Mykonos Theoxenia Boutique Hotel

About
Mykonos Theoxenia Boutique Hotel occupies a landmark position just beside the famous windmills of Mykonos Town — the cluster of white-capped mills on the Kato Mili ridge that frames almost every postcard of the island. The property is protected by the Greek Ministry of Culture, which gives it an architectural standing unusual for a functioning hotel, and it has been a member of Design Hotels since its reimagining. The original hotel opened in the 1960s, when Mykonos was drawing the first wave of international jet-setters, and that era of relaxed Mediterranean glamour is still legible in the bones of the building.
The current incarnation strips away anything fussy and replaces it with what the hotel calls Aegean Chic: natural tones, organic linens, terracotta accents, soft sculptural furnishings, and shapes that reference the Cycladic vernacular without resorting to pastiche. The result is a property that feels contemporary without being cold. With a Google rating of 4.4 from 220 reviews and a room count of 49 — 37 rooms and 12 suites, including four suites with private pools — it operates at a scale that keeps service personal.
What to Expect
The 37 rooms offer sea or garden views; given the hotel's position above the Mykonos Town waterfront, the sea-view rooms look directly toward the Aegean. The 12 suites divide into standard suites, suites with private pools, and two signature suites that also have private pools. Room interiors follow a consistent palette: whites and creams offset by warm wood and terracotta, natural textiles, and a deliberate absence of visual clutter. The aesthetic is closer to a well-curated private residence than to the maximalist approach common at some Mykonos properties.
The hotel's location beside the windmills places it within a short walk of Little Venice — the row of centuries-old houses cantilevered over the sea — and the narrow lanes of Mykonos Town (Chora). The port, where ferries and catamarans arrive from Athens' Piraeus and other Cycladic islands, is also reachable on foot. Immediate surroundings are quiet relative to the heart of Chora, which matters on an island where nighttime noise can be a genuine concern for guests seeking rest.
The design pedigree is genuine: Design Hotels membership involves a rigorous vetting process, and the Greek Ministry of Culture designation means the building's character cannot be altered arbitrarily. For travelers who care about the physical integrity of where they stay, both distinctions are meaningful.
How to Get There
Mykonos Town is the island's central settlement. The hotel's coordinates (37.4435, 25.3265) place it on the western edge of Chora, close to the windmills at Kato Mili. From Mykonos Airport, taxis are available outside arrivals; the drive to Mykonos Town takes roughly 10 minutes depending on traffic. From the Old Port (near the town center), the hotel is walkable in under ten minutes heading toward the windmills. From the New Port at Tourlos, where most large ferries dock, a taxi or bus into town is necessary before walking to the hotel.
Parking in central Mykonos Town is extremely limited. If you are arriving by rental car, confirm the hotel's parking arrangements in advance — properties at this location in Chora typically do not have on-site vehicle parking, and the nearest public lots are on the periphery of town.
The windmills themselves are a useful visual landmark: if you can see them, the hotel is immediately adjacent.
Best Time to Visit
Mykonos operates primarily from April through October, with July and August representing peak season. During those two months, the island is at its most crowded and its most expensive, and prices at boutique hotels in Mykonos Town reflect demand. The shoulder months — late May, June, and September — offer a meaningful improvement in both availability and atmosphere: temperatures are warm enough to swim, the light is long, and the crowds are manageable.
The windmill location means the hotel catches the prevailing meltemi wind that blows across the Cyclades from mid-July through August. This keeps temperatures bearable but can make outdoor terraces breezy. For travelers who find Mykonos summers too intense, late September and early October remain genuinely pleasant, with sea temperatures still in the low 20s Celsius.
Book well in advance for July and August. For June or September stays, earlier booking is still advisable for a property of 49 rooms that carries genuine design-hotel recognition.
Tips for Visiting
- Enroll in the hotel's loyalty program before booking. The website notes a 10% discount on first bookings for loyalty members, so signing up before you confirm your reservation is straightforward savings.
- Request a sea-view room explicitly. The property offers both sea and garden views; if the Aegean outlook is a priority, specify it at the time of booking rather than at check-in.
- Assess the suite tiers carefully. Four of the 12 suites include private pools. If a private pool is important to your stay, confirm whether you are in a pool suite or a standard suite — the room categories differ in more than price.
- Use the windmills as your navigation anchor. First-time visitors to Mykonos Town's maze of whitewashed lanes can lose their bearings quickly. The windmills are visible from a distance and mark the hotel's position clearly.
- Ask the hotel about direct beach transfers. Mykonos Town itself has no significant swimming beach; the island's main beaches — Paradise, Super Paradise, Ornos, Psarou — are reached by bus, boat, or taxi from the port. Hotels at this level often assist with arrangements.
- Pack layers for evenings on the terrace. The meltemi can make outdoor sitting cool after sunset even in July, particularly at the elevated, windward position near the mills.
- Confirm arrival logistics in advance. The hotel's Mykonos Town address means vehicle access may require coordination. Email or call ahead, especially if arriving with heavy luggage.
- Little Venice is a four-minute walk. If you want to watch sunset from the water's edge rather than a terrace, the sea-level bars and platforms of Little Venice are the closest option and require no transport.
Facilities and Location
The hotel operates as a full boutique property with the amenities expected at the five-star tier, though specific facility details beyond rooms and suites are not confirmed in available source material. What the research bundle and heritage designation make clear is that the property is not an apartment-style rental or a converted guesthouse — it is a purpose-built hotel with professional management, a loyalty program, and direct booking infrastructure.
Its position in Mykonos Town means that virtually every cultural and culinary point of interest on the island's western coast is within walking distance: the Archaeological Museum, the Church of Paraportiani (one of the most photographed churches in Greece), the waterfront tavernas of the harbor, and the departure points for boat excursions to Delos — the uninhabited sacred island two nautical miles to the southwest that houses one of the Aegean's most significant ancient sites.
For travelers who want to be based in the town rather than at a beach resort, the Theoxenia's location is among the most convenient on the island. The tradeoff is that Chora's famous nightlife is also close, which means noise after midnight is a realistic possibility in peak season — worth weighing against the convenience.
Location
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