Cape Greco & Fig Tree Bay by Hire Car
Cape Greco National Forest Park sits just 8 km south of Protaras — a protected limestone headland where turquoise sea caves meet open-water boat trips to a boat-only Blue Lagoon.
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Getting to Cape Greco by Hire Car
Cape Greco (also called Cavo Greco) is about 8 km south of Protaras — a ten-minute drive along well-signed roads. The Protaras car hire home page covers what to expect when collecting your car, but the drive to Cape Greco itself is one of the most straightforward excursions from the resort. The main asphalt spine through the national park is suitable for any standard hire car, and free 24/7 access means no entry kiosk or queues at the gate.
There are no shops or refreshments inside the 385-hectare protected park, so fill a water bottle before you leave. In July and August the designated car parks — including the popular roadside Blue Lagoon lot — fill completely by around 10:00. Arriving before 09:00 or after 16:00–17:00 avoids the worst of it; the late-afternoon slot has the bonus of golden light on the sea caves.
The park is free and open around the clock. There is no staffed entry point, no charge to park on the main road, and no facilities inside — bring water, sunscreen and any food you need.
Where Your Hire Car Can and Cannot Go
This is the single most important thing to understand before driving into Cape Greco. The driving in Cyprus guide explains the general rules of the road, but Cape Greco adds a specific hire-car trap: the tracks leading down to the Sea Caves and the Cyclops Cave are unsurfaced, rutted limestone. Taking a standard hire car down them almost certainly breaches your hire agreement and voids your CDW — and CDW already excludes tyres, undercarriage damage and glass, so you would be personally liable for repairs.
What you can drive on
- The main asphalt spine road through the park — suitable for any hire car.
- The approximately 1.2 km extension to the visitor centre and the roadside Blue Lagoon parking area.
- The surfaced approach road to Agioi Anargyroi chapel, which has a proper tarmac car park.
- All standard resort roads in and around Protaras and Konnos Bay.
What you must walk
- The tracks to the Sea Caves — park at the nearest tarmac point and walk 10–15 minutes on foot.
- The approach to the Cyclops Cave — same rule applies.
- The viewpoint for Kamara tou Koraka ('Love Bridge') rock arch — the dirt parking area is accessible but the arch itself is fenced off due to collapse risk; walking on it is forbidden.
If you are keen to explore the rougher tracks, ask your hire company explicitly about off-road cover before you collect the car. Most standard policies do not include it.
The Two Blue Lagoons — and Why One Needs a Boat
There is genuine confusion around Cape Greco because two completely different places share the name 'Blue Lagoon'. Knowing the difference saves time and avoids disappointment.
| Blue Lagoon | How to reach it | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Roadside Blue Lagoon (near visitor centre) | Drive on asphalt, park in the dedicated lot | Free to swim |
| Sheltered turquoise bay (boat-only) | Shared boat trip from Ayia Napa harbour or Protaras pier | ~€20–30 per person; premium cruises ~€50–60 |
The boat-only Blue Lagoon is the famous sheltered turquoise bay that appears in most travel photographs of the cape. There is no road to it whatsoever. Shared boat trips are the only realistic way to visit, departing from Ayia Napa harbour or the Protaras pier. If you have driven to the Protaras to Famagusta and Ayia Napa stretch before, you will know how straightforward the coastal road is — Ayia Napa harbour is roughly 15 minutes west of Protaras.
The roadside Blue Lagoon, by contrast, is accessible entirely by hire car and is a perfectly good swimming spot in its own right — clear water, no crowds if you arrive early, and no boat ticket required.
Fig Tree Bay, Konnos Bay and the Smaller Coves
Fig Tree Bay sits within Protaras itself — a five-minute drive or a 15-minute walk from the main strip. It is a 500-metre Blue Flag beach with gently sloping sand, good for young children, and lifeguard cover from 10:00 to 18:00 between May and October. Sunbeds hire for roughly €5–7 a day at peak season.
Parking at Fig Tree Bay
The main municipal car park holds around 300 vehicles but fills by 10:00 in peak season. Parking is free early in the morning, then a small daily charge of around €1.50 applies from 09:00. Overflow parking on the approach roads pushes the walk to the beach out to about ten minutes. August is the busiest month — the Protaras strip itself becomes congested as pedestrians spill onto the road, so using the dedicated beach car parks rather than trying to park on the strip is the better approach.
Konnos Bay
About ten minutes south of Fig Tree Bay, Konnos Bay has a free cliff-top car park reached by a steep descent with hairpin bends. The car park is small and fills quickly, but turnover tends to be faster than at Fig Tree Bay. The road down is manageable in a standard hire car if you take it steadily.
Other coves worth knowing
- Green Bay — good snorkelling and diving, with a submerged sculpture park; limited street parking.
- Sirena Bay — shaded cove, steep and narrow approach lanes, very limited parking.
- Loumbardi — a quieter alternative along the Pernera stretch.
- Protaras Ocean Aquarium (Cavo Greco Avenue) — its own free car park; adult entry around €15 if you want a break from the beach.
If you are still working out which hire car size makes sense for your group, compare car hire deals before you book — a smaller car handles the narrow lanes around Sirena Bay and the hairpins at Konnos far more comfortably than a large SUV.
Practical Tips for a Day at the Cape
A full day covering Cape Greco, a boat trip to the boat-only Blue Lagoon and an evening at Fig Tree Bay is genuinely achievable by hire car. The road from Larnaca Airport to Protaras takes around 45 minutes — the Larnaca Airport to Protaras transfer guide explains the route if this is your first time on the island. Once at the resort, the circular loop from Protaras to Cape Greco and back via Konnos Bay covers roughly 25 km on good roads.
| Stop | Drive from Protaras | Key tip |
|---|---|---|
| Fig Tree Bay | 5 min (or 15-min walk) | Arrive before 09:30 for a free parking space |
| Cape Greco visitor centre | 10 min / 8 km | Asphalt all the way; no facilities inside |
| Agioi Anargyroi chapel | 12 min | Can be busy mid-morning with ATV tours |
| Roadside Blue Lagoon lot | 12 min | Park here, walk to sea caves (10–15 min on foot) |
| Konnos Bay | 10 min south | Steep hairpin descent; go slowly |
Fuel and insurance reminders
- Fill up on the main Protaras strip before heading into the park — there are no petrol stations inside Cape Greco.
- Check your excess figure before you go: even with CDW, most policies carry a €500–1,500 excess. A full excess waiver from the hire desk or a third-party insurer reduces that to zero.
- Off-road tracks void CDW entirely — stick to the tarmac and walk the unsurfaced sections.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I drive my hire car all the way to the Sea Caves?
Is there a charge to enter Cape Greco National Forest Park?
How do I reach the famous turquoise Blue Lagoon?
What time should I arrive at Fig Tree Bay to get a parking space?
Is it worth hiring a car just for a day trip to Cape Greco from Protaras?
Can I walk on the Love Bridge rock arch at Kamara tou Koraka?
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