Table of Contents
Most travel sites recommending Greece vacation packages have packages to sell.
We don't. We're 5 Greeks who plan dozens of Greek trips a year for visiting friends and family β and the honest truth is that packages are genuinely the right call about 30% of the time, and a 15β40% overpayment the other 70%.
Below is the 2026 comparison: the 12 best Greece package providers ranked by who they're actually for, real prices, what's included and what isn't, and an honest call from our team on which to use and when to skip the package entirely.
Whenever you decide to go, compare flight deals to Greece across airlines on Kiwi.com for the best available fares.

Find Your Package Type
The 12 Best Greece Vacation Package Providers in 2026
We've grouped these by who they're best for, not by who pays us best (none of them do β yet). Each verdict is from our team based on packages we've vetted, friends we've watched book them, and the customer-service horror stories we hear when something goes wrong.
1. Costco Travel β Best US Value Bundles
Costco Travel consistently offers the strongest flight + hotel bundles for US travelers heading to Greece. The buying power of Costco membership translates to real savings β typically 15β25% below booking the same components separately on Expedia or directly.
What's included: Round-trip flights, hotel (usually 4-star mainstream chains), some all-inclusive resorts, occasional car rental, occasional Athens-to-island combinations.
Typical cost: β¬1,800β3,200 per person for 7 days, including flights.
The catch: Limited customization. Mainstream hotels only β no Cycladic boutiques or character properties. Costco membership required. Island-hopping options minimal.
Our verdict: If you're a US traveler with a Costco membership doing a "fly into Athens, stay at a 4-star, fly home" trip β book it. If you want anything more interesting than that, skip.
2. TUI β Best UK/EU Package Operator
TUI is the default package operator for UK, German, Dutch, and Belgian travelers heading to Greece β and it's absent from most US-written package round-ups, which is why we're putting it here. TUI's scale in Greece is enormous: they charter their own flights, block-book hotel inventory on Crete, Rhodes, Kos, and Corfu, and offer all-inclusive packages that genuinely undercut what DIY can achieve in those specific resort markets.
What's included: Charter flight from UK/EU origin airport, all-inclusive resort hotel, transfers, sometimes excursions.
Typical cost: Β£600β1,400 per person for 7 days all-inclusive (off-peak to peak).
The catch: Charter flights mean fixed dates and limited origin airports. Hotels are mostly large all-inclusive resorts, not character properties. Not available to US travelers without a UK billing address.
Our verdict: If you're flying from the UK or Germany and want an all-inclusive week on Crete, Rhodes, Kos, or Corfu β TUI is almost certainly the cheapest legitimate option. Look at competitors Jet2 Holidays, loveholidays, and On The Beach for comparison.
3. Apple Vacations / Classic Vacations β Best US All-Inclusive
Apple Vacations specializes in beach resort packages for the US market. If you want an all-inclusive week in Crete or Rhodes without thinking, they deliver. The product is similar to TUI's but priced for North American travelers.
What's included: Charter or commercial flight, all-inclusive resort, transfers, sometimes kids-stay-free promotions.
Typical cost: $1,800β3,500 per person for 7 days all-inclusive.
The catch: Limited to resort destinations. Not for island-hopping. Fixed departure dates from select US gateways.
Our verdict: Strong choice for US families wanting all-inclusive Crete or Rhodes. Compare against Vacations by Marriott Bonvoy if you collect Marriott points.
4. Goway Travel β Best Tailor-Made
Goway is the major North American specialist in tailor-made Greece trips β 55 years in business, real local operations partners in Athens, premium customization. Where Costco gives you a bundle and Apple gives you a resort, Goway gives you a custom-built itinerary with hotels they actually vet.
What's included: Flights (optional), hotels (curated 4β5 star), private transfers, guides, ferry tickets, custom routing.
Typical cost: $4,000β8,000 per person for 10β14 days.
The catch: Premium pricing. Sales process is consultative (you'll talk to an agent, not click-book). Best for travelers who'd rather pay more than research.
Our verdict: If you have the budget and you want the trip handled end-to-end without the bespoke-luxury price tag of Abercrombie & Kent β Goway is the right tier. Strong choice for first-time visitors over 45.
5. Unforgettable Greece β Best Honeymoon & Luxury Specialist
This one is interesting because it's our closest competitor in market positioning: a UK-based agency specifically focused on Greece, with Greek heritage on the team. They sell what we don't β they actually book the trips. For travelers who want a Greek-specialist bespoke trip and have a meaningful budget, they're genuinely good at it.
