Saint Vlassis

About
Saint Vlassis is a luxury hotel on Konstantinou Karamanli, one of the main approach roads into Naxos Town (Chora). With a 4.8 rating across 247 Google reviews, it sits at the upper end of what the island offers for accommodation — and the property leans into that positioning deliberately, marketing itself to travelers who want personal service alongside comfort rather than anonymous resort scale.
The ethos here is personal. The website excerpt references knowing guests by name, and the on-site concierge team is a recurring point in guest feedback. If you're planning a honeymoon or a longer stay on the island and want a base that handles logistics — beach suggestions, restaurant bookings, local itineraries — Saint Vlassis is built for exactly that.
What to Expect
Rooms range from standard categories up to a Honeymoon Suite with a rain shower. The hotel runs its own restaurant, which focuses on local Naxian cuisine and hosts periodic events — useful if you want to eat well without heading out every night. Mornings start with a Mediterranean buffet breakfast included for guests.
The setting is described as peaceful and countryside-adjacent despite being within reach of Naxos Town's harbor and narrow Kastro lanes. That balance — walkable to the old town but removed from its noise — is one of the property's clearer practical advantages. Parking is available on site, which matters in high season when Chora's streets become difficult to navigate by car.
The hotel is open 24 hours, with front desk and concierge coverage around the clock.
How to Get There
Saint Vlassis sits on Konstantinou Karamanli in Naxos Town, roughly a 10–15 minute walk from the Naxos port ferry terminal. If you're arriving by ferry, you can walk with light luggage or take one of the taxis that wait at the port. The hotel's coordinates place it just south of the main Chora area, accessible by the coastal road.
By car from Naxos Airport, the drive is under 10 minutes — the airport sits close to the southern edge of Naxos Town. On-site parking means you won't need to hunt for a space if you're renting a vehicle to explore the island's interior villages.
Local buses connect Naxos Town to major beaches and villages; the main KTEL bus station is near the port, a short walk or taxi ride from the hotel.
Best Time to Visit
Naxos Town runs year-round at a low hum, but the island's high season runs from late June through August, when ferry traffic is heaviest and rooms fill quickly. Saint Vlassis's rating suggests consistent quality across seasons, but booking direct in advance is advisable for July and August, particularly if you want the Honeymoon Suite.
Shoulder months — May, June, September, and early October — offer calmer streets, warm sea temperatures, and more availability. The meltemi wind that sweeps the Cyclades in August can make north-facing beaches choppy; the hotel's concierge can steer you toward sheltered alternatives like Alyko Beach on the southwest coast during those windows.
Tips for Visiting
- Book direct via the hotel's website or by phone; the hotel runs an SV Hotel Loyalty Club suggesting benefits for direct bookings.
- Ask the concierge about beach conditions and current restaurant recommendations — local knowledge here is a genuine resource, not a formality.
- Bring or rent a vehicle if you plan to explore Naxos's mountain villages (Apeiranthos, Filoti, Halki) — the island rewards those with wheels.
- Check the restaurant's event calendar before arrival; the hotel hosts local cuisine evenings that are worth timing your stay around.
- For honeymoon stays, contact the hotel directly at [email protected] to discuss suite availability and any arrival arrangements in advance.
- Sunset at Alyko Beach is referenced in the hotel's own content as a recommended end-of-day destination — it's about 15 km south of Naxos Town along the west coast road.
What's Nearby
Konstantinou Karamanli feeds directly into Naxos Town center, putting the Portara (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia) within a 15-minute walk. The Kastro, Naxos's medieval Venetian citadel, is similarly close — its narrow lanes contain several small museums and churches worth an hour of exploration.
Naxos Town's harbor promenade holds the main concentration of cafes, tavernas, and bars. Agios Georgios Beach, the long sandy stretch immediately south of the port, is the closest swimming option and reachable on foot in under 20 minutes. For day trips, the bus to Plaka Beach on the west coast runs regularly in summer.
Address
Κωνσταντίνου Καραμανλή, Naxos 843 00, Greece
Phone
+30 2285 023536Website
www.saint-vlassis.comOpening Hours
Location
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