Sitia – Kasos
Ferries to Dodecanese Islands
Sitia – Kasos
Ferries to Dodecanese Islands
Blue Star Ferries provides the ferry from Sitia to Kasos. Sitia Kasos ferries cost around $37 and $160, depending on ticket details. Prices exclude any service fees. Ferry schedules change seasonally, use our Deal Finder to get the latest ferry ticket information for Sitia Kasos ferries.
Sitia Kasos ferry sailings typycally depart from Sitia at around 07:00. The last ferry leaves at 23:15.
The Sitia Kasos ferry trip can take around 2 hours 5 minutes. The fastest Sitia to Kasos ferry is around 2 hours. Crossing times can vary between ferry operator and seasons.
There are around 2 weekly sailings from Sitia to Kasos serviced by Blue Star Ferries. Timetables can vary by season and operator.
Sitia Kasos ferry prices typically range between $37* and $160*. The average price is typically $42*. The cheapest ferries from Sitia to Kasos start from $37*. The average price for a foot passenger is $38*. The average price for a car is $160*.
Ferry price can vary based on booking factors such as number of passengers, vehicle type sailing times. Pricing is taken from searches over last 30 days and exclusive of service fees, last updated March 25.
The distance between Sitia to Kasos is approximately 57 miles (92km) or 50 nautical miles.
Yes, Blue Star Ferries allow cars on board ferries between Sitia and Kasos. Use our Deal Finder to get live pricing for car ferries between Sitia and Kasos.
Foot passengers can travel on the Sitia to Kasos ferry with Blue Star Ferries.
Pets currently are not allowed on ferries from Sitia to Kasos.
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The port town of Sita is located on the Greek island of Crete which lies in the Aegean Sea. On the island, Sita is to the east of Agios Nikolaos and to the north east of Lerapetra. The town is generally not much visited by tourists and is not particularly well developed and can trace its history back to Minoan times. Excavations have been unearthed in the neighbouring site of Petras which date back to the end of the Neolithic period, 3,000 BC through to the Bronze Age, 3,000 - 1,050 BC. In support of the Petras findings, excavations at other archaeological sites on the island, such as Itanos and Mochlos, have found artefacts from Minoan times. Petras has, over its history, also been under the control of the Venetians who used it as a base for their eastern Mediterranean operations. The site was destroyed by an earthquake in 1508, and again by pirates in 1538 and by the Venetians in 1651.
The port at Sitia connects Sitia and eastern Crete with several other Greek islands as well as with the port of Piraeus on the Greek mainland. The town also has a marina which accommodates smaller fishing boats and yachts.
The Greek island of Kasos is the most southerly of the Dodecanese group of islands and has a history that is closely associated with the nearby island of Crete. The island's first inhabitants are thought to have been the Phoenicians, while Homer included the island as one of the islands that participated in the Trojan War. The small island had a significant naval presence and used its fleet to take part in the Revolution in 1821 which unfortunately resulted in its complete destruction by the Turks in 1824.
The island's more recent history is linked to the rest of the islands in the Dodecanese until they were all unified with Greece in 1948. Many of island's residents, and those of Karpathos, emigrated to America and Egypt, where they worked on the construction of the Suez Canal in the middle of the 19th century.
Kasos can be reached by ferry from Piraeus, Crete (Siteia, Aghios Nikolaos), Rhodes, Halki and Karpathos.