Kondylis

Over
Kondylis is a local supermarket on Serifos supplying everyday groceries and household essentials to both residents and visitors. On a small Cycladic island where options are limited and restocking mid-trip can take real planning, knowing which shops carry what matters — and Kondylis is one of the practical anchors of daily life on the island.
Serifos has a relatively small permanent population, and the island's supply infrastructure reflects that. Supermarkets here are compact by mainland standards, but experienced island shoppers know to check shelves early in the day and not to leave provisioning to the last minute, particularly during the busy summer months of July and August when stock can move quickly.
The coordinates place Kondylis in the lower part of the island near the port area of Livadi, which is the main commercial hub of Serifos. That location puts it within reach of visitors staying along the Livadi waterfront or in the accommodation scattered across the valley between the port and the hilltop village of Chora.
What to Expect
As a local supermarket on a small Greek island, Kondylis stocks the kind of range you'd expect from a neighborhood store rather than a large chain. That means fresh and packaged produce, bread, dairy, cold cuts, canned goods, water and soft drinks, wine and beer, cleaning products, and basic toiletry items. Imported or specialist goods are unlikely to feature, but for self-catering travelers or those renting a villa or apartment, the essentials are generally covered.
Greek island supermarkets of this type often also carry a small selection of local products — olive oil, honey, dried herbs, local pasta shapes — which can double as straightforward and practical souvenirs. Don't expect a large floorplan or a wide selection of international brands, but for stocking a kitchen or grabbing supplies for a beach day, this kind of store is exactly what you need.
The shop serves the local community year-round, which means it operates on a different rhythm than the tourist-facing businesses along the waterfront. Staff will typically be familiar faces to the locals who rely on them, and the atmosphere is functional and relaxed rather than retail-polished.
How to Get There
Based on its coordinates, Kondylis sits in the Livadi area — the port settlement at the base of the island where the ferry docks. If you're arriving by ferry from Piraeus or connecting from Kythnos or Sifnos, you'll land at Livadi port, and the commercial strip runs along and just behind the waterfront from there.
On foot from the Livadi waterfront, most shops in the port area are within a five to ten-minute walk. If you're staying in Chora (the hilltop capital), the walk down to Livadi takes around 20–25 minutes on the stepped path, or you can use the local bus that connects the two settlements during the summer season. Taxis are also available from the port.
Parking in Livadi is informal and limited during peak season. If you're driving from a villa outside town, arriving in the morning before the roads fill up is the sensible approach. There is no dedicated parking infrastructure in the village center.
Best Time to Visit
For practical grocery shopping, mornings are the better option. Stock is freshest, shelves are fuller, and the shop is less likely to be crowded. On Serifos, the summer peak runs roughly from late June through late August, when ferry arrivals bring a surge in demand and popular items can sell out.
If you're self-catering across a week-long stay, plan a main shop shortly after arrival and top up every two or three days rather than waiting until you've run out of everything. Ferries do bring fresh deliveries, but the schedule is not daily, and island supermarkets do not have the buffer stock of a city store.
Out of season — from October through May — Serifos is much quieter. Many tourist businesses close, but local shops serving the resident population continue to operate, typically on reduced hours.
Tips for Visiting
- Bring cash. Card payment infrastructure on smaller Greek island shops can be unreliable or absent. Having euros on hand saves friction.
- Arrive early in high summer. Bread and fresh items sell out faster than you might expect on a small island in peak season.
- Check ferry days. Fresh deliveries often coincide with ferry arrivals, so shopping a day after a ferry from Piraeus can mean better-stocked shelves.
- Reusable bags help. Greek supermarkets charge for plastic bags; a lightweight tote takes up no space in your luggage and earns you no surcharges at the till.
- Don't overlook local products. Even small island supermarkets often stock locally produced olive oil, honey, or dried pulses. These are usually better value bought here than at tourist-facing gift shops.
- Stock up on water. Tap water on Serifos is technically drinkable in most areas, but many visitors and locals prefer bottled water. Buying in bulk at a supermarket is significantly cheaper than buying single bottles at a cafe or beach bar.
- Opening hours vary by season. Greek island shops often adjust their hours significantly between summer and winter. If you're traveling outside July–August, confirm hours locally before making a special trip.
Practical Information
Kondylis operates as a local grocery store primarily serving everyday needs. No website, phone number, or confirmed opening hours are currently listed in public directories — this is common for small independent businesses on minor Cycladic islands, which rely on word of mouth and local foot traffic rather than an online presence.
The TikTok account associated with the name (@thanoskondylis) appears unrelated to the supermarket — it belongs to an individual content creator — so that channel is not a useful source of shop information.
For up-to-date hours, the most reliable approach is to ask at your accommodation on arrival. Hotel owners, villa managers, and ferry port staff on Serifos will know current trading hours and can advise on which days the shop may close early or stay open late.
Serifos has at least a small handful of grocery and convenience options in the Livadi area, so if one shop is closed or out of a specific item, alternatives are generally within walking distance along the port strip.
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