Mikri Vigla

About
Mikri Vigla is a beachfront hotel planted directly on the sandy shore of Mikri Vigla beach, one of the longest and most consistently windy stretches on Naxos's west coast. If you're planning a trip built around water sports, or simply want to wake up with the Aegean a few steps from your door, this is one of the more straightforward choices on the island.
The beach itself runs for a considerable length, with water that shifts through several shades of blue-green as the depth changes — the kind of gradation you notice when you're actually standing in it rather than reading about it. The steady meltemi wind that sweeps the west coast through summer is the reason kitesurfers and windsurfers treat Mikri Vigla as a destination in its own right.
What to Expect
The hotel occupies a beachfront position on Mikri Vigla beach, which means the sand and sea are immediately accessible without a walk or a road crossing. The setting is low-key and relatively uncommercialized compared to the beaches closer to Naxos Town. The surrounding area is characterized by open dunes, cedar trees, and a landscape that hasn't been heavily developed — the neighboring beach of Mikro Aliko, just to the south, remains particularly untouched.
Guests choosing this hotel are typically here for the beach and the wind. Windsurfing and kitesurfing schools and rental operations work out of the Mikri Vigla beach area, so conditions and equipment are reasonably accessible without needing to arrange transport elsewhere.
How to Get There
Mikri Vigla beach is on the southwest coast of Naxos, roughly 18 kilometers from Naxos Town by road. The main route heads south from the capital through Vivlos and Kastraki before reaching the coast at Mikri Vigla.
- By car or scooter: The most practical option. The drive from Naxos Town takes around 25–30 minutes. There is roadside parking near the beach.
- By bus: KTEL buses connect Naxos Town with the southwest coast beaches during summer, including a stop serving Mikri Vigla. Schedules run less frequently than the main resort routes, so check current timetables at the Naxos Town bus station before relying on this.
- By bicycle: The distance and some uphill sections make this a committed ride rather than a casual one, but cyclists do make the trip.
Best Time to Visit
The hotel operates in the context of the Greek island tourism season, which runs broadly from late April through October. July and August bring the strongest meltemi winds — ideal for windsurfing and kitesurfing, but worth knowing if you're hoping for flat, calm water. May, June, and September offer a balance of warm temperatures, lighter winds, and thinner crowds on the beach. The west coast catches the late afternoon sun well, and evenings here have a particular quality as the light drops over the water.
Tips for Visiting
- Book well in advance for July and August, when Mikri Vigla's reputation among water-sports travelers fills beach-adjacent accommodation quickly.
- The meltemi can blow hard and consistently for several days at a stretch; factor this into plans if you're traveling with young children or prefer calmer conditions.
- The area around Mikro Aliko, immediately to the south, offers a quieter and more sheltered beach experience when the wind is up.
- Bring supplies or plan meals, as the immediate beach area has limited dining options compared to larger resort zones on the island.
- The sandy bottom and shallow entry at Mikri Vigla beach make it reasonable for swimming even when the surface is choppy.
- A car or scooter gives you the flexibility to combine a stay here with day trips to Naxos Town, the inland villages, and the beaches of the southeast coast.
What's Nearby
The Mikri Vigla area sits within easy reach of several other west-coast beaches. Kastraki beach is a short drive north, longer and less developed. Mikro Aliko to the south is backed by dunes and juniper trees and sees fewer visitors. Further south, Aliko beach and the surrounding cedar forest form one of the quieter corners of the Naxos coastline.
The inland village of Vivlos (also called Tripodes) is around 5 kilometers east and has a handful of tavernas and a local character entirely different from the coast. The villages of the Tragaea plateau — Halki, Filoti, Apeiranthos — are under an hour's drive and worth a half-day if you want to see a different side of the island.
Location
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