Port Cafe

About
Port Cafe is located at Tourlos, the district that houses Mykonos's New Port roughly 2 kilometres north of Mykonos Town. Its position makes it one of the most practically placed cafes on the island — whether you've just stepped off a ferry from Piraeus or Rafina and need a coffee before the taxi queue, or you're killing time before an early departure, this is the natural stopping point in the area.
The cafe operates under the Cantina Mykonos umbrella, whose full menu is published at cantinamykonos.com. The Google Places listing logs it under coffee shop, cafe, and food store, suggesting a range that goes beyond espresso drinks into light food and provisions — useful when the port area's other options are limited. With a rating of 4.3 out of 5 based on 72 reviews, it holds up consistently for what it is: a port-adjacent cafe rather than a destination dining experience.
For travellers arriving by high-speed catamaran or conventional ferry, Port Cafe fills a gap that most Greek port towns don't bother to fill well. The Tourlos waterfront is functional rather than atmospheric — cranes, ticket booths, and idling coaches — so a reliable coffee spot with food options is genuinely useful rather than optional.
What to Expect
Port Cafe at Tourlos is a compact, functional space aligned with the waterfront activity of the New Port. Expect counter service or minimal table service geared toward people who are moving — arriving passengers gathering their bearings, departing travellers watching for their gate to open, and local commuters waiting on transport.
The Cantina Mykonos menu leans toward all-day cafe fare: coffee in various forms, cold drinks, and light food items suited to the pace of port life. The surrounding Tourlos area doesn't have the whitewashed lanes and bougainvillea of Mykonos Town — it's a working port district — so the cafe's appeal is primarily practical. That said, the waterfront views from the Tourlos area do look back across the bay toward the island's hills, which is more scenic than a typical port approach.
The cafe's food store classification in the Google Places data suggests you can pick up packaged provisions alongside prepared food and drinks — useful for stocking up before a ferry crossing or supplementing accommodation that lacks nearby shops.
Service is oriented around turnover, which suits the port context. Don't expect a long leisurely breakfast here the way you might in a Mykonos Town courtyard cafe. The value here is convenience, consistency, and the ability to eat and drink well in a location where alternatives are thin.
How to Get There
Tourlos is approximately 2 kilometres north of Mykonos Town (Chora). The New Port is the main ferry arrival and departure point for the island, so most visitors will pass through the area at least once during their trip.
By taxi or transfer: The most direct option from Mykonos Town. Taxis queue at the port during ferry arrivals. Journey time is under five minutes. Transfer services from hotels across the island also use the New Port as their standard drop-off and pick-up point.
By bus (KTEL): Public buses connect Mykonos Town's main bus stop near the Old Port with the broader road network. Check current KTEL schedules on arrival, as routes and frequencies change seasonally.
On foot: The walk from Mykonos Town along the coastal road to Tourlos takes approximately 20–25 minutes. There is no dedicated footpath for the full distance, so be cautious during busy periods when traffic on the main road is heavy.
By car: Parking is available in and around the New Port area, though spaces fill quickly during peak ferry arrival windows in summer. If you're dropping someone off, short-term parking near the terminal is usually manageable outside of the busiest mid-morning and afternoon arrival slots.
Accessibility: The port area is largely flat and paved, which generally makes it more accessible than Mykonos Town's cobblestone lanes.
Best Time to Visit
The practical answer is: whenever you have a ferry to catch or have just stepped off one. Port Cafe's Tourlos location makes it almost uniquely tied to ferry schedules rather than the standard tourist rhythms of the island.
For pure ambience, the early morning hours before the first major ferry arrivals are the quietest — the bay is calm, light is soft, and the port hasn't yet shifted into its high-volume mode. Mid-morning and early afternoon in peak summer (July and August) see the highest foot traffic as multiple large ferries arrive within short windows.
Mykonos has a long tourist season running from late April through October, with August being the most congested month island-wide. The Tourlos port area reflects this: it's functional in shoulder season (May, June, September, October) and hectic at peak. If you have flexibility in your ferry timing, arrivals before 9am or after 6pm in summer tend to involve shorter queues and a calmer port environment.
Wind is a genuine consideration on Mykonos. The island sits in the Cyclades and receives strong meltemi winds from the north in July and August. The New Port at Tourlos faces partly northwest, so exposed seating outside can be blustery during meltemi episodes.
Tips for Visiting
- Arrive ahead of your ferry. The New Port can become congested quickly during peak summer departures. Having coffee at Port Cafe while watching for your boat is a better use of time than standing in the sun near the gates.
- Check the Cantina Mykonos website before you go. The full menu is listed at cantinamykonos.com, which allows you to plan your order if you're on a tight schedule between arrival and transfer.
- Use it as a provisions stop. The food store classification suggests packaged items are available. If you're heading to accommodation without nearby shops, this is a convenient last-chance pickup point.
- Confirm current opening hours locally. No hours were available in the research data for this article. Port-area cafes on Greek islands often align their hours with ferry timetables rather than fixed clock times, so hours may shift seasonally.
- Have cash and card options ready. While card payment is widely accepted in Mykonos, port-area businesses can have connectivity issues during busy arrival periods when networks are strained.
- Don't expect Mykonos Town atmosphere here. Tourlos is a working port. If you want the whitewashed-lane, bougainvillea cafe experience, take a taxi into Chora after you've sorted your luggage.
- The phone number listed in some directories is unverified. Contact details for this location should be confirmed via the Cantina Mykonos website or Google Maps listing before relying on them for reservations or queries.
- Ferry schedules shift seasonally. Services to and from Piraeus, Rafina, and neighbouring Cycladic islands run more frequently in summer. The Blue Star Ferries and SeaJets schedules published at their respective websites give reliable timetable information.
Practical Information
Port Cafe operates as part of the Cantina Mykonos operation, with its official web presence at cantinamykonos.com. The address is Tourlos 846 00, Mykonos, Greece. The Google Maps coordinates place it at approximately 37.4465°N, 25.3705°E, which positions it at the New Port waterfront.
The cafe holds a Google rating of 4.3 out of 5 from 72 reviews at time of research, indicating consistent quality relative to its category and location. Place type classifications include coffee shop, cafe, and food store.
No verified phone number or email address was available in the research data. For current hours, menu updates, or contact, cantinamykonos.com is the recommended starting point. Opening hours were not confirmed and may align with ferry timetable patterns rather than fixed daily schedules.
The Facebook link associated with the listing (facebook.com/boldthemes) appears to belong to a web theme developer rather than the business itself, and should not be used as a contact or information source for the cafe.
Location
Loading map…
