Aliktypo Studios

About
Aliktypo Studios sits on a quiet footpath in Livadi, the port settlement of Serifos, just 40 metres from the island's central beach. That positioning matters on Serifos: you can walk to the water in under a minute, yet the property is set back enough from the waterfront strip to stay genuinely quiet. The studios look up toward Chora, the whitewashed hilltop capital, whose silhouette is visible from the balconies.
This is a three-key rated property — the Greek classification for straightforward, comfortable accommodation — rather than a resort. The clientele tends to be independent travellers who want a clean, well-placed base on Serifos without paying for facilities they won't use. With 85 reviews and a 4.6 rating on Google, the reception here is consistently positive for the category.
Restaurants, cafés, and small shops are within a five-minute walk along Livadi's waterfront, so self-catering is optional rather than necessary. The ferry dock is also close by, which is useful on an island where all arrivals come by sea from Piraeus or neighbouring Cyclades ports.
What to Expect
Aliktypo Studios offers three room types: standard double rooms, studios, and two-room maisonettes. All configurations include a king-size bed, a private balcony, and a separate entrance — so you come and go without passing through a shared lobby or corridor. The studios and maisonettes include kitchen facilities, which makes them practical for stays of more than a few nights or for travellers who prefer to buy local produce at the small market in Livadi and cook for themselves.
The building is described as quiet despite the central location, sitting on a side path rather than on the main seafront road. Views from balconies face toward Chora rather than directly onto the beach, which trades the postcard sea panorama for a calmer, more private outlook.
Bathrooms are described as modern and rooms as spacious for the budget category. There is no information in the available sources about air conditioning, Wi-Fi, or a pool, so travellers with specific needs on those points should confirm directly with the property before booking. The reception or management desk operates Monday to Sunday, 10:00–20:00, based on the listed hours.
The overall character of the place is practical and comfortable without pretension. Serifos itself attracts travellers who value a quieter, less commercialised Cycladic island, and Aliktypo fits that profile: no frills that inflate prices, no facilities competing for attention with the island itself.
How to Get There
Livadi is the arrival and departure point for all ferries to Serifos, served by Seajets and other operators from Piraeus (roughly 2.5–3 hours by high-speed ferry) and from nearby islands including Sifnos, Milos, and Kythnos. The ferry dock is within walking distance of Aliktypo Studios — under ten minutes on foot from the main pier.
There is no airport on Serifos. All arrivals are by ferry. Taxis meet ferries at the dock, and a local bus connects Livadi to Chora several times daily, though the walk between the two is steep and takes around 30–40 minutes.
For guests arriving by ferry with luggage, the short flat walk from the dock to Aliktypo along the Livadi waterfront is straightforward. The property's coordinates place it at the inland edge of the beach settlement. If you are driving a hire car, Livadi has limited but available parking near the beach area, and the property's side-path location means street access is relatively calm.
Best Time to Visit
Serifos has a short but concentrated tourist season. July and August bring the most visitors, the warmest water temperatures (around 25–26°C), and the strongest meltemi wind — the north-northwesterly that cools afternoons but can make exposed beaches choppy. Livadi's main beach is reasonably sheltered by comparison with the more exposed coves elsewhere on the island.
June and September are the practical sweet spots: temperatures are warm, the ferry schedule is full, and Livadi's restaurants and shops are all open without the peak-season crowd density. For budget accommodation like Aliktypo, availability in June and September is also considerably easier than in the middle of August, when the island fills quickly.
October is transitional — some businesses close from mid-month onward, and ferry frequency drops. Serifos receives very few visitors outside the May-to-October window, and accommodation at this scale does not typically operate year-round.
Tips for Visiting
- Book directly via the website or by phone. The property has an online booking function at aliktyposerifos.gr and a direct phone line (+30 2281 051000). Direct bookings sometimes carry better rates or room selection than third-party platforms.
- Confirm your specific room type before arrival. The three room types — studio, double, and maisonette — vary in kitchen provision and space. If you plan to self-cater, confirm the kitchen facilities in your chosen room.
- Bring cash for the island. Serifos has limited ATM infrastructure in Livadi. Having euros on arrival avoids problems, particularly if you arrive on a weekend or late ferry.
- The reception hours are 10:00–20:00 daily. If your ferry arrives outside those hours, contact the property in advance to arrange key collection or a late check-in procedure.
- Pack light beach kit from home. Livadi has a small range of shops, but dedicated beach gear shops are limited. Sun umbrellas and quality snorkelling masks are better sourced before you arrive.
- A hire car or scooter unlocks the rest of the island. Aliktypo's location in Livadi is excellent for the beach and port, but Serifos has remote coves, the medieval Chora kastro, and inland villages that require transport. Several rental operators work out of Livadi.
- Ask about the Chora walk. The old mule path from Livadi to Chora is a genuine 40-minute hike with significant elevation, but the views down over the bay justify it. It is best done in the morning before the midday heat.
- Water from the tap is drinkable on Serifos, which is not the case on every Cycladic island. Reusable bottles are practical and appreciated here.
Facilities and Location
The key assets at Aliktypo are proximity and quietness. Being 40 metres from the beach in Livadi means the sea is the first decision each morning — not a logistical exercise. The separate entrances on each unit and the side-path setting reduce the noise and through-traffic common to more central seafront properties.
The three-key Greek classification reflects a mid-range of the budget accommodation scale: the property meets a standard of comfort and cleanliness assessed by the Greek National Tourism Organisation without claiming the facilities of a hotel complex. Guests who have reviewed it consistently note the location and the value relative to the island's more expensive options.
For couples or solo travellers on a Cyclades island-hopping itinerary, the studio and double-room formats are well-suited. The maisonette format is the right choice for small families or two couples travelling together who want more internal space and flexibility.
Livadi itself has a good concentration of tavernas along its waterfront, a small supermarket, a bakery, and the usual selection of island cafés. Everything day-to-day is reachable without transport, which reduces the practical overhead of a Serifos stay considerably.
Opening Hours
Location
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