Porto is one of the most rewarding cities in Europe and one of the best port calls on an Atlantic itinerary. The Ribeira, the riverside neighbourhood of painted houses, ornate azulejo tile facades, and narrow lanes running down to the Douro, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, reached from the port of Leixões 8 km north that looks exactly as beautiful in person as it does in every photograph, which is not always the case. The Dom Luís I bridge, a double-deck iron arch spanning the river at the Ribeira, is one of the great bridges of the 19th century.

Across the bridge in Vila Nova de Gaia, the lodges of the great port wine houses, Sandeman, Graham’s, Taylor’s, and Ramos Pinto, stretch along the south bank of the Douro. Most offer tours and tastings from around €20 and the combination of a guided tour of the cellars and a tasting of aged tawny port overlooking the river is one of the most civilised ways to spend a port afternoon.

Porto is also a city of small pleasures: azulejo tile panels on the São Bento station walls (some of the finest decorative tilework in Portugal), the Livraria Lello bookshop (a neo-Gothic interior of carved wood, stained glass, and a sweeping staircase that reportedly inspired J.K. Rowling), and the Majestic Café on Rua de Santa Catarina (an Art Nouveau interior of gilded mirrors and leather booths). Each deserves at least a few minutes.

Dom luís i bridge over the douro river in porto
Photo by Pascal Bernardon on Unsplash

Port of Leixões: Where Ships Dock for Porto

CategoryDetails
Port Type Dock
Distance to Town Porto city centre 15 km from Leixões (30 min by shuttle or taxi)
Currency Euro (€)
Language Portuguese (English widely spoken)
Best Known For The Ribeira (a UNESCO waterfront of painted houses and wine barges), the Dom Luís bridge, port wine tasting in the lodges of Vila Nova de Gaia, and Livraria Lello: one of the most beautiful bookshops in the world.
Key Destinations
  • Leixões Cruise Terminal , Porto's cruise port, Matosinhos
  • Ribeira , Historic waterfront neighbourhood
  • Dom Luís I Bridge , Iconic double-deck iron bridge
  • Vila Nova de Gaia , Port wine lodges across the Douro
  • Livraria Lello , Famous bookshop, central Porto

Porto: Leixões Cruise Terminal  ·  View larger map

Getting From the Port to Town

Walking: The Best Option

Free (once in the city)
  • Walk time: Porto city centre 15 km from Leixões; shuttle or taxi needed
  • The cruise terminal at Leixões is in Matosinhos, 15 km north-west of Porto city centre. The terminal itself is walkable to Matosinhos (a pleasant seafront town with excellent fish restaurants), but reaching Porto requires a shuttle bus, taxi, or metro. Once in Porto, the main sights are walkable: the Ribeira, the Dom Luís bridge, Vila Nova de Gaia, and Livraria Lello are all within 20 minutes of each other on foot.

Local Bus

Metro line B from Matosinhos Sul to central Porto: €2.40 (30–40 min)
  • The Porto Metro line B connects Matosinhos Sul station (15 min walk from the cruise terminal) to Aliados in central Porto in about 30 to 40 minutes for around €2.40 for a 2-zone ticket. This is the most economical way to reach the city independently. Ships often provide a paid shuttle closer to the terminal entrance; the metro is a self-service alternative.

Taxi

€20 to €30 to central Porto; €50 to €70 to Douro Valley vineyards
  • Taxis are available at the terminal. Uber and Bolt operate in Porto and are generally cheaper than traditional taxis. For the Douro Valley: the wine-producing region 100 km east of Porto along the river: a hire car or organised excursion is more practical than a taxi for a port day.

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The best excursions in Porto fill up ahead of peak sailings. Compare options and book before you leave port.

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Things to Do in Porto

Porto rewards a sequence that starts at the Ribeira and moves outward: down to the waterfront, across the Dom Luís bridge (upper level for the view), through the port wine lodges of Gaia, back across at the lower level, up through the lower city past São Bento station, and along Rua de Santa Catarina to Livraria Lello. This circuit takes 4 to 5 hours at a comfortable pace and covers the essential Porto without a single bus.

The city is hilly and the Ribeira is at the bottom; everything above it involves climbing. The Clerigos Tower (baroque, 75 metres, views) and the Sé Cathedral are on the upper city ridge. The Foz neighbourhood at the mouth of the Douro is around 5 km west along the river and has a seafront promenade and good fish restaurants. For passengers interested in the Douro Valley wine country, an organised river cruise or excursion coach is the right approach.

