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Attractions & Points of InterestMykonosSuper Paradise Beach Restaurant

Super Paradise Beach Restaurant

Restaurants
Mykonos
4.3
Super Paradise Beach Restaurant - 1
1 / 1

About

Super Paradise Beach Restaurant sits directly on the sand at Super Paradise, one of the south-facing beaches on Mykonos that has held a reputation for lively, all-day beach culture for more than fifty years. The restaurant is the anchor of a wider beach club operation — you come for lunch, stay for cocktails, and find the music volume rising as the afternoon rolls on.

The venue recently underwent a full redesign, with the stated aim of grounding the aesthetic in local materials: stone, wood, and granite that echo the Cycladic landscape rather than fighting it. The result is a space that functions simultaneously as a sit-down restaurant, a full bar, a sunbed club, and a boutique — which explains why Google's place data tags it as everything from a restaurant to a clothing store to a hookah bar. With a 4.3-star rating across more than 5,400 reviews, it clearly delivers on most of what it promises.

The beach itself curves between rocky headlands with clear, deep-blue water and coarse sand. Super Paradise has long drawn a mixed crowd — international visitors, the LGBTQ+ community, and party tourists who want music with their swimming. The restaurant and bar operation is the social and commercial centre of that scene.

What to Expect

The dining area is set back from the waterline but close enough that you eat within earshot of the sea. Design uses natural stone finishes, wooden surfaces, and open-air sightlines toward the water — the redesign emphasises what the venue calls Mykonian bohemian aesthetics, which in practice means relaxed but polished.

Food at Super Paradise leans toward Mediterranean and Greek: the kind of menu suited to long lunches in the sun, with fresh seafood, salads, and grilled dishes that pair with the wine list. Cocktails are a significant part of the offer and the bar programme is treated as a headline feature. The venue's own description highlights "mouth-watering food options, sensational wines and creative cocktails" — which is broadly consistent with beach club dining of this calibre on Mykonos.

Beyond the restaurant and bar, the wider complex includes sunbed and umbrella rentals on the beach, a boutique selling clothing and gifts, and massage services. This makes Super Paradise less a standalone restaurant and more a full-day resort destination, where eating is one layer of a longer stay.

The crowd tends to be international, cosmopolitan, and social. Music builds through the day, and by mid-afternoon the bar area operates more like a club. If you want a quiet lunch, arrive before noon.

How to Get There

Super Paradise Beach is on the southern coast of Mykonos, roughly 5–6 km from Mykonos Town (Chora). There is no direct bus route from the town centre to Super Paradise — this is one of the beaches served primarily by private transport, taxi boat, or rental vehicle.

The most atmospheric way to arrive is by taxi boat from Platis Gialos Beach, which runs seasonally and takes only a few minutes. Platis Gialos is itself reachable by the main KTEL bus network from the southern bus station in Mykonos Town.

By road, the approach involves a narrow, winding track down toward the beach. Parking is limited and can fill quickly in peak season; arriving before 11:00 gives you the best chance of a space. Driving a rental scooter or quad is common, but the road surface and gradient require care.

Taxis from Mykonos Town are available but factor in waiting time for the return, especially on busy summer evenings.

Best Time to Visit

Super Paradise operates seasonally. The 2026 season opens May 1st according to the venue's own announcement — past seasons have typically run through late September or October. July and August are peak months: the beach and restaurant are at maximum capacity, sunbeds book out, and the bar scene peaks in the afternoon.

For a meal with a relaxed pace, June and September offer the best balance: the water is warm, the venue is open, and the crowds are thinner than high summer. Within a single day, arriving before noon secures a table and a sunbed without the full midday rush. The afternoon shift, roughly 15:00–18:00, is when the music and the bar scene dominate.

The Mykonian meltemi — the strong northerly wind that blows across the Aegean in July and August — can make the north-facing beaches rough, but Super Paradise faces south and is generally more sheltered, which is part of its enduring appeal.

Tips for Visiting

  • Book ahead in peak season. Super Paradise takes reservations — contact the venue via the website at super-paradise.com or email [email protected]. Walk-ins are harder in July and August, especially for sunbeds with service.
  • Arrive early for the food experience. The kitchen produces its best work before the bar atmosphere takes over. A noon arrival lets you eat properly before the afternoon party crowd arrives.
  • Taxi boat from Platis Gialos is the easiest and most enjoyable way to get there if you're not driving. The crossing is short and drops you directly on the beach.
  • The boutique stocks beachwear and gifts. If you forget sunscreen or need a cover-up, the on-site shop covers basics — but prices will reflect the location.
  • Cocktails are a feature, not an afterthought. The bar programme is one of the venue's calling cards; the creative cocktail list is worth exploring if you're staying into the afternoon.
  • Music gets loud by mid-afternoon. If you're sensitive to high-volume sound or are visiting with young children, plan a morning slot and depart by early afternoon.
  • Check the season opening dates. The beach club opens seasonally — the 2026 season starts May 1st. Outside that window the restaurant does not operate.
  • The beach is popular with the LGBTQ+ community. Super Paradise has a long-established reputation as a welcoming, inclusive beach. That's part of its identity, not incidental to it.

History and Context

Super Paradise's reputation stretches back more than fifty years. The beach became a fixture on the alternative Mykonos circuit in the early 1970s, when the island was drawing artists, free-thinkers, and travellers outside the package-holiday mainstream. Its LGBTQ+ identity solidified through that decade and has remained part of its character ever since.

The current operation represents a new chapter. The website describes the venue as entering "a new era" following a full redesign, with an emphasis on architecture that matches local materials to the natural rock formations of the headland. The granitic rocks that frame the beach — part of the raw Cycladic geology that defines this stretch of the south coast — have been incorporated into the design language rather than obscured by it.

The fifty-year arc from informal beach hangout to a professionally operated beach club with a full restaurant, boutique, and events programme mirrors the broader transformation of Mykonos itself. Super Paradise has managed to retain its identity through that shift, which is partly why it still draws loyal visitors alongside first-timers.

Address

Super Paradise Beach, Μύκονος 846 00, Greece

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What's On at Super Paradise Beach Restaurant