Soros is a bus stop on Antiparos served by 1 route: Antiparos Town - Agios Georgios.
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KTEL Antiparos
What's On Near Soros
Nearby Points of Interest
Beach Bars
Soros Beach is the most fully developed beach experience on Antiparos, operating as a beach club, full-service restaurant, bar, and boutique hotel in one location on the island's western coast. It draws a crowd that wants more than a stretch of sand — the operation runs sunbeds and umbrellas alongside a kitchen turning out fresh fish, seafood, sushi, and Mediterranean plates from early morning until early evening. The beach itself faces west across the channel toward Paros, and the view of that larger island across the water gives the spot a distinct backdrop. The setting is sandy rather than rocky, and the water in this part of Antiparos is the shallow, clear blue typical of the sheltered Cycladic channel. What makes Soros stand out from the island's quieter, unorganized beaches is the level of infrastructure: you're not bringing a cooler and a towel — you're arriving at a place with a menu, a wine list, and a hospitality team. The operation is run by Dennis and Nick, who position it explicitly as a destination rather than a stopping point. The kitchen is led by executive chef Spyros Melanitis, who works with local produce alongside imported ingredients, covering Mediterranean and fusion dishes, fresh fish, meat, and a raw bar with sushi. The drinks program includes Veuve Clicquot by the glass, rosé, and house cocktails. What to Expect Arriving at Soros Beach, the organized section is immediately clear — rows of sunbeds and umbrellas are set in front of the main bar and restaurant structure. The beach is sandy with calm, clear water, and the western exposure means afternoon light is ideal for swimming before the sun drops toward Paros. The restaurant menu covers a wide range: fresh fish and seafood are the centerpiece, alongside sushi and raw bar selections, light snacks, and more substantial Mediterranean and fusion dishes. The kitchen uses what the website describes as classic and modern techniques, combining local produce with international ingredients. If you're coming for a full meal, the fresh fish and the sushi bar are the items most emphasized in the venue's own description of what they do well. On the drinks side, the bar runs signature cocktails alongside premium champagne and wine. It's a setup aimed at people spending a full day, not dropping in for a coffee. The hotel component — rooms and suites — means some guests at the sunbeds are staying on-site, which gives the atmosphere a resort feel rather than a purely day-trip one. The venue runs events during the season, making some evenings busier than a standard beach-bar visit would suggest. The overall rating on Google from over 2,100 reviews sits at 3.7 out of 5, which is worth noting: the scale and ambition of the operation generate a wider range of experiences than a smaller, simpler beach bar would. Service pace and pricing relative to expectations appear to be the most common sources of variation in visitor feedback. How to Get There Soros Beach sits on the western side of Antiparos, southwest of Antiparos Town (the Chora). The island is small enough that most destinations are reachable by scooter or car within 10–15 minutes from the Chora. By car or scooter, follow the main road south from Antiparos Town and take the turning toward the western coast. The road is paved but narrow in sections typical of Cycladic island tracks — a small rental car or scooter is easier than a larger vehicle. Parking is available near the beach. From Paros, you reach Antiparos via the car ferry from Pounta (near Antiparos Village on Paros's west coast), a 10-minute crossing that runs frequently in summer. From Parikia, there's also a direct passenger ferry. Once on Antiparos, it's a short drive or scooter ride to Soros. For visitors without a vehicle, Antiparos Town has taxi services and rental outfits for scooters, ATVs, and cars. The island's limited public transport means a rental is the most flexible option for reaching beaches on the western and southern coasts. Best Time to Visit Soros Beach operates from 8:30 AM to 7:00 PM daily throughout its season, which aligns with the main Cycladic tourist window of late May through early October. July and August are the busiest months for Antiparos generally — the island sees an influx of visitors, partly due to its reputation as a calmer, smaller alternative to Paros, and the beach club fills up accordingly. Arriving by 9:00–9:30 AM on peak-season days gives you the best chance of securing a good sunbed position. For the restaurant and bar, midday through mid-afternoon is when food service is in full swing. Late afternoon brings the best light for the western-facing beach, and sunset views across to Paros are worth timing a visit around if you're not committed to leaving at 7:00 PM closing. Shoulder season — June and September — is when Antiparos generally delivers the most comfortable conditions: warm water, less