Sunday Studios

About
Sunday Studios sits in Agia Anna, a small coastal village on the west coast of Naxos, roughly 5 km south of Naxos Town. The complex is 60 metres from the sandy shore of Agia Anna beach, which means the sea is a genuine short walk rather than a distant promise. With a 4.8-star rating across 103 Google reviews, it consistently ranks among the better-regarded small properties along this stretch of coast.
The building follows Cycladic whitewashed architecture with colourful interior accents — a look that's familiar on the islands but executed with enough care here to feel considered rather than formulaic. Twelve rooms across several room types give it the intimacy of a guesthouse while offering the flexibility of a small hotel.
What to Expect
Sunday Studios offers six room categories: a Basic Studio with land view, a Studio with sea view, a Studio with partial sea view, an Apartment with sea view, an Apartment with garden view, a standard Apartment, and a Two-Bedroom Apartment on the ground floor. That range makes it workable for solo travellers and couples as well as families or small groups who want the extra space of a two-bedroom unit.
The property includes free Wi-Fi, free private parking, family rooms, and a pet-friendly policy — practical advantages that matter when you're renting a car to explore the island's interior or travelling with animals. A 24-hour front desk means late ferry arrivals, which are common on Naxos, aren't a logistical problem. The atmosphere is described by the owners as tranquil, and the west-facing position means sea-view rooms catch the afternoon light and evening colour over the Aegean.
How to Get There
From Naxos Town, Agia Anna is a straightforward 5 km drive south along the coastal road. By car or scooter, the journey takes about ten minutes. Free private parking on site removes the usual coastal-village headache of finding a space in summer.
The local KTEL bus service connects Naxos Town to Agia Anna several times daily in summer; the stop is close to the beach. Taxis from the port or Naxos Town typically run around €10–12. If you're arriving by ferry at the main port, the ride is short enough that a taxi on arrival is a reasonable option before picking up a rental vehicle the next day.
Best Time to Visit
Agia Anna is quieter than Agios Prokopios to the north and livelier than the beaches further south toward Kastraki. July and August bring the most visitors and the warmest water temperatures, but they also bring the meltemi — the strong north wind that cools the island and can occasionally roughen the sea. June and September offer calmer conditions, lower occupancy, and the same reliable sunshine. If you want Agia Anna beach largely to yourself, early mornings in any summer month work well; the sand fills up by late morning in peak season.
The property is primarily a summer operation in line with most Cycladic studios, so confirm availability outside June–September.
Tips for Visiting
- Book a sea-view room if the budget allows. The west-facing Aegean view is one of the property's main draws, and the difference in rate between land-view and sea-view rooms is rarely dramatic at a 12-room property.
- Book direct through the official website (sunday-studios.gr) to use their own booking engine — direct bookings sometimes carry small advantages over third-party platforms.
- Rent a vehicle from the start. Agia Anna has its own tavernas and beach bars, but the rest of Naxos — the mountain villages, the Portara, the inland citrus groves — requires wheels.
- Bring cash for local tavernas. Several of the small restaurants in Agia Anna and neighbouring Agios Prokopios are cash-only or prefer it.
- Ask about parking logistics on arrival if you're hiring a car and arriving by bus initially — the free on-site parking is a genuine asset worth confirming for your dates.
- Check the ferry schedule before booking late checkout. Naxos ferries to Piraeus often depart in the afternoon or evening, so a late checkout or luggage storage arrangement can save a wasted afternoon at the port.
What's Nearby
Agia Anna beach is the immediate draw — a long stretch of fine sand with shallow water that's suitable for children and calm-water swimmers. Walking north along the coast path takes you into Agios Prokopios, which has more restaurant and bar options. The beach road south leads toward Kastraki and eventually the dunes at Plaka, one of the longer undeveloped beaches on the island.
Naxos Town (Chora) is 5 km up the road and worth at least a half-day for the Venetian kastro, the Archaeological Museum, and the covered market street. The Portara — the marble gateway of an unfinished ancient temple on the small islet at the harbour entrance — is the island's most recognisable landmark and a short drive from Agia Anna.
Location
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