Alfa Market

About
Alfa Market is a supermarket on Milos carrying the everyday groceries and household essentials that self-catering visitors and long-stay travellers tend to need most. Whether you are renting a villa, staying in an apartment with a kitchen, or simply stocking up on water, snacks, and sunscreen before a day at the beach, having a reliable local supermarket on your radar makes a practical difference on an island where driving between villages is part of daily life.
Milos is a relatively compact island, but its settlements — Adamas, Plaka, Triovasalos, Pollonia — are spread across the interior and coast, and not every neighbourhood has an equivalent shop within walking distance. Knowing where Alfa Market sits relative to your accommodation will help you plan your first supply run without unnecessary detours.
The research data available for this listing is limited: no street address, verified opening hours, or phone number is confirmed at the time of writing. The coordinates place the market in the central part of the island, in the area around the main settlements. The sections below draw on verified island context and general supermarket practice in the Cyclades; anything time-sensitive should be confirmed locally on arrival.
What to Expect
A supermarket in the Alfa Market category on Milos will typically carry fresh produce, packaged dry goods, dairy, chilled meats, bread, bottled water, soft drinks, beer, and basic wine. Household cleaning products, toiletries, and simple over-the-counter pharmacy items often share shelf space with the food aisles in Cycladic supermarkets of this type — useful if you need washing-up liquid, sunscreen top-ups, or insect repellent without making a separate trip.
Fresh produce quality on Milos tends to be reasonable through the summer season, with tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and stone fruit reflecting what is in season across the southern Aegean. Local cheeses — particularly graviera and mizithra — are worth looking for in the dairy section, as are locally produced capers, which are a Milos speciality harvested from the wild caper plants that grow across the island's volcanic landscape.
Packaging sizes in Cycladic supermarkets skew toward single-use and small-household formats during the tourist season, reflecting the needs of renters rather than large families doing a weekly shop. Prices on island supermarkets generally run slightly higher than mainland Greece due to transport costs, which is standard practice across the Cyclades.
The shop's coordinates place it away from the main port at Adamas, so visitors staying closer to the port area may find it more convenient to check nearby alternatives first, while those based further inland or toward Plaka may find Alfa Market the more practical option.
How to Get There
Milos has no public bus network that connects all settlements with frequent service, so most visitors explore the island by rental car, scooter, or quad. The coordinates for Alfa Market (36.7440°N, 24.4307°E) place it in the central inland area of the island — enter the coordinates directly into Google Maps or a navigation app before you set off, as signage for individual shops can be sparse outside Adamas.
If you are staying in Adamas, the island's main port and commercial hub, it is worth noting that Adamas has its own supermarket options along the main strip. Alfa Market may be better suited to visitors based in the villages of the interior or the western coast.
Parking is not a constraint in the way it is in larger urban areas; most supermarkets across Milos have adjacent road space or a small forecourt where you can stop. If you are arriving by scooter or quad, factor in carrying capacity before doing a large shop.
Best Time to Visit
For practical grocery shopping, early morning is the most comfortable time, particularly in July and August when midday temperatures regularly exceed 30°C. Mornings also tend to see fresher bread and produce restocked from overnight deliveries.
Avoid the peak lunch window (roughly 13:00–17:00) if you want a quick in-and-out experience; this is when both tourist and local traffic peaks at island shops during high season. Late afternoon — from around 17:30 onward — is generally quieter.
Milos receives a significant seasonal influx of visitors between late June and early September. During this period, popular items such as bottled water in larger formats, specific local products, and quality fresh produce can sell out by midday, so earlier visits are more reliable. Outside of high season, from October through April, reduced tourist traffic means shelves are generally well-stocked throughout the day, though some specialist items may not be ordered in the same volume.
Greek supermarkets often close on Sunday afternoons and may operate reduced hours on public holidays. This is worth confirming when you arrive on the island, as hours can shift between seasons.
Tips for Visiting
- Confirm opening hours locally. No verified hours are available for this listing. Ask at your accommodation on arrival, or check the shop front directly — hours posted on the door are reliable.
- Bring a bag. Single-use plastic bags are subject to a small charge at Greek supermarkets following national legislation; a reusable bag avoids the fee and the fuss.
- Stock up on water early in your stay. Tap water on Milos, as on most Cycladic islands, is not recommended for drinking. Buying larger 6-litre bottles rather than individual 0.5-litre bottles is significantly cheaper per litre.
- Look for Milos capers. Jarred capers and caper leaves from Milos are a genuinely local product worth picking up — they keep well and make useful gifts or additions to island picnic food.
- Cash is useful. Card payments are widely accepted at Greek supermarkets, but smaller island shops can sometimes have connectivity issues with card terminals. Having a small amount of cash is practical insurance.
- Check unit prices on wine and beer. Local labels and supermarket own-brand options are almost always better value than imported or heavily marketed brands, and Greek wine in particular offers strong quality at the lower price points.
- Factor in transport. If you are on a scooter or quad rather than a car, think through what you actually need before heading in — heavy water bottles and awkward packaging are harder to manage on two wheels.
- Revisit as needed. On a week-long stay, two or three short visits spread across the week is more practical than one large shop, particularly in summer heat when perishables need refrigeration quickly.
Practical Information
Alfa Market serves the grocery and household needs of residents and visitors in its part of Milos. The supermarket category on the island covers a range of store sizes, from small convenience-style shops in beach villages to larger format stores near the main settlements; Alfa Market appears to fall in the latter category based on available data, though the exact floor area is not confirmed.
No phone number is listed in the available data for this location. If you need to call ahead — for example, to check whether a specific product is in stock — the most reliable approach is to ask a local contact or your accommodation host for the current contact details.
The Facebook page associated with this listing (facebook.com/AlfaMarketeg) appears, based on web snippets, to relate to a supermarket chain based in Egypt rather than the Milos location. This social media link should not be used as a source of information about the Milos store's hours, stock, or promotions. Similarly, the TikTok account linked in the data does not appear to relate to the Milos location. Visitors should rely on on-the-ground information rather than these social channels.
Location
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