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Rhodes International Airport “Diagoras” (RHO) — Airport Guide 2026

Schengen; EES live since · EUR

Rhodes International Airport “Diagoras” (RHO) — Airport Guide 2026

Rhodes is Greece’s fourth-busiest airport, and almost everyone passing through it is on holiday — over 7 million passengers in 2025, the overwhelming majority arriving in the April-to-October season for the island, not connecting onward. That shapes the whole experience: this is an arrival airport for Rhodes and the Dodecanese, run hot in summer and quiet in winter. The change that actually matters for 2026 is the border — the EU’s Entry/Exit System is now live, and at a seven-million-passenger summer airport with a huge British market, that’s the queue to plan around. This guide keeps to the operational side: the terminal, the border, the transfer to town and the resorts, and the lounges.

Quick Reference

Airport
Rhodes International Airport “Diagoras”
Codes
RHO / LGRP
Island
Rhodes, Dodecanese, Greece
2025 passengers
7+ million — Greece’s 4th-busiest; operated by Fraport Greece
Season
Overwhelmingly summer (April–October); quiet in winter
Distance to Rhodes Town
About 16 km (≈25 min by road)
Rail
None — no rail anywhere on Rhodes
Best transport
KTEL bus (~€6) or fixed-fare taxi (~€25 day)
Lounges
Goldair Handling Lounge + The Lounge Rhodes (both Priority Pass, peak-season)
Dominant carriers
Ryanair, easyJet, Jet2 (seasonal); Aegean & Sky Express (Athens)
Currency
Euro (EUR)
Border
Schengen; EES live since 10 Apr 2026; ETIAS expected Q4 2026

🛫 1. What to know: a summer airport, now with EES

Diagoras is a leisure airport that lives and dies by the season. In July and August it handles a relentless churn of charter and low-cost arrivals from the UK, Germany and Scandinavia; in January it shrinks back to a handful of domestic flights to Athens. Fraport Greece, which runs it under the 14-airport regional concession, has been making incremental upgrades — self-service kiosks, clearer wayfinding, apron work — rather than building a dramatic new terminal, so the airport you land at is the same compact one, just smoother at the edges.

The seasonal swing is the defining fact of using Diagoras. A summer Saturday brings back-to-back charter banks and an arrivals hall shoulder-to-shoulder; a winter weekday is near-empty. Anything you read about the airport being calm or chaotic depends entirely on when the writer went, so plan for the crush if you’re travelling in the July–August peak and expect a quiet, pared-back airport off-season.

🛂 EES is the 2026 change to plan for

The genuinely new thing this year is at passport control. The EU’s Entry/Exit System went fully live across the Schengen external border on 10 April 2026, and Rhodes is a frontline case because so many of its visitors are now third-country nationals — every UK passport is, post-Brexit.

Build in time at arrivals, especially on a summer evening when several wide-body charters land together. Non-EU visitors are now registered biometrically (facial image and fingerprints) on first entry instead of getting a passport stamp, and a small airport processing a peak-season wave of first-time EES registrations is exactly where the queue forms.

🛂 2. The border: Schengen, euro, and the EES detail

Greece is a long-standing Schengen and eurozone member, so the rules are the standard Schengen ones. EU, EEA and Swiss nationals breeze through on an ID check. Everyone else — including UK, US, Canadian and Australian visitors — uses the 90-days-in-any-180 visa-free allowance for tourism, and now goes through EES.

🇬🇧 What EES means for UK and other non-EU arrivals

On your first entry since EES went live you register biometrically; subsequent entries are quicker. There is no separate fee for EES, and you still don’t need a visa for a holiday. The practical effect is purely the time it adds at the desk on arrival.

🗓️ ETIAS — still coming, not yet required

ETIAS, the pre-travel authorisation visa-exempt visitors will eventually need, is expected to launch in the final quarter of 2026 with a grace period afterward. As of mid-2026 it is not required and you cannot yet apply, so ignore any site charging you for a Greece “travel authorisation” this summer — that’s a scam. Verify the official timeline before you travel.

