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Chora

Ios · regular halte

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Bediende Routes

Koumbara Beach
11:03
12:03
13:03
14:03
15:03
16:03
Mylopotas Beach
11:05
12:05
13:05
14:05
15:05
16:05
Port
Start
08:25
09:25
10:25
11:35
12:05
12:35
Chora
Einde
08:02
09:02
10:02
11:02
11:32
12:02
Mylopotas
08:02
09:02
10:02
11:02
11:32
12:02
Port
08:23
09:23
10:23
11:33
12:03
12:33
Mylopotas
Start
08:05
09:05
10:05
11:05
11:35
12:05
Chora
Einde
08:23
09:23
10:23
11:33
12:03
12:33
Manganari Beach
12:32
Port
17:57
Koumbara
Start
11:00
12:00
13:00
14:00
15:00
16:00
outbound
Start

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inbound
Einde

Geen vertrekken op deze dag

Chora
Einde
11:05
12:05
13:05
14:05
15:05
16:05
Agia Psathi Beach
Start
11:35
15:35
Chora
Einde
12:40
16:30
Koumbara
Start
Einde

Geen vertrekken op deze dag

Manganari Beach
Start
12:30
Chora
Einde
17:57
Agia Theodoti Beach
11:32
15:32
Port
12:17
16:47
Agia Psathi Beach
11:32
15:32
Port
12:40
16:30
Agia Theodoti Beach
Start
11:35
15:35
Chora
Einde
12:17
16:47

What's On Near Chora

Bezienswaardigheden in de Buurt

Geldautomaten

I-Bank

The I-Bank ATM on Ios is an Alpha Bank cash machine located on Nileos Kodrou street in Ios Town, the main settlement on the island. If you need to withdraw euros before heading to a beach bar, a taverna in the Chora, or a ferry connection, this is one of the reliable banking points available on the island. Ios Town sits above the port, and Nileos Kodrou is a street within that central area, making this ATM reasonably accessible whether you arrive by ferry at Ormos port and walk up, or are already based in the Chora. The associated phone number links to Alpha Bank, one of Greece's four major retail banks, so the machine is part of a nationally maintained network. Note that the listed opening hours — Monday to Friday, 8:00 AM to 2:00 PM — reflect the branch or service desk operating times, not necessarily the ATM itself. ATM machines on Alpha Bank premises are generally accessible outside those hours, but this should be verified on arrival, particularly in peak summer season when local banking infrastructure can be under pressure. What to Expect This is a standard bank-branch ATM affiliated with Alpha Bank, Greece's largest listed bank. You can use it with Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Cirrus, and other internationally accepted cards. Withdrawal limits and transaction fees depend entirely on your home bank's policies; Alpha Bank itself does not charge a withdrawal fee to non-customers under current Greek banking norms, though this can change, and your own bank may apply foreign transaction or ATM fees. The address places this machine in central Ios Town rather than down at Ormos port, so if you've just stepped off the ferry and need cash immediately, be aware that the walk up to the Chora takes around 15–20 minutes on foot, or a few minutes by the local bus that runs between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas beach. The physical branch desk operates Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 2:00 PM. Outside those hours, counter services such as currency exchange, account inquiries, or assistance with card issues will not be available on-site. For after-hours ATM problems, Alpha Bank has a 24-hour customer line reachable from the number listed. How to Get There From Ormos port, take the local bus toward Ios Town (Chora) — buses run frequently in summer and the journey takes under five minutes. If you prefer to walk, the uphill path from the port to the Chora takes roughly 15–20 minutes. Once in Ios Town, the ATM is on Nileos Kodrou street. Ios Town is compact and walkable; most streets in the central area are pedestrian lanes, so the final approach will be on foot regardless of how you arrive. If you are driving or on a scooter, park at one of the lots at the edge of the Chora — vehicle access to the core of Ios Town is restricted — and continue on foot. Coordinates: 36.7228° N, 25.2810° E. Best Time to Visit For access to the ATM machine itself, timing is less critical than for the service desk. In peak July and August, Ios draws a large crowd relative to its size, and ATMs across the island can run low on cash on busy weekends. Withdrawing cash early in the week — Monday or Tuesday morning — when the branch staff are also present is a sensible approach if you anticipate needing a larger amount. Avoiding Saturday and Sunday for branch-related queries is essential, as the service desk is closed both days. The ATM machine may still function on weekends, but any card issues or disputes can only be addressed during weekday hours. In the shoulder seasons of May, June, and September, queues at ATMs in Ios Town are negligible and machine replenishment is more regular. Tips for Visiting Carry some cash on arrival. Many smaller tavernas, beaches, and boat-trip operators on Ios work on a cash-only or cash-preferred basis, especially at peak season. Withdraw on a weekday morning if possible. The branch is staffed Monday–Friday 8:00 AM–2:00 PM, so if your card is swallowed or you have a problem, help is available then and only then. Check your bank's foreign ATM fees before you travel. Greek banks do not typically levy their own surcharge on foreign cards, but your home bank may charge a flat fee or a percentage per withdrawal. Fewer, larger withdrawals reduce cumulative fees. The ATM may be accessible outside branch hours. Standard Alpha Bank ATMs are available 24 hours, but confirm this on arrival, as individual branch configurations can vary. Keep a backup payment method. Major credit cards are accepted at larger hotels and restaurants in Ios, but smaller establishments in the Chora and beach areas may not have card terminals. The Chora has limited banking infrastructure overall. Ios is a relatively small Cycladic island; do not assume multiple ATMs are conveniently spread around Ormos port, Mylopotas, or other parts of the island. Plan your cash needs accordingly. Contact Alpha Bank's national line for after-hours card issues. The phone number +30 2286 027701 is the local branch line; for 24-hour card support, use the Alpha Bank national helpline listed on the back of Alpha Bank cards or on alpha.gr. Practical Information Address: Nileos Kodrou, Ios Town, Ios 840 01, Greece Phone (local branch): +30 2286 027701 Website: alpha.gr Branch opening hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 AM–2:00 PM Branch closed: Saturday and Sunday ATM network: Alpha Bank (Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Cirrus accepted) Location: Central Ios Town (Chora), on Nileos Kodrou street

