Perigiali Beach Kavala: Blue Flag, Thassos in View
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Perigiali Beach, Kavala: The Semi-Organised Blue Flag Beach at the East Exit of the City Where Thassos Is on the Horizon and Apostle Paul First Set Foot in Europe
Greece | Perigiali | Kavala, Macedonia–Thrace
The Apostle Paul first set foot in Europe at Kavala. The city was called Neapolis in 50 CE when Paul, Silas, and Luke arrived by ship from Samothrace on the way to Philippi. The event is recorded in Acts 16:11–12 and is considered one of the significant moments in the spread of Christianity into the Roman west. A church built in his honour stands in the old city above the harbour. A commemorative plaque marks the location of the first landing.
Kavala is also the birthplace of Mehmet Ali Pasha — the Albanian-born military commander who went from this Macedonian port city to become the founder of modern Egypt, the Khedive whose descendants ruled Egypt until 1952. His childhood home in Kavala is still standing: the Imaret — the Ottoman charitable complex he built in 1817 in gratitude to his birthplace — is now a hotel and one of the most architecturally remarkable Ottoman buildings in Greece. The connection between a small port city in eastern Macedonia and the Egyptian modern state runs through this man’s biography.
This is the city context for Perigiali Beach. The beach is at the east exit of Kavala, connected to Aspri Ammos beach and reachable by bus #11 from the city centre. At Perigiali you can enjoy the open horizon, as well as green spots offering natural shade. Just a few metres further down you will find fish tavernas next to the waves, where you can relax with an ouzo after your swim. The Blue Flag designation is consistent. The beach is semi-organised. Natural shade from oak trees makes a picturesque scenery and provides visitors a cool break from sunbathing.
Getting There: Bus #11 From Kavala City Centre, Car 5 Minutes East on the Old Kavala–Xanthi Road, Ample Parking
Located at the east exit of Kavala city, Perigiali is a Blue Flag beach with sandy golden beach and crystal clear water. Very easy to visit — just next to the old national road Kavala–Xanthi — you can also go there with public bus #11.
By car from Kavala city centre, drive east toward Xanthi on the old national road. The beach is on the right side approximately 5 minutes from the centre. Parking is available along the road and in the surrounding area.
Kavala itself is reached from Thessaloniki by the E90 motorway — approximately 1 hour 40 minutes east. The nearest airports are Kavala International Airport (Alexander the Great) at Chrysoupoli, 30 kilometres east of the city, and Thessaloniki Makedonia Airport, approximately 160 kilometres west. The Thassos ferry leaves from Kavala port, 35 minutes from the island, multiple daily sailings.
The Beach: Semi-Organised Blue Flag, Sandy, Oak Shade, Connected to Aspri Ammos, Thassos on the Horizon
Perigiali and Aspri Ammos beach are connected and located at the exit of Kavala. The two beaches form a single continuous shore at the east edge of the city — different names for sections of the same stretch. The sandy beach has oak trees providing natural shade throughout the day — the specific shade feature that distinguishes Perigiali from the more open beaches closer to the city centre.
The view from the beach faces north and northeast into the Gulf of Kavala. Thassos island is visible on the horizon — the silhouette of the island, covered in pine forest, is one of the clearest views of Thassos from the mainland coast. On clear days the specific geography of the island — the high central mountain mass of Ipsarion (1,205 metres) — is visible above the treeline.
Kalamitsa beach — the fully organised Blue Flag beach in the city — is the comparison: longer, more infrastructure, more commercial development. Perigiali is the quieter, semi-organised alternative at the other end of the city’s beach strip.
Kavala: Apostle Paul, Mehmet Ali, the Byzantine Aqueduct, the Philippi Connection
The Byzantine aqueduct known as Kamares of Kavala is the most impressive aqueduct in Macedonia — a multi-arched stone structure visible from the old harbour, built in the 16th century during the Ottoman period on the foundations of an earlier Roman construction. The old city (Panagia) on the promontory above the harbour is the neighbourhood within the old walls where the Imaret stands, where Mehmet Ali’s house is preserved as a museum, and where the medieval walls still define the skyline.
Philippi — the ancient city where Paul preached his first European sermon and where the Philippians letter was addressed — is 17 kilometres from Kavala. The Philippi Archaeological Site is one of the most significant early Christian sites in Europe and one of the most important Hellenistic and Roman cities in northern Greece. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2016. The combination of Kavala city (Paul’s landing point, Neapolis) and Philippi (Paul’s first European sermon) is the specific Pauline heritage circuit. Perigiali beach and the Philippi site are reachable in the same day from a Kavala base.
Thassos: The Island on the Horizon, 35 Minutes by Ferry From Kavala Port
Thassos is one of the most beautiful islands in northern Greece — lush pine forests, marble beaches, clear water, and the specific northern Aegean character that is cooler and greener than the southern island chain. Thassos offers a classic Greek island atmosphere with lush landscapes and a wider array of beaches, some quite famous like Marble Beach. The island is worth more than a day trip from Kavala but is commonly done as one — the ferry schedule allows departure in the morning and return in the evening.
The day trip programme from a Kavala base: Perigiali morning swim, ferry to Thassos for the afternoon, return to Kavala for dinner on the old harbour.
The Kavala Beach Sequence: Six Beaches From West to East
There are six beaches in Kavala. Arriving from the east, from the direction of Thessaloniki, the first beach is Toska, then Batis beach, Kalamitsa and Rapsani, while Perigiali and Aspri Ammos beach are located at the exit of the city.
The sequence from west (direction of Xanthi) to east (direction of Thessaloniki): Perigiali and Aspri Ammos, then Rapsani (closest to the city centre), then Kalamitsa (the most organised, 700 metres long), then Batis (4km, with a children’s playground and pool), then Toska (5km, the quietest).
Perigiali Beach at Kavala is the semi-organised Blue Flag beach at the east exit of the city — connected to Aspri Ammos, natural oak shade, sandy beach, fish tavernas a few metres away, bus #11 from the city centre, Thassos visible on the horizon (35-minute ferry from Kavala port), the birthplace of Mehmet Ali (founder of modern Egypt, childhood home and Imaret still standing), the Apostle Paul’s first European landing point (Neapolis, 50 CE), the Byzantine Kamares aqueduct above the old harbour, and Philippi UNESCO World Heritage Site 17 kilometres west.
Drive 5 minutes east from the city centre. Park on the old Xanthi road. Swim in the morning. Take the afternoon ferry to Thassos.
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