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Low Price Market

supermarkets
Santorini
Low Price Market - 1
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About

Low Price Market is a small convenience store in Santorini aimed at travelers and locals who want to pick up everyday groceries and household essentials without paying the premium that most tourist-facing shops on the island charge. Santorini has a well-earned reputation for expensive dining and shopping, so a store with straightforward, budget-conscious pricing fills a practical gap.

The coordinates place the store in the southern part of the island, in the general area of Akrotiri or Megalochori rather than in the busy tourist corridors of Fira or Oia. That location alone tends to mean lower overheads and, consequently, lower shelf prices than you would typically find at convenience stores clustered around the caldera-view villages.

This is not a large supermarket. Stock is oriented toward the everyday — packaged foods, drinks, snacks, basic fresh produce where available, and household sundries. If you are staying in a villa or apartment with a kitchen anywhere in the southern part of Santorini and want to avoid driving to a larger supermarket in Fira or Karterados, this kind of local market can cover most routine needs.

What to Expect

The shop functions as a convenience market rather than a full-scale grocery. Expect a compact layout with shelves stocked for practicality: bottled water, soft drinks, beer and local wine, packaged snacks, canned goods, pasta, bread, dairy basics, and similar staples. Greek convenience stores at this size typically also carry a small range of cleaning products, toiletries, and over-the-counter pharmacy-adjacent items like sunscreen, although the selection will be narrower than at a dedicated pharmacy or large supermarket.

Pricing is the store's main draw. Santorini's tourism economy pushes up the cost of almost everything, and small stores positioned away from the main resort villages can offer noticeably lower prices on packaged goods in particular. Bottled water, snacks, and drinks are the categories where the savings relative to caldera-side kiosks tend to be most tangible.

The atmosphere will be functional rather than polished — this is a working local shop, not a curated deli. Staff may or may not speak extensive English, but pointing and numbers are universal, and payment by card is increasingly standard across Greek small shops, though it is worth having a small amount of cash as backup.

Do not expect a deli counter, a wide selection of fresh meat or fish, or imported specialty foods. For those, the larger Atlantik supermarket in Fira or the AB Vassilopoulos near the main road are better options.

How to Get There

The store's coordinates (36.3546, 25.4724) place it in the southern interior of Santorini, broadly in the zone between Akrotiri and Megalochori. This part of the island is most practically reached by car or scooter. The public bus network (KTEL Santorini) connects Fira to Akrotiri, but stops are spaced along the main road and the store may require a short walk from the nearest stop depending on its exact street position.

If you are driving, the southern ring road is well-signposted and conditions are straightforward outside the peak summer traffic hours around Fira. Parking near small local shops in this part of the island is generally informal and easy compared to Oia or Imerovigli. A taxi from Fira to this area typically takes 10–15 minutes depending on traffic.

Best Time to Visit

For grocery shopping, timing is mostly about avoiding the midday heat rather than managing crowds — this is not the kind of destination that gets overwhelmed by tourist footfall. Morning shopping, before temperatures peak in July and August, makes carrying supplies back to accommodation more comfortable. Greek shops in smaller villages sometimes observe a midday pause, so early morning or late afternoon visits are generally more reliable.

The store is likely open year-round, as it serves a local as well as visitor clientele, but hours may shorten significantly in the winter months when tourist traffic across Santorini drops sharply. If you are visiting outside the main April–October season, it is worth checking locally before making a special trip.

Tips for Visiting

  • Bring a reusable bag. Plastic bag charges are standard in Greek shops following EU regulations, and small shops often have a limited supply.
  • Check prices on drinks first. Bottled water and beverages are where you will likely see the clearest price difference compared to convenience stores in Oia or Fira's main square.
  • Have cash available. Card payment is increasingly accepted in Greek small shops, but not universal. A small amount of euro cash avoids any inconvenience.
  • Don't expect a full produce section. For fresh vegetables, meat, or fish in larger quantities, the central market area of Fira or a larger supermarket will serve you better.
  • Combine the trip. If you are visiting Akrotiri Archaeological Site or the Red Beach area, plan your grocery stop at a nearby store like this on the same outing rather than making a separate journey.
  • Stock up on snacks for excursions. Day trips to the volcano or boat tours from Akrotiri Port benefit from pre-packed food and drinks bought at local prices rather than paying at tourist-facing kiosks.
  • Local wine and beer. Small convenience stores on Santorini usually carry local Assyrtiko wine and standard Greek beer brands at reasonable prices — a practical option if you want something cold at the end of the day without restaurant markup.

Practical Information

Low Price Market is a small, independently operated convenience store. No website, phone number, or formal contact details are publicly listed. The most reliable way to confirm current opening hours is to ask at your accommodation, particularly if you are staying in the southern part of the island where staff will likely know the shop.

The store is not a pharmacy, a bakery, or a specialty food shop. It is also not equipped for tourist services like luggage storage or currency exchange. Its utility is straightforward: everyday groceries and essentials at accessible prices, in a part of Santorini where full supermarket alternatives require a dedicated drive to Fira or Karterados.

For larger shopping needs, the AB Vassilopoulos supermarket chain has a presence on Santorini and offers a wider range including fresh meat, deli items, and a broader selection of Greek products. The Atlantik supermarket in Fira is another well-stocked option for a full weekly shop.

Location

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