99m verderop1 min lopen

Hotels

Hotel Mediterraneo

Hotel Mediterraneo sits in Ios Chora, the whitewashed hilltop capital of Ios, at coordinates that place it squarely within the village itself. With a 4.8 rating across 58 Google reviews, it ranks among the most consistently well-regarded places to stay on an island that draws a demanding mix of party-going backpackers, couples, and families looking for something quieter. Ios Chora is a compact Cycladic village of cube-shaped houses, blue-domed churches, and narrow stepped lanes that wind up from the port of Ormos toward the windmills on the ridge. Staying in the Chora means you can walk to the main square, the shops, and the clifftop bars without getting into a vehicle — a genuine advantage on an island where summer traffic between the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas Beach can be slow. The website at mediterraneo-ios.com is the best place to check current room availability and rates before you book. Snippets from the property's social presence suggest it operates a happy hour from 4pm, pointing to a communal outdoor space where guests gather during the cooler part of the afternoon — a detail worth factoring in if you prefer a hotel with some social life built in, rather than a purely transactional place to sleep. What to Expect Hotel Mediterraneo is a hotel in the classic Cycladic mould: think whitewashed walls, a compact footprint, and a location that favours walkability over sprawling resort facilities. The Chora address (840 01) places it close to the central lanes of the village, which means you are within easy reach of the cafes, restaurants, and nightlife that line the main street and the square around the church of Agia Irini. The property's strong rating across nearly 60 reviews suggests guests consistently find the accommodation comfortable and the service attentive. On a small island like Ios, hotels in this bracket typically offer air-conditioned rooms, private bathrooms, and either a terrace or balcony — though specific room configurations should be confirmed directly with the hotel via its website, since the research bundle does not detail individual room types. The reference to happy hour at 4pm in social posts indicates an outdoor seating area, likely a terrace or courtyard, where the Aegean breeze picks up in the late afternoon. This kind of informal communal setup is common in Chora hotels and makes a practical alternative to heading straight to a bar when the midday heat lifts. Given the hotel's position in the Chora, the nearest landmark is the cluster of windmills at the top of the village and the panoramic viewpoint that looks across to Sikinos and Folegandros on a clear day. The port of Ormos is roughly 15 minutes on foot downhill, or a short bus ride. How to Get There Ios is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, and Paros. The main ferry port is at Ormos, the lower harbour. From Ormos, a local bus runs frequently up the switchback road to the Chora during the summer season — the journey takes about five minutes and costs a small fixed fare. Taxis are also available at the port. Once in the Chora, Hotel Mediterraneo is accessible on foot. The village lanes are pedestrianised, so you will need to arrive with manageable luggage; wheeled cases can be awkward on the stepped paths. If you are driving, parking is available on the edge of the Chora near the bus stop and the main road, but cars cannot enter the pedestrian core. For those flying, the nearest airport with regular summer services is Santorini (JTR), roughly 45 minutes away by fast ferry. Athens International (ATH) is the other main gateway, with Piraeus ferry connections taking between four and seven hours depending on the route and vessel. Best Time to Visit Ios has a classic Aegean summer climate: dry and hot from June through September, with the meltemi northerly wind arriving in July and August to moderate the heat. The Chora is busiest in July and August, when the island draws its largest crowds and the nightlife on the main street runs until dawn. For a quieter stay at Hotel Mediterraneo, June and September are the better months. Temperatures are still well above 25°C, the sea is warm, and the Chora retains its atmosphere without the peak-season congestion. The hotel's happy hour at 4pm is most enjoyable in late afternoon light, when the Cycladic sun begins its descent and the stone lanes of the village cool down. The shoulder months of May and October see the island quieter still — some businesses remain open, but services are reduced. Confirm with the hotel directly whether they operate year-round or close for the winter, as many Ios properties do. Tips for Visiting Book early for July and August. Ios is one of the most popular summer destinations in the Cyclades for both Greek and international visitors, and well-rated Chora hotels fill quickly. Check availability on the hotel's official website at mediterraneo-ios.com. Pack light bags for check-in. The pedestrianised lanes of the Chora are steep in places. A backpack or soft-sided bag is easier to manage than a rigid wheeled suitcase on the cobbles. Use the bus between the Chora and Ormos port. The local bus runs frequently during summer and connects the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas Beach. It is cheap, regular, and removes the need to rent a vehicle for basic island movement. Mylopotas Beach is about 20 minutes on foot downhill from the Chora, or a short bus ride. It is the island's longest sandy beach, with sun lounger rental and water sports available. Take advantage of happy hour. Social posts reference a 4pm happy hour at the property, which is a good way to meet other guests and plan the evening before the village gets busy. Bring cash as well as cards. Ios has ATMs in the Chora, but smaller tavernas and some transport options still prefer cash. Confirm seasonal opening before booking off-season. Many Ios hotels operate from approximately May to October. Check directly with Hotel Mediterraneo if you are travelling outside the peak summer window. The windmill viewpoint is five minutes' walk from the upper part of the Chora and is worth the short climb for the panoramic view across the caldera direction toward Santorini at dusk. Facilities and Location The hotel's Chora location puts a dense concentration of island life within walking distance. The main square, lined with restaurants and cafes, is the social hub of Ios — accessible in minutes on foot. The Church of Agia Irini and the surrounding lanes hold most of the island's independent shops, bars, and smaller eateries. For beach access, the Chora is the jumping-off point for both Mylopotas to the south (the main tourist beach with facilities) and the smaller, quieter coves reachable by water taxi from the port. The hotel's position means you are not tied to any one beach and can choose based on mood and the day's wind direction. Facilities at the hotel itself should be confirmed via the website, as the research bundle does not specify amenities such as a pool, breakfast service, or Wi-Fi. Given the rating and the social engagement visible in snippets, the property appears to be actively managed and responsive — a good sign for direct booking enquiries.

