Sunset Windmill Suites

About
Sunset Windmill Suites occupies a traditional windmill building on the western edge of Mykonos Town, directly alongside the row of iconic kato mili windmills that overlook the Aegean. The address — Mykonos Windmills, Mikonos 846 00 — is as central as it gets: Paraportiani Church, one of the most-photographed religious buildings in Greece, is a short walk away, and the cluster of bars and galleries along Little Venice sits within the same compact neighborhood.
The property completed a full renovation before opening and positions itself as a small boutique operation rather than a large resort. It runs three distinct suite categories, all designed for two guests, and markets sea views and sunset light as its primary selling point — which, given the building's westward orientation above the harbor, is well-founded rather than promotional language.
Direct bookings through the property's website (sunsetwindmills.com) currently attract a discount of up to 10 percent, which makes contacting the hotel before going through a third-party platform worth the extra step.
What to Expect
The three suite types give guests a clear hierarchy based on the view they want. The Deluxe Suite With City View is the more economical choice, oriented toward Mykonos Town itself. The Deluxe Suite With Windmills View frames the historic kato mili directly, giving you the postcard perspective without leaving your room. The top category — Deluxe Suite With Windmills and Sea View — combines both, adding the open Aegean horizon to the windmill silhouette, which becomes especially striking in the late afternoon when the sun drops toward the water.
All rooms are newly renovated, and guest reviews emphasize cleanliness and the cooperative attitude of the staff. The property has a 4.8 rating from 30 Google reviews at the time of writing — a high score for a small accommodation, though the relatively low review count means a few experiences carry significant weight.
The building sits close to Mykonos Town's nightlife strip, which is both an asset and something to factor into room selection if you prefer quiet evenings. The windmill neighborhood borders the Kastro area and the lanes leading toward the main harbor bus stop, so nearly everything in Mykonos Town is reachable on foot within ten to fifteen minutes.
How to Get There
Mykonos New Port (where large ferries and high-speed catamarans dock) is roughly 2 km north of Mykonos Town. From the port, KTEL buses run regularly to the Fabrika bus station at the southern edge of town. From Fabrika, the windmill neighborhood is a ten-minute walk northwest through the pedestrian lanes of the Chora.
Taxis are available at the port and at Mykonos Town taxi stand near the harbor. A taxi from the new port to the windmill area typically takes under ten minutes, traffic depending. If you're arriving at the Old Port (some seasonal ferries and private boats dock here), the windmills are visible directly from the waterfront and are a five-minute walk along the harbor.
Mykonos Airport is approximately 3 km southeast of town. Taxis are the most practical transfer, as the airport is not on the main bus loop into town. Journey time is around ten minutes.
Parking a private car in Mykonos Town itself is not practical — the streets in the Chora are pedestrianized or extremely narrow. The nearest public parking area is below the town at the harbor. If you're renting a car or ATV for day trips, parking it outside the old town and walking in is the standard approach for everyone staying in this neighborhood.
Best Time to Visit
Mykonos runs a compressed high season from late June through late August, when ferry seats and accommodation fill weeks in advance. July and August bring the strongest meltemi winds — the northerly gusts that cool the air but can make outdoor dining uncomfortable on exposed terraces. For a property that sells itself on sunset views from a west-facing windmill location, the meltemi is generally not a problem, as the wind primarily affects the north and east sides of the island.
May, June, and September offer a noticeably calmer pace. Temperatures are still warm enough for swimming, the ferries run on full summer schedules from mid-June, and the streets of Mykonos Town are walkable without the crush of peak summer. Sunset time shifts from around 20:30 in late May to 20:00 in September, meaning the golden-hour light from a windmill-view suite lands at a practical hour rather than late evening.
If you're visiting specifically for the sunset views this property is named for, early evening during the shoulder months gives you the clearest skies and the fewest people clustered on the windmill hill.
Tips for Visiting
- Book direct. The hotel's website explicitly offers up to 10 percent off for direct reservations. Contact them at [email protected] or by phone at +30 698 976 3121 before booking through an OTA.
- Choose your suite category deliberately. The three room types differ in view, not just price. If the windmill silhouette at sunset is the reason you're booking, the Windmills View or Windmills and Sea View categories are the relevant choices; the City View room is the practical option if rate is the priority.
- Arrive light. The lanes around Paraportiani and the windmill quarter are cobbled and narrow. Rolling luggage is workable for short distances, but soft bags or backpacks make navigation easier from wherever a taxi or bus drops you.
- Plan around sunset. The windmills face due west. If your room faces the windmills, you'll have a front-row seat from your own window. The public area around the kato mili fills with photographers and visitors from about an hour before sunset — if you want a quieter vantage point, your room may be more comfortable than the hill itself.
- Walk to Little Venice. The waterfront stretch of bars and cafes known as Little Venice is a few minutes' walk from the property and directly faces the same sunset direction. It's a good complement to an evening at the hotel, though the bars there are busy during peak season.
- Nightlife proximity cuts both ways. The clubs and late-night venues in the Kastro and harbor area are walkable, which is convenient if that's part of your Mykonos plan. If you're a light sleeper, ask about room orientation and noise levels when you book.
- Verify check-in logistics in advance. Small boutique properties in Mykonos Town sometimes have unstaffed front desks during low-traffic hours. Confirm your arrival time with the hotel directly, especially if you're taking a late ferry.
- Use the location for day trips. With no car required for the Chora itself, this is a good base for morning beach trips by bus or ATV. The south coast beaches — Platis Gialos, Psarou, Ornos — are reachable by KTEL from Fabrika in under twenty minutes.
Facilities and Location
Sunset Windmill Suites sits at the coordinates 37.4440°N, 25.3273°E, which places it on the northwestern edge of the Mykonos Town old quarter, immediately adjacent to the kato mili windmills and within a two-minute walk of Paraportiani Church. The hotel also operates related properties — Sunset Paraportiani Rooms and Sunset Windmills House — suggesting the same ownership manages several units in this immediate neighborhood, which may give guests flexibility if one specific property is unavailable.
The surrounding area offers direct access to the main Mykonos Town amenities: the harbor waterfront with its fish tavernas and cafes, the boutique shopping lanes of the Chora, and the Kastro area — the oldest part of town. The Archaeological Museum of Mykonos is a short walk along the harbor road for visitors interested in local antiquities.
No restaurant or pool is listed for the property itself, which is consistent with the boutique windmill-suite format. Breakfast and dining options are abundant within walking distance, including bakeries in the market area and tavernas along the harbor.
Address
Mykonos Windmills, Mikonos 846 00, Greece
Phone
+30 698 976 3121Website
sunsetwindmills.comLocation
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