What's included: Fully bespoke itineraries, 5-star hotels, private guides, transfers, ATOL bonded, 24/7 support.
Typical cost: Β£4,500β12,000 per person for 10β14 days.
The catch: UK booking only for the financial protection (ATOL). Honest premium pricing β no budget tier.
Our verdict: If you want the comfort of a Greek-expert team booking your luxury honeymoon and you're UK-based, this is the cleanest answer in this category. US travelers should look at Abercrombie & Kent or Black Tomato instead for similar quality.
6. Exoticca β Best Budget Tour Operator
Exoticca packages international flights, hotels, and curated tours into surprisingly low all-in prices β often β¬1,200β2,500 per person for 7β10-day Greece trips. The catch is real (see below) but for first-time international travelers who want a structured trip on a tight budget, they're an honest middle-ground between cheap-and-rough Group Travel and expensive-and-bespoke tailor-made.
What's included: International flights, hotels (typically 4-star chains), some transfers, optional excursions.
Typical cost: β¬1,200β2,800 per person for 7β10 days, flights included.
The catch: Itineraries are fixed and group-friendly. Hotels are functional, not characterful. Customer service has mixed reviews β read recent Trustpilot before booking.
Our verdict: Best for budget-conscious first-time visitors who want a structured trip and don't mind staying in mainstream hotels. Skip if you want Cycladic boutiques or independent exploration.
7. G Adventures / Intrepid Travel β Best for Solo & Young Travelers
G Adventures and Intrepid offer small-group tours through the Greek islands β ferries, accommodation, guides included. The right call for solo travelers under 40 who want social experiences and budget pricing.
What's included: 7β14 day island-hopping itineraries, sailing trips through the Cyclades, mainland + islands combinations, budget-to-mid-range accommodation, group leader, ground transport.
Typical cost: β¬1,500β2,500 for 8β10 days (flights not included).
The catch: Fixed itineraries, no flexibility. Budget accommodation (hostels or basic hotels). Group dynamics vary. Age-skewed (G Adventures: 18β39; Intrepid: 25β50).
Our verdict: The right answer if you're solo, under 40, and want to meet people without organizing the trip yourself. Their Sailing Greece (Mykonos to Santorini) and Greek Island Hopping tours are perennials for a reason.
8. Grand European Travel (Trafalgar / Insight) β Best for Older Coach Tours
Grand European operates the US-facing arm of Trafalgar and Insight Vacations β coach-based guided tours of Greece, popular with US retirees and AARP members. The product is structured, comprehensive, and unromantic.
What's included: Flights (sometimes), all hotels, all transport (mostly coach), most meals, guides, entrance fees, structured 7β17 day itineraries.
Typical cost: $3,500β7,500 per person for 10β14 days.
The catch: Pace can be exhausting. Hotel quality varies β often mid-tier chains. Coach-tour experience means lots of group time. AARP member discount available.
Our verdict: If you're 55+ and want a no-decisions-required Greece trip with all the major sites covered, this is the right product. Younger travelers will find it tedious.
9. Celestyal Cruises β Best Greek-Islands Cruise Line
Celestyal specializes in 3β7-day Greek-islands cruises β they're a Greek-owned line focused on this market, with itineraries that hit 4β6 islands in a week. Better local knowledge than Norwegian or Royal Caribbean for the Greek section.
What's included: Cruise cabin, all meals, some drinks, port stops at 4β6 islands, shore excursion options.
Typical cost: β¬600β1,800 per person for 3β7 days (cabin tier dependent).
The catch: Limited time at each island (4β8 hours). You see Santorini for a day, not for a week. Crowded when ships dock. Less authentic experience than land-based.
Our verdict: Right call if you want to sample the islands before committing to one β or if logistics fatigue is your bigger concern than depth. See our Greek Islands Cruise Guide for full cruise comparisons.
10. Norwegian / Royal Caribbean / MSC β Best for Multi-Country Cruises
If you want a Mediterranean cruise that includes Greek islands as one stop among many (Italy, Croatia, Turkey), the major lines do this better than Celestyal. Norwegian's Greek Isles itineraries are the most popular among US cruisers.
What's included: Cabin, meals, port stops in Greece + 2β4 other countries, on-board entertainment.
Typical cost: β¬1,500β4,500 per person for 7β10 days.