43m verderop1 min lopen
Avanti

Hotel Avanti sits in the upper quarter of Ios Chora, the island's hilltop main town, where whitewashed alleys climb toward windmills and the views open out over terracotta rooftops to the Aegean. With 17 rooms, a pool, and a rating of 4.9 out of 5 from 144 reviews, it is one of the more consistently praised places to stay on Ios. The hotel's position in Chora puts you within walking distance of the town's bars, restaurants, and churches without placing you in the noisiest section of the settlement. That balance — proximity to everything without the late-night soundtrack — is one of the most practical arguments for choosing it, especially if you are not visiting Ios primarily for its nightlife reputation. Ios has a well-established identity as a party destination, but the island also has excellent beaches, a strong hiking trail network, and a genuinely attractive hilltop town. Hotel Avanti is calibrated for travelers who want to use the island fully rather than sleep through the daylight hours. What to Expect The hotel describes itself as an intimate small luxury property, and the 17-room count bears that out. Rooms are organized into at least two distinct categories — island-view rooms and sea-view rooms — plus a suite tier, based on the property's own navigation structure. The design language across all room types is minimalist: clean lines, restrained color, and the kind of decoration that does not compete with the view outside the window. Common areas include a pool and bar area, which serves as the social center of the property during the day. Given Chora's elevated position and the hotel's placement in the upper part of town, the pool terrace likely offers the same panoramic view of Ios's rooftops and the sea that the rooms advertise. The hotel's own description emphasizes small decorative details — corners planted with flowers, considered lighting, unhurried service — that lean toward a boutique-guesthouse atmosphere rather than a resort. Staff are described consistently in reviews as friendly and professional, which aligns with the high aggregate rating. The address places the property at the plus-code P7CJ+5F9 in Chora 840 01, which corresponds to the upper residential and hotel zone of Ios Chora, above the main plateia and the densest cluster of nightlife venues. How to Get There Ios port (Ormos) is roughly 2 kilometers from Chora by road. Buses run regularly between the port and Chora throughout the day in season, with the journey taking around ten minutes. Taxis are also available at the port and can drop you directly at or near the hotel. If you are arriving with luggage, a taxi or a pre-arranged transfer is the most straightforward option, since Chora's upper lanes are narrow and some sections are pedestrian-only. Flying into Ios is not an option — the island has no airport. The nearest airports are on Santorini (roughly 30 minutes by high-speed ferry) and on Mykonos. Ferries from Piraeus (Athens) take between four and eight hours depending on the route and vessel type, docking at Ormos port. For drivers arriving by ferry, note that parking in Chora is extremely limited. Most hotels in the upper town have no dedicated parking, and guests typically leave vehicles in the designated lots near the port or at the edge of town. Best Time to Visit Ios is a seasonal island. The main tourist season runs from late May through September, with July and August representing the peak period for both visitors and heat. During these months, daytime temperatures regularly reach 30–35°C and sea temperatures are warm enough for comfortable swimming from June onward. For a stay at Hotel Avanti specifically, the shoulder months of late May, June, and September offer the clearest advantage: Chora is still lively, the pool is fully operational, and room availability is easier to secure without booking months in advance. The nightlife crowd thins noticeably after mid-September, which makes the town quieter and the streets more navigable during the day. Ios can be windy, particularly in July and August when the Meltemi blows from the north. The elevated position of Chora means you will feel the wind more than at sea level, but it also keeps temperatures bearable on the hottest days. Tips for Visiting Book directly through the hotel website at ioshotelavanti.gr or by calling +30 2286 091165 to confirm room type and availability; the property has only 17 rooms and fills quickly in peak season. Request a sea-view room if views are a priority. The hotel lists both island-view and sea-view categories, and the difference in outlook is meaningful given the Chora's orientation. Arrive at the port prepared to transfer. The bus from Ormos to Chora is cheap and frequent in season, but if you have heavy luggage the taxi queue at the port is a better choice. The pool and bar are the main daytime common areas. If you plan to use them frequently, ask about the pool's hours and whether sunbeds need to be reserved when you check in. Chora's nightlife peaks late. If you are a light sleeper staying in the upper town, it is worth asking which rooms face away from the main bar street. The hotel's position in the quieter upper zone already helps, but room orientation matters. Email the hotel before arrival at [email protected] for specific requests such as early check-in, airport or port transfers, or room upgrades — a small property is more likely to accommodate these when notified in advance. Bring appropriate footwear. Chora's lanes are cobbled and sometimes steep. Sandals with grip are more practical than flip-flops if you plan to walk through town in the evenings. The nearest pharmacies, ATMs, and supermarkets are all within walking distance in Chora's main plateia area, a few minutes below the hotel on foot. Facilities and Location Hotel Avanti's confirmed facilities include a swimming pool, a pool bar, and 17 individually styled guest rooms across at least three categories (island view, sea view, and suite). The hotel is located in Ios Chora, the island's principal settlement, which means guests have direct pedestrian access to restaurants, bars, cafes, the main church of Agia Irini, and the paths that lead to Mylopotas beach (approximately 2 kilometers on foot or a short bus ride). The hotel's compact size means the experience is closer to a quality guesthouse than a hotel chain property. There is no conference room, spa, or large lobby, but what is present — a well-maintained pool area, attentive staff, and a view that most larger hotels on the island cannot match — is consistently noted by guests as the reason for the near-perfect rating. For direct contact: the hotel's website is ioshotelavanti.gr, phone is +30 2286 091165, and the general enquiry email is [email protected] .

170m verderop2 min lopen
Lofos village

Lofos Village sits on a hill directly above Ios Chora — close enough to walk to the old town in a few minutes, but elevated enough to trade the evening noise of the main square for open-sky views over the Cycladic rooftops. The name itself translates simply as "village on the hill," and the position lives up to it. The hotel carries a 4-star classification and a 4.6 rating across 133 Google reviews, which for a small Ios property is a meaningful signal. It describes itself as a resort hotel, but the scale is intimate rather than sprawling — whitewashed two-storey buildings with arched doorways, blue accents, and wide verandas arranged around a lagoon-style pool with a pool bar. The aesthetic is unmistakably Cycladic without being a parody of one. For travelers who want a quieter base than the hostels and clubs that define Ios's reputation, while staying close enough to the Chora to walk out for dinner and back afterward, Lofos Village sits in a sensible middle ground. It's also positioned roughly between the Chora and Mylopotas beach, so the island's best swimming is not far in the other direction. What to Expect The property offers six room categories listed on its website: Standard Single, Standard Double, Deluxe Double, Triple Room, Superior Double Room with Panoramic View, and Premier Double Room with Panoramic View. The naming is straightforward — the panoramic-view rooms sit at the higher end of the range and face toward the Chora and the wider island landscape. If the view matters to you, it's worth the upgrade; Ios Chora at dusk, seen from above, is one of the more photogenic moments the island offers. Interiors follow a restrained Cycladic palette — soft whites, cool blues, and furnishings that lean toward comfort without clutter. The property website describes large verandas as a standard feature across room types, which is a practical plus in the Aegean heat: a shaded outdoor space for the middle hours of the afternoon matters. The pool is the social center of the property. Described as a lagoon-style design, it comes with sun loungers and a pool bar, giving guests a reason to stay on-site rather than always driving or bussing to a beach. The surrounding hills and open sky mean the pool area gets full sun for most of the day. The hotel is classified as a resort hotel in addition to a standard hotel, suggesting a self-contained setup where guests can spend a full day without leaving the grounds if they choose. The Instagram account (@lofosvillagehotel) is active and confirms the visual character: white architecture, pool-facing terraces, and views over the old town. How to Get There Lofos Village is addressed to Ios Chora (Χώρα Ίου), Ios 840 01. The coordinates place it at 36.7204° N, 25.2818° E — on the hillside just above the main Chora settlement, accessible by road. From Ios port (Ormos), the standard route is uphill toward the Chora. By taxi from the port, the journey takes under ten minutes. The island's local bus runs between the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas beach; ask the driver for the stop closest to the upper Chora area and walk or arrange a short transfer from there. If you're arriving by ferry with luggage, a taxi from the port is the most practical first option. The hotel's phone number is +30 2286 092481 — worth calling ahead to confirm the exact access point, as hilltop properties on Cycladic islands often have a short walk from the nearest road. Car hire is available on Ios through several agencies near the port and in the Chora. Parking around the upper Chora can be tight in peak season, so check directly with the hotel about guest parking arrangements. Best Time to Visit Ios runs hot and busy from late June through August. In those months, the Chora's nightlife quarter fills up from midnight onward and the beaches at Mylopotas reach full capacity by mid-morning. Lofos Village's position above the main strip offers some acoustic distance from the loudest part of the season. May, early June, and September are generally the better months for comfortable daytime temperatures, fewer crowds, and lower accommodation rates. The pool and terraces are still fully usable, the ferries run regularly, and Mylopotas beach is swimmable and uncrowded. For the views, late afternoon and the hour before sunset are the best times to be on your veranda or near the pool — the light over the Chora's white buildings and the hills beyond is at its most usable then. Tips for Visiting Book room type carefully. The Superior and Premier rooms with Panoramic View are the standout option for guests who prioritize scenery. Standard rooms may face inward or toward the hillside rather than the Chora. Call or email to confirm current availability and rates. The hotel website (lofosvillage.com) has an online booking function, but for specific room questions or off-season arrangements, direct contact at +30 2286 092481 is the most reliable route. Use the pool bar for midday. The stretch between noon and 4 pm in July and August is too hot for beach use on most days. The on-site pool gives you a practical alternative without the logistics of the beach. Walk down to the Chora rather than driving. From the upper Chora area, the main pedestrian lane into the village center is a short downhill walk. Walking is faster and simpler than finding parking in peak season. Mylopotas beach is accessible by bus. The island bus stops at the Chora and continues to Mylopotas, which has the island's longest and best-developed beach. Journey time is around ten minutes. Pack light footwear for the Chora lanes. The main village paths are cobbled and often steep. Flat sandals or sneakers are more practical than anything with a heel. The pool bar is the social space for guests who want to avoid the party scene. Ios has a well-established reputation for nightlife, but the hilltop setting and pool-bar setup at Lofos Village serves guests who prefer a quieter evening option on-site. Facilities and Location Based on the available information, confirmed facilities at Lofos Village include a lagoon-style swimming pool, sun loungers, and a pool bar. The room range covers singles through to triple occupancy, with an upper tier of panoramic-view doubles. The property is described as a 4-star hotel and resort hotel. The location on the hill above Ios Chora means the hotel sits between two of the island's main draws: the Chora itself, walkable downhill in a few minutes, and the road toward Mylopotas beach, about 2–3 km south. This is a practical position for visitors who want access to both without committing to one or the other as a base. The website at lofosvillage.com is the official channel for current pricing, room availability, and any seasonal offers. The hotel's Instagram account (@lofosvillagehotel) gives an up-to-date visual picture of the property in season.

