Heraklion

Crete's capital is a real Greek city, not a tourist town — sophisticated dining, Venetian walls, and immaculate old-town streets that belie its underdog reputation in the guidebooks.

Heraklion gets an unfair rap. Some guidebooks paint it as rough around the edges, but step inside the old city walls and you'll find an immaculate, well-maintained city with a dining and drinking scene that punches well above its weight. Yes, things get scruffier beyond the old town — but most visitors rarely need to venture that far.

The old town itself is a labyrinth of mostly pedestrian cobblestone streets lined with boutique stores, cafes, restaurants, and grand Venetian-era buildings. It's compact and walkable, with eating and drinking options around every corner. Stay as central as possible — you won't regret it.

What makes Heraklion genuinely enjoyable is that it's a functioning Greek city first, tourist destination second. That means fewer traps, more authenticity, and locals actually eating in the same restaurants as you.

Queer Heraklion

Heraklion's queer scene is small but not unwelcoming. La Brasserie is the standout — a gay-friendly café-bar with a loyal queer following, more neighbourhood local than scene bar. When the Apollo party rolls into town, it typically takes over the same space and transforms it entirely.

What the city lacks in dedicated queer nightlife it more than compensates for with the quality of its bars and restaurants overall. Heraklion isn't built around tourists, which means the places locals actually drink and eat are right there for the taking — no tourist markup, no watered-down cocktails, no performance of a good time.

Queer men will find the broader bar scene relaxed and comfortable. Heraklion is a cosmopolitan city and a university town — the vibe is open, unpretentious, and largely indifferent in the best possible way.

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Venetian Heraklion

The city spent over four centuries under Venetian rule — longer than almost anywhere else in the Mediterranean — and the architecture shows it. The old harbour, the Koules Fortress, and the city walls (among the most intact in the world) are all worth your time beyond simply passing through.

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