Driving in Gouves, Crete

Driving in Crete is on the right-hand side of the road, and UK driving licences are accepted without an international permit. The north-coast highway is well maintained, the road signs follow EU standards, and most UK drivers adapt within an hour. The sections below cover the rules, the roads around Gouves, and the things that catch British drivers out.

The Rules UK Drivers Need to Know

Drive on the right in Crete and overtake on the left. The change is the single biggest adjustment for a UK driver, and it is felt most at junctions and roundabouts rather than on the open road.

Speeds are the most common misreading: a limit of 90 on a Cretan sign means 55.9 miles (90 km) per hour, roughly 56 miles per hour, not 90 miles per hour.

The Roads Around Gouves

Two roads run east to west through Gouves, and choosing the right one saves time. The E75 national highway bypasses the coastal villages and is the fast route to Heraklion; the old coastal road runs parallel to the sea and passes the entrance to each beach and taverna in turn.

Use the E75 to reach Heraklion, the airport and the port. Use the coastal road for the beaches near Gouves, because the highway bypasses them all and forces a doubling back at the next junction.

Inland roads are a different proposition. The tracks to Skotino Cave and the climb to the Lasithi Plateau are narrow, unlit and in places unsurfaced, which is why a small car suits the coast and an SUV suits the interior.

Parking in Gouves and Heraklion

Park on the street in Gouves, where roadside parking is the norm across the village and the coastal strip. Spaces fill early on August weekends, particularly near the beaches, so arriving before mid-morning is the practical answer in high season.

Heraklion is harder. The streets inside the Venetian walls are narrow and largely one-way, and the sensible approach is to park once on the edge of the old town and cover the centre on foot. The Heraklion museums sit within walking distance of one another, so one parking stop covers the lot.

Fuel, Tolls and Fines

Crete has no toll roads. The E75 and every other road on the island are free to use, which is unusual for a Mediterranean holiday destination and removes a cost UK drivers often budget for.

Fuel is sold by the litre and is not included in a hire price. The car is supplied at an agreed fuel level and must be returned at the same level. Petrol stations are frequent along the north coast but thin out sharply in the mountains, so fill up before driving inland to Lasithi.

What Catches UK Drivers Out

Four things account for most of the trouble UK drivers report on Crete, and none of them is the right-hand driving.

None of these is a reason to avoid driving, and a hire car remains the only practical way to reach most of what is worth seeing. Full insurance with zero excess is what removes the financial consequence of the one scrape that a narrow mountain road occasionally produces.

Roads are the reason a car matters here rather than a luxury. Booking car hire in Gouves with zero-excess cover, unlimited mileage and free hotel delivery puts the coast road, the mountain villages and the south of the island inside a single week.

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