  • Ribeira and the Douro Waterfront. The UNESCO-listed riverside neighbourhood of Porto: a terrace of tall painted houses with tiled facades above the Douro, with the port wine lodges of Vila Nova de Gaia visible across the water. The narrow lanes of the Ribeira, the waterfront cafes, and the view of the Dom Luís bridge from the Cais da Ribeira quay are the essential first hour of any Porto port day. Allow 60 minutes to walk and stop.
  • Dom Luís I Bridge. The double-deck iron bridge across the Douro (1886) is Porto’s most recognisable structure. Walk across the upper level (45 metres, accessed via the Jardim do Morro on the Gaia side) for panoramic views of the city and river; return on the lower level for the waterfront approach. The upper level also carries the Porto Metro.
  • Port Wine Lodges, Vila Nova de Gaia. The south bank of the Douro in Vila Nova de Gaia is lined with the lodges (armazéns) of the great port wine houses: Sandeman, Graham’s, Taylor’s, Ramos Pinto, Ferreira, and others. Most offer guided cellar tours and tastings from around €15 to €25. The Gaia waterfront also has a cable car to the upper level where the panoramic views extend over the bridge and the Ribeira.
  • Livraria Lello. A 1906 neo-Gothic bookshop on Rua das Carmelitas: one of the most beautiful bookshops in the world. The interior features a carved wood staircase, a stained glass ceiling panel, ornate shelving, and a sense of drama that has made it one of Porto’s most visited spots. Entry costs €8 (redeemable against book purchases). Book a timed slot in advance at livrarialello.pt.
  • São Bento Station Azulejos. The main railway station in Porto is covered in 20,000 azulejo (blue and white ceramic tile) panels depicting scenes from Portuguese history: the Battle of Valdevez, the life of João I, rural and urban scenes from the early 20th century. Painted by Jorge Colaço between 1905 and 1916, they are among the finest examples of decorative tilework in Portugal. Entry is free; trains pass through so the hall is always accessible.
Book Livraria Lello entry in advance

Livraria Lello charges an entry fee of €8, redeemable against book purchases, and has a timed entry system. Without advance booking (at livrarialello.pt) you may face a queue of 30 to 60 minutes on busy days. The bookshop is small and the interior: a neo-Gothic carved wood staircase, stained glass ceiling, and ornate shelving: is genuinely beautiful and worth the few minutes it takes to book online before your sailing.

Best Restaurants in Porto

Ratings from TripAdvisor, verified June 2026.

Travellers' Choice 2025

Flow restaurant & bar

4.4 (1,638 reviews)
€€€€ International Mediterranean Portuguese

The "Flow Restaurant & Bar" is the new reference in Porto's downtown, located in an emblematic and rehabilitated building, aims to provide unique flavours of Mediterranean cuisine without forgetting the most appreciated palates of the traditional Portuguese cuisine. Conceived by

#197 of 3,195 Places to Eat in Porto

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Travellers' Choice 2025

MISTU restaurant & bar

4.5 (735 reviews)
€€€€ International Mediterranean Fusion

The MISTU kitchen makes interpretations of special dishes from kitchens of the World, mostly from the Asian and South American gastronomic cultures, always with a Portuguese approach. The space is cozy, irreverent … surprising. Come visit us and help us describe the ambiance of

#188 of 3,195 Places to Eat in Porto

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SOMOS Restaurant & Lounge

4.4 (132 reviews)
€€ – €€€ Mediterranean Portuguese

We use in our Executive Menu a selection of national products of proven quality. From the fish and the shellfish of our coast to the traditional smoked sausages, the superior race meats, specially the "Taurino" and "Maronês". The vegetables and fruits are produced in our "Urban V

#460 of 3,195 Places to Eat in Porto

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Getting Around

Walk across the upper level of the Dom Luís bridge

The Dom Luís I bridge has two levels: the lower level carries road traffic and pedestrians, the upper level (45 metres above the river) carries the Porto Metro line D and also has a pedestrian walkway. Walking the upper level gives the most dramatic view of the Douro, the Ribeira, and the port wine lodges of Gaia below. It is not for those with a fear of heights: the walkway is narrow and the drop is visible through the grating. The views are outstanding.

