Delfinia

Over
Delfinia is a hotel on Vasileos Paulou, one of the main streets running through Tinos Town, at number 10. With coordinates placing it squarely within the town centre, it sits within easy reach of the port, the waterfront promenade, and the well-worn pilgrim path that leads up to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria. It's a practical, centrally positioned option for travellers who want to be close to Tinos Town's daily life without relying on a car to reach basic amenities.
The address — Vasileos Paulou 10, Tinos 601 00 — puts the hotel in a walkable part of town where tavernas, bakeries, and small shops are nearby. The port, where ferries from Piraeus, Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros dock, is a short walk away, making arrival and departure straightforward regardless of the hour. Tinos Town is a compact, navigable place, and a central address here means most of the town's main attractions are accessible on foot.
With 101 reviews and a 3.6 out of 5 rating on Google, Delfinia sits in the mid-range of visitor opinion. That score suggests an honest, functional property rather than a polished resort, which is common among the older, independently run hotels in Tinos Town. For travellers whose priority is location and a reliable bed close to the port and the church, it represents a straightforward choice.
What to Expect
Delfinia occupies a town-centre location on Vasileos Paulou, a street that connects the port area with the commercial core of Tinos Town. The immediate surroundings are typical of a busy Cycladic port town: small hotels, kafeneions, shops selling religious icons and local products, and the constant movement of ferry passengers in high season.
The property is classified as a hotel — not a resort, studio complex, or villa — which in Tinos Town typically means private rooms with en-suite bathrooms, reception staff, and basic morning services rather than extensive leisure facilities. The building's town-centre position means you're trading views of open water or hillside for the convenience of walking out the front door and being immediately in the middle of things.
For visitors coming to Tinos primarily to attend a religious festival, make a pilgrimage to the Panagia Evangelistria, or use the island as a base for day trips around the Cyclades, the location is a genuine asset. The walk from Vasileos Paulou to the church takes roughly ten to fifteen minutes on foot via the marble-paved pilgrim route; the ferry quay is closer still.
Guests who prefer quiet surroundings should be aware that Tinos Town can be loud on summer evenings and during the major feast days of 15 August and 25 March, when the island receives an extraordinary volume of visitors. Rooms on the street side of any town-centre hotel will reflect the ambient noise of those periods.
How to Get There
Tinos Town is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (approximately 4–5 hours on conventional ferries, under 3 hours on high-speed services), Rafina, Mykonos (30–40 minutes), and Syros. On arrival at the port, Vasileos Paulou runs parallel to and just inland from the waterfront. Number 10 is within a few minutes' walk of the ferry terminal — you can reach the hotel on foot from the quay without needing a taxi.
If you're arriving by car via a ferry from Rafina or Piraeus, note that Tinos Town has limited street parking. Vasileos Paulou is a central street and parking directly outside is not guaranteed, especially in July and August. A small number of public parking areas exist on the edges of town; hotel reception should be able to advise on the closest option.
For visitors arriving at the island's smaller port at Panormos on the north side of the island, a car or taxi will be needed — that route is not served by the main ferry lines.
Best Time to Visit
Tinos receives visitors year-round, but the island's character shifts markedly between seasons. July and August bring peak crowds, particularly around the Feast of the Dormition on 15 August, when tens of thousands of pilgrims arrive and accommodation across the island fills weeks in advance. If you're planning to visit during that period, book early and expect busy streets and elevated prices.
May, June, and September offer a more measured pace: ferries run frequently, temperatures are warm enough for the beaches on the island's south and west coasts, and Tinos Town is busy but not overwhelming. The Cycladic wind — the meltemi — blows strongly across Tinos from mid-July through August, which keeps temperatures bearable but can disrupt ferry schedules.
Spring (April–May) is genuinely pleasant on Tinos: the Cycladic landscape is still green, the marble-village routes in the interior are walkable without the midday heat, and the town has a quieter rhythm. Winter travel is possible but limited — some hotels and restaurants close from November through March.
Tips for Visiting
- Book early for August. The 15 August feast day draws more pilgrims than any other event in the Cyclades. If your travel dates overlap with that period, confirm your reservation as far in advance as possible.
- Confirm check-in times directly. Call the hotel on +30 2283 022288 to confirm your arrival time, especially if you're taking a late ferry. Tinos ferries can run into the evening.
- Use the location. Vasileos Paulou is genuinely central — the church, the port, the town's main market street, and the waterfront are all within a short walk. Plan to explore on foot rather than driving within the town itself.
- Pack for the meltemi. In July and August, the north wind is strong enough to make beaches on the island's exposed northern coast choppy. The sheltered south-coast beaches at Agios Fokas, Kionia, and Porto are more reliable for swimming during that period.
- The pilgrim route matters. The marble-paved path from the port to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria is a central part of the Tinos experience — not just a tourist walk. Devout pilgrims complete it on their knees. Walk it with some awareness of the space you're in, regardless of your own background.
- Tinos Town has good food options close by. The streets around the port and the market area have bakeries open early, waterfront cafes, and tavernas serving local specialties including loukoumades and the island's distinctive artichoke dishes. Most are within a few minutes' walk of Vasileos Paulou.
- Rent a vehicle for the interior. The marble villages — Pyrgos, Volax, Kardiani, Tarambados — are best reached by car or scooter. Several rental outfits operate near the port. A centrally located hotel means you can pick up and return a rental without losing time driving in from the outskirts.
- Check the ferry schedule the night before departure. Tinos has multiple daily connections in high season, but the meltemi can cause delays or cancellations, especially for smaller vessels. The KTEL buses that serve the villages also depart from the main square near the port.
Facilities and Location
Delfinia's full facilities are not extensively documented in available sources, which is common for smaller independent hotels in the Cyclades that rely primarily on phone or walk-in booking rather than maintaining a detailed online presence. The phone number on record is +30 2283 022288, which is the most reliable way to confirm room availability, rates, breakfast provision, and any additional services before arrival.
The address — Vasileos Paulou 10 — is verifiable and precise. For context, Vasileos Paulou (King Paul Street) is one of the two or three main arteries through Tinos Town, running inland from the waterfront. The street is lined with a mix of accommodation, small businesses, and island services. The immediate neighbourhood gives easy access to the port ferry gate, the lower section of the pilgrim path, and the town's market lanes.
The hotel's Google rating of 3.6 from 101 reviewers suggests a consistent but unpretentious experience. At that score, expectations are best calibrated toward a clean, functional stay in a useful location rather than high-end finishes or elaborate amenities. For pilgrimage visitors, walkers, or travellers using Tinos as a Cyclades hub, that trade-off is often exactly what the trip requires.
Adres
Vasileos Paulou 10, Tinos 601 00, Greece
Telefoon
+30 2283 022288Locatie
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