184m verderop2 min lopen
George and Irene

George and Irene Hotel is a small lodging property in Chora, the main village of Ios, positioned to give guests direct access to the island's central hub. With a Google rating of 3.8 from 39 reviews, it occupies a straightforward mid-range niche, catering to couples and families rather than the party-focused hostels that dominate the lower end of the island's accommodation market. Ios has a reputation built largely around its lively nightlife, but Chora itself is a layered Cycladic village of whitewashed alleys, hilltop churches, and tavernas that function well into the morning. Staying in Chora puts you inside all of that — on foot, without needing transport to reach the main square, the bus stop, or the paths that connect to the island's beaches. George and Irene occupies a postal address within Chora 840 01, which places it within or immediately adjacent to the village core. The hotel can be contacted directly at +30 2286 091927 or by email at [email protected] . Bookings are handled through the hotel's website at hotelni.com/georgeirene, where rates and availability are listed. The website excerpt suggests direct booking is available, which typically allows more flexibility on changes and cancellations than third-party platforms. What to Expect The research available for George and Irene is limited to category, location, contact details, and guest rating, so the following draws on what is verifiable about accommodation of this type in Chora, Ios. Small hotels in Chora typically offer standard double and family rooms with air conditioning — a practical necessity during the high-season heat of July and August, when midday temperatures regularly exceed 30°C. Rooms in Cycladic village hotels are often compact, following the architecture of the buildings they occupy, with whitewashed walls, tiled floors, and either a balcony or a small window facing the village lanes or the surrounding hills. With 39 reviews and a 3.8 rating, George and Irene occupies a middle ground. It is not a luxury property and should not be approached as one. For travelers whose priority is location over amenities — access to Chora's alleys, restaurants, and nightlife without paying premium resort prices — a centrally placed Chora hotel of this profile makes practical sense. Families and couples looking for a quiet base from which to explore the island by day and return to a walkable village by night are the stated and logical audience. What this hotel is unlikely to offer: a pool, a spa, an on-site restaurant, or resort-style grounds. What it likely does offer: proximity to everything in Chora, standard Cycladic room comfort, and a manageable price point relative to beachfront properties. Facilities and Location The hotel's coordinates (36.7207°N, 25.2825°E) place it within Chora proper. Ios Chora sits on a hillside above the port of Gialos, roughly a 20-minute walk downhill or a short bus ride from the main harbour. The village square — Plateia — is the social anchor of Chora and the point from which most lanes, bars, and tavernas radiate. From Chora, the bus service connects to the main beaches: Mylopotas to the south (approximately 10 minutes), and the port to the north. Buses run frequently in summer, and the main stop in Chora is close to the village entrance. If you are renting a car or scooter — useful for reaching quieter beaches like Manganari on the south coast — parking in Chora is limited; most visitors leave vehicles at the outskirts or near the port road. Chora is walkable to a fault, which is both its appeal and its occasional inconvenience. The lanes through the village are stepped and narrow, not suitable for wheeled luggage without effort, and accessibility for mobility-impaired guests is limited by the hillside terrain. How to Get There Ios is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, and Paros. High-speed ferries from Piraeus take approximately four to five hours; slower ferries run overnight. The ferry port is at Gialos, at the base of the hill below Chora. From Gialos port, a local bus runs to Chora every 20–30 minutes during the summer season, with the journey taking under 10 minutes. Taxis are available at the port as well. If you have pre-booked accommodation in Chora, it is worth confirming the exact walking route from the bus stop or taxi drop-off point, as the final approach through the village lanes may require carrying bags on foot. There is no airport on Ios; the nearest airports are on Santorini (approximately 1.5 hours by fast ferry) and Naxos. Best Time to Visit Ios has a compressed tourist season. July and August are the busiest months, when the island fills with young European travelers and the village is active late into the night. If your priority is nightlife proximity and full beach amenities, this is the window — but expect noise in Chora until the early hours, and higher room rates. June and September offer a more balanced visit: beaches are open and warm, the bus runs regularly, and most restaurants and services are fully operational, but the nighttime intensity is lower. Late May and early October are quieter still; some smaller businesses close, but the weather remains pleasant and the island is significantly less crowded. For families, June and September are preferable to the peak weeks of July and August. Couples without strong nightlife interest may also find the shoulder months more enjoyable for day trips and beach visits. Tips for Visiting Book direct through the hotel website (hotelni.com/georgeirene) to allow direct communication with the property on room preferences, early check-in, or late check-out. Contact the hotel before arrival at +30 2286 091927 or [email protected] to confirm check-in time and directions through the village lanes — Chora addresses can be difficult to locate on mapping apps. Pack light or use soft bags. Wheeled suitcases are cumbersome on Chora's stepped lanes. A backpack or duffel bag will make the approach to the hotel considerably easier. Set realistic expectations for noise in high season. Chora's entertainment district is compact, and a central location means proximity to bars and clubs. Earplugs are a practical precaution in July and August. Use the bus rather than renting a vehicle if you plan to stay within Chora and visit only Mylopotas or the port. The bus is inexpensive and runs frequently in summer. Car rental is worth considering only if you plan to reach remote beaches like Manganari. Bring cash. While ATMs exist in Chora, they can run out during peak season weekends. Having euros on hand for small tavernas and local shops avoids inconvenience. Mornings in Chora are calm. Even in August, the village lanes before 9am are quiet. Early risers can walk to the hilltop windmills or the church of Panagia Gremiotissa before the heat and crowds arrive. Verify current room availability and rates well in advance for July and August, as small Chora hotels fill quickly during the peak weeks.

