
Cyprus's Ancient Sites and the Troodos Mountains
Cyprus packs three UNESCO World Heritage entries into a small area: the Paphos Archaeological Site (mosaics and tombs), the Painted Churches of the Troodos Region (ten Byzantine churches), and Choirokoitia (a Neolithic settlement). Add Kourion โ a Greco-Roman theatre perched on a cliff above the sea, still used for concerts โ and a day in the Troodos Mountains for Kykkos Monastery and wine villages. Entry fees run roughly โฌ2.50โ8.50 ($3โ9) per site.
Most visitors fly into Cyprus for the beaches and only discover by accident that the island is basically an open-air history museum with better weather than most actual museums. Here's what's genuinely worth the drive, from Roman ruins with sea views to a mountain range with its own microclimate.
Kourion โ the best ancient site most people haven't heard of
A Greco-Roman city on a bluff above the sea near Limassol, destroyed by an earthquake around 365 AD and never fully rebuilt. The centerpiece is a restored amphitheatre with a sea view most modern concert venues would envy โ it's still used for live performances today. The site also includes the House of Eustolios, with well-preserved floor mosaics.
Paphos's mosaics and tombs
See our full Paphos destination guide for details, but the short version: the Paphos Archaeological Park has some of the best-preserved Roman floor mosaics in the Eastern Mediterranean, and the nearby Tombs of the Kings is an underground rock-cut necropolis dating to around the 4th century BC.
Choirokoitia โ one of the oldest settlements in the Mediterranean
A UNESCO-listed Neolithic village, roughly 9,000 years old, with reconstructed circular stone dwellings that give a genuinely vivid sense of how people lived here millennia before the Greeks or Romans arrived. Less visually dramatic than Kourion or Paphos, but a fascinating half-hour stop if you're driving between Larnaca and Limassol.
The Troodos Mountains โ Cyprus's other personality

An hour or two inland from any coastal base, the Troodos range feels like a different country: stone villages, vineyards, waterfalls, and โ genuinely, in winter โ a working ski resort on Mount Olympus, Cyprus's highest peak at 1,952 meters (6,404 ft). Ten small Byzantine churches scattered through the mountains, collectively UNESCO-listed as the Painted Churches of the Troodos Region, hold some of the best-preserved medieval religious frescoes in the world, hidden behind deliberately plain, unassuming exteriors.

Kykkos Monastery
Cyprus's wealthiest and most famous monastery, founded around 1100 and rebuilt several times after fires, is covered floor-to-ceiling in gold-backed mosaics and icons โ a striking contrast to the plain village churches nearby. It's a working monastery with a museum attached, and also the burial site of Archbishop Makarios III, Cyprus's first president.
Wine villages worth a stop
The Troodos foothills produce Commandaria, one of the oldest named wines still in continuous production anywhere in the world (documented since at least the medieval Crusader era). Villages like Omodos and Kathikas have tasting rooms and a genuinely pretty, cobblestoned village-square atmosphere worth an hour even if you're not a wine person.
What it costs
| Site | Entry |
|---|---|
| Kourion | โฌ4.50 ($5) |
| Paphos Archaeological Park | โฌ4.50 ($5) |
| Tombs of the Kings | โฌ2.50 ($2.70) |
| Choirokoitia | โฌ2.50 ($2.70) |
| Kykkos Monastery | Free (small fee for the museum) |
The Troodos Mountains can be genuinely cold and occasionally snowy from December through March โ a real contrast to the coast, which stays mild. Check the mountain forecast separately if you're planning a winter day trip; roads can ice over at the higher elevations.












