In practice, the EES registration is the only border step most holidaymakers will notice. There’s no exit check leaving Greece, and a connection through Athens onward into the Schengen area skips passport control entirely. The bottleneck is arrivals on a non-EU inbound flight, not departures, so the planning all goes into the day you land.

🚌 3. Getting to Rhodes Town and the resorts

The airport sits on the island’s west coast, about 16 km south of Rhodes Town, roughly a 25-minute drive. You’re arriving for a holiday base, so the real question is the transfer to your hotel, not a connection.

🚌 KTEL bus
the cheap option to Rhodes Town: roughly €6 one way (sources vary, so confirm at the kiosk), running about 05:30–22:30, every 30 minutes or so and more often at summer peak. The stop is on the main road by the terminal; pay the driver or the kiosk.
🚕 Taxi
a regulated fixed fare to Rhodes Town, about €25 by day and €35 overnight, roughly 25 minutes. In peak summer expect the real figure nearer €30–40, and agree it before setting off.
🚐 Pre-booked transfer
the simplest door-to-door option for the resort strips; book ahead, especially for a late arrival.
🚗 Car hire
worthwhile if you’re touring the island or staying somewhere rural; desks are at the airport, and the west-coast road runs straight to town.

If your hotel is at Faliraki, Kallithea or — especially — Lindos down the east coast, you are not staying near the airport, and the taxi fare climbs steeply with distance (Lindos is about 50 km away). Don’t accept a vague “meter” quote for a long resort transfer at midnight; agree a price or pre-book, because the long-haul resort run is where the airport-taxi overcharging happens.

There is no rail on Rhodes, so the bus, a taxi, a transfer or a hire car are the only ways out of the airport. The KTEL bus serves Rhodes Town well but is not a door-to-door resort service; for the east-coast resorts, a transfer or car is the realistic call.

Time the KTEL bus against your flight rather than assuming one will be waiting — it runs to a timetable, not to arrivals, and the last departure is mid-evening. After a late-night landing, or travelling as a group with luggage, the taxi or a pre-booked transfer is the sane choice; the bus is at its best for a daytime arrival travelling light into Rhodes Town.

🛋️ 4. Lounges

For a seasonal island airport, Rhodes is reasonably covered — two contract lounges, both on Priority Pass.

🛋️ Goldair Handling Lounge
on the 2nd floor with sea views, open to pay-in guests and to Priority Pass and DragonPass members, serving both Schengen and non-Schengen departures. It’s a peak-season operation, typically running through to late October.
🎫 The Lounge Rhodes
the second Priority Pass option at the airport, useful as a fallback when the Goldair lounge is full or closed.

Both are seasonal, so out of the summer window don’t count on a lounge being open — check before you rely on it. Neither is an airline flagship lounge; they’re comfortable pay-in or card-access spaces, not a reason in themselves to arrive early.

Outside summer, assume neither lounge is open and the airside catering is minimal — on a winter Athens-only schedule the airport is bare-bones. In peak summer the opposite problem applies: airside seating fills as the gates’ waves build, so if you don’t have lounge access, grab a seat and a coffee early rather than circling for somewhere to sit later.

🍽️ 5. Food and what to carry home

Don’t plan a meal airside — it’s the usual summer-airport café fare, and busy. Eat properly in Rhodes Town instead, and skip the obvious tourist tavernas along the main drag of the medieval old town in favour of the quieter backstreets and the New Town where locals actually eat. The honest carry-home from Rhodes is the simple Greek stuff that travels: Dodecanese honey, local olive oil, and a bottle of ouzo or the island’s stronger souma. Buy liquids airside after security if you’re flying cabin-only.

🏝️ 6. Rhodes itself — keep it brief here

You’re arriving for the island, and Rhodes has the goods: the walled medieval Old Town of Rhodes (a UNESCO site and one of the best-preserved in Europe), the acropolis village of Lindos down the east coast, and a long run of beaches and resorts. This guide stays on the airport; for what to actually do, where to base yourself and how to plan the island, see the full Rhodes island guide linked below rather than a rushed version here.

