The Family Pizzeria

Over
The Family Pizzeria sits on Plateia Firas — the main square in Fira, Santorini's capital — and it's open around the clock, every day of the week. That alone makes it one of the most practically useful restaurants on the island, where most kitchens shut by midnight and late-night options are limited to overpriced snack bars. With a 4.6-star rating across close to 800 Google reviews, the place earns its reputation through consistency rather than novelty.
Fira is the busiest town on Santorini, perched on the caldera rim and packed with visitors from spring through October. The Family Pizzeria isn't trying to compete with the white-tablecloth sunset-view restaurants further along the cliff. It occupies a different and equally important niche: reliable, affordable, filling food that works for families, groups, and anyone who lands back in Fira at 2am wondering what's open.
The pizzas are the main draw. Reviewers consistently flag the generous sizing and the price point, which is low by Santorini standards — a large pizza for around €15 is genuinely competitive on an island where even a basic taverna meal can run €20–30 per person. Air-conditioned seating adds comfort during the intense summer heat.
What to Expect
The dining room is straightforward and family-oriented — the kind of space where young children are as welcome as solo travelers looking for a quick, no-fuss meal. Air conditioning makes it a relief from Santorini's July and August heat, and the central location on Fira's main square means you can walk in from the cable car terminal, the bus station, or the caldera path without a detour.
The pizza menu covers both classic combinations and some more creative options. Portions are large — multiple reviewers note that one pizza is more than enough for a single person. The dough and toppings read as straightforward rather than artisanal, but the execution is consistent and the value is clear.
Beyond pizza, the place types listed in Google's data flag ice cream, desserts, and confectionery alongside the restaurant offer — so there's a dessert angle worth exploring if you're stopping in after a meal elsewhere or just want something sweet before walking back to your accommodation.
The staff receive repeated positive mentions in reviews, and the atmosphere is relaxed without being slow. This isn't a place to linger over a bottle of wine watching the sunset, but it's not trying to be. For what it sets out to do — feed people well, quickly, at a fair price, at any hour — it delivers.
How to Get There
The pizzeria is on Plateia Firas, the central square in Fira town. If you're arriving by cable car from the old port (Skala), you'll walk up the short path into Fira and hit the main square within a few minutes. From the Fira bus station — the island's main hub on the eastern edge of town — it's about a five-minute walk west along the main commercial street.
If you're driving, parking in central Fira is limited and competitive in peak season. The nearest public parking areas are on the outskirts of the town center; expect a short walk. Taxis and the island's blue bus network both stop near the main square. The address is Πλατεία Φηρών, Φηρά, and Google Maps lists the location accurately at coordinates 36.4185°N, 25.4325°E.
For visitors staying in Oia, Imerovigli, or Firostefani, Fira is reachable by bus or car in under 30 minutes from most points on the caldera side of the island.
Best Time to Visit
Because The Family Pizzeria is open 24 hours, the more relevant question is when to avoid it rather than when to go. The main square in Fira is busiest between roughly 8pm and 11pm during summer, when dinner crowds from nearby hotels and day-trippers from cruise ships converge. If you want a table without waiting, aim for lunch (1–3pm) on a weekday, or a late dinner after 10:30pm.
Cruise ship days — typically Tuesday through Saturday in summer — push crowds in Fira noticeably higher between noon and 5pm. The square outside fills quickly, but turnover inside a pizza restaurant tends to be faster than in a full-service taverna.
In shoulder season (April–May and October–early November), Fira is quieter and the restaurant is easier to walk into at any time. The 24-hour operation is most valuable in high summer, when late-night hunger after a long day of beaches and boat trips is a genuine problem to solve.
Tips for Visiting
- Call ahead for large groups. The phone number is +30 2286 025396. While walk-in is generally fine for couples and small families, groups of six or more may want to check on table availability, especially on weekend evenings in July and August.
- Check the weekly specials. Web snippets reference a discounted pizza and pasta deal on specific weekdays. Ask when you arrive or call ahead to confirm current offers, as these can vary by season.
- Use it for late-night meals. The 24-hour schedule is the most distinctive practical feature here. If you're returning from a boat trip, a late bar crawl, or a night out in Fira, this is one of very few places on the island where a full hot meal is available at any hour.
- One large pizza is usually enough for one person. Multiple reviewers note the generous sizing. Order conservatively if you're with children or lighter eaters, and avoid over-ordering.
- Take advantage of the air conditioning. In July and August, Santorini's midday heat can exceed 35°C. The air-conditioned seating makes this a legitimate lunch refuge as well as a dinner spot.
- It's central enough to combine with other stops. Fira's main square is within easy walking distance of the cable car, the Archaeological Museum of Thera, the Orthodox Metropolitan Cathedral, and the caldera-view walkway. A meal here works naturally into a town-based half-day.
- Follow on Instagram for updates. The restaurant's Instagram account is @thefamilypizza2 — a useful source for current promotions or seasonal menu changes when no official website is available.
- Dessert is an option. The Google listing flags ice cream and confectionery in addition to the main menu. Worth checking if you're after something sweet to finish.
What to Order
Pizza is the clear focus, and the reviews consistently back it. A large pizza runs around €15 — confirm the current price when ordering, as costs shift with inflation and season. Classic combinations (margherita, prosciutto, four-cheese) appear to be the baseline, with more creative options available on the full menu.
The restaurant also appears to serve pasta, based on the web snippets referencing a pasta-and-pizza deal on certain weekday nights. If you're not in a pizza mood, it's worth asking what the pasta options are.
On the sweet side, ice cream and desserts are available — useful if you're stopping in with children or want to finish the meal without walking to a separate place. No specific dessert menu details are available in the research for this article, so ask the staff what's on.
The price point across the board is notably lower than what most Santorini restaurants charge, which has contributed significantly to the strong review volume and consistent ratings.
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