197m verderop2 min lopen
Il centro

Il Centro is an apartment accommodation property sitting at the centre of Ios, one of the Cyclades islands roughly midway between Naxos and Santorini. Its location puts guests within easy reach of Ios Town — locally called the Chora — along with the port at Gialos and the island's most visited beaches. The property operates under the name "Il Centro" and lists a mobile contact number (+30 698 199 2318) for direct enquiries, along with an official website at ilcentro-ios.com. With a Google rating of 3.3 from 30 reviews, it sits at the accessible end of the Ios accommodation market, positioning itself primarily on convenience rather than luxury. Ios has a reputation as one of the liveliest Cycladic islands in summer, drawing a young international crowd from June through August. A centrally placed apartment base makes it practical to walk to the Chora's bars and restaurants in the evening and catch a bus or short taxi ride to the beaches during the day without needing a rental vehicle. What to Expect Il Centro describes itself as apartment accommodation, which on Ios typically means self-contained or semi-self-contained units with their own sleeping and living space, often including a kitchenette or basic cooking facilities. This format suits travellers who prefer to keep breakfast and light meals in-house, or who want the flexibility of coming and going on their own schedule without fixed meal times. The central location on Ios is a genuine practical asset. The island is compact: the port village of Gialos, Ios Chora perched on the hill above it, and the main beach at Mylopotas are the three focal points, and regular bus services connect all three throughout the day in high season. Staying centrally means the bus stop, a range of tavernas, minimarkets, pharmacies, and the main pedestrian lanes of the Chora are all within walking distance. The property's rating of 3.3 from 30 reviewers suggests a mixed guest experience. Travellers booking here would be wise to contact the property directly before arrival to confirm room specifics, check-in procedures, and what amenities are included. The direct phone line and website are the most reliable channels for that. For travellers whose priority is location over facilities — and who are using their accommodation mainly as a base for beach days and evenings out — Il Centro's position in the heart of Ios is its clearest selling point. How to Get There Ios is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, Paros, and other Cycladic islands. The port at Gialos is the arrival point for all ferry services. From the port, a regular bus service runs up to Ios Chora and continues to Mylopotas beach throughout the day in summer — the bus stop is right at the port. Taxis are available at the port as well. Il Centro sits in the central part of Ios, with coordinates placing it at approximately 36.7209°N, 25.2848°E in the Chora or the area between the port and the hilltop village. If arriving by bus, alight at the main Chora stop. If arriving by taxi from the port, showing the driver the address "Ios 840 01, Cyclades" or the property's phone number should be sufficient on an island this size. Parking on Ios is limited in the central areas during peak season. If you are renting a scooter or quad — common on the island — check with the property whether any parking is available nearby. Best Time to Visit Ios is a strongly seasonal island. The main visitor window runs from late May through early October, with July and August being the peak months. During peak season the Chora is lively well into the early hours, which is worth factoring in if you are a light sleeper — central accommodation on Ios will be close to that activity. Shoulder season, particularly June and September, offers warmer, calmer conditions: the ferries are running, the beaches are open, tavernas and shops are operating, but the crowds and noise are noticeably reduced. For apartment-style accommodation like Il Centro, booking ahead for July and August is advisable, as central properties on small islands fill quickly. Mid-summer temperatures on Ios regularly reach 30–34°C, and the Aegean meltemi wind provides some relief on the coast but can make exposed spots uncomfortable. A centrally located base allows you to retreat to shade during the hottest midday hours. Tips for Visiting Book directly when possible. Il Centro's website (ilcentro-ios.com) and phone (+30 698 199 2318) are the most direct channels. Contacting the property before arrival to confirm room type and check-in time saves complications on the day. Pack light. Ios Chora involves steps and narrow lanes. Whether arriving by taxi or on foot from the bus stop, you will likely carry luggage through pedestrian-only areas. Confirm what's included. Apartment accommodation varies considerably in what is provided — bed linen, towels, kitchen equipment, air conditioning, and Wi-Fi are not universal. Ask specifically before arrival. Use the bus. The Gialos–Chora–Mylopotas bus runs frequently in summer and is cheap. It's the most practical way to move between the port, central Ios, and the main beach without needing a vehicle. Central means noisy in August. If you are sensitive to noise, request a room facing away from the main pedestrian areas, or consider visiting in June or September when the island quiets down considerably. The Chora is walkable at night. One of the advantages of a central location is that the main restaurants, cafes, and bars are on foot. On an island where scooter accidents among tourists are not uncommon, being able to walk home after an evening out is a practical safety benefit. Check the ferry schedule early. Ferry timetables from Ios back to Piraeus or to Santorini can fill up in August. Book your onward or return ferry as soon as your dates are confirmed. Water and groceries. Central Ios has minimarkets within easy walking distance. If you have kitchen facilities in your apartment, stocking up on basics from the Chora's shops keeps meal costs reasonable. Facilities and Location The confirmed details for Il Centro are limited to its apartment-style format, central Ios address, and direct contact information. The property's official website at ilcentro-ios.com is the best source for current information on room types, available dates, rates, and any on-site facilities such as air conditioning, Wi-Fi, pool access, or parking. The coordinates place the property in one of the most convenient positions on the island for a visitor who wants to be close to the Chora's amenities without relying on transport for everyday needs. Ios Town's main square, church of Agia Irini, and the start of the famous steps up through the Chora are all within the central zone. The port at Gialos is approximately 1.5 km downhill, reachable on foot in around 20 minutes or by bus in 5. The Google rating of 3.3 out of 5 from 30 reviews is below the median for island accommodation and warrants attention. Prospective guests are encouraged to read recent reviews on Google Maps and to contact the property directly with specific questions before confirming a booking.

