Serifos Scuba Divers

About
Serifos Scuba Divers is a dive centre on Serifos operating guided dives and structured courses for visitors of all experience levels. Serifos sits in the western Cyclades, surrounded by some of the cleaner, less-trafficked Aegean water in the island group — conditions that make it a reasonable choice for anyone wanting to get underwater without fighting heavy boat traffic or stirred-up sediment.
The island itself receives far fewer visitors than Mykonos or Santorini, which translates directly to quieter dive sites and better visibility on most days. The seabed around Serifos is varied: rocky reefs, sea caves, and sandy channels that shelter octopus, sea bream, grouper, and the occasional moray eel. Iron ore was mined on Serifos for centuries, and underwater remnants tied to that industrial past give some local sites an added layer of interest beyond the marine life alone.
The centre caters to complete beginners who have never worn a wetsuit as well as certified divers looking for a local guide who knows the specific reefs, depths, and currents around the island.
What to Expect
A typical session at a Cycladic dive centre like this involves a pre-dive briefing, equipment fitting, and a guided dive led by a certified instructor or divemaster. For first-timers, introductory dives are usually conducted in shallow, protected water before moving to open sites — this is standard practice at reputable Greek diving operations.
Certified divers can expect guided excursions to reef walls, rocky outcrops, and potentially wreck or cave sites depending on conditions and group experience level. Serifos has no famous deep wreck that appears in published dive logs, but its reef topography, sea life density, and water clarity are consistent draws.
Course options at centres of this type typically include PADI or SSI Open Water certification programs, Advanced Open Water, and speciality courses such as night diving or underwater photography — though the specific curriculum offered here should be confirmed directly with the operator before booking.
Equipment rental is standard at most Greek dive centres, covering wetsuit, BCD, regulator, tank, mask, and fins. Bringing your own mask and computer is always worth doing if you have them.
The coordinates place the operation near the western side of Serifos, not far from Livadi, the island's main port village and the hub of most visitor activity. Livadi has the island's concentration of accommodation, tavernas, and transport connections, making logistics straightforward.
How to Get There
Serifos is reached by ferry from Piraeus, with journey times of roughly two to three hours on high-speed services and up to four hours on conventional ferries. Ferries dock at Livadi, the port at the base of the island. The coordinates for Serifos Scuba Divers fall near the Livadi area, so it is likely walkable or a very short taxi ride from the port.
If you are staying in Chora, the hilltop capital, you can reach Livadi by the local bus that runs between the two settlements, or by taxi. The road between Chora and Livadi takes about ten minutes by car.
Parking in Livadi is generally available along the waterfront road, though space tightens in August. No specific parking information for the dive centre is available from the research bundle.
Best Time to Visit
The diving season on Serifos runs broadly from late April through October, with July, August, and September offering the warmest water temperatures — typically 24–27°C at the surface in peak summer. Visibility is generally good across the season, though August brings stronger meltemi winds from the north that can affect sea conditions on exposed sites. Calmer conditions earlier in the season, particularly May, June, and early September, often combine reasonable water temperatures with better surface and subsurface visibility.
Early morning dives tend to have calmer sea surfaces before daily thermal winds build. If you are planning a multi-day diving itinerary, build in flexibility for weather holds — this is standard practice across the Cyclades.
Tips for Visiting
- Book in advance during July and August. Serifos has limited visitor infrastructure and dive slot availability, so contacting the centre before you arrive on the island is strongly advisable in peak season.
- Confirm the exact meeting point before your dive day. With no confirmed address in publicly available sources, ask the operator for precise directions when you make your booking.
- Bring your certification card and logbook. Greek dive centres are required to verify certification for guided dives beyond introductory level. Digital copies on your phone are generally accepted.
- Hydrate before diving. Serifos summers are hot and dry. Arriving dehydrated for a dive is a safety issue as well as a comfort one — drink water the evening before and the morning of any dive.
- Ask specifically about the dive sites planned. The operator will know which sites suit current conditions and your experience level, and a quick conversation before the briefing avoids surprises.
- Check ferry schedules around your dive days. If you are island-hopping, confirm that your dive timing doesn't conflict with your onward ferry, since afternoon dives and early-evening departures can clash.
- Avoid flying within 18–24 hours of diving. If Serifos is your last stop before a flight home, plan your final dive accordingly.
- Rent a snorkel set even if you're not diving. Much of the interesting marine life around Serifos is accessible in shallow water, and snorkelling is worth doing on rest days between dives.
Practical Information
Serifos Scuba Divers operates on Serifos in the western Cyclades. The coordinates (37.1448, 24.5144) place it in the Livadi area near the port. No phone number, email address, or website was available at the time of writing — contacting the centre via local accommodation owners, the Serifos port authority, or tourism boards on the island is the most reliable way to obtain current contact details and pricing before your visit. Pricing for guided dives and certification courses varies seasonally and by course type; expect rates broadly in line with other small Cycladic dive operations.
Location
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