Skip to main content
Greek Island Buses LogoGreek Island Buses

Scorpios Mykonos

Tourist Attractions
Mykonos
Scorpios Mykonos - 1
1 / 1

About

Scorpios Mykonos occupies a stretch of Paraga Beach on the southern coast of Mykonos, roughly five kilometers from Mykonos Town. Unlike the island's more conventional beach clubs — where the emphasis is almost entirely on loungers, cocktails, and DJ sets — Scorpios is built around a broader program of music, movement, wellness, and what the venue describes as community ritual. The result is a place that operates more like a seasonal cultural hub than a straightforward day-to-night beach destination.

The venue is the original outpost of a concept that has since expanded to Bodrum in Turkey. On Mykonos, it sits directly above the water at Paraga, with a beachside restaurant at its core and a programming calendar that runs across music performances, movement workshops, sound healing sessions, and design-focused market events. It draws a crowd that tends to be as interested in the afternoon wellness offering as in the late-evening music lineup.

For many visitors, Scorpios sits in a category of its own on Mykonos. The island has no shortage of beach clubs, but few places combine a serious food and beverage operation with live-act bookings at the caliber of Peggy Gou, Michael Bibi, and Adriatique alongside daily morning practice and wellbeing workshops. Whether you come for one element or intend to spend a full day moving between them, it helps to arrive knowing roughly what each part of the experience involves.

What to Expect

The physical setting at Paraga is relaxed by Mykonos standards — less manicured than the clubs at Psarou or Nammos, more oriented toward natural materials, open-air terraces, and shade structures that blend with the rocky hillside above the beach. The sea here is calm by Aegean standards in most conditions, and the coastline is a mix of small sand and flat rock.

The restaurant anchors the daytime experience, offering food and drink from mid-morning onward with a menu that reflects the venue's orientation toward fresh, Mediterranean-leaning ingredients. The Bodrum outpost features what the brand calls a "Beach House" concept focused on swimming and informal dining; the Mykonos original runs along similar lines at its core.

Musically, Scorpios books artists across the spectrum of electronic music, with a lean toward melodic, deep, and organic house rather than the harder festival sound you'll find at some other island venues. Live instruments frequently feature alongside electronic sets. Performances typically begin in the late afternoon and extend into the night, meaning the transition from golden hour into evening is one of the most attended moments on the venue's daily schedule.

The wellness component — branded as the Wellbeing Program — includes sessions in fan movement, strength training, sound healing, and energy ceremony formats. These are scheduled for the morning and early afternoon, making it entirely possible to attend a class, spend time at the beach, eat, and then stay for music without leaving the site.

The Agora Experience is a market and creative forum concept that the venue runs periodically, bringing together designers, collectors, and makers. The Scorpios Bazaar functions as a curated shopping element within this, leaning toward independent and design-forward offerings rather than typical tourist merchandise.

How to Get There

Paraga Beach is located on Mykonos's southern coast, accessible by car or scooter via the main road that runs south from Mykonos Town toward Platis Gialos and then continues east toward Paraga and Paradise Beach. The drive from Mykonos Town takes around 15 minutes depending on traffic, which can be significant in high summer.

Taxis from Mykonos Town or the airport are available but should be booked in advance during July and August, when demand consistently outpaces supply. The island's KTEL bus service runs routes to the southern beaches from the Fabrika bus station in Mykonos Town, with stops near Paraga included in the summer schedule — check current timetables locally or at the bus station, as schedules change each season.

Water taxis operate between Platis Gialos and several southern beaches during summer, and this can be a practical option if you're coming from that direction. Parking near Paraga Beach is limited; arriving by bus, water taxi, or hired scooter avoids the worst of it.

Best Time to Visit

Scorpios operates on a seasonal basis, typically from late spring through early October, with the full programming calendar running across July and August. If you're specifically interested in the marquee music bookings, those are concentrated in the peak summer months. Wellbeing sessions tend to run throughout the season.

For the music program specifically, late afternoon arrival — roughly two to three hours before sunset — allows you to settle in, eat, and be positioned for the transition from daylight into the evening set. Sunset at Paraga during summer falls broadly between 8:00 and 8:45 p.m., and the period around it is consistently the busiest part of the day at the venue.

June and early September are worth considering if you want the full program without the intensity of peak-August crowds. The weather is warm and stable across the whole season, and early September in particular often brings calmer winds than July or August, when the meltemi — the northern Aegean wind — can be strong on exposed sections of the Mykonos coastline. Paraga has some natural shelter but is not fully protected.

Morning wellness sessions suit visitors who want to use the venue as a day-long base, arriving early and staying through the evening. The venue is less suited to a casual short visit during peak hours, when demand for space is high.

Tips for Visiting

  • Check the program before you go. Scorpios publishes its music and wellness schedule on its website and Instagram in advance of each season. Specific artist announcements often appear a few weeks before the dates, so monitoring the Instagram account gives the earliest notice.
  • Book for the restaurant separately. During peak season, showing up without a reservation for the restaurant is risky. The venue's website handles bookings; do this well in advance for July and August dates.
  • Wellness sessions may require advance sign-up. The Wellbeing Program runs structured sessions rather than drop-in classes. Check the current season's format on the website before assuming you can join on the day.
  • Dress code leans toward relaxed but considered. The crowd at Scorpios tends toward natural fabrics, earthy tones, and beachwear that crosses over into evening wear without looking out of place at either end. Overly formal attire is as conspicuous as purely clubwear.
  • Water taxi from Platis Gialos is worth considering. If you're based in Mykonos Town or the north and want to avoid driving back after an evening event, a plan for the return journey is essential — taxis are scarce late at night on the southern beaches.
  • The Bazaar events are irregular. These don't run on a fixed weekly schedule. If the design market or Agora Experience is a priority, check the event calendar specifically rather than assuming it will be active on your visit date.
  • Arrive early for peak music nights. On nights with headline bookings, space inside the venue fills quickly and waiting outside for entry can be lengthy. Earlier entry in the late afternoon is typically easier.
  • Stay across the Bodrum comparison only if relevant. If you've visited Scorpios Bodrum, the Mykonos location shares the ethos and some aesthetic DNA but operates in a distinct physical setting. Paraga is rockier and more compact than the Bodrum beachfront.

History and Context

Scorpios opened on Mykonos in 2015, conceived as an alternative to the style of beach club that had defined the island's southern coast for the previous decade. The founders positioned it explicitly against the VIP-bottle-service model, building instead around a concept of communal experience, creative programming, and a connection to natural rhythms — sunrise, sunset, seasonal change.

The timing coincided with a broader shift in how a segment of European and international travelers engaged with Mykonos. The island had a well-established reputation for luxury and excess, but Scorpios addressed a different appetite: extended days oriented around food, movement, music, and conversation rather than pure spectacle.

Over the seasons, the venue developed its programming infrastructure — the wellbeing curriculum, the Bazaar, the Agora concept — and built a community of returning visitors alongside a steady flow of first-timers. The expansion to Bodrum confirmed it as a brand rather than a one-location experiment, and in both locations the core proposition has remained stable: a seasonal destination where music, wellness, and gathering are treated as equally serious pursuits.

On Mykonos, the location at Paraga keeps the venue slightly removed from the most heavily trafficked beach strip at Platis Gialos and the party concentration at Paradise and Super Paradise, which suits the pace the venue is trying to maintain. The physical positioning reinforces the separation from the island's more conventional beach-club circuit.

Address

Paraga Beach, Mykonos 846 00, Greece

Phone

#ERROR!

Follow & Connect

Location

Loading map…

What's On at Scorpios Mykonos