The catch: You'll get half a day in Athens, half a day in Mykonos, half a day in Santorini β not a Greek trip, a Mediterranean sampler with Greek stops.
Our verdict: Right product if you want multi-country Mediterranean in one trip. Wrong product if Greece is your primary destination.
11. Vacations by Marriott Bonvoy β Best for Points Collectors
If you're collecting Marriott Bonvoy points, their packaged flight + hotel deals can be worth it β particularly because you earn Bonvoy points on the booking and stay credits at participating Greek Marriott properties (mostly Athens and Crete).
What's included: Flight + Marriott hotel, occasional resort credit, point-earning structure.
Typical cost: $2,000β4,500 per person for 7 days, Bonvoy properties only.
The catch: Restricted to Marriott hotel inventory in Greece, which is concentrated in Athens, Crete, and a couple of Santorini properties. Doesn't fit Cycladic island-hopping.
Our verdict: Skip unless you're a loyal Bonvoy member with status to maintain.
12. Abercrombie & Kent / Butterfield & Robinson β Ultra-Premium
The bespoke luxury tier β handcrafted itineraries with the kind of access most travelers can't buy individually. Private yacht charters, after-hours museum access, top-tier hotels, dedicated trip directors.
What's included: Everything. Private guides, private transfers, top-end hotels (Amanzoe-tier), exclusive experiences.
Typical cost: β¬8,000β25,000 per person for 10β14 days.
The catch: Eye-watering pricing. Books out 6+ months ahead for peak season.
Our verdict: For travelers spending β¬15k+ per person on a trip, this is what that money buys. Below that price point, look at Unforgettable Greece or Goway for similar quality at less.
Greece Vacation Packages by Travel Style
Best All-Inclusive Greece Packages
All-inclusive packages genuinely save money for one specific traveler: families and couples who'd otherwise spend β¬150+ per day on resort food and drinks. Outside that profile, all-inclusive is overpriced.
Where they make sense: Crete (largest selection), Rhodes (best family infrastructure), Kos (value), Corfu (variety).
Where they don't: Santorini (no all-inclusive culture), Mykonos (you're there for the bars, not the buffet), the small Cyclades (no all-inclusive properties exist).
What to look for:
- Γ la carte restaurants alongside the buffet (buffet-only burns out by day 3)
- Premium drinks included, not "house only"
- Real beach access, not just a pool
- Quality kids' clubs (matters more than parents admit)
Typical cost: β¬1,500β3,500 per person for 7 days all-inclusive (UK/EU traveler), $1,800β3,800 (US traveler).
Our pick: TUI for UK/EU travelers, Apple Vacations or Costco Travel for US. For details on the all-inclusive market specifically, see our All-Inclusive Trip to Greece guide.
Best Family Greece Packages

Families benefit from packages more than any other traveler type β the logistics of traveling with kids make pre-arranged everything genuinely valuable.
What to look for:
- Kids' clubs and childcare (essential if you want any couple time)
- Family rooms or connecting rooms (not "we'll fit a rollaway")
- Pool access (mandatory)
- Beach access with shallow, calm water (rules out most Cycladic islands)
- All-inclusive meal plans (kids eat constantly)
Best islands for family packages: Naxos (best family beaches), Rhodes (best infrastructure), Crete (most variety), Corfu (best resorts).
Typical cost: β¬1,500β3,000 per person for a family of 4, 7 days all-inclusive.
Our pick: Jet2 Holidays or TUI for UK families, Apple Vacations for US families, Costco Travel for budget-conscious bundled flights + family resort. For broader family planning, see Best Greek Islands for Families.
Best Greece Honeymoon Packages
Honeymoon packages often include perks β room upgrades, champagne, private dining, couples' experiences β that justify the premium over booking yourself.
What to look for:
- Honeymoon recognition (upgrades, amenities)
- Private pool suites
- Romantic dining arrangements
- Couples' spa treatments
- Sunset experiences
Best destinations: Santorini (iconic), Folegandros (intimate), Milos (unique beaches), Hydra (sophisticated, no cars).
Typical cost: β¬3,000β8,000 per couple for 7β10 days (mid-luxury), β¬8,000+ for proper luxury.
Our pick: Unforgettable Greece for UK couples wanting Greek-team expertise, Goway or A&K for US couples. For honeymoon-specific Greek island picks, see our Best Greek Islands for Couples and our Best Hotels in Folegandros for the intimate-island route.
