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Veletas

Hotels
Milos
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About

Veletas Rooms sits on Eparchiaki Odos Adamanta in Adamas, the main port village of Milos, about 500 metres from the ferry quay and 800 metres from the nearest beach. It is a compact, family-run guest house built and decorated in the Cycladic tradition — whitewashed walls, stone and iron-frame beds, and a fragrant garden with a paved courtyard that gives the property a residential rather than commercial feel.

With a 4.6 rating across 68 Google reviews, Veletas punches above its category. Guests consistently note the cleanliness, the helpfulness of the owners, and the ease of reaching Adamas's restaurants, supermarkets, and cafés on foot. The address places it directly on the main road linking the port to the rest of the island, which means both convenience and, at peak summer, some road noise — a ground-floor room at the garden side is worth requesting.

The property is operated under the email [email protected] and can be reached directly at +30 694 543 3385. The official website is veletasrooms.com.

What to Expect

Veletas offers rooms and studios, each air-conditioned and fitted with an LCD television and a mini-refrigerator. The decorative style is deliberately traditional: beds are built from wrought iron or local stone, and the overall palette draws on the whitewashed Cycladic aesthetic rather than the anonymous neutrals of chain hotels. Every unit has a private bathroom with a hairdryer.

Several units go beyond the standard room configuration. Studios include a small kitchenette with cooking utensils and an electric kettle, making them practical for stays of more than a couple of nights or for travelers who want the option of a simple breakfast in. All rooms include free Wi-Fi.

Shared facilities include a communal kitchen — useful if you have a standard room rather than a studio — and the paved garden courtyard, which is a genuine outdoor sitting area rather than a token terrace. The garden itself is described as fragrant, which in a Milos summer context usually means flowering shrubs that provide shade and scent in the early evening.

Free public parking is available nearby, which is a practical advantage in Adamas during July and August when street parking near the port becomes difficult. The owners can also arrange transfers to and from Milos Airport (5 km away) and the ferry port (500 m) on request — worth flagging at the time of booking rather than on arrival.

How to Get There

Adamas is Milos's main gateway: all ferries from Piraeus, Santorini, and the other Cyclades dock here, and the island's single airport is 5 km east of the village. From the ferry terminal, Veletas is a flat 500-metre walk along the port road — manageable with luggage and no hills involved.

By car or taxi from the airport, the drive takes around ten minutes. If you are renting a vehicle, the property's proximity to free public parking means you do not need to worry about access. The main bus stop for Adamas is in the village center, from which local routes serve Plaka (Milos's hilltop capital, 4 km away), Pollonia in the north, and the main beaches.

For first-time visitors arriving by ferry, look for the main road running parallel to the waterfront; Veletas is on Eparchiaki Odos Adamanta, which is the primary road heading out of the port area.

Best Time to Visit

Milos has a long visitor season, roughly April through October. July and August are the busiest months, when the island's famous beaches — Sarakiniko, Kleftiko, Tsigrado — are at full capacity and accommodation fills up weeks in advance. Booking Veletas well ahead for peak summer is advisable, particularly for the studios with kitchenettes, which tend to go first.

May, June, and September offer the best balance of warm weather, open facilities, and manageable crowds. The sea temperature in June is already comfortable for swimming, and by September it has absorbed a full summer's heat. October remains mild and is a good month for exploring the island's geological landscape and Byzantine heritage without the August crowds.

Adamas itself is a year-round working port, so the guest house may operate outside the main season — contact the owners directly to confirm availability if you are traveling in winter or early spring.

Tips for Visiting

  • Book studios early. The units with kitchenettes are the most practical for independent travelers and book out first in peak season. Contact the property directly by phone or email to confirm availability and specific room types.
  • Request a garden-side room. The property sits on the main road into Adamas; a room facing the courtyard or garden will be quieter, especially during busy summer evenings.
  • Ask about airport and port transfers when booking. The owners offer this service on request, but it requires advance notice — not something to arrange on the day of arrival.
  • Use the communal kitchen if you have a standard room. Adamas has well-stocked supermarkets within walking distance, making self-catering breakfasts or light meals straightforward.
  • Adamas is compact and walkable. From Veletas you can reach the port, the main tavernas, and the bus stop in under ten minutes on foot. A rental car or scooter is worth considering for beach-hopping, but you do not need one just to reach day-to-day amenities.
  • Check ferry schedules before arriving. Milos is a busy ferry hub and summer services from Piraeus can be heavily booked. If you are arriving late in the evening, let the guest house know your expected time.
  • Milos Airport is small. The airport handles mainly domestic flights from Athens (around 45 minutes) and some seasonal European charters. Confirm your transfer arrangements if you are landing outside normal daytime hours.
  • The beach is 800 metres away. Adamas has its own town beach, which is quiet compared to the island's famous volcanic beaches. It is useful for an early-morning swim before the day begins.

Facilities and Location

Veletas is positioned to make Adamas function as a practical base rather than just an arrival point. The port area has a range of tavernas and restaurants ranging from waterfront fish places to casual souvlaki spots, along with supermarkets and a pharmacy. The village is lively enough in summer to be entertaining in the evening but not so large that it becomes overwhelming.

For day trips, the bus network from Adamas reaches most of Milos's key sites. Sarakiniko — the lunar white pumice landscape that is the island's most photographed geological feature — is reachable by bus or a short drive north. Plaka, with the Castro, the Folklore Museum, and views across the caldera, is 4 km uphill. The island's catacombs, one of the most significant early Christian sites in Greece, are near Trypiti, a short drive or bus ride from Adamas.

Kleftiko, the sea caves and rock arch formations in the island's southwest, is best reached by boat tour departing from Adamas harbour. Half-day and full-day boat trips are bookable locally and are among the most popular activities on the island.

Address

Eparchiaki Odos Adamanta, Adamas 848 00, Greece

Location

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