Thessaloniki

The port of Thessaloniki is Greece’s second largest export and transit port and the main sea hub to the Balkan hinterland. Located on the north-west shore of the Thermaikos Gulf, it is also the nearest European Union port to the Balkan countries and the Black Sea zone.
  • General Description
  • Tide
  • Weather Restrictions
  • Services

General Description

UN/LOCODE: GRSKG
Coordinates: 040°38’N / 022°56’E
B. A. Nautical Chart No: 2070
Time zone: UTC +2 hrs
Port Security Level: 1

Thessaloniki Port is separated into three zones:

 

Passenger terminal

A modern facility located in the central port and near the city center, serves coastal shipping such as the north-eastern Aegean Islands, the Dodecanese Islands and Samos, the Cycladic Islands and Crete and the North Sporades. Part of the pier and terminal is set aside for cruise ships.

 

Container Terminal

It is located in a specially arranged area 550m long and 340m wide in the western part of Pier 6 of the port and can accommodate ships up to max draft 12m.

Conventional cargo is handled in an area totaling about 1 million m2 with quay length of 4,000m (quays 10-24) and depth up to 12m. Cargoes handled include general cargo (steel products, palletized cargo, timber, marble, etc.), dry bulk cargoes (minerals, cement, ores, coal, grains, feedstuffs, fertilizers, scrap), liquid bulk cargoes via pipeline (spirits, chloroform, asphalt, chemicals, mineral oils, wine) and Ro-Ro vehicles.

 

Free-trade zone is available, offering storage space of 3.200 ground slots.

 

An artificial islet jetty is available within Thermaikos Bay for Crude oil and oil products. The islet belongs to Hellenic Petroleum.

Tide

Tidal variation is minimal.

Weather Restrictions

Thessaloniki is an ice free port.

Services

All general services are available including bunkering, all supplies, fresh water, slops removal, repairs and surveys, crew changes, etc.