Giannis Hotel Apartments

About
Giannis Hotel Apartments sits in Adamantas, the port village and main commercial hub of Milos, at a rated 4.5 out of 5 across 81 guest reviews. The property offers 19 air-conditioned units configured as hotel apartments — a format that suits island visitors who want the privacy and flexibility of self-catering alongside the reliability of staffed accommodation.
Adamantas is the obvious base for exploring Milos as a whole. The ferry dock is within easy walking distance, and the village's main strip of restaurants, mini-markets, and bike rental shops is immediately at hand. For first-time visitors to Milos, staying here removes the logistical complexity of reaching the island's more remote villages while still giving you a central point from which to drive or ride to Sarakiniko, Kleftiko, or Plaka.
The property address places it firmly in the 848 00 postal district of Adamantas, and the coordinates confirm a central location rather than an out-of-town plot. It is a practical, well-reviewed choice for couples, pairs of friends, or small families who want their own space without committing to a full villa rental.
What to Expect
All 19 units are air-conditioned and each comes with a safe and hair dryer as standard. More usefully for a self-catering stay, every room opens onto a furnished balcony or patio — a detail that matters on Milos, where outdoor space allows you to eat breakfast in the shade, dry swimwear after beach days, and wind down in the evening without retreating indoors.
Guest reviews consistently mention cleanliness and comfort as the standout qualities. The other thread running through the feedback is the friendliness of the staff, which for a small-scale apartment property tends to translate into direct local knowledge — where to eat, which beaches to prioritise on which days depending on wind direction, where to rent a quad bike or car.
The self-catering format means you can buy produce at one of Adamantas's small grocery shops and cook when you prefer not to eat out, though the village has enough affordable tavernas that you are unlikely to need to cook every night. The combination of in-room facilities and immediate access to restaurants, bike rentals, and port services covers most practical needs without requiring a car for daily basics.
The property is classified as a hotel apartment, which in the Greek accommodation system sits between a standard hotel room and a private apartment rental: you have dedicated reception or contact staff, regular housekeeping, and booked availability, alongside a small kitchen or kitchenette setup for independent use.
How to Get There
Adamantas is the arrival point for all ferry services to Milos. Ferries run from Piraeus (Athens) and, seasonally, from other Cycladic islands including Santorini, Folegandros, Sifnos, and Serifos. The crossing from Piraeus takes roughly 3.5 hours on a fast ferry or 5–7 hours on a conventional vessel depending on the service.
From the ferry dock in Adamantas, Giannis Hotel Apartments is reachable on foot in a few minutes. The village is compact and flat near the port, so arrival with luggage is straightforward. If you are arriving by car ferry or have pre-booked a rental vehicle, parking in the immediate port area can be tight in July and August; the property team can advise on the nearest available spaces.
Milos Airport (MLO) receives domestic flights from Athens year-round and has seasonal connections to other Greek cities. The airport is on the eastern edge of the island, roughly a 10–15 minute taxi or rental car drive from Adamantas.
Best Time to Visit
Milos has a long tourist season running from April through October, with July and August representing peak demand. Adamantas functions year-round as the island's main settlement, so the property is viable outside peak season in a way that more remote beach-adjacent accommodation is not.
Visiting in May, June, or September offers the best combination of warm temperatures, manageable ferry frequencies, and less competition for tables at the village's restaurants. The Aegean meltemi wind picks up reliably from mid-July onward; this can affect exposed beaches but rarely disrupts Adamantas itself, which is set within a sheltered bay.
For those who want maximum beach time at Sarakiniko or the boat-access beaches around Kleftiko, late June or early September tends to offer calmer sea conditions alongside comfortable temperatures in the mid-to-high 20s Celsius.
Tips for Visiting
- Book early for July and August. Milos has become significantly more popular over the past decade, and small properties with only 19 units fill up well in advance for peak weeks. Aim to confirm at least two to three months ahead for high season.
- Use Adamantas as a hub, not just a transit point. The village has its own fish tavernas along the waterfront, a useful mini-market, and a pharmacy — you don't need to drive anywhere for daily essentials.
- Rent a vehicle for day trips. Milos's most photographed beaches (Sarakiniko, Fyriplaka, Tsigrado) are spread across the island and not easily reached by bus. A rental car, scooter, or quad bike hired from one of the shops near the port makes full-day exploration straightforward. Staff at the property can point you toward reputable local rental options.
- Confirm balcony orientation when booking. A furnished outdoor space is one of the property's stated features; if aspect or privacy matters to you, ask when reserving.
- Check ferry timetables when you book your room. Late-season ferry schedules to Milos thin out from mid-October. If you're travelling in shoulder season, plan your departure day with buffer time.
- Pack sun protection and light layers. Even in September, midday sun on the white volcanic rock at Sarakiniko and similar spots is intense. Evenings in Adamantas can be noticeably cooler once the meltemi season winds down.
- The port is walkable at all hours. Staying centrally in Adamantas means ferry check-in for early morning departures doesn't require a taxi call — a practical advantage for a 6am Piraeus crossing.
- Verify current rates and availability directly. The official property website (hotelscheck-in.com/giannishotel/en) or a direct call to +30 2287 022204 will give you the most accurate pricing; rates vary meaningfully between early and peak season.
Facilities and Location
The 19 units all include air conditioning, a room safe, hair dryer, and a furnished balcony or patio. Beyond the room-level amenities, the property's primary practical asset is its position: Adamantas concentrates the island's transport links, services, and a good proportion of its dining options in a compact area around the port bay.
Adamantas has several waterfront and back-street tavernas offering fresh fish and standard Greek menus. There are also a few cafes suitable for a morning coffee before setting off on a day trip. The island's main bus terminal is in Adamantas, with routes running to Plaka (the hilltop capital), Pollonia (the northeastern fishing village), and the main beaches — though bus frequency is limited compared to larger Cycladic islands, so a rental vehicle offers considerably more flexibility.
For boat tours to the sea caves and the inaccessible-by-land beaches around Milos's coastline — particularly Kleftiko — tour operators board from Adamantas harbour. This makes the hotel apartment's location directly useful for that type of excursion, as you can walk to the dock rather than driving from a more distant base.
Location
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