crowding, and easier access to sunbeds without needing to arrive at opening. May and October can be hit or miss with wind and cloud in the Cyclades. The Meltemi wind, which affects all of the Cyclades in July and August, blows predominantly from the north. The western exposure of Soros Beach means it can catch afternoon wind during strong Meltemi days. Check conditions before planning a full-day visit in high summer. Tips for Visiting Book a table in advance for peak season. The restaurant section of Soros Beach can be reserved separately, and a full-service seafood lunch on a July Saturday fills up. Use the website or phone ahead. Call the venue directly for sunbed reservations or to confirm seasonal opening. Phone: +30 698 002 8281. The venue has both a restaurant booking system and room bookings, so clarify what you need when you call. Plan for a half-day at minimum. The setup rewards a longer stay — arrive for late-morning swimming, eat lunch from the kitchen, and stay for afternoon drinks rather than treating it as a quick stop. Check the events calendar. Soros Beach runs events during the season, and an event day means a different atmosphere and potentially higher prices or reservations required. Fresh fish is priced by weight in Greece. This is standard practice across Greek fish restaurants, not specific to Soros. Ask about the day's selection and confirm the price before ordering. Bring cash as backup. Card payment is standard at beach clubs of this type, but having euros on hand avoids issues if a terminal has connectivity problems — this is true across Cycladic island venues. Consider the hotel option if you're coming from Paros for the day. A suite at the beach allows you to skip the ferry timing pressure and extend into the evening — the on-site accommodation makes this a practical base for a night or two without needing the Chora. Parking near the beach can be limited in August. Arriving early or using a scooter rather than a car reduces the friction of finding a spot on busy days. What to Order The kitchen at Soros Beach is built around fresh fish and seafood. Executive chef Spyros Melanitis runs a menu that covers grilled and prepared fresh fish — the daily selection depends on what's available from local fishermen — alongside a raw bar and sushi options, which are less common at Cycladic beach venues of this scale. For a lighter option, the snack and light plate selections are suited to people who want something to eat without committing to a full restaurant meal. Seafood by nature works well mid-beach-day: lighter on the stomach than meat, and the sushi and raw bar options suit a beach-day pace. On the drinks side, the bar program is built around signature cocktails and a champagne selection — Veuve Clicquot is specifically featured — alongside wine, with rosé being the beach-day default across the Cyclades. If you're spending the afternoon, a bottle of rosé shared between two or four works as well as anything on the menu. For a full-meal visit, the combination of raw bar to start, fresh fish as a main, and a cocktail or champagne to finish is the intended experience the venue is built around.
Beach House Antiparos sits on the western shore of Antiparos, a small island reachable by a short ferry crossing from Paros. The property combines eight guest rooms with a beach bar that operates around the clock — a rare format on an island where most bars close at midnight. Whether you're staying here or visiting purely for drinks, you land somewhere that takes the Cycladic aesthetic seriously: whitewashed stone, deep-blue accents, bougainvillea, rosemary, and olive trees planted not for show but as part of the setting's logic. The bar is the most accessible part of the property for day visitors. You don't need a room to pull up a seat, order a cocktail, and watch the Aegean. The beach runs directly into the grounds, which means the sand underfoot barely changes between beach towel and bar stool. That continuity — sea, sand, drink, repeat — is the point. Conversations about where to drink on Antiparos reliably surface Beach House as a reference point for the island's beach-bar scene, alongside Soros Beach Club and the chilled-out stretch at Fanari Beach. It has a Condé Nast Traveller mention on record, which signals a certain level of outside attention, though the 3.5-star Google rating from 370 reviews suggests the experience is not universally flawless. Go in knowing what it is: a small, style-conscious property that does best when the weather is good and the sea is flat. What to Expect The bar area takes its cues from Greek island architecture of two or three generations ago — thick walls, stone finishes, a whitewashed palette punctuated with blue. The planting is fragrant: rosemary and basil grow among the ornamental bougainvillea, so the air near the terrace carries something herby alongside the salt. It doesn't feel like a theme-park version of a Greek village; the materials and proportions are studied enough to avoid that. Drinks run toward cocktails, and the bar is set up to handle them properly rather