Best Greek Islands Island-Hopping Packages
Island-hopping packages handle the logistics that make DIY planning time-consuming β ferry bookings, accommodation timing, weather contingencies, and connections.
What to look for:
- Logical island routing (no backtracking)
- Sensible ferry times (avoid 6am departures)
- Variety of island types (don't visit three identical Cycladic islands)
- Some flexibility built in (weather happens)
Popular combinations:
- Mykonos β Paros β Santorini (Classic Cyclades)
- Naxos β Milos β Santorini (Beach-focused)
- Athens β Hydra β Spetses (Quick Saronic)
Typical cost: β¬2,000β4,000 per person for 10β14 days (excluding international flights).
Our pick: G Adventures or Intrepid for budget travelers under 40, Goway for tailor-made over-40 trips. Or skip the package and use our Best Way to See the Greek Islands guide to plan it yourself.
Best Luxury Greece Packages
Luxury packages cluster around two providers in Greece: tailor-made specialists (Unforgettable Greece, Goway, Black Tomato) and ultra-premium global operators (Abercrombie & Kent, Butterfield & Robinson, Scott Dunn).
What's included at this tier:
- 5-star hotels throughout (Aman, Mystique, Canaves, Amanzoe-tier)
- Private guides at major sites
- Private transfers including helicopter where it makes sense
- Yacht days
- Restaurant reservations and curated dining
- Dedicated 24/7 trip director
Typical cost: β¬8,000β25,000+ per person for 10β14 days.
Our pick: Unforgettable Greece for β¬5β10k per person trips, Abercrombie & Kent above that.
Best 7-Day Greece Packages
Seven days is the most popular Greece trip length. Here are the three most-booked 7-day structures:
Classic Athens + Santorini (most popular):
- 2 nights Athens, 5 nights Santorini
- Cost: β¬1,800β3,500 per person
- Best for: First-time visitors. The catch: Santorini in JulyβAugust is genuinely overwhelming.
Crete-only beach week:
- 7 nights all-inclusive resort in Chania or Heraklion
- Cost: β¬1,200β2,800 per person (often less for UK travelers via TUI/Jet2)
- Best for: Families wanting one base, beach focus.
Cyclades 3-island (Mykonos/Paros/Santorini):
- 2 nights each + Athens stopover
- Cost: β¬2,200β4,000 per person including ferries
- Best for: Travelers who want variety in a short trip. The catch: rushed pace, one day of ferry travel.
See our 7-Day Greece Itinerary for day-by-day planning.
Greece Vacation Packages by Destination
The 8 destinations below are the ones our readers actually search packages for. Each gets the package style we'd recommend.

Vacations to Elounda
Elounda (eastern Crete) is the highest-end Greek beach destination after Mykonos β home to Blue Palace, Elounda Beach Hotel, and Elounda Mare, all luxury resort properties with their own grounds and private beaches.
Best package type: All-inclusive luxury resort + flight. The luxury all-inclusive math works at Elounda because resort restaurants are genuinely good and resort wine programs are honest.
Best for: Couples and families wanting a luxury one-base week. Not for explorers β Elounda is a resort destination, not a touring base.
Typical cost: β¬2,500β5,000 per person for 7 days all-inclusive.
Vacation in Nafplio
Nafplio is the picturesque port town in the Peloponnese β Venetian fortress, neoclassical architecture, easy day-trips to Mycenae, Epidaurus, and Mystras. Underrated.
Best package type: Self-drive package with rental car + boutique hotel. Doesn't fit standard "package" definitions β better booked DIY.
Best for: Couples wanting authentic mainland Greece, history lovers, road-trip travelers.
Typical cost: β¬800β1,800 per person for 5 days DIY (β¬500 less than equivalent package).
Our verdict: Skip the package. Book direct via our Nafplio travel guide.
Vacation in Patmos
Patmos is the Dodecanese island where St. John wrote Revelation β a quiet, monastery-dominated island with serious religious tourism but a tiny package-market footprint.
Best package type: None of the major operators package Patmos directly. Use a Greek specialist (Sunvil, Goway, Unforgettable Greece) or DIY.
Best for: Religious travelers, quiet-island seekers, returning Greek-island visitors who've done the obvious choices.
Typical cost: β¬1,400β2,800 per person for 7 days DIY.

Vacation in Ikaria
Ikaria is the "Blue Zone" island β famous for longevity, wellness, and the most authentic Greek-island feel left in the Aegean. Not a package destination by design β Ikarians prefer it that way.
