 minutes

40 km

Paphos to Ayia Napa

2 hrs 30 mins

200 km

Ayia Napa to Larnaca airport

45 minutes

55 km

Where to Stay Each Night

Here’s a rough guide on where to base yourself each night. Mix and match based on your travel style.

Night

Location

Budget (per night)

Mid-range (per night)

1

Larnaca

£50 / €58 / $63

£90 / €105 / $113

2

Nicosia

£55 / €65 / $69

£100 / €117 / $126

3

Limassol

£70 / €82 / $88

£130 / €152 / $163

4

Limassol or Paphos

£65 / €76 / $82

£120 / €140 / $151

5

Paphos

£60 / €70 / $75

£110 / €128 / $138

6

Paphos or Ayia Napa

£60 / €70 / $75

£110 / €128 / $138

Prices correct as of 2026. All of these are findable on Booking.com with free cancellation if your plans shift.

Rough Cost Breakdown for 7 Days

What I actually spent on my last trip (mid-range, mostly self-catering breakfast, eating out for lunch and dinner).

Category

GBP

EUR

USD

Flights (from London)

£180

€210

$226

Car hire (7 days, compact)

£140

€164

$176

Fuel

£65

€76

$82

Accommodation (mid-range, 6 nights)

£660

€772

$830

Food and drink

£200

€234

$251

Entrance fees and tours

£80

€94

$100

Coffee and snacks (I have a problem)

£45

€53

$57

Total per person

£1,370

€1,603

$1,722

Prices correct as of 2026. You can shave 30% off with budget stays and less eating out. Couples sharing drop the per-person cost significantly.

Best Time to Visit Cyprus made simple

Best time to visit Cyprus made simple.
Best time to visit Cyprus made simple.

Practical Tips Before You Go

A handful of things I learned the hard way:

  • Cash and cards. Euros in the south, Turkish Lira in the north (euros are accepted in most tourist spots up there too). Contactless is everywhere.
  • Driving. Left-hand side, speed limits in km/h, seatbelts compulsory, drink-drive limit is strict. Petrol is dearer near airports, so fill up inland.
  • Water. Tap water is safe in the south. Buy bottled in mountain villages.
  • Sun cream. No negotiation. I saw a grown man cry on a sunbed in Paphos because he thought “it’s only 9am” would protect him.
  • More reading. My Cyprus travel tips guide covers the stuff I wish I’d known first time.

Ready to Plan Your Cyprus Week?

7 days in Cyprus is one of those trips where you land thinking “it’s just a small island” and leave realising you’ve only scratched the surface. Byzantine churches, Roman mosaics, flamingo lakes, mountain wineries, divided cities, sea caves and some of the clearest water in the Mediterranean. All in one week, all in under 300 km of coastline.

Sort your car hire first, lock in your stays via Booking.com, book the day tours you don’t want to miss, and leave enough room in your suitcase for halloumi, olive oil, and those weird little ceramic cats everyone seems to bring home. See you out there.👇💬

Adventure on,
The Travel Tinker Crew
🌍✨

FAQs

What's the best 7-day Cyprus itinerary route?

Start in Larnaca, drive clockwise through Nicosia, Troodos, Limassol, Paphos, and the Akamas Peninsula, then head back east to Ayia Napa before flying out. This route covers the cultural highlights, the mountains, and the best beaches without doubling back on yourself too much.

You can see Larnaca, Nicosia, Limassol, Paphos, and Ayia Napa on intercity buses, but you’ll miss Troodos, the Akamas Peninsula, and most of the mountain villages. Day tours from Paphos can fill some of the gaps, but a hire car is genuinely the best way to do the full island justice.

Larnaca has more flights, especially from the UK, and it’s more central for this route. Paphos works well if you want to start on the west coast, but you’ll usually pay a bit more for flights.

Budget for around £150 to £200 (€175 to €235 / $190 to $250) in cash for tips, small tavernas, and crossings into the north. Almost everywhere takes card, but smaller places in mountain villages sometimes don’t.

Absolutely. English is spoken almost universally, driving is on the left (UK travellers feel at home instantly), crime is very low, the food is brilliant, and the distances between highlights are manageable. It’s honestly one of the easiest Mediterranean countries to visit.

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Ready to book your next trip? These trusted resources have been personally vetted to ensure a smooth travel experience.

Book Your Flights: Kick off your travel planning by finding the best flight deals on Trip.com. Our years of experience with them confirm they offer the most competitive prices.

Book Your Hotel: For the best hotel rates, use Booking.com . For the best and safest hostels, HostelWorld.com is your go-to resource. Best for overall Hotel ratings and bargains, use TripAdvisor.com!

Find Apartment Rentals: For affordable apartment rentals, check out VRBO. They consistently offer the best prices.

Car Rentals: For affordable car rentals, check out RentalCars.com. They offer the best cars, mostly brand new.

Travel Insurance: Never travel without insurance. Here are our top recommendations:

  • EKTA for Travel Insurance for all areas!
  • Use AirHelp for compensation claims against flight delays etc.

Book Your Activities: Discover walking tours, skip-the-line tickets, private guides, and more on Get Your Guide. They have a vast selection of activities to enhance your trip. There is also Tiqets.com for instant mobile tickets.

Book The Best Trains: Use Trainline to find the most affordable trains or Rail Europe for rail passes!

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Author

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Claire Taylor

I am a storyteller, podcaster, and global explorer deeply intrigued by the nuances of unconventional living. I transitioned from conforming to conventional norms to embracing a life that defies the ordinary All articles on The Travel Tinker are written by humans. Read our editorial policy.

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