Matogianni Reception

About
Matogianni Hotel occupies one of the most sought-after addresses in the entire Cyclades: a position directly on Matogianni Street, the pedestrian spine of Mykonos Town that connects the port waterfront to the whitewashed labyrinth of Chora. Guests here wake up above designer boutiques, art galleries, and the bars that have defined the island's social scene for decades — with no taxi, bus, or scooter needed to reach any of it.
With a 4.3-star rating across 363 Google reviews, the hotel draws consistently positive feedback, and its location is the most cited reason. Staying here means you are already inside the action rather than commuting to it, which in Mykonos — where traffic during peak season can turn a two-kilometer drive into a forty-minute crawl — is a meaningful practical advantage.
The reception desk is the contact and check-in point for the property, reachable by phone at +30 2289 022217 and online at matogianni.gr. Because the hotel sits within the old town's pedestrian zone, arrivals with luggage will need to coordinate drop-off carefully; the surrounding streets are closed to vehicles for most of the day.
What to Expect
Matogianni Hotel is positioned in the heart of Chora, which means the entire old town is walkable from your door. Little Venice, with its cantilevered houses extending over the sea, is a short stroll west. The famous windmills of Kato Mili sit on the ridge just beyond it. Mykonos Town's main port, where ferry connections arrive from Piraeus and the other Cyclades, is within comfortable walking distance to the north.
The street itself is a lively, densely packed shopping corridor. Expect foot traffic from mid-morning through late at night in July and August, with the pace slowing considerably in shoulder season. Rooms facing the street will have character views but ambient noise; this is a hotel best suited to travelers who want to be embedded in Mykonos Town rather than insulated from it.
The hotel's website positions the property squarely in the see-and-be-seen culture of the island — the kind of place where watching the procession of people on Matogianni Street from above is itself part of the experience. That framing is accurate to the location: this is not a retreat, it is a front-row seat to one of the Mediterranean's most concentrated stretches of fashion, hospitality, and nightlife.
For practical logistics, note that Mykonos Town's old core is almost entirely pedestrian. Luggage should be manageable without a trolley, or guests should coordinate with the hotel about timing arrivals around the brief windows when vehicles can access adjacent lanes.
How to Get There
Mykonos has two ports: the Old Port in Mykonos Town, used by smaller catamarans and some seasonal ferries, and the New Port at Tourlos, about two kilometers north, which handles most large ferry and high-speed vessel traffic. From Tourlos, a taxi to Matogianni Street takes five to ten minutes in low season; allow significantly more time in July and August. The hotel is not reachable by vehicle at the door — arrange drop-off at the nearest permitted point and walk the final stretch.
Mykonos Town is compact. From the waterfront bus stop at Fabrika Square (the main KTEL hub), the walk to Matogianni Street is under ten minutes on foot through the old town lanes. From the Old Port waterfront, the walk along the harbor past Taxi Square takes roughly the same time.
There is no dedicated hotel parking lot given the pedestrian location. Day parking is available outside the old town perimeter; several lots operate near the New Port and along the road toward Ornos, with shuttle or taxi connections. If you are renting a vehicle during your stay, factor in the parking logistics before arrival.
Accessibility within the pedestrian old town is limited by the cobblestone lanes and stepped alleys typical of Cycladic architecture. Guests with mobility considerations should contact the hotel directly to confirm the specific access route and room options.
Best Time to Visit
Mykonos Town operates year-round but the island's intensity peaks hard between late June and late August. During that window, Matogianni Street is at maximum capacity from noon onward, and evenings turn the lane into a slow-moving crowd. Staying on the street itself means the energy is immediate and constant — which is exactly what many visitors want, and exactly what others prefer to avoid.
May, June, and September offer a noticeably calmer version of the same location. Temperatures are still warm enough for beach days, shops and restaurants are open, and the street is animated without being gridlocked. October sees some businesses close but the town retains enough life for a relaxed visit.
For the hotel specifically, early-season bookings tend to offer better availability and rates. Mykonos is one of the most in-demand islands in Greece; rooms in central Chora locations sell out quickly once summer bookings open, often months in advance for peak weeks.
Time of day matters inside the old town. Mornings before ten are genuinely quiet — good for photography, for coffee without queuing, and for walking the lanes before the heat builds. Late afternoon through midnight is when Matogianni is at its most characteristic.
Tips for Visiting
- Book well in advance for July and August. Central Mykonos Town accommodation at this price point and location fills fast. Waiting until two or three weeks before your trip is high risk in peak season.
- Coordinate luggage logistics before you arrive. Ask the hotel for the exact drop-off point and any preferred arrival window. Dragging wheeled bags through narrow Cycladic cobblestone lanes mid-afternoon in August is harder than it sounds.
- Use the hotel's central location fully. Little Venice, the windmills, the harbor, and the main ferry terminal are all walkable. You may not need a rental vehicle at all if your base is Matogianni Street.
- Contact the hotel directly at +30 2289 022217 for specific questions about room types, booking terms, or early/late check-in options. The website at matogianni.gr is the official booking channel.
- Pack light footwear suitable for cobblestones. The lanes around the old town are charming but uneven. Sandals with grip or low-profile soles are more practical than wheeled luggage-friendly shoes.
- Factor in noise if you are a light sleeper. Matogianni Street remains active late into the evening during high season. Mention any noise sensitivity when booking and ask whether quieter room positions are available.
- Explore beyond the street. The hotel's location makes it easy to default to Matogianni, but Mykonos Town has excellent bakeries, small kafeneions, and neighborhood streets — Alefkandra near Little Venice, the area around the Catholic Cathedral — that see far fewer visitors.
- Check ferry times against your check-out. The New Port at Tourlos is the departure point for most ferries; factor in the transfer time plus check-out formalities when booking afternoon or evening departures.
Facilities and Location
The research bundle does not include a published room count, amenity list, or detailed facility breakdown for Matogianni Hotel. For confirmed information on room types, inclusions such as breakfast, air conditioning, pool access, or WiFi, the official website at matogianni.gr is the authoritative source, and the front desk at +30 2289 022217 can answer booking-specific questions directly.
What the location itself provides is substantial: immediate access to Mykonos Town's full dining, nightlife, and shopping offer, walkable proximity to the island's historic landmarks, and ferry connections that make day trips to Delos or Rhenia straightforward. The address places guests in the center of a UNESCO-listed settlement without the need for any daily transport.
Location
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