ℹ️ Short answer: The fastest, cheapest way to Comino is the shuttle ferry from Ċirkewwa (Malta’s northern tip), running every 30 minutes in summer for ~€15 return, 25-minute crossing. If you want the headline experience — Blue Lagoon plus Crystal Lagoon plus Gozo’s caves and lunch on board — book a full-day cruise from Sliema (€35–45). For the quietest swim, take a small-group RIB or catamaran from Mġarr or Buġibba (€60–100), which arrives before the big boats. Avoid 11:30–14:00 in July and August whichever option you pick. Comino has three permanent residents, no cars, no shops, one chapel, and somewhere between 6,000 and 10,000 day visitors a day in the high season. The island is 3.5 km², 90% of which is fenced-off Natura 2000 reserve, which means almost everyone is funnelled to the same 200 metres of coastline — the Blue Lagoon — at the same hours of the day. Picking the right way to get there isn’t a budget question. It’s a when do you want to be in the water question.
ℹ️ Short answer: The Gozo Channel ferry from Ċirkewwa (Malta) to Mġarr (Gozo) runs every 30–45 minutes in summer, takes 25 minutes, costs €4.65 return as a foot passenger (paid only on the way back from Gozo) and €15.70 return with a car. No advance booking — show up and pay. There’s also a Valletta fast ferry to Mġarr (45 minutes, €7.50 single) that saves the bus to Ċirkewwa if you’re staying in Valletta. Avoid Friday afternoons and Sunday evenings — car queues hit 90+ minutes. The ferry to Gozo is the smoothest piece of public transport in Malta, which is faint praise but accurate. Two boats, a 25-minute crossing, no booking, pay on the way back, and you’re on the second island. The whole system has run roughly the same way for decades and works because of it.
ℹ️ Short answer: The best Gozo day trip from Malta in 2026 is a small-group jeep tour from Mellieħa or Sliema (€75–95), which covers Dwejra, Tal-Mixta Cave, Ramla Bay, the Citadel, and a Gozitan lunch in one tightly-run day. The cheapest is DIY by ferry and bus (~€20 round trip including transport), the most fun in good weather is a quad-bike self-drive (€100/quad), and the laziest is the coach + Citadel + lunch combo (€55–70). The best advice we can give: if you can possibly stretch to two nights on Gozo, do that instead — see our 5-day Malta and Gozo itinerary for why. Gozo is the second-largest of the Maltese islands and, in the opinion of every Gozitan and most second-time visitors, the better one. Half the population per square kilometre, almost no traffic, red-sand beaches, the cliffs at Dwejra, the medieval Citadel of Victoria, dinners that don’t end at 22:00. The catch: Gozo doesn’t fit in a day. The bus-and-ferry chain alone costs you 90 minutes each way, and the headline sights are spread across an island that’s 14 km tip to tip.