Luxury travelers heading to Santorini by cruise this summer will find a very different experience from years prior.
As many destinations across Europe continue to seek new ways to combat overcrowding, the destination has implemented a daily cap of 8,000 cruise passengers, down significantly from the peak numbers of 17,000. Cruise visitors arriving during the height of the summer season are already subject to a €20 (~$23) per-person fee introduced two years ago.
The measures follow years of complaints from residents, local businesses, and hoteliers about the strain large-scale cruise tourism places on roads, public spaces and towns, particularly during the height of cruise season.
When unveiling the country's cruise levy in 2024, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said measures taken were just to ease pressure on certain destinations such as Santorini.
"Cruise shipping has burdened Santorini and Mykonos and this is why we are proceeding with interventions," he said at the time. "Greece does not have a structural overtourism problem... Some of its destinations have a significant issue during certain weeks or months of the year, which we need to deal with."
Authorities have also introduced new arrival management rules and additional restrictions have been introduced to manage crowding at key transfer points, with the system designed to spread visitor numbers more evenly throughout the day.
The move to restrict heavy cruise traffic echoes similar actions taken by authorities across Europe as some want to either ease overcrowding or attract high-spending tourists while dissuading others. Barcelona recently announced plans to double its cruise passenger tax while also reducing the number of cruise terminals operating in the city to discourage high-volume, low-spend day tourism. In Italy, Venice has banned large cruise ships from entering its historic center, while in Amsterdam, moves have also been made in the same vein.
Barcelona's mayor, Jaume Collboni, has been particularly vocal about his preference for visitors who stay in Barcelona and contribute more to the local economy than day-trippers arriving on cruise stopovers. Announcing the tax hike, he told local broadcaster Betevé that his goal is to reduce cruise ship stopovers in Barcelona to zero in the coming years, framing the policy around a simple principle: tourism should serve the city, not the other way around.
While tighter controls might be expected to draw opposition from the cruise sector, industry bodies have broadly accepted the need for intervention in Santorini. The Cruise Lines International Association said it was "supportive" of the island's intention to enforce the 8,000-passenger daily cap.
Positively for travelers on the luxury end of the spectrum, the changes may ultimately improve the on-the-ground experience. While cruise lines and passengers face higher costs and tighter arrival controls, resulting in the need for more planning, fewer visitors arriving at the same time could mean less crowded streets, shorter queues, and a more enjoyable experience. Early reports from the first weeks of implementation suggest the measures are already helping to ease congestion in some of Santorini's busiest areas.
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