Cosmos Hotel

About
Cosmos Hotel sits directly beside Plaka Beach, one of the longest and most unspoiled stretches of sand on Naxos. The property positions itself as a boutique operation — a step up from the standard beach hotel — with a range of accommodation from villas sleeping up to ten people down to sea-view suites, a sky lounge bar, a pool bar, and a signature breakfast programme built around local Naxian produce.
With a Google rating of 4.8 from 48 reviews, it consistently earns high marks for atmosphere and hospitality. The scale feels deliberate: small enough to feel personal, large enough to offer genuine amenities.
What to Expect
Accommodation at Cosmos Hotel runs across several categories. Villas accommodate groups of up to ten or six guests, making them a practical choice for families or friends travelling together. Family apartments come in three orientations — landscape view, partial sea view, or pool view — and the signature suite rounds out the options for couples looking for something more intimate.
The breakfast here is worth highlighting specifically. The Cosmos Signature Breakfast buffet draws on the island's own larder: PDO feta, Naxian graviera cheese, spinach pies, omelettes made with local eggs, fresh fruit, house honey, and handmade jams. It reads like a farmers' market in buffet form, and it's the kind of start to the day that justifies skipping the town bakery run.
Two bar areas serve different purposes. The pool bar covers daytime drinks and snacks beside the swimming pool, while the sky lounge bar steps up the atmosphere for evenings — cocktails with an elevated outlook over the Aegean. Plaka Beach itself is accessible directly from the property, offering that particular combination of fine sand and clear, shallow water that makes the island's southwest coast so popular with families.
How to Get There
Plaka Beach is approximately 8 kilometres south of Naxos Town (Chora) along the coastal road that runs past Agios Prokopios and Agia Anna before reaching Plaka. By car or scooter from Chora, the drive takes around 15 minutes and parking is available near the beach. The KTEL bus service on Naxos runs a route south toward Pyrgaki that stops at Plaka; check current timetables at the bus station in Naxos Town, as frequency varies by season. Taxis from the port or Chora to Plaka typically run to around 15–20 euros depending on the time of day. The hotel's coordinates place it at 37.0625° N, 25.3574° E — enter those into Google Maps or use the hotel's website for precise directions.
Best Time to Visit
Cosmos Hotel operates seasonally, as most Plaka Beach properties do. The summer window of June through early September brings the most reliable weather and the fullest range of services. July and August are peak months — Plaka is popular with Greek and European families alike, and availability at a boutique property this size fills quickly. If you want Plaka's famous long beach with fewer crowds and cooler evenings, the second half of June or early September offer the most comfortable balance. The strong Meltemi winds that can pick up across the Cyclades in July and August are felt on the west-facing coast, so factor that into any sailing or watersports plans.
Tips for Visiting
- Book villa and suite rooms as early as possible — capacity at a boutique property is limited and summer weekends fill first.
- Contact the hotel directly via email at [email protected] or by phone at +30 699 443 4090 to ask about seasonal packages or transfers from the port.
- Plaka Beach has minimal infrastructure beyond beach bars; the hotel's pool bar and sky lounge mean you don't need to leave the property for a full evening.
- If you're self-catering in a villa or apartment, the main Naxos Town market is the best source for fresh produce — the drive back to Plaka takes 15 minutes and is straightforward.
- Ask about the signature breakfast when booking — it may be included in certain room packages or available as an add-on.
What's Nearby
Plaka Beach stretches roughly 5 kilometres from Agia Anna southward toward Mikri Vigla. Immediately north, Agia Anna village has a small harbour, a handful of tavernas, and ferry connections to smaller Cycladic islands during summer. Continue north and you reach Agios Prokopios, another long sandy beach with slightly more services. South of Plaka, the road winds toward Mikri Vigla — a well-known windsurfing and kitesurfing spot — and eventually Pyrgaki, where the coast becomes quieter and more rugged. Naxos Town itself is the obvious base for an evening excursion: the Kastro, the Portara on the islet of Palatia, and a concentrated strip of restaurants around the port are all within a 15-minute drive.
Location
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