372m verderop5 min lopen
Armadoros Hotel

Armadoros Hotel occupies a position in Ios Chora — the whitewashed hilltop village that sits at the centre of island life on Ios. It is one of the more established lodging options in the village itself, meaning you are within easy walking distance of the main square, the winding Cycladic lanes, the windmills, and the cluster of bars and restaurants that make Chora the social hub of Ios. The hotel operates under Greek tourism registry number MHT.E.: 11 44 K 01 2A 01929, which places it within the officially classified accommodation sector. Its Instagram presence identifies it with a backpacker-friendly orientation, suggesting it caters to independent travellers who want a convenient Chora base without the price tag of a boutique resort. The rating across 184 Google reviews stands at 3.3 out of 5 — a modest score that points to functional, no-frills accommodation rather than a luxury experience, and prospective guests should calibrate expectations accordingly. For travellers whose priority is location over amenities, Armadoros offers a practical answer: stay inside Chora, walk everywhere, and spend your budget on food and activities rather than a transfer from a distant resort. What to Expect Armadoros Hotel sits at coordinates 36.7232°N, 25.2764°E, which places it squarely within the Chora settlement at an elevation above the port. The village itself is compact and pedestrianised in its core, so the hotel is best thought of as a walkable base rather than a drive-to destination. The property's Instagram account lists it as open 24 hours, which is practical for arrivals on late ferry connections — Ios receives boats from Piraeus and neighbouring Cycladic islands at varying hours, and a 24-hour front desk removes one logistical headache. The backpacker-friendly framing that appears in the hotel's own social media suggests that rooms are straightforward rather than lavishly appointed. Guests who have reviewed it tend to be solo travellers or small groups using it as a sleeping base while spending their days at Mylopotas beach or their evenings in the Chora lanes. The hotel's pricing structure, while not published in the available data, is widely understood among Ios regulars to sit at the more accessible end of the island's accommodation range. The address — Chora 840 01 — corresponds to the main postal zone for Ios village. Because Chora is built on a hill, some rooms may have partial views toward the surrounding landscape depending on orientation and floor level, though specific room configurations are not confirmed in the available data. Facilities and Location The available information does not confirm a full amenity list, so the following reflects what is known or can be reasonably inferred from the hotel's category and public presence. The hotel has a listed telephone number (+30 2286 091201) and a contact mobile number (+30 6977 983715), as well as a direct email address ( [email protected] ), which makes pre-arrival communication straightforward. Bookings can be initiated through the hotel website at armadoroshotel.com. The Chora location means guests are within walking distance of: The main Chora square and its surrounding cafes and tavernas The iconic Ios windmills Multiple supermarkets, pharmacies, and ATMs in the village Bus stops connecting to Mylopotas beach and the port (Ormos) Guests who need beach access will rely on the island bus service, which runs frequently in summer between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas. Mylopotas is the island's principal sandy beach, roughly 3 km from the village centre by road. Taxis are also available from the main square. How to Get There Ios is served by ferries from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Mykonos, Naxos, and Paros. High-speed catamarans reduce crossing times significantly in summer. The port (Ormos) is at the base of the hill below Chora, and buses connect the two points throughout the day and into the early hours during peak season. From the port bus stop in Chora, Armadoros Hotel is accessible on foot. Because Chora's lanes are narrow and steep in places, arriving with large luggage can be awkward — a compact bag or wheeled case with a handle is easier to manage than oversized luggage. Taxis from the port can drop passengers at the edge of the pedestrian zone closest to the hotel. There is no private parking within the pedestrianised Chora core. Visitors arriving by rental car or scooter will need to use the parking areas at the entrance to the village and continue on foot. Scooter rentals are available from several outlets near the port and in Chora itself, and they are the most practical way to reach the island's more remote beaches. Best Time to Visit Ios has a pronounced seasonal pattern. The island is busiest from late June through August, when ferry connections are at their most frequent and the Chora nightlife runs at full intensity. This is also when accommodation fills quickly, and rates are at their peak — booking ahead is strongly advisable for July and August arrivals. Shoulder season — May, early June, and September — offers calmer conditions, more availability, and lower temperatures. The Aegean can be warm enough for swimming from late May onward. In September, the sea temperature is typically at its annual high, crowds thin noticeably after the first week, and the island takes on a more relaxed character. Ios in October and November is quiet to the point of being sleepy, with many businesses closed. Confirm directly with Armadoros whether the hotel operates year-round before planning an off-season trip. For time of day, Chora is at its most active from late afternoon onward. If you plan to sleep before midnight, be aware that rooms on the village-facing side of any Chora property will pick up ambient noise from the laneways. Pack earplugs if you are a light sleeper. Tips for Visiting Book early for peak summer. Ios fills up faster than many comparable Cycladic islands in July and August. Confirm availability with the hotel directly by phone or email rather than assuming walk-in rooms will be available. Contact the hotel about late arrivals. The 24-hour availability indicated on social media is useful, but confirm your expected arrival time in advance so the front desk can prepare. Use the bus to reach Mylopotas. The beach is not walkable for most travellers from Chora — the island bus is inexpensive and runs frequently during the summer months. Ask at the hotel for the current schedule. Pack light luggage for Chora navigation. The pedestrianised lanes are uneven and sometimes steep. A backpack or compact rolling bag is far easier to manage than large hard-sided suitcases. Set expectations on the rating. With a 3.3 score across 184 reviews, the hotel sits below the threshold most travellers associate with comfort-focused accommodation. Read recent reviews on multiple platforms before booking to understand the current condition of the property. Bring cash as a backup. ATMs in Chora can run dry during peak summer weekends when ferry arrivals spike. Having some euro on hand before you arrive avoids inconvenience. Ask about the view when booking. Room orientation in a hillside Chora property can vary significantly. If a sea or landscape view matters to you, ask when reserving. Check seasonal opening. The hotel's operating season is not confirmed in the available data. Verify directly before planning a visit outside June–September.

