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Nidaros Pizzeria

Restaurants
Paros
4.6
Nidaros Pizzeria - 1
1 / 1

About

Nidaros Pizzeria sits on the main coastal road through Piso Livadi, a quiet seaside settlement on Paros's eastern shore, roughly 20 kilometres from Parikia. The restaurant holds a 4.6 rating from 384 Google reviews — a score that reflects consistent quality rather than a lucky run of good seasons. It opens at 9 AM and stays open until 11 PM every day of the week, making it one of the more reliable all-day options on this quieter side of the island.

The menu covers more ground than a single-category label suggests. Pizza is on offer, but so are grilled meats, fresh seafood, Greek taverna standards, and coffee. That breadth is intentional — this is the kind of place that serves a village year-round, feeding locals at breakfast, tourists at lunch, and families at dinner. The kitchen uses fresh, locally sourced ingredients with an emphasis on simplicity and Parian culinary tradition.

Piso Livadi itself is a small, low-key resort village with a natural harbour and a handful of tavernas, shops, and accommodation. It's calm by Paros standards — no clubs, no ferry crowds — and the waterfront feels genuinely local even in summer. Nidaros Pizzeria fits that register: unfussy, welcoming, and focused on good food over theatrical presentation.

What to Expect

The address on Epar.Od. Parikias-Piso Livadiou puts the restaurant along the provincial road that traces the southeastern coast, passing through Piso Livadi's cluster of whitewashed buildings before continuing toward Logaras and Dryos. The setting is Cycladic in the plain, useful sense: stone and plaster, tables that probably spill outside in summer, a view toward the calm water of the bay.

The menu range is wider than the pizzeria label implies. You can expect to find pizza alongside grilled fish and meat, Greek salads, mezedes, and coffee at any hour. Breakfast is possible from 9 AM — useful if you are staying in Piso Livadi or Golden Beach and want to avoid cooking. Lunch runs into a full afternoon, and dinner service continues until 11 PM, which is fairly late for a village this size.

Service here follows the family-run Greek hospitality model: guests are treated informally, more like friends dropping in than customers moving through a rotation. That approach, combined with fresh local produce and a menu that covers all occasions, explains the high review score across a large sample. You are unlikely to find white tablecloths or a lengthy wine list, but you will find competent, consistent cooking in a relaxed room.

The restaurant also offers takeaway, so if you are self-catering nearby, collecting a pizza or a grilled dish is straightforward.

What to Order

The pizza is the obvious starting point given the name, and it is the dish most reviewers seem to arrive intending to order. Beyond that, the place types logged against this listing include seafood and barbecue, which suggests the kitchen is genuinely comfortable with grilled fish and meat rather than treating them as afterthoughts to a pizza menu.

For a full meal, a practical approach is to start with a Greek salad or a cold mezedes plate, move to a pizza or a grilled main, and finish with Greek coffee. The all-day format means the kitchen is running continuously, so ordering outside strict meal windows is not an issue.

If you are visiting as part of a group with mixed preferences — one person wanting seafood, another wanting pizza — this is a kitchen set up to handle that without forcing compromise. The breadth is genuine, not just marketing.

How to Get There

Piso Livadi is on Paros's southeastern coast, connected to Parikia by the provincial road (Epar.Od. Parikias-Piso Livadiou) that runs along the island's eastern flank. From Parikia, the drive takes roughly 20–25 minutes. From Naoussa on the north coast, allow around 30 minutes by car, heading south through Kostos or via the main cross-island road.

The KTEL bus network on Paros operates a route to Piso Livadi from Parikia during the summer season. Departure times vary and the schedule contracts significantly in the shoulder season, so check the current timetable at Parikia's main bus stop before planning around it. From Alyki or Golden Beach, the village is close enough to reach by scooter or a short taxi ride.

Parking in Piso Livadi is generally informal — cars pull up along the road through the village. There is no dedicated car park, but finding a space near the restaurant is rarely difficult outside the peak August weeks.

The restaurant is on a ground-floor level along the main road, which makes step-free access likely, though this has not been independently verified.

Best Time to Visit

Piso Livadi is quieter than Parikia or Naoussa year-round, and Nidaros Pizzeria is open every day, all year. In summer (late June through August), the village fills with visitors drawn to the nearby beaches at Golden Beach and Logaras, and dinner service will be busier in the evenings. Arriving before 7 PM for dinner in July or August is sensible if you prefer a table without a wait.

The shoulder months — May, June, and September — are when the east coast of Paros is most pleasant. Temperatures are comfortable, the meltemi wind is less severe than in July and August, and the beaches are uncrowded. Lunch at Nidaros Pizzeria during these months is an unhurried affair.

The restaurant's all-day hours from 9 AM make it a practical base for a morning stop before a beach day at nearby Golden Beach (about 3 km north) or Logaras (immediately adjacent). Coffee and a light breakfast here before heading to the water is a straightforward plan.

Winter visits are possible — the restaurant stays open year-round — but Piso Livadi is very quiet from November through March, and some nearby businesses will be closed.

Tips for Visiting

  • Book ahead in August. The village is small but popular with returning visitors, and a well-reviewed all-day restaurant in a village this size can fill up on summer evenings without much warning. A quick call to +30 2284 041392 is worth the effort.
  • Use it as a breakfast stop. Opening at 9 AM daily makes this one of the more accessible breakfast options on the east coast, particularly if you are staying at accommodation in Piso Livadi or Golden Beach without a kitchen.
  • Takeaway is available. If you are renting a villa or apartment in the area, the takeaway option means you can bring a pizza or grilled dish back without eating in.
  • Pair it with Golden Beach. Golden Beach (Chryssi Akti) is roughly 3 km north and is one of Paros's best windsurfing beaches. A late lunch or early dinner at Nidaros after a day there is an easy combination.
  • The east coast road is scenic. The drive or scooter ride along Epar.Od. Parikias-Piso Livadiou passes through farmland and small villages before reaching the coast. If you are renting a scooter, this is a worthwhile route rather than using the inland highway.
  • Check hours outside summer. Although the listed hours show 9 AM–11 PM every day, hours on small Greek island restaurants can vary in the low season. If you are visiting in October or later, a quick call ahead confirms current service.
  • The menu suits mixed groups. Pizza, seafood, grilled meat, and café items mean a table with varied preferences can be fed without negotiating a compromise restaurant. This is more useful than it sounds on an island where many places specialise tightly.
  • Piso Livadi's harbour is walkable. After eating, the small harbour at Piso Livadi — where ferries once connected to Naxos and Amorgos — is a few minutes on foot and worth a brief walk in the evening.

Address

Epar.Od. Parikias-Piso Livadiou, Piso Livadi 844 00, Greece

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Opening Hours

monday09:00 – 23:00
tuesday09:00 – 23:00
wednesday09:00 – 23:00
thursday09:00 – 23:00
friday09:00 – 23:00
saturday09:00 – 23:00
sunday09:00 – 23:00

Location

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