The Ample

About
The Ample is a supermarket on Naxos carrying groceries and everyday essentials — the kind of stop that makes self-catering accommodation genuinely workable on a Greek island. Its coordinates place it in the broader Naxos Town area, within reasonable reach of the port and the main residential and tourist neighborhoods.
For anyone renting an apartment or villa, or simply wanting to avoid restaurant meals every night, a reliable local supermarket matters. The Ample fits that role, offering a selection wide enough to cover the basics: fresh produce, packaged goods, beverages, household items, and the sort of local products — Naxian potatoes, local cheeses, thyme honey — that the island is known for producing.
What to Expect
Greek island supermarkets tend to be compact compared to mainland hypermarkets, but they cover the practical range well. You can expect fresh fruit and vegetables, dairy including the local graviera and arseniko cheeses that Naxos produces, bread and bakery items, wine, beer, and soft drinks, as well as cleaning supplies and toiletries. Naxos has a strong agricultural base, so local products often appear on the shelves alongside national brands — worth picking up if you see them.
The store is categorized as a supermarket rather than a small convenience kiosk (periptero), which suggests a broader stock than a corner shop. Bring a bag, as plastic bag charges apply across Greece under national regulations.
How to Get There
The coordinates (37.0995, 25.3754) place The Ample within Naxos Town (Chora). If you are staying in or near the Chora, the most straightforward approach is on foot or by car. Naxos Town is compact enough that most accommodation within it is within a 10–15 minute walk of any central point.
If you are arriving by ferry, the port sits at the western edge of Chora — from there, walk inland toward the main commercial streets. Drivers will find that Naxos Town has limited central parking; street spaces along the seafront promenade (the paralia) or in the public car parks near the port are the practical options before continuing on foot.
Local buses connect Naxos Town to the main beach resorts and villages, but for a supermarket run with bags, a car or taxi is the more convenient choice if you are based outside town.
Best Time to Visit
Greek supermarkets generally open early and close in the evening, with a midday break possible outside peak season — though many tourist-area shops in July and August keep extended hours. Early morning is the quietest window for shopping, before the heat builds and before tour groups and beach crowds are moving. Avoid the hour before the midday siesta and the early evening rush, when locals and tourists converge.
In peak summer (late June through August) Naxos is significantly busier than shoulder season, and supermarket shelves — particularly for popular local products — can deplete faster. If you want Naxian graviera or the island's distinctive Kitron liqueur, shop earlier in the day.
Tips for Visiting
- Bring your own reusable bag; single-use plastic bags carry a small charge in Greece.
- Naxian graviera cheese is sold in most supermarkets on the island and is worth buying here rather than at airport shops, where it costs more.
- Check expiry dates on local honey and preserved goods if you plan to take them home as gifts.
- Greek supermarkets accept card payment widely, but having a small amount of cash on hand is useful for any incidental purchases at adjacent stalls or kiosks.
- If you need a specific brand or dietary item (gluten-free products, for example), larger supermarkets in Naxos Town are a more reliable source than smaller village shops.
- Bottled water is very inexpensive and widely available; tap water on Naxos is generally safe but has a mineral taste that not everyone prefers for drinking.
What's Nearby
The Ample's position in the Naxos Town area puts it close to the main attractions of the Chora: the Portara (the landmark marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia), the Venetian Kastro, and the waterfront cafes and tavernas of the paralia. The town's covered market street runs through the Chora and is lined with independent shops, bakeries, and delis that complement a supermarket shop for fresh or specialty items.
The main bus terminal for routes to the island's beaches and villages — Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, Plaka, Apollonas — is near the port, making it easy to combine a grocery stop with onward travel.
Location
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