Ostria Hotel

About
Ostria Hotel occupies a coastal position in Adamas, the main port town of Milos, with direct views over the harbour and the town centre below. The property is a three-star hotel offering a range of room types — double suites, larger suites accommodating up to three guests, and studios of the same capacity — making it practical for solo travellers, couples, and small families. With a 4.8 rating across 127 Google reviews, it sits at the well-regarded end of the island's lodging options.
The hotel's name references the ostria, the southerly wind that in Mediterranean nautical tradition blows up from the North African coast — appropriate for a place on the southern Aegean that catches summer breezes across an open harbour. That position on the waterfront in Adamas means you are walking distance from the port's ferry terminal, restaurants, and the bus connections that serve the rest of the island.
Accommodation options at Ostria span three formats. The Double Suite is configured for two people; the Suite scales up to three guests and suits families or those wanting more space; the Studios also accommodate up to three and tend to work well for longer stays or travellers who prefer a self-contained layout. All options face toward the coast and town, and the hotel's elevation on the harbour slope means upper-floor and roof-level spaces have unobstructed water views.
Facilities and Location
The standout shared facility is the rooftop garden, which combines a jacuzzi area with a bar serving cocktails, coffee, and drinks. The position at roof level in Adamas, facing the harbour and the wider bay, gives it one of the more commanding viewpoints in town — the Aegean stretches south and the harbour activity below is fully visible. It functions both as a morning spot and an evening one, with the bay catching colour at both sunrise and sunset.
Breakfast is served either in the hotel lobby or up on the roof garden, which means you have the option of eating with the harbour spread out in front of you. Free Wi-Fi is available throughout the property.
The hotel also offers a car rental service on-site, which is genuinely useful on Milos. The island's most compelling beaches — Sarakiniko, Firopotamos, Tsigrado, Kleftiko by boat — are spread across a coastline that public buses reach only partially. Having a rental car or ATV arranged from your hotel removes the logistics of finding one separately after arrival.
Reception hours run from 8:00 AM to midnight daily, which covers most ferry arrival windows, including some of the later evening boats that serve Milos from Piraeus and other Cycladic ports.
How to Get There
Adamas is the entry point for most visitors to Milos. Ferries dock at the port directly below the hotel, and the walk from the ferry terminal to Ostria Hotel is short — Adamas is a compact town, and the hotel's coastal position means it is one of the first lodging options you encounter coming up from the quay.
If you are arriving by air, Milos Airport (MLO) is roughly 5 kilometres east of Adamas. Taxis are available at the airport, and the transfer to Adamas takes around ten minutes. There is also a bus connection between the airport and Adamas, though taxi is the more practical option with luggage.
For those driving on the island, Adamas has street parking along the harbour front and in the adjacent streets. The hotel's address is Adamantas 848 00. Parking availability varies during July and August when the town is at its busiest.
Best Time to Visit
Milos is a year-round destination in terms of accessibility, but the main tourist season runs from late May through early October. The shoulder months — May, June, and September — combine warm sea temperatures with thinner crowds and lower ferry and accommodation demand. July and August bring the meltemi, the strong northerly wind that defines summer across the Cyclades; in Adamas, which faces southwest into the bay, the harbour is generally sheltered, though exposed beaches on the northern coast can be windy.
For a harbour-view hotel like Ostria, there is a practical advantage to arriving in June or September: the rooftop garden is fully usable, the water is warm enough for daily swimming, and the town has enough activity to feel alive without the August compression of visitors. Winter stays are possible for those exploring Milos out of season, but many island facilities reduce hours or close from November through March.
Tips for Visiting
- Book the car rental in advance. Milos has a finite number of rental vehicles in peak season, and arranging through the hotel when you book your room is more reliable than hunting for availability on arrival.
- Request a harbour-facing room. The hotel's coastal position is its main asset; rooms and suites oriented toward the water take full advantage of it.
- Use Adamas as your operational base. The port town has the island's main supermarkets, pharmacies, fuel station, and ATMs — stocking up here before heading to more remote parts of the island makes practical sense.
- Factor in ferry timing. If you are arriving on a late ferry, note that reception is open until midnight, which covers most scheduled arrivals. For any ferry arriving after midnight, contact the hotel directly in advance via email or phone.
- The roof garden jacuzzi is shared. It works best at quieter times — early morning before the heat builds, or in the early evening. Mid-afternoon in August can be busier.
- Adamas bus connections leave from the port area. The island's main bus routes to Plaka, Pollonia, and Sarakiniko pass through Adamas. Confirm current timetables on arrival; summer schedules add frequency but sell out on popular routes.
- Bring cash for smaller transactions. While Adamas has ATMs, smaller beach bars, boat trip operators, and some tavernas across the island operate on a cash basis.
- The hotel faces southwest. Sunsets from the roof garden look across the mouth of the Milos Gulf — worth timing a drink up there for the light on the water in the early evening.
Opening Hours
Location
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