❓ Frequently asked questions

How do I get from Rhodes Airport to Rhodes Town? +
By KTEL bus (roughly €6, about 25–40 minutes, every 30 minutes or so, more often at peak) or a fixed-fare taxi (about €25 by day, €35 overnight, around 25 minutes). There is no rail. For east-coast resorts like Lindos, use a pre-booked transfer or hire car.
Is there a train at Rhodes Airport? +
No. There is no railway anywhere on Rhodes. Your options are the KTEL bus, a taxi, a pre-booked transfer, or a rental car.
Do I need a visa or ETIAS for Rhodes in 2026? +
Greece is in the Schengen Area. EU/EEA/Swiss travellers need only an ID or passport; UK, US, Canadian, Australian and other visa-exempt visitors can stay 90 days in any 180 without a visa. ETIAS is not yet required — it’s expected in late 2026 with a grace period — so you cannot apply yet and don’t need it this summer. Ignore any site charging for a Greece travel authorisation now.
What is EES and will it slow me down at Rhodes? +
The Entry/Exit System went live across the Schengen border on 10 April 2026. Non-EU visitors (including UK passport holders) are now registered biometrically on first entry rather than getting a stamp. It can add time at passport control, particularly on busy summer evenings when several charter flights land together, so allow a buffer.
What currency is used on Rhodes? +
The euro. Cards are widely accepted; carry some cash for the bus, small tavernas and kiosks.
Which airlines fly to Rhodes? +
Ryanair, easyJet and Jet2 operate most of the seasonal traffic, with UK routes typically running April to November. Aegean and Sky Express fly the year-round domestic links to Athens; summer brings charters and low-cost flights from across the UK, Germany and Scandinavia.
Is Rhodes Airport open in winter? +
It operates year-round but on a much-reduced winter schedule, mostly the Athens domestic links. The international and charter network is a summer operation, broadly April to October.
Is there a lounge at Rhodes Airport? +
Yes — the Goldair Handling Lounge (2nd floor, sea views) and The Lounge Rhodes, both accepting Priority Pass and pay-in guests. Both are peak-season operations, so check opening outside summer.
How far is the airport from Rhodes Town, and from Lindos? +
Rhodes Town is about 16 km (25 minutes by road). Lindos is far further, roughly 50 km down the east coast, so budget a longer, pricier transfer if that’s your base.
How early should I arrive for my flight at RHO? +
In peak summer, allow a solid two hours for a departure — the airport runs at capacity in July and August, and security and check-in queues build. Off-season it’s quick.
Can I rely on the KTEL bus to my resort? +
Only for Rhodes Town and points the public network serves. The KTEL bus is not a door-to-door resort shuttle; for Faliraki, Kallithea or Lindos, a transfer or hire car is the realistic option.
Is Rhodes worth visiting beyond the beaches? +
Yes — the medieval Old Town is a genuine highlight and Lindos is worth the trip. For the full picture of where to go and stay, see the Rhodes island guide; this page is the airport logistics.

📊 Rhodes Airport (RHO) at a glance — 2026

Item Detail
Codes RHO / LGRP
2025 passengers 7+ million (Greece’s 4th-busiest)
Operator Fraport Greece
Season Summer-dominated (April–October)
Distance to Rhodes Town ~16 km (≈25 min)
KTEL bus ~€6 one way, ~05:30–22:30
Taxi Fixed ~€25 day / ~€35 night to Rhodes Town
Lindos ~50 km — longer, pricier transfer
Rail None
Lounges Goldair Handling + The Lounge Rhodes (Priority Pass, seasonal)
Dominant carriers Ryanair, easyJet, Jet2; Aegean & Sky Express (Athens)
Currency Euro (EUR)
EES Live since 10 April 2026
ETIAS Expected Q4 2026 (not yet required)

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