Alexander

About
Alexander is a hotel in Tinos Town, situated on Nikolaou Kornárou street — a quiet address within easy reach of the island's busy port and the famous Church of Panagia Evangelistria. With a 4.7-star rating across 150 Google reviews, it consistently earns strong marks from guests, which for a moderately sized property in a competitive pilgrimage-and-holiday destination like Tinos is a meaningful signal.
Tinos Town is the island's main hub: ferry connections, the majority of restaurants and shops, and the steep marble-paved approach to the revered church all converge here. Staying centrally means you can walk to the waterfront for an early coffee, catch a morning ferry to Mykonos or Syros, and still be back at the church before the midday crowds thicken. The Alexander's address on Nikolaou Kornárou places it within that walkable core.
The hotel can be reached directly by phone at +30 697 375 4505, and the official website is alextinos.gr. No email address is publicly listed, so a phone call or the website contact form are the most reliable ways to check availability and rates.
What to Expect
The research available on Alexander is deliberately concise — the property does not appear to market itself through a large-scale booking platform profile, which is common for independently run Greek island hotels that rely on repeat guests and word-of-mouth. What the review count and rating do confirm is that guests leave satisfied at a notably high rate.
Tinos Town hotels in this category typically offer clean, simply furnished rooms with air conditioning, private bathrooms, and either a balcony or a street-facing window. The island's strong Cycladic light means even modestly sized rooms feel open in the mornings. Because the address is in the town center rather than on a beach, the immediate environment is urban-village in character: tiled streets, the sound of the port, and the general movement of a Greek island town through the day.
The location on Nikolaou Kornárou is not on the main waterfront esplanade itself, which means lower ambient noise from the evening dining and bar scene while still being close enough to reach it on foot in minutes. For pilgrims visiting the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, this is a practical base: the church is uphill from the port, and the Alexander's central position cuts the walking distance considerably compared with staying at the edge of town.
Guests traveling with a car will find Tinos Town manageable for short-stay parking, though the narrow lanes near the center require patience. The port area has more open parking if you arrive early.
How to Get There
Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens), Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros. The port is at the base of Tinos Town, and the Alexander Hotel is a short walk from the ferry landing — under ten minutes on foot carrying luggage, following the main street uphill from the waterfront then bearing toward Nikolaou Kornárou street.
Taxis are available at the port and in the town square. If you are arriving with heavy luggage or late at night, calling ahead to the hotel (+30 697 375 4505) is the most efficient way to arrange a pickup or confirm directions.
There is no airport on Tinos; all arrivals are by sea. In summer, high-speed catamarans from Piraeus cut travel time to under three hours. Slower conventional ferries from Piraeus take four to five hours but cost less and are good for overnight crossings.
Best Time to Visit
Tinos has two distinct visitor patterns. The 15th of August, the Feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, is the most important religious pilgrimage day in Greece — tens of thousands of visitors descend on the island, accommodation books out months in advance, and the town's streets are impassable for much of the day. If your visit aligns with this date, confirm your reservation well ahead and expect a profoundly different atmosphere from a standard summer stay.
July and August are peak summer months: warm, reliably dry, busy, and expensive. June and September offer a better balance of good weather and manageable crowds. Tinos is also a year-round destination for domestic religious tourism, so shoulder and winter months see lower prices and a quieter, more local atmosphere, though some restaurants and shops reduce hours or close entirely after October.
The island's position in the central Cyclades means it catches the strong summer meltemi winds from the north, which makes July and August afternoons breezy and pleasantly cooler than many Aegean islands — relevant for anyone planning beach days during a stay here.
Tips for Visiting
- Book early for any stay around August 15. The Feast of the Assumption fills every room on the island, and prices spike significantly in that window.
- Call the hotel directly at +30 697 375 4505 to confirm room availability, rates, and any current facilities — the website at alextinos.gr is the best starting point for general information.
- The Church of Panagia Evangelistria is a ten-to-fifteen minute walk uphill from the port area; the Alexander's central location reduces that walk noticeably.
- If you are traveling with a car rented on the island, ask the hotel about nearby parking options before you arrive — Tinos Town's center is compact and navigable on foot, so parking once and walking is the practical approach.
- Tinos Town has a genuine local food scene distinct from the more tourist-oriented Cycladic islands. The covered market and the lanes behind the waterfront hold small tavernas and cafes used by islanders year-round.
- Pack a layer for evenings in June and September, and for afternoons on the water in July and August — the meltemi is reliable and can be strong.
- The ferry schedule changes seasonally. Check current timetables from Piraeus, Rafina, or connecting islands before booking arrival and departure dates, especially if traveling outside peak summer.
- Tinos is known for its Venetian-era dovecotes scattered across the interior villages. If time allows, renting a car or scooter for a day to explore Pyrgos (marble-carving village) and the northern villages adds significant depth to a stay.
Facilities and Location
The Alexander is located at Nikolaou Kornárou 1, Tinos Town 842 00, at coordinates 37.5334°N, 25.2142°E — within the built center of Tinos Town and roughly equidistant between the port waterfront and the hillside approach to the church. The surrounding streets contain a mix of small hotels, guesthouses, and local businesses serving both pilgrims and leisure travelers.
The official website (alextinos.gr) is the primary channel for current room information, pricing, and availability. The property also has a presence on Instagram (@alexandertino12) and TikTok (@alexander.tino53), which may provide a more current visual sense of the property and its immediate surroundings.
Given the strong aggregate rating of 4.7 from 150 reviews, the Alexander sits in the upper tier of Tinos Town accommodation by guest satisfaction. For travelers who prioritize a central location, walkable access to the port and church, and a track record of positive guest experiences, it is a practical choice for Tinos stays of any length.
Location
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