Lisbon is one of those port days that benefits from having a plan, but rewards you for abandoning it. The city spreads across seven hills above the Tagus estuary, every neighbourhood has a different character, and the time it takes to move between them is consistently longer than it looks on a map. Getting from the cruise terminal to Belém, exploring the Alfama, finding a pastel de nata in Belém, and making the all-aboard time are all entirely achievable in a single port day : but only with a clear sense of what you are prioritising.
The Santa Apolónia terminal sits on the eastern edge of the waterfront, about 15 minutes walk from Praça do Comércio and the gateway to the historic centre. Lisbon’s cruise infrastructure is good and the city is well-practised at receiving large numbers of passengers, but the public transport system : Tram 28, bus routes, metro : requires a Viva Viagem card and a basic understanding of the routes to use efficiently. This guide covers the options.
Lisbon is also a common embarkation port for Atlantic and Iberian cruises, particularly on itineraries that run between Northern Europe and the Mediterranean. For passengers joining or leaving their ship here, the city deserves more than a single rushed day. This guide focuses primarily on the port call, but the same advice applies for anyone spending a day or two in Lisbon before or after their cruise.

Port Overview
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Port Type | Dock |
| Distance to Town | 15 to 20 min walk or short bus to Praça do Comércio; Belém is 6 km west by tram or taxi |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Language | Portuguese (English widely spoken in tourist areas) |
| Best Known For | Alfama's hilltop miradouros, the yellow Tram 28, Belém's Jerónimos Monastery, and the freshest pastel de nata in Europe. |
- Santa Apolónia Terminal , Main cruise terminal, eastern quay
- Jardim do Tabaco Terminal , Second terminal, closer to Alfama
- Alfama , Historic Moorish quarter, fado heartland
- Praça do Comércio , Riverside square, 15 min walk or 2 stops
- Belém Tower , UNESCO monument, 6 km west
Lisbon : Dock Port (Santa Apolónia / Jardim do Tabaco) · View larger map
Getting From the Port to Town
Walking: The Best Option
Free- Walk time: 15 to 20 min from Santa Apolónia to Praça do Comércio
- A riverside walk from the Santa Apolónia terminal to Praça do Comércio takes 15 to 20 minutes along the Tagus waterfront and is entirely flat and pleasant. From Jardim do Tabaco the walk is shorter at around 10 minutes. From Praça do Comércio, Alfama is a further 15 minutes uphill on foot.
Local Bus
About €2 per journey (€6.40 for 24-hr Viva Viagem card)- A 24-hour Viva Viagem transport card (available from metro station machines) covers all buses, trams, and the metro for €6.40 and is the best value option for a full day of city movement. Tram 28E, Lisbon's famous yellow tram, runs from near Praça do Comércio through Alfama to Estrela and passes many of the most photographed streets in the city. It is extremely popular and can be very crowded mid-morning : boarding at the eastern terminus (Martim Moniz) gives a better chance of a seat.
Taxi
About €8 to €12 to city centre; €15 to €20 to Belém- Taxis and Uber are widely available and reasonably priced for Lisbon. A taxi from the terminal to Belém costs around €15 to €20 depending on traffic. Uber is often cheaper and more predictable for price. For a day that includes both Alfama and Belém, taxis between the two sites (about €10 to €12) save considerable time compared to combining trams and buses.
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Things to Do in Lisbon
Lisbon works best when you pick a neighbourhood and stay in it rather than trying to cross the city. The old Moorish quarter of Alfama, the riverside waterfront around Praça do Comércio, and the monument district of Belém each have enough to fill a half-day comfortably. Mixing two of them in a single day is possible with good timing.
The city has a pace that rewards slowing down. Lisbon’s best moments are often small ones : a miradouro viewpoint at the right time of day, a pastel de nata warm from the oven, a fado soundtrack drifting from an open door in Alfama. Planning too tightly tends to squeeze those moments out.
- Alfama and the Miradouros. Lisbon’s oldest quarter, built on the city’s steepest hill, is a tangle of narrow lanes, white and yellow facades, and viewpoints (miradouros) that look out over the Tagus. Miradouro da Graça and Miradouro de Santa Luzia are the most rewarding viewpoints; Miradouro da Portas do Sol is the most central. The climb from Praça do Comércio takes about 20 minutes on foot or a few stops on Tram 28E.
- Belém Tower and Jerónimos Monastery. Belém’s two UNESCO monuments sit about 500 metres apart on the riverside, 6 km west of the city centre. The Belém Tower (Torre de Belém) is the more photogenic; the Jerónimos Monastery is the more substantial, with its extraordinary Manueline cloister and the tombs of Vasco da Gama and Luís de Camões. Book timed entry for the monastery in advance : queues without pre-booking can exceed an hour in peak season.
- Pastel de Nata at Pastéis de Belém. The original pastel de nata bakery, operating since 1837, is a five-minute walk from the Jerónimos Monastery. The custard tarts here are served warm with cinnamon and icing sugar and are one of the most straightforward pleasures Lisbon offers. There is usually a queue at the counter but it moves quickly, and tables inside accommodate groups who want to sit.
