- Over 100,000 visitors at Kourtaliotis Gorge so far in 2025.
- A new model was introduced in February, featuring a €5 daily ticket for infrastructure and conservation.
- Temporary closure followed heavy rainfall on May 31, 2025.
- Past problems include overcrowding, litter, fire risks, and biodiversity damage.
- Authorities hail the new system as a model of sustainable management.
A Gorge With Rules Now
Kourtaliotis (also spelled Kourtaliotiko) Gorge has consistently drawn crowds—too many, in fact. In previous years, the streambed became a picnic ground, the cliffs a backdrop for Instagram, and the paths a littered maze. The biodiversity suffered, the landscape groaned under the weight of uncontrolled tourism, and the risk of fire or accident grew with each careless visit.
This year, that changed. With the backing of the Municipality of Agios Vasileios, the Region of Crete, the Ministry of Environment and Energy, and the Natural Environment and Climate Change Organization (OFYPEKA), a new management model was introduced in early February: entry now requires a €5 daily ticket, issued electronically, with revenue earmarked for infrastructure, safety, and biodiversity protection.
Still Popular—Even After the Rains
If the plan was meant to discourage mass visitation, it has not worked. On the contrary, the gorge has already recorded more than 100,000 visitors—a staggering figure considering the entry fee and the fact that the site was closed for several days after the torrential rains of May 31, 2025.
Clearly, €5 is not much of a deterrent. In Crete, it barely buys a coffee in Rethymno. For that price, you get cliffs, waterfalls, dragonflies, and the faint reassurance that someone is keeping an eye on the chaos.
Officials Applaud Themselves
Mayor Giannis Tatarakis described the system as “already particularly successful,” crediting the electronic ticket and new rules for allowing “organized visitor flow, effective protection of the environment, and resources for infrastructure.”
OFYPEKA’s managing director, Kostas Triantis, went further, suggesting that Kourtaliotis could become a model of environmental protection and local development: “I hope other areas will follow its example. The operation so far is truly encouraging.”
The subtext is clear: Kourtaliotis has gone from being loved to being managed—and, in tourism terms, that may be the only way to keep it alive.