Best package type: Wellness retreat or specialist Greek operator. Generic packages don't exist here.
Best for: Wellness travelers, slow-travel believers, returning Greek-island visitors.
Typical cost: β¬1,200β2,500 per person for 7 days DIY.
Greek Hotels Lesbos Vacation
Lesbos (Mytilini) is the third-largest Greek island, in the northeast Aegean β known for ouzo, hot springs, bird-watching, and a stronger Turkish-Greek cultural mix than the Cyclades.
Best package type: Flight + hotel bundle, sometimes via TUI for European travelers. Limited package market.
Best for: Off-the-beaten-path travelers, foodies (ouzo + sardines), bird-watchers.
Typical cost: β¬1,000β2,200 per person for 7 days.
Sparta Vacation
Sparta itself is small and historical (less spectacular than Mycenae), but the surrounding Peloponnese β Mystras, Monemvasia, the Mani Peninsula β is some of mainland Greece's best.
Best package type: Self-drive Peloponnese road trip, not a "Sparta package." Goway or a Greek specialist can build this; generic package operators don't sell it.
Best for: History lovers, road-trippers, travelers doing 10+ days who want depth over breadth.
Typical cost: β¬1,500β3,000 per person for 7 days self-drive.
Crete, Rhodes, Santorini, Mykonos Packages
The four most-packaged Greek destinations. Quick guide to which provider fits which:
How Much Does a Greece Vacation Package Cost in 2026?
Honest 2026 pricing across the major package types.
All prices include international flights from US East Coast or UK; West Coast US travelers should add ~$300β500 per person.
Per-day equivalents: Budget β¬200β350/day; mid-range β¬350β600/day; tailor-made β¬500β900/day; luxury β¬1,000β2,000+/day.
The cheapest real week in Greece runs roughly β¬1,200 per person from the UK on a TUI all-inclusive deal in May or October. The same trip booked DIY from the US lands around $1,800β2,200. There is no legitimate package below those numbers β if you see one, check what's missing (usually it's the flight).
Package vs. DIY: The Honest Cost Comparison
We ran the numbers on three real trip scenarios:
What this tells you:
- DIY saves the most on island-hopping (40%+). Packages overprice ferry logistics dramatically.
- DIY saves the least on all-inclusive resorts (14%). Resort buying power is real β chains negotiate room rates you can't access.
- DIY saves a middling amount on standard hotel weeks (20β25%). The savings exist but you're paying with planning time.
Time is a cost too. Planning a 10-day island-hopping trip yourself takes 10β15 hours of research. At β¬50/hour that's β¬500β750 of "cost" not in the DIY column. For travelers who enjoy planning, this is fun. For travelers who don't, it's a tax on the savings.
When Packages Are Genuinely Worth It
After all of the above, here's our honest call on when a package beats DIY:
Book a package when:
- You're doing all-inclusive Crete, Rhodes, Kos, or Corfu as a family (the math actually works here)
- You're under 40, solo, and want group-tour social energy without organizing it (G Adventures, Intrepid)
- You're a first-time international traveler and the logistics genuinely intimidate you
- You're booking a honeymoon over β¬5k per person and want it handled (Unforgettable Greece, Goway, A&K)
- You want a Mediterranean cruise that includes Greece as one stop
- You're booking inside 60 days of departure and DIY availability is collapsing
- You found a genuine sale (TUI shoulder-season deals, Costco flash sales)
Skip the package when:
- You're doing island-hopping (the 40% DIY savings are real)
- You want boutique Cycladic hotels β packages can't book them
- You're honeymooning under β¬5k per person (DIY luxury is achievable here)
- You're booking 90+ days ahead with flexibility (best DIY prices)
- You enjoy travel planning (the planning is genuinely part of the trip)
- You want off-the-beaten-path destinations (Patmos, Ikaria, Lesvos, the Mani β packages don't really sell these)
Written by

Athens-born engineer Β· Coordinates a 5-expert Greek team Β· 50+ years combined field experience
I write every article on this site drawing on real, first-hand expertise β mine and that of four colleagues who live and work across Greece daily: a Peloponnese tour operator, a transfer specialist across Athens, Mykonos & Santorini, a Cretan hotel owner, and a Northern Greece hotel supplier. Nothing here comes from a single visit or desk research.
Informed by 5 Greek experts
Every destination we cover has been visited and vetted by at least one team member β not for a review, but as part of their daily work in Greek tourism.
