Paradise Beach Club Mykonos

About
Paradise Beach Club has occupied the same stretch of south-coast shoreline since 1969, making it one of the longest-running party venues in Greece. It sits directly on Paradise Beach — a broad arc of golden sand roughly 5 kilometres south of Mykonos Town — and operates as both a beach bar from morning and an open-air club by afternoon, running without pause until 2 AM every day of the week during the summer season.
DJMag's annual global club poll has ranked it at number 14 worldwide, which places it in the same conversation as purpose-built urban superclubs while it remains, technically, a beach. That context matters when you're deciding what kind of day you want: this is not a lounger-and-rosé operation. Sunbeds fill early, the music is on from the moment the doors open at 8 AM, and the energy shifts noticeably upward around 4 PM when the afternoon party block begins.
The venue also manages a connected accommodation property, Paradise Beach Resort, offering sea-view rooms, standard rooms, bungalows, and beach cabins within a short walk of the sand. VIP table and booth reservations can be made in advance through the club's website, and the email address for those enquiries is [email protected].
What to Expect
Paradise Beach itself is a south-facing bay with fine-to-medium golden sand and calm, clear water. The club has colonised the main section of the beach with sunbeds, a bar infrastructure, and a stage or DJ booth area that faces the sea. The open-air format means you're genuinely on the beach — there are no solid walls separating the dancefloor from the shoreline.
The crowd skews young, international, and here specifically for the party. Thousands of visitors make Paradise Beach a dedicated stop each summer, and it shows in the atmosphere: on a busy afternoon in July or August, the beach bar section is dense and loud. If you arrive at 8 AM you'll find relative quiet, a working beach bar, and a more relaxed pace. By mid-afternoon that has changed considerably.
VIP booths are available to book, and doing so in advance is the practical way to secure a defined space on a peak day. Without a reservation, you're joining the general crowd, which can mean standing rather than sitting once the afternoon sessions are in full swing.
The venue has a clear identity as a crossover between daytime beach bar and full clubbing venue — the website describes it in exactly those terms, and the DJMag ranking confirms it's taken seriously as a nightlife destination rather than just a beach concession. The summer season runs April through October.
How to Get There
Paradise Beach is around 5 kilometres south of Mykonos Town (Chora). The quickest and most convenient way to reach it in summer is by taxi boat from Mykonos Town harbour or Platis Gialos beach — these small ferries run regularly during the season and drop you directly at the beach. Journey time from the harbour is approximately 15–20 minutes by sea.
By road, you can drive or take a taxi south from Chora via the main inland route toward Paraga; Paradise Beach is signposted from the junction. Parking exists in the area but fills quickly on peak days — arrive early or use the taxi boat to avoid the search. KTEL buses from the south bus station in Mykonos Town serve Paradise Beach during the season, though schedules and frequency vary; check current timetables at the bus station.
If you're staying at Paradise Beach Resort you're already on site. For visitors coming from Super Paradise or Paraga, both beaches are a short walk along the coastal path or a brief taxi ride away.
Best Time to Visit
The club operates from April through October. The peak months are July and August, when the beach is at its most crowded and the afternoon parties are at full capacity. If you want the full experience — maximum crowd, headline DJs, the DJMag-ranking atmosphere — that's your window, but book a booth or arrive early to claim space.
June and September offer a meaningful trade-off: the weather is reliably warm (sea temperatures are comfortable by early June), the beach is less compressed, and the club is still fully operational. For those who want the club but not the extreme density of high summer, the shoulder months are worth considering.
Time of day is the most important variable. The beach bar mode from 8 AM to early afternoon is genuinely calmer and suits a mix of swimmers and early drinkers. The party ramp-up begins around 4 PM and the venue transitions into full club mode from there through the late-night hours. Mykonos summers are hot — temperatures in July and August regularly exceed 30°C — so the early-morning hours also have practical value as the coolest part of the day.
The meltemi wind blows across the Cyclades in July and August, but Paradise Beach's south-facing orientation gives it some natural shelter compared to north-coast beaches. Sea conditions are generally calm.
Tips for Visiting
- Book a VIP booth in advance if space matters to you. On peak days in July and August, unreserved sunbeds and tables go quickly. Contact the venue at [email protected] or through the website.
- Arrive before 10 AM if you want a sunbed in the general area without a reservation. By midday on a summer weekend the prime spots are taken.
- The taxi boat from Mykonos Town harbour is the most practical transfer. It avoids parking stress, drops you at the beach, and the return boats run into the evening.
- Wear footwear you're comfortable dancing in on sand. The dancefloor is open-air and partly sandy — heels are impractical and most guests go barefoot or in sandals.
- Bring cash as well as a card. Beach venues in the Cyclades sometimes have card reader issues during peak hours; having euros available avoids a queue at the bar.
- If you're staying nearby, check whether your accommodation offers a shuttle or walking access to the beach. Paradise Beach Resort guests have the most direct access.
- The afternoon party starts around 4 PM. If you're there purely for the club experience, arriving at noon gives you time to settle in before the energy escalates.
- Noise and volume are significant. This is not a venue for quiet conversation. If you're travelling with people who are not there for the music, consider splitting your afternoon.
- Check the events calendar on the website before you go. Summer 2026 events are already listed, and specific party nights or themed evenings may affect crowd size and pricing.
Activities and Facilities
The beach itself offers standard Aegean swimming — clear water, no strong currents in normal summer conditions, and a sandy entry. Water sports concessions operate on Paradise Beach separately from the club, though the club's own facilities are focused on the bar, music, and sunbed setup rather than watersports.
Accommodation at the adjacent Paradise Beach Resort includes sea-view rooms, standard rooms, bungalows, and beach cabins. Staying on-site eliminates transfer logistics entirely and is a practical option if you're planning multiple days at the beach. Bookings go through the venue website.
VIP booth and event package bookings are available for groups wanting dedicated space. The club's website lists package options and event schedules; the VIP email is the direct line for group enquiries.
For visitors not staying on-site, the beach bar itself covers food and drink service from 8 AM. Full club programming runs afternoons through to 2 AM.
Address
C947+W3 Paradise Beach, Mikonos 846 00, Greece
Phone
+30 2289 022852Website
www.paradiseclubmykonos.comOpening Hours
Location
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