Felicity Villas

About
Felicity Villas is a small villa-style property in Kamari, one of Santorini's most established beach villages on the island's southeast coast. Rather than a conventional hotel corridor, the property is made up of self-contained houses — currently including Villa Victoria (up to five guests) and Gregoire Villa (up to six guests) — each occupying around 102 square metres and surrounded by a garden, with views taking in both the Aegean and the inland volcanic hills.
Kamari sits at the foot of the Mesa Vouno ridge, directly below the ancient ruins of Thera, and its long black-sand beach runs parallel to the main village road. Felicity Villas is on Vasileos Filippou street, a short walk from that seafront. For families or groups of friends who want more space and a kitchen of their own rather than a hotel room, the setup addresses a real need on an island where most of the headline accommodation is clustered in the caldera villages of Fira and Oia.
The property carries a 4.9 rating from 25 Google reviews — a small sample but a consistently strong one. The contact email is [email protected] and the French international phone number (+33 6 13 46 35 15) suggests the owners or management may be based partly in France, which is useful context if you're making contact from abroad.
What to Expect
The villas are described as bright, Cycladic in style — white and blue predominating — and furnished with the household amenities you'd expect to need for an independent stay: kitchen facilities, living areas, and private outdoor space within the garden. The 102 sq m footprint gives considerably more room than a standard hotel double, making the layout practical for families or friend groups rather than just couples.
Villa Victoria is the smaller of the two named units, sleeping up to five, and has been described in social media posts as developed across two levels in a classic Cycladic style. Gregoire Villa accommodates up to six. Both benefit from the sea and mountain views that the garden position affords — the Mesa Vouno ridge rises steeply just to the south, and on clear days the neighboring island of Anafi is visible from the property.
The website mentions that guests are offered local Santorini delicacies as part of the welcome, which points toward a degree of personalised hosting rather than purely self-service rental. The property bills itself around exclusive and personalized service, so interactions with the owners or managers are likely part of the experience, not incidental to it.
Kamari's black-sand beach, the island's longest, is walkable from the property. The beachfront road is lined with tavernas, cafes, and shops. Fira is roughly 10 km north by road, and the clifftop ruins of Ancient Thera are accessible via a road that climbs Mesa Vouno from the southern end of Kamari.
How to Get There
Kamari is served by the KTEL bus network from Fira (the island's central bus station near the main square). Buses to Kamari run regularly throughout the day during summer, with the journey taking around 20–25 minutes. The stop in Kamari is on the main beach road, and Felicity Villas is a short walk inland from there.
By car or scooter from Fira, follow the main road south toward Messaria, then continue to Kamari — the route is straightforward and signposted. Kamari has roadside parking and the village is easy to navigate by vehicle. Taxis from Fira to Kamari typically take 15–20 minutes depending on traffic; always confirm the fare before setting off or ensure the meter is running.
Santorini's main port at Athinios is about 12 km from Kamari by road. If you're arriving by ferry, a taxi is the most direct option to reach the villas; pre-arranging a transfer via the property is worth considering given ferry schedules can shift. The island has no rail or tram links.
Accessibility details for the villas — step counts, ramp access, bathroom configurations — are not confirmed in the available information, so contact the property directly before booking if mobility access is a requirement.
Best Time to Visit
Kamari is a summer destination in the full sense: the beach town is at its most animated between late June and early September, when the seafront restaurants and bars are all open and the beach is in full use. The black sand retains heat intensely in July and August, so mornings and late afternoons are considerably more comfortable for beach time than midday.
May, June, and September offer the same reliable sunshine with meaningfully smaller crowds and slightly lower prices. The meltemi — the seasonal north wind common across the Cyclades — blows through July and August and is more pronounced on the island's windward northern and western sides; Kamari, sheltered to some degree by Mesa Vouno, is somewhat more protected.
The shoulder months of April–May and October can be quiet in Kamari, with some businesses closed. If you plan to visit then, confirm with Felicity Villas directly that they are open and that local amenities you're counting on are operational.
Tips for Visiting
- Book directly with the property. The contact email ([email protected]) and website (felicityvillassantorini.com) are the primary booking channels. With only two named villa units, availability in peak summer is limited.
- Confirm the exact unit you're booking. Victoria Villa and Gregoire Villa have different capacities (5 vs 6 guests) and possibly different configurations. Clarify which you're reserving and what's included before paying a deposit.
- Bring or rent a car for island exploration. Kamari is well-positioned for the southeastern half of Santorini — Perissa, Perivolos, Ancient Thera, and the winery region around Pyrgos and Megalochori are all within 15–20 minutes. Getting to Oia by bus requires a change in Fira.
- The black sand gets extremely hot. Pack water shoes or sandals if you plan to walk on Kamari beach at midday in high summer. The sand temperature mid-afternoon is not trivial.
- Stock up in the village. Kamari has supermarkets, bakeries, and a range of restaurants along the beachfront, so self-catering from the villa is practical. The main strip is a few minutes on foot from the property.
- Note the international phone format. The contact number listed has a French country code (+33). Factor this in when dialling if you're calling from a Greek or UK mobile.
- Ask about local recommendations. The hosting style described suggests the owners take an active interest in guests' experience of the island. A conversation on arrival about tavernas, quiet beaches, or winery visits could yield suggestions that don't appear in any guidebook.
- Check ferry connections in advance if island-hopping. Santorini's Athinios port runs high-speed and conventional ferry services to the other Cyclades. If Felicity Villas is part of a wider island-hopping trip, factor in the 12 km transfer to the port when planning departure times.
Facilities and Location
The confirmed facilities at Felicity Villas include household amenities within each self-contained villa (interpreted as kitchen, living space, and private outdoor areas within the garden), sea and mountain views, and a garden setting. The property's own description references personalized services and local Santorini delicacies offered to guests, indicating some host-provided hospitality beyond purely self-catering.
The address on Vasileos Filippou in Kamari places the property in the main residential zone of the village, within walking distance of the beach, restaurants, and local shops. The 24-hour access noted in the opening hours listing is consistent with self-contained villa accommodation where guests hold their own keys.
For any specific questions about facilities — pool, air conditioning, Wi-Fi, parking on site, pet policy, infant equipment — contact the property directly before booking. The research available does not confirm these details.
Opening Hours
Location
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