- Praça do Comércio. The grand riverside square that opens Lisbon to the Tagus, with three sides of yellow arcaded buildings, a central equestrian statue, and the water beyond. It is 15 minutes walk from the Santa Apolónia terminal and a natural starting point for the day. The waterfront Ribeira market and the pedestrianised Rua Augusta run from here into the Baixa shopping district.
- São Jorge Castle. The Moorish castle above Alfama offers broad views over the city and river and an accessible history spanning multiple civilisations. The site is large enough to spend an hour walking the battlements and the ruins of the medieval palace. Entry costs around €15 per adult; the view from the towers is the best elevated panorama in central Lisbon.
- Fado in the Alfama. Fado : Portugal’s traditional melancholic song form : originated in the Alfama district and several small restaurants still host authentic performances during lunch service. Spontaneous performances are less common than they used to be, but a handful of the older tascas in the upper Alfama still maintain the tradition. Evening fado performances are staged more regularly, though most port calls do not extend that late.
Alfama and Belém are the two headline experiences in Lisbon, but they are 6 km apart and the journey between them by tram or bus takes 30 to 45 minutes. On a standard 8-hour port call, trying to do both properly is tight. Alfama suits passengers who want to walk, climb to a viewpoint, and feel the character of the old city. Belém suits those who want the monuments (Jerónimos Monastery, Belém Tower, the pastry shop) and a more structured visit.
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Getting Around
Buy a 24-hour Viva Viagem card (€6.40) from any metro station machine on arrival : it covers all trams, buses, and the metro for the day. Without it, single journey fares on trams cost €3.00 and add up quickly. The card pays for itself within two or three journeys and removes the hassle of having exact change.
Port Day Tips
Tram 28E through Alfama is one of the most photographed streets in Lisbon and one of the most crowded tourist experiences in the city. Mid-morning queues at Praça do Comércio can be 20 to 30 minutes long. The tram is still worth taking for the ride through Alfama's steep lanes, but boarding at the eastern terminus at Martim Moniz gives a better chance of a seat than joining at a central stop.
Sintra, with its fairy-tale palaces and UNESCO-listed cultural landscape, is 40 km north of Lisbon and reachable in about 40 minutes by train from Rossio station. It is a full-day excursion in its own right : the Pena Palace alone takes two to three hours. On a port call of 10 hours or more it is feasible but requires an early start and a strict return time. On a call of eight hours or less, Lisbon itself is the more sensible choice.
Even at a dock port like Lisbon, return buffers still matter on busy days. A simple packing checklist helps you avoid last-minute stress, especially with layers, water, and comfortable shoes for changing weather.
If you are a first-time cruiser, decide early whether each stop is better as a shore excursion or independent travel so you can pace your day realistically.
Before booking, compare whether excursions are worth the premium for this port, and keep onboard spending in mind so your day ashore budget stays balanced.
For seasonal ports, the best time to book can affect both availability and value. Also double-check cruise visa details and pick the right cabin for your itinerary.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Santa Apolónia terminal is about 1.5 km from Praça do Comércio : a 15 to 20-minute flat walk along the Tagus waterfront. The Jardim do Tabaco terminal is slightly closer at around 10 minutes walk. From Praça do Comércio, Alfama is a further 15 minutes uphill on foot.
A 24-hour Viva Viagem transport card (€6.40 from metro station machines) covers all trams, buses, and metro for the day and is the most efficient option. Without a card, tram fares are €3.00 per journey. Taxis and Uber are good for longer distances, particularly between Alfama and Belém.
No. Lisbon is a dock port. Ships berth at the Santa Apolónia or Jardim do Tabaco terminals with no tendering required.
Sintra is possible on a port call of 10 or more hours if you start early. The train from Rossio station takes about 40 minutes and costs around €5 return. However, the Pena Palace and other Sintra attractions take 2 to 3 hours each, and the round trip including travel is a full day. On a call of 8 hours or less, Lisbon itself is the better use of limited time.
Pastel de nata (custard tart) from Pastéis de Belém in the Belém district is the single most celebrated food stop in the city. Grilled sardines, bacalhau (salted cod prepared any number of ways), and bifanas (pork rolls in a bread roll) are all straightforward and excellent. The riverside Ribeira market near Praça do Comércio has a good range of Portuguese food stalls.
Lisbon is excellent for independent travel. The walk from the terminal to the city centre is straightforward, public transport with a Viva Viagem card covers the main sites efficiently, and English is spoken widely in all tourist areas. Ship excursions add structure but the main Lisbon experiences : Alfama, Belém, a miradouro : are entirely accessible independently.
Lisbon
Lisbon gives you more than most port days promise and slightly less time than you will want. Settle on Alfama or Belém as your main anchor, allow the smaller moments between them, eat something warm from a bakery, and be back at the terminal with a sensible buffer. The city is generous to passengers who approach it with a loose plan rather than a rigid one.
How We Verify Port-Day Details
We aim for practical, low-risk guidance. Before publishing and during updates, we check core planning details against official sources and current operator information.
What We Check
- Berth and terminal details, including whether the port is walkable or requires a transfer
- Transport options and realistic return timing for different port types
- Details that change frequently, such as fares and schedules, with up-to-date notes where relevant
Typical Sources
- Official port authority and terminal updates
- Cruise line port notes and day-of-call instructions
- Local transport operators and official tourism resources