Skip to content
5,947 deals tracked live · Updated every 6h · 100% free, no commissions — Get free alerts ✈
✈️ No Commissions — Honest Flight Deals Every Day

Samos Airport (SMI) — Airport Guide 2026

Samos · North Aegean, Greece · €

Samos Airport (SMI) — Airport Guide 2026

Quick Reference

Airport
Samos “Aristarchos of Samos” International Airport
Codes
SMI / LGSM
City
Samos, North Aegean, Greece
Location
~3 km from Pythagoreio; ~14 km from Vathy (Samos Town)
Terminal
One small terminal (Fraport Greece)
Traffic
A small, summer-led airport; 2025 eased a couple of per cent year-on-year, against a growing network
Country & border
Greece — Schengen, euro; EES live since April 2026, ETIAS expected Q4 2026
Currency
Euro (€)
To Pythagoreio
Taxi ~€10 (~5–7 min); sparse KTEL bus. To Vathy: taxi ~€30
Lounge
None — café and duty-free only
Busiest carriers
Jet2, TUI, easyJet (seasonal); Sky Express (Athens)

🛫 1. What Samos Airport is

Samos is a small, seasonal airport for one of the greener and less-trodden islands of the eastern Aegean, close enough to Turkey that you can see it across the water. It runs on summer leisure flying, and it had a quieter-than-usual 2025 — while most of Greece’s regional airports grew, Samos was one of the few to soften, with traffic dipping a couple of per cent on the year. Nothing dramatic, no recent terminal or carrier upheaval; the story here is the island, not the building.

You land three kilometres from one of antiquity’s great feats of engineering. At Pythagoreio, the Tunnel of Eupalinos — a kilometre-long aqueduct cut clean through a mountain around 550 BC, dug from both ends at once and meeting near-perfectly in the middle — is open to walk, part of a UNESCO site most package visitors never leave the beach for. The airport is even named for Aristarchus, the Samian who worked out the Earth goes round the Sun some 1,800 years before Copernicus.

For a passenger, the practical points are quick: a small terminal, a border that is pure Schengen, and a transfer that depends more on a taxi than a timetable. The reason to come is across the road.

🛬 2. The terminal and the lounge

One small terminal on two floors, with the check-in desks and security upstairs in the departures area. It’s modest and quick to cross, and the single security line is the only real queue — which means it bites when two summer charters leave together, so allow two hours for a peak departure. Walks are short and there’s nothing to connect to.

On lounges, keep expectations low: there’s a café and a duty-free shop, and no reliably confirmable walk-in or Priority Pass lounge. Plan on the café, and verify on the airport’s own site if lounge access matters to you, because at a terminal this size it may simply not exist.

✈️ 3. Carriers, and the seasonal reality

This is a UK-and-northern-European summer airport. Jet2 is the anchor, flying from Birmingham, London Stansted and Manchester, with TUI, easyJet and German and Dutch operators adding seasonal routes, and a summer inter-island hop or two within the Aegean. Year-round, the airport leans on the domestic flight to Athens, flown by Sky Express and the Aegean group.

The pattern is the usual island one. In summer you can fly direct from a fair range of European cities; in winter the international map mostly closes and you connect through Athens. There’s no long-haul and nothing to change onto — every trip is point-to-point or a hop via the mainland. As ever with a school-holiday market, fares spike in July and August and the calmer, cheaper weeks sit in the shoulders of late spring and September.

The market is more international than the average UK-package island, too: Germans and Dutch are major sources of traffic here, drawn as much by the green, hiking-friendly interior as by the beach. For a deal-hunter that’s useful, because the cheapest seats can come out of a German or Dutch departure point as readily as a British one — worth a look if you’re flexible about where you start.

🛂 4. The border: Greece, Schengen, the euro

Greece is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro. EU/EEA and Swiss nationals pass straight through; UK, US, Canadian, Australian and many other passport-holders enter visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period.

A 2026 note: Greece’s EES biometric registration has been live since April 2026, applying to arrivals from outside Schengen — chiefly the UK here. One Samos-specific wrinkle: Turkey is barely two kilometres across the strait, and the ferries from Pythagoreio and Vathy to Kuşadası make a real day-trip to Ephesus — but that is a separate crossing under Turkey’s own entry rules, not the EU’s, so check those before you sail.

ETIAS, the pre-travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors, is expected to follow in the last quarter of 2026, ahead of becoming mandatory in 2027 — worth checking before you book on a non-EU passport. Prices are in euros, there’s an ATM in the terminal, and cards work nearly everywhere, but carry some cash for taxis and the village tavernas.

🚌 5. Getting to Pythagoreio and Vathy

The airport sits on the island’s southeast corner, about 3 km from Pythagoreio and 14 km from the capital, Vathy (Samos Town). Both are reachable by bus or taxi, but the bus is the catch.

There is an airport bus, but don’t count on it. KTEL runs services to Pythagoreio (about every three hours) and Vathy (about every four), timed to the main flights and only Monday to Saturday — so unless your arrival lines up, a taxi is the realistic choice: roughly €10 to Pythagoreio next door, €30 to Vathy. Off-season or on a Sunday, the bus may not run at all.

Pythagoreio is the obvious base if you want the ancient sites and a working harbour on your doorstep; Vathy is the bigger town with the ferries and the main shops. The north-coast resorts like Kokkari and the western town of Karlovasi are further out over mountain roads, where the bus thins and a hire car starts to make sense. Nobody connects through Samos, so the only planning that matters is the transfer at each end — and on the way out, leaving enough margin for a taxi if the bus times don’t suit.