421m verderop5 min lopen
Pension Irene

Pension Irene is a small guesthouse sitting in Ios Chora, the whitewashed hilltop village that is the social and geographic centre of Ios island. With a 4-out-of-5 rating across 58 guest reviews, it has built a consistent reputation as a reliable, no-frills base for travelers who want to spend their money on experiences rather than room upgrades. The address places it squarely within the 840 01 postcode that covers Chora itself, meaning the village's main square, tavernas, and the steep marble steps leading down toward Mylopotas Beach are all within walking distance. For budget travelers, pensions on Ios have always served a practical purpose: they provide a clean, comfortable place to sleep without the overhead of a larger resort property. Pension Irene fits that mold. The source description is direct — modest, comfortable rooms for budget-conscious guests — and the review score suggests it delivers on that promise without overselling itself. Ios has a reputation as a party island, but Chora itself is a layered place. By day, the Cycladic lanes are quiet and photogenic; by night, the bar strip along the main drag comes alive. A guesthouse positioned in Chora puts you inside both versions of the island without committing you to either. What to Expect Pension Irene operates as a guesthouse rather than a hotel, which in Greek island terms typically means a family-run or independently managed property with a smaller number of rooms, fewer amenities than a resort, and a more personal interaction with whoever manages the property. Rooms are described as modest and comfortable — the kind of accommodation where everything you need is present and nothing superfluous inflates the price. The Chora location is a genuine practical asset. Ios Chora is built on a hillside, so the village is compact and most of it is pedestrianised or accessible only on foot. Being based here means you avoid the logistics of driving up from the port or the beach every time you want a meal, a coffee, or to catch a sunset from the kastro viewpoint above the village. The nearest windmills — a signature Cycladic landmark on Ios — are a short uphill walk from central Chora. The guesthouse has an official website at iosirene.gr, and a phone line is available for direct booking inquiries. With only 58 reviews in the dataset, this is clearly a smaller property, which can mean a quieter and more personal experience than larger hotels that process hundreds of guests per season. Expect the basics to be covered: a place to sleep after a long day, somewhere to store your belongings, and proximity to everything Chora offers. Travelers who have stayed here consistently rate the value positively, which is the most useful signal for this category of accommodation. How to Get There Ios is served by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, and Paros. The ferry port is at Ormos (also called Ios Town port), located on the island's western coast, roughly 3 km from Chora by road. From the port, buses run frequently up to Chora during the summer season — the bus stop is right at the port entrance and the ride takes around 10 minutes. Taxis are also available at the port, and the fare to Chora is short. Once in Chora, Pension Irene is within the village itself. Because Chora's lanes are largely pedestrianised, you will almost certainly be walking the final stretch with your luggage. If you are arriving with heavy bags, it is worth calling ahead on +30 2286 091023 to confirm the exact entry point and whether there is a vehicle drop-off spot nearby. The coordinates (36.7226° N, 25.2758° E) place it in the heart of the Chora area. There is no on-site parking in the pedestrian core of Chora, but vehicles can be left in the designated parking areas at the edges of the village before the lanes narrow. Best Time to Visit Ios has a peak season running from late June through August, when ferry connections are most frequent, the beach bars at Mylopotas are operating at full capacity, and Chora is busy into the early hours. Pension Irene, as a budget property, is likely to fill quickly during this window, so booking in advance is advisable if your travel falls in July or August. Shoulder season — May, early June, and September — offers the best balance of open businesses, manageable crowds, and comfortable temperatures. The Aegean in late May already reaches swimming temperature, and September retains summer warmth without the peak crowds. Budget accommodations in Chora also tend to be more available and occasionally cheaper in these windows. April and October are quieter still. Some smaller guesthouses on Ios close or reduce operations outside the main season, so it is worth contacting Pension Irene directly if you plan to visit before May or after October. Tips for Visiting Call or check the website before booking. The official site is iosirene.gr. Direct contact on +30 2286 091023 can clarify room availability, exact check-in arrangements, and whether any seasonal closures apply. Pack light or use luggage storage at the port. Chora's pedestrian lanes can be steep and cobbled. Arriving with a smaller bag makes the walk to the guesthouse significantly easier. Factor in the noise level of Chora at night. Ios Chora has an active bar scene centered on the main street. If you are a light sleeper, ask whether your room faces a quieter lane or courtyard when you book. Use the bus rather than a taxi for daily trips to the beach. The bus between Chora, the port, and Mylopotas Beach runs regularly in summer and is inexpensive. It stops close to the main square. Bring cash. Smaller guesthouses on Greek islands do not always have card payment infrastructure, and it is always worth having euro notes available for accommodation payments and incidentals. The kastro and windmills are walkable from Chora. Staying here gives you easy access to the elevated parts of the village, including views across to the neighboring islands on a clear day. Book a return ferry early. Ios ferries in peak season fill up. Once you have confirmed your accommodation dates, secure your onward or return ferry ticket — this is unrelated to the guesthouse but affects your overall trip planning significantly. Facilities and Location The research data available for Pension Irene confirms lodging classification, a Chora address, a direct phone line, and a dedicated website. The property does not appear to have active social media presence beyond a TikTok handle that is not linked to the guesthouse. As a pension-category property, the standard offering on Ios typically includes private or shared bathroom options depending on room type, basic furnishings, and access to common areas. Whether Pension Irene includes air conditioning, Wi-Fi, breakfast, or kitchen access is not confirmed in the available data — these details are worth asking directly when you book. The website at iosirene.gr is the most reliable source for current room specifications and rates. Its Chora position is its strongest facility in practical terms. You are within walking distance of the island's main concentration of restaurants, cafes, minimarkets, and the bus stop connecting you to the port and Mylopotas Beach. The Chora church of Panagia Gremiotissa, perched on the upper hill, and the village's central square with its evening crowds are both close by.