than defaulting to beer and bad wine. The beach itself is sandy with calm, clear water — typical of the sheltered Aegean conditions on this side of Antiparos. Sunbeds are generally available for guests, and the bar-to-beach flow means you're never far from your drink. Beyond the bar, the property holds eight rooms, which is deliberately small. Conde Nast Traveller called it "quiet luxury at its very best," and that phrase is more accurate than it sounds: the scale prevents the noise and anonymity of a larger resort. A complimentary Greek-style breakfast is included for guests, by independent reviewer accounts worth showing up for. The crowd tends toward couples and small groups rather than large parties. The 24-hour opening hours don't mean it becomes a late-night club — Antiparos doesn't really have that energy — but you can arrive early or linger late without pressure. How to Get There Beach House Antiparos sits at coordinates 36.9817° N, 25.0688° E, on the western flank of Antiparos near the hamlet of Apantima. From Antiparos Town, follow the main road southwest; the property is roughly a 10-minute drive or a longer walk along the shore path. To reach Antiparos from Paros, take the small car ferry from Pounta (near Parikia) — the crossing takes about 10 minutes and runs frequently in summer. Foot passengers can also take the passenger-only ferry from Parikia port directly to Antiparos Town, then pick up a taxi or rent a scooter or ATV at the port. There is no direct ferry from Athens or the mainland to Antiparos itself; all routes go via Paros. Parking is available near the property for those arriving by car or hired scooter. Taxis on Antiparos are limited; it's worth noting the local taxi number when you arrive in case you need a return. Walking from Antiparos Town to the property along the coast takes around 25–30 minutes on flat ground. Best Time to Visit Beach House Antiparos is a seasonal property aligned with the Cycladic summer. The practical window runs from late May through early October, with July and August being the busiest months. Antiparos in peak summer is warmer and windier than the shoulder months — the Meltemi north wind picks up most afternoons from mid-July onward, which can make the sea choppy by late afternoon but keeps the heat bearable. For beach-bar visits, the best timing is mid-morning (before the heat peaks) or late afternoon heading into sunset. The sun sets over the water on this side of the island, which means the bar terrace gets the full show. That light, roughly 8–9pm in July, is worth planning around. Early June and September offer calmer seas, smaller crowds, and lower prices for rooms. The bar should be operational through most of that window, though confirming directly with the property is wise outside the core July–August season. Tips for Visiting Book rooms well in advance. Eight rooms fill quickly once summer itineraries solidify — late April or May for a July stay is not too early. Day visitors are welcome at the bar. You don't need to be a hotel guest to use the beach bar; just turn up and order. Bring cash as backup. Card machines on smaller Antiparos properties can be temperamental; having euros on hand avoids friction. Arrive via Pounta ferry if you have a vehicle. The car ferry from Pounta is faster and more frequent than trying to route a vehicle through Parikia's passenger terminal. Rent a scooter or ATV in Antiparos Town. Getting around the island independently is much easier with two wheels; the port area has several rental options when you arrive. Check the sea conditions before a beach session. The western shore is generally sheltered, but a strong Meltemi can push in afternoon chop; mornings are usually glassy. The breakfast is included for guests. Don't skip it — independent reviews flag it as a genuine reason to eat at the property rather than heading into town. Expect a mid-range crowd, not a party scene. Beach House skews toward quiet relaxation. If you're after a high-energy beach club atmosphere, Soros Beach Club is a better fit. Contact the property directly for current rates and availability. Reaching them at [email protected] or +30 2284 064000 tends to get faster responses than third-party booking platforms for a property this small. Facilities and Location The property sits on its own sandy stretch with direct beach access — the transition between rooms, terrace, and sea is intentionally seamless. Guest facilities center on the beach bar, the beach itself, and the eight rooms, each apparently designed to reflect the Cycladic village aesthetic rather than generic resort finishes. A partnership with skincare and wellness brand 1OAM Apotheke is mentioned on the property website for the current season, suggesting some amenity-level upgrades. The address — Apantima, 840 07, Antiparos — puts it outside the main village but not inconveniently far. The quiet around the property is part of the appeal; there is no adjacent road noise or neighboring nightlife strip. The nearest town services — tavernas, a small supermarket, the port — are back in Antiparos Town.
