Panorama Hotel

About
Panorama Hotel sits in Agios Stefanos, a low-key coastal village on the northern edge of Mykonos, roughly 150 metres from the sandy shore of Agios Stefanos Beach. It is a straightforward, independent property that trades on its proximity to the beach, its reasonable rates relative to the island average, and a location that keeps you close to the new port without dropping you into the noise of Mykonos Town.
The hotel draws guests who prioritise practicality — a clean room with a sea-view balcony, reliable air conditioning, free Wi-Fi, and the option to grab a coffee or a light meal without getting on a bus. At a Google rating of 3.3 from 142 reviews, it occupies the honest middle ground: not a luxury retreat, not a hostel, but a functional base that suits travellers who plan to spend most of their time off-site exploring the island.
If you are arriving by ferry to the new port (roughly 1.5 km south), Panorama is one of the closest proper hotels to that terminal, which makes it a sensible choice for early arrivals or late departures that don't line up with a full day's itinerary.
What to Expect
The hotel's accommodation runs across three basic room types. Single rooms are 22 square metres and fitted for one person with a double bed. Twin rooms step up to 24 square metres with two single beds. Triple rooms are the largest at 30 square metres, configured with three single beds — practical for small groups or families travelling on a budget. Each room has a furnished balcony or patio; upper-floor rooms overlook the Aegean, while others face the garden.
All rooms include air conditioning and free Wi-Fi, which is confirmed throughout the property. The on-site snack bar serves light meals, coffee, and drinks, so you don't need to go out for breakfast if you arrive late the night before or want a quick morning coffee before the beach. A 24-hour front desk means there's always someone available regardless of your ferry schedule — a genuine practical advantage on an island where arrivals and departures happen at all hours.
Car and motorbike rental can be arranged through the hotel, which matters on Mykonos where public bus routes are limited and taxis are expensive during peak season. On-site parking is available, useful if you plan to rent a vehicle and self-drive the island. The property's overall aesthetic is utilitarian rather than designed — whitewashed walls, simple furnishings, tidy common areas — in line with the price point and the village setting.
How to Get There
Agios Stefanos is about 3 km north of Mykonos Town (Chora) by road. From the new port (Tourlos), the hotel is approximately 1.5 km, an easy five-minute drive or a 20-minute walk along the coastal road. From the old port in Mykonos Town, the drive is around 10 minutes.
The KTEL bus network on Mykonos serves Agios Stefanos from the main bus station near the old port in Mykonos Town; check current schedules at the station as frequency varies significantly between shoulder season and high summer. A taxi from Mykonos Town to Agios Stefanos takes roughly 10 minutes, though fares climb sharply in July and August.
Parking is available at the hotel, so arriving by rental car or scooter is straightforward. The hotel's coordinates place it at the northern end of Agios Stefanos village, just back from the beachfront road.
Best Time to Visit
Mykonos runs hot and dry from late June through early September, with the Meltemi wind picking up strongly in July and August — that northerly wind keeps temperatures bearable but can make sunbeds on exposed beaches less comfortable in the afternoons. Agios Stefanos Beach faces northeast, which gives it some shelter compared to the south-coast beaches.
Shoulder season — May through early June and September into October — brings quieter roads, lower room rates, and a more relaxed pace in the village. The hotel, like most Mykonos properties, is likely to be closed or on minimal operation from November through March. If you are visiting for the beach and want genuine peace in the village, early June or late September are the most balanced options.
For Mykonos Town day trips from this base, mornings are the better time to visit Chora before cruise ship passengers arrive mid-morning.
Tips for Visiting
- Book direct for best rates. The hotel's own website (panoramamykonos.eu) is listed as the booking channel, and independent hotels on Mykonos often offer better terms than third-party platforms.
- Request a sea-view balcony room when booking. Not all rooms face the Aegean; upper-floor rooms are more likely to have open water views. Specify this at the time of reservation rather than on arrival.
- Use the 24-hour desk for excursion planning. Staff can point you toward ferry connections, island bus routes, and any available day trips — helpful if this is your first visit to Mykonos.
- Arrange car or scooter rental through the hotel. Having wheels in Mykonos outside of Chora makes reaching beaches like Elia, Agrari, or Kalafatis far easier than relying on the bus.
- The snack bar covers light meals, not full dinners. For evening dining, Agios Stefanos has a small cluster of tavernas on and near the beach road, or you can take the short bus or taxi ride into Mykonos Town.
- The new port proximity is a genuine advantage. If your ferry departs from Tourlos (the new port), staying here means a short transfer with luggage rather than a cross-town drive from central Chora.
- Check the air conditioning specification before booking in August. Guest reviews note efficient, quiet air conditioning as a positive; confirm whether your specific room type is included in that assessment if it matters to you.
- Agios Stefanos Beach is walkable. At 150 metres from the hotel, you don't need transport to reach the water — convenient for a swim before or after the busier parts of the day.
Facilities and Location
Panorama Hotel's confirmed facilities include free Wi-Fi throughout, a snack bar serving light food and drinks, a 24-hour reception desk, on-site parking, and car and motorbike rental services. The three room categories (single, twin, triple) cover solo travellers, couples, and small groups. Each room has a private balcony or patio.
Agios Stefanos itself is a quieter alternative base to Mykonos Town — there are no clubs, no cobblestone lanes packed with boutiques, and no cruise-ship foot traffic. What it does offer is a beach, a handful of tavernas, and fast access to both the new port and, via bus or car, the rest of the island. For travellers who want to be on Mykonos without paying old-town premium prices or sleeping through nightclub bass, Agios Stefanos and a practical hotel like Panorama is a logical trade-off.
The hotel's email contact is [email protected] and the phone number is +30 2289 022337 for direct enquiries or reservations.
Address
Agios Stefanos 846 00, Greece
Phone
+30 2289 022337Website
www.panoramamykonos.euLocation
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