Essential Travel Tips

The metro from Matosinhos Sul is cheaper than the ship shuttle

The cruise terminal at Leixões is a 15-minute walk from Matosinhos Sul metro station (or a short taxi from the terminal entrance). Metro line B (yellow) runs from Matosinhos Sul to Aliados in central Porto in about 35 minutes for €2.40. This is significantly cheaper than most cruise line shuttle buses and gives you a direct connection to the city centre.

Graham's Lodge has the best view and a very good restaurant

Graham’s Lodge in Vila Nova de Gaia is on the upper slope above the river: 15 minutes on foot from the Gaia waterfront via a steep path, or a short taxi. The cellar tour and tasting costs around €20 and includes an aged tawny and a vintage. The terrace restaurant (Vinum) has one of the finest views of Porto and the Douro bridge. A reservation for lunch is worth making before you sail.

Plan around all-aboard rather than the headline sight, especially in Porto where the journey back to the ship is part of the calculation. A short packing list works in your favour: layers, water, sun protection and shoes that handle the local pavements.

Deciding between a shore excursion and independent travel in Porto comes down to two things: how much you trust the local logistics, and how forgiving the return is if something runs late. First-time cruisers usually overestimate the difficulty of independent travel in compact ports and underestimate it in spread-out ones.

On the question of whether excursions are worth the premium in Porto, the price is only half the calculation. Time is the other half, and your onboard spending money tends to stretch further when you control the pace yourself.

Timing a cruise that visits Porto well comes down to two practical levers: when you book (which affects both price and cabin choice) and how your passport sits against the destination’s entry rules. Both are worth checking before you commit to a sailing.

Frequently Asked Questions

About 15 km: roughly 30 minutes by shuttle bus, taxi, or the combination of a short walk and the metro (line B from Matosinhos Sul station, 35 min to Aliados, €2.40). Ships often provide a paid shuttle service closer to the terminal entrance. Plan at least 30 minutes each way for the journey to allow adequate time in the city.

Cross the Dom Luís bridge from the Ribeira (upper or lower level) or take the Teleférico de Gaia cable car from the Gaia waterfront. The main lodge entrances are on the Gaia waterfront and the upper slope behind it. Most lodges operate tours throughout the day without advance booking, though popular sessions (particularly at Graham’s and Taylor’s) can fill on busy cruise days. An 11am or noon session is usually available.

Yes: Livraria Lello operates a timed entry system with an €8 entry fee (redeemable against purchases). Without a booking (livrarialello.pt), queues can run to 30 to 60 minutes on busy days. The bookshop is small and only a limited number of visitors are admitted per slot. Booking for the first available morning slot before your sailing is the safest approach.

Yes: Matosinhos is a pleasant seafront town with some of the best fish restaurants in the Porto region. The Rua Heróis de França is lined with restaurants that serve fresh Atlantic fish grilled over charcoal at lunch: the standard order is sea bass or bream with chips and salad. For passengers who prefer not to make the 15 km journey into Porto, Matosinhos offers a genuine and very good alternative.

The Douro Valley wine country begins about 80 km east of Porto: roughly 90 minutes by road. A port day allows time for an organised river cruise (combining coach and boat) or a winery visit near Peso da Régua if the port call is 8 hours or more. Going independently by hire car is practical but requires careful timing to return. Most passengers find Porto city more than enough for a standard port day.

Port is a fortified wine from the Douro Valley: grape spirits are added during fermentation to stop it and preserve residual sugar. Styles range from fresh Ruby and Tawny to aged 20-year or 30-year Tawny. For lodge visits, Graham’s (upper Gaia slope, excellent view and tasting) and Taylor’s (oldest lodge in the city, very good 20-year tawny) are both consistently recommended. Sandeman’s lodge is the most visited; Ramos Pinto and Ferreira are quieter and less tourist-oriented.

Cruise ships dock at the port of Leixões in Matosinhos, around 8 km north of central Porto. A taxi reaches the Ribeira in 15 minutes for around 12 euros; the metro from Matosinhos Sul (Line A) with a change at Trindade reaches São Bento in around 30 minutes for €1.40. Most ships also offer a paid shuttle into the city.

Porto

Porto is one of the finest cities in Europe for a port day: visually striking, historically layered, and organised around two of the most enjoyable things a port day can offer (a UNESCO riverfront to walk and port wine to taste across the bridge). The Ribeira, the Dom Luís bridge, the Gaia lodges, and Livraria Lello together make a day that is full without being rushed. For passengers who have the time and the inclination, Matosinhos at the terminal offers an excellent fish lunch before or after the city.

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