Lola Bar

About
Lola Bar sits on Zanni Pitaraki 4 in the heart of Mykonos Town, a short walk from the narrow lanes of the Kastro neighborhood and a stone's throw from the Little Venice waterfront. It opens at 8 PM every night and runs until 3 AM, making it one of the earlier-starting bars in Mykonos — useful if you want atmosphere without waiting until midnight.
With a Google rating of 4.7 across more than 600 reviews, Lola punches well above its modest footprint. It is a compact, openly gay-friendly bar that draws a loyal mix of locals and international visitors. The tone is social and energetic without scaling up to a full club format — you can hold a conversation, but the music is very much part of the experience.
What you'll find here is a bar that has built a consistent reputation on personality: the staff are frequently singled out in reviews, the atmosphere is inclusive, and the space itself is small enough that the room tends to fill with genuine crowd energy rather than the hollow buzz of a venue too large for its clientele.
What to Expect
Lola Bar is intimate by design. The venue does not sprawl — you are standing close to other guests, the bar is central to the action, and there is no divide between those drinking and those watching. That compression is part of what makes evenings here work: people actually talk to each other.
The bar skews gay-friendly and is openly positioned as LGBTQ-welcoming, though the crowd on any given night is typically mixed. Mykonos has long had a significant LGBTQ scene, and Lola sits comfortably within that tradition without being exclusively a single-crowd venue.
Drink service is straightforward — cocktails, spirits, and standard bar orders. Pricing reflects Mykonos rates, which run high by Greek standards; budget accordingly. The bartenders are a recurring point of praise in visitor reviews, and the general impression from returning guests is that the quality of service is consistent across the week rather than peaking only on weekends.
The physical space has something of a theatrical edge — expect some sparkle in the décor, music calibrated for the mood rather than background noise, and a crowd that arrives ready for the night ahead. It is not a place for a quiet drink; it is a place to start, extend, or center an evening.
How to Get There
The address is Zanni Pitaraki 4, Mykonos Town (Chora), postal code 846 00. Zanni Pitaraki is a pedestrian lane in the dense central grid of Mykonos Town, walkable from the main port in roughly 10–15 minutes on foot depending on which gate you enter Chora from.
If you are coming from the southern beaches (Psarou, Platis Gialos, Paraga) by taxi or bus, you will be dropped near the main square or the bus station area — both are a 5–10 minute walk into the town center from there. The Old Port is the nearest practical landmark if you are navigating by GPS.
Parking in Mykonos Town is effectively impossible at night. There is a pay car park on the edge of Chora near the windmills, but walking is the only practical option once you are in the island's capital after dark. Taxis from outlying hotels are straightforward; ask your accommodation to arrange one for the return.
Accessibility: Mykonos Town's lanes are cobbled and uneven. The route to Lola Bar involves narrow pedestrian streets that are not wheelchair-accessible in any practical sense.
Best Time to Visit
Lola Bar operates the same hours seven days a week — 8 PM to 3 AM — so there is no special scheduling required based on the day. In peak season (July and August), the bar fills quickly after 9:30 PM. If you want a spot at or near the bar without serious competition, arrive closer to opening time.
Shoulder season — late May through June and September through early October — sees a noticeably calmer Mykonos overall, but Lola maintains enough of a local and semi-regular visitor crowd to stay animated even outside peak weeks. The bar does not appear to close for winter in the manner of some seasonal Mykonos businesses, but hours outside the main season should be confirmed directly.
Mykonos evenings in summer are warm and humid; the bar's compact interior can feel close later in the night. Arriving slightly earlier means a cooler, less crowded start to the evening.
Tips for Visiting
- Arrive before 10 PM in August if you want to get a drink quickly without fighting the crowd at the bar — the space is small and fills fast on peak summer nights.
- Call ahead if you have questions: the phone number is +30 2289 078391. The website at lolabarmykonos.com may have current updates on events or special nights.
- Pricing is Mykonos-standard, meaning cocktails will cost more than mainland Greece equivalents. Go in with that expectation set.
- The bar is openly gay-friendly and has been for long enough that it has a genuine LGBTQ following, but the crowd is typically mixed — solo travelers and couples of all orientations are comfortable here.
- Check Instagram (@lolabarmykonos) before your visit for current event nights, themed evenings, or any guest DJ appearances — the account is active and gives a real-time picture of what's on.
- Wear comfortable shoes. Getting to Lola requires walking cobblestone lanes; heels are an Mykonos Town challenge regardless of destination.
- Combine with Little Venice nearby. The waterfront bars around Little Venice are a 3–5 minute walk; a sunset drink there followed by Lola later in the evening is a logical sequence that many visitors use.
- The bar closes at 3 AM, which is early by the standards of Mykonos clubs. If you are looking to continue after that, the island's major clubs run until dawn and are accessible by taxi from Chora.
What to Order
The research available on Lola Bar points to a standard cocktail bar format rather than a venue with a single signature serve. Cocktails are the obvious choice — the bar's aesthetic and crowd lean toward drinks that look and taste the part, and the bartending staff have a consistent reputation for delivery.
If you are uncertain what to order, ask the bartender directly; the team at Lola is frequently described as personable and willing to engage with guests rather than running a purely transactional service. Classic long drinks and spirits-based cocktails will be on offer; the menu is not published in detail online, so go with what you know or take a recommendation.
Drinking water is not always automatically served in Greek bars. Ask for it, especially on summer nights when the heat and the close quarters of the venue combine to make hydration genuinely practical.
Opening Hours
Location
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