On a hire car, Samos rewards one more than most. The two main towns are bus-and-taxi territory, but the best of the island — the hill villages, the north-coast coves, the long mountain road west to Karlovasi — sits well beyond the bus network, and a small car turns a beach week into an island one. The desks are in the terminal; pick one up if you mean to get past the resort strip.

🏛️ 6. The reason this airport is interesting: ancient engineering, next door

Most people fly to Samos for the green hills, the quiet coves and the wine, and never look past the beach — which is their loss, because the island has a deeper claim. Pythagoreio, the ancient capital a few minutes from the runway, holds the Tunnel of Eupalinos: built around 550 BC to carry water through a mountain, dug simultaneously from two ends and meeting within a fraction of a degree, it supplied the town for over a thousand years and is one of the earliest large-scale tunnels anyone built. It sits within the UNESCO-listed Pythagoreion and Heraion of Samos, alongside the remains of the great temple of Hera. This is the island of Pythagoras, after all, and of the airport’s own Aristarchus.

The thing worth carrying home is the wine. Samos has made sweet Muscat since antiquity, and the island cooperative’s Vin Doux and Nectar are the genuine article — a few euros at a village shop, and a world away from the supermarket version. Buy it in town rather than off the departure-gate shelf.

The geography is part of the draw, too. From the island’s southeast — the airport’s own corner — Turkey is a clear line of hills across a narrow strait, close enough that the Kuşadası ferry takes barely more than an hour. Samos is greener and more mountainous than the bare Cyclades, with pine, vineyards and walking trails inland; if your picture of a Greek island is whitewashed cubes on a treeless rock, this is the other kind.

A frank word on the rest: Pythagoreio’s harbourfront is touristy and priced accordingly, so eat a street back; the green interior and the north coast around Kokkari reward a drive far more than the package strips do; and there’s no aifly guide to Samos yet, so take this as orientation, not a tour.

❓ 7. FAQ

How do I get from Samos airport to Pythagoreio? +
It’s only about 3 km. A taxi is roughly €10 (a little more at night) and takes five to seven minutes; a KTEL bus runs roughly every three hours, Monday to Saturday, timed to the main flights.
How do I get to Vathy, the capital, from the airport? +
Vathy (Samos Town) is about 14 km away. A taxi is around €30 (more at night), about 25 minutes; the KTEL bus runs roughly every four hours, Monday to Saturday.
Is there a bus from Samos airport? +
Yes, but it’s infrequent — KTEL buses to Pythagoreio and Vathy are flight-timed and run Monday to Saturday, often not at all on Sundays or out of season. A taxi is the reliable option if your timing doesn’t line up.
Which airlines fly to Samos? +
Jet2 (Birmingham, London Stansted, Manchester), TUI, easyJet and German and Dutch carriers fly seasonal routes, mostly in summer, alongside year-round domestic flights to Athens on Sky Express and the Aegean group.
Do I need a visa, and does EES apply at Samos? +
Greece is in Schengen; EU, UK, US and many other nationals enter visa-free for 90 days in any 180. Arrivals from outside Schengen (chiefly the UK) go through the EU’s EES biometric system, live since April 2026; ETIAS is expected in Q4 2026. Schengen and domestic arrivals skip passport control.
Can I day-trip to Turkey or Ephesus from Samos? +
Yes. Ferries from Pythagoreio and Vathy cross to Kuşadası on the Turkish coast, the gateway to Ephesus. It is a full border crossing into Turkey, with Turkey’s own entry rules, so check them and carry your passport.
Is there a lounge at Samos airport? +
No. The terminal has a café and a duty-free shop, with no reliably confirmable lounge or Priority Pass access. Plan on the café.
Is Samos airport open in winter? +
Barely, for visitors — the international routes are summer-only. Out of season the airport is mostly the Athens domestic link, so you’ll connect through the mainland.
What currency is used, and can I pay by card? +
The euro. Cards are accepted nearly everywhere, but carry some cash for taxis, the bus and smaller village tavernas.
What’s worth seeing near the airport? +
Pythagoreio, about 3 km away, has the Tunnel of Eupalinos and the UNESCO-listed ancient harbour, with the Heraion temple a short drive further. It’s the rare beach island with a serious archaeological draw on its doorstep.

📋 8. At a glance

Item Detail
Airport Samos (SMI / LGSM), southeast corner of the island
Terminal Single small terminal; arrive 2h in summer peak
To Pythagoreio ~3 km; taxi ~€10 (~5–7 min); sparse KTEL bus (~every 3h, Mon–Sat)
To Vathy ~14 km; taxi ~€30 (~25 min); KTEL bus ~every 4h, Mon–Sat
Bus caveat Flight-timed, no Sundays / thin off-season — taxi is the fallback
Border Greece; Schengen; euro; EES live since April 2026; ETIAS expected Q4 2026
Currency Euro (€); cash useful for taxis and villages
Lounge None (café and duty-free only)
Carriers Jet2, TUI, easyJet (summer); Sky Express to Athens (year-round)
Near the airport Tunnel of Eupalinos & UNESCO Pythagoreion (~3 km); Turkey/Ephesus by ferry
Carry home Samos sweet Muscat wine, from a village shop not the airport

🔗 9. Explore More

Posted 1h ago

More deals you might like

Loading route… Book Now →
Find your deal