456m verderop6 min lopen
Princess Sissy

Princess Sissy is a family-run hotel and hostel positioned on the old stepped walking path that connects Ios port (Gialos) with Ios Chora, the island's hilltop main village. The property sits roughly 300 metres from both the port and the centre of Chora, and the same distance from Gialos beach — making it one of the more practical bases on the island for travelers who want to move between the waterfront and the village on foot without relying on transport. With a 4.2 rating across 135 Google reviews, the property appeals primarily to younger, budget-conscious travelers and backpackers who want an affordable, centrally located room with the essentials covered. The location on the traditional stepped mule path is one of its defining characteristics: you walk up or down stone steps to reach it, which gives it a quieter feel than properties right on the main road, while still keeping Chora's bars and nightlife within a five-minute walk. The hotel describes itself as a hostel as well as a hotel, operating under the full name A1 Princess Sissy Ios Hotel & Hostel. If you are arriving by ferry and want to reach the property without hauling luggage up the steps, a transfer service from the port is available for an additional charge of €5. What to Expect All rooms at Princess Sissy include an en-suite private bathroom with shower, 24-hour hot water, and complimentary toiletries. Each room also has air conditioning, a balcony, a mini fridge, a flat-screen TV with satellite channels, a wardrobe, and Wi-Fi. Safe deposit boxes are available at the reception rather than in-room. Most rooms have sea views, which from this hillside position typically means views toward the port and the Aegean. The on-site facilities extend beyond the rooms. There is a café-bar and a restaurant where guests receive a 10% discount on food and drink. A rooftop garden provides an outdoor sitting area with views over the surrounding area. The reception can arrange car and motorbike rental, daily excursions to archaeological sites and beaches around Ios, laundry and ironing service, and free island maps. Free parking is also available, which is a practical advantage given how limited parking can be in and around Chora. The hostel classification means the property is accustomed to solo travelers and groups moving through Ios on a broader Cyclades itinerary, and the price point reflects that positioning. The combination of private en-suite rooms and hostel-style communal facilities gives it more flexibility than a straightforward dormitory hostel. How to Get There From the port of Gialos, the hotel is approximately 300 metres along the old stepped path that leads up toward Chora. On foot this takes around five minutes, though the path involves stone steps and is not suitable for wheeled luggage without effort. The transfer service offered by the hotel (€5 from the port) is worth considering if you are arriving with large bags, particularly in summer heat. From Ios Chora centre, the hotel is similarly about 300 metres downhill along the same stepped path, also roughly five minutes on foot. The island bus service connects the port, Chora, and Mylopotas beach, stopping near the main road above the path; from the bus stop it is a short walk down to the property. If you are driving, free parking is available at the property. The coordinates place it at approximately 36.7245°N, 25.2767°E on the hillside between port and village. The address is listed as Main Street, Ios Chora 840 01. Best Time to Visit Ios has a strong seasonal character. The island is busiest — and loudest — from late June through August, when its reputation for nightlife draws a concentrated crowd of younger European travelers. If you are staying at Princess Sissy during this peak period, expect Chora to be lively until the early morning hours; the property's position slightly off the main village strip helps, but you are still close to the nightlife area. May, early June, and September offer calmer conditions: the sea is warm enough to swim, the main beaches and boat trips are operating, and accommodation prices are generally lower. The island largely closes from late October through April, so Princess Sissy, like most Ios accommodation, operates on a seasonal basis. Confirm availability before planning a shoulder-season trip. For day-to-day timing, the hillside position means the property catches morning sun and benefits from Aegean breezes that moderate the afternoon heat. The walk to Gialos beach at 300 metres is short enough that an early-morning swim before the beach fills up is easy to manage. Tips for Visiting Book early for July and August. Ios accommodation fills quickly in peak season, and the central location of Princess Sissy makes it a popular choice for budget travelers. Request a sea-view room explicitly. Most rooms have sea views, but not all — if this matters to you, ask at the time of booking. Use the transfer service if you have heavy luggage. The stepped path is charming but impractical with large wheeled bags; the €5 port transfer is worth the cost on arrival. Take advantage of the 10% discount at the on-site restaurant and bar. Eating and drinking in Chora is priced for tourist season; the in-house discount adds up over a multi-night stay. Confirm seasonal opening dates before booking. Ios operates on a pronounced seasonal calendar; verify the property is open for your specific travel dates, particularly in May or October. Bring cash for smaller incidentals. While Chora has ATMs, having euros on hand for the port transfer and any reception services is practical. Ios Chora nightlife runs very late. If you are not joining it, earplugs are useful during peak season even at a property that is not directly on the main nightclub strip. Day excursions can be booked through reception. The island has beaches that require a boat or vehicle to reach easily; booking through the hotel is a straightforward option compared to arranging transport independently. Facilities and Location Princess Sissy sits at a functional midpoint between Ios's two main hubs. Gialos (the port) is 300 metres downhill and is where ferries from Athens (Piraeus), Santorini, Mykonos, and other Cyclades islands dock. The port has waterfront tavernas, a small beach, and the island's main taxi rank. Ios Chora, 300 metres uphill, is the whitewashed hilltop village with the majority of the island's bars, restaurants, clubs, and the central square. Mylopotas, the long sandy beach that is Ios's most popular, is about 3 kilometres from Chora and accessible by bus or taxi. The on-site facilities include: Café-bar and restaurant (10% discount for guests) Rooftop garden Free Wi-Fi throughout the property Free parking Safe deposit boxes at reception Laundry and ironing service Car and motorbike rental (arranged through reception) Daily excursions to beaches and archaeological sites Transfer service to and from the port (extra charge) Free Ios island map The fax number listed on the property's website (+30 22860 92044) and the telephone number (+30 693 908 9289) are the primary contact points. The official website is www.princess-sissy.com .

465m verderop6 min lopen
Relux Ios

Relux Ios Hotel sits directly at the marina of Ios — the first thing ferry arrivals see as they pull into port. Opened in 2015, this four-star boutique property has 18 rooms and suites, each designed around a minimalist Cycladic aesthetic, and several of them come with private jacuzzis and verandas facing the Aegean. The location is practical as well as scenic: Gialos sandy beach is 350 metres away, and the main town of Ios, the hilltop Chora, is 1.5 kilometres up the road. With a Google rating of 4.7 across 146 reviews, Relux Ios consistently draws guests who want something quieter than the party-hostel circuit that Ios is historically known for. The hotel positions itself as a retreat for couples and travellers seeking comfort rather than noise — the marina setting keeps things calm even in peak July and August, when the Chora is at full tilt. The hotel's restaurant is open to guests and focuses on creative Greek and Mediterranean cooking, supported by a curated wine list. A swimming pool provides an alternative to the beach on days when you'd rather not move far, and the in-room jacuzzi suites are a recurring highlight in guest feedback. What to Expect The property is compact at 18 rooms, which works in its favour: service is attentive and the atmosphere is calm rather than corporate. Rooms and suites follow a minimalist design language — whitewashed walls, clean lines, and materials that reference the broader Cycladic palette without being derivative of every other island hotel. Several room categories include private jacuzzis, and the verandas in sea-facing units frame a direct view across the Aegean towards the water's edge. The swimming pool is described as expansive relative to the hotel's size — a usable amenity rather than a decorative feature. The on-site restaurant serves breakfast and meals rooted in Greek and Mediterranean cuisine. The wine selection has been curated rather than generic, which makes it worth exploring for an evening meal rather than immediately heading up to the Chora's tavernas. The hotel also has capacity for private events — weddings and celebrations are part of its offer, and the marina setting provides a backdrop that requires no additional decoration. For guests arriving by ferry, the hotel's location could hardly be more convenient: you step off the boat and the property is within sight. This eliminates the taxi-or-bus scramble that guests staying in the Chora or at more distant beach hotels have to deal with on arrival and departure days. How to Get There Ios is accessible only by sea. Ferries from Piraeus (Athens) take approximately four to six hours depending on the route and vessel. High-speed catamarans reduce this to around three hours. There are also regular ferry connections from Santorini (roughly 45 minutes to one hour) and Mykonos, making Ios a natural stop on a Cyclades circuit. Relux Ios is at the port itself — the marina address means you exit the ferry terminal and the hotel is immediately accessible on foot, within a few minutes' walk. There is no need for a taxi or bus transfer from the port. For guests already on the island, the hotel is reachable from the Chora by a 1.5-kilometre downhill walk or a short bus or taxi ride. The island bus runs regularly in summer between the port, Chora, and main beaches. Driving is possible, and parking near the marina is available, though spaces fill quickly in peak season. Best Time to Visit Ios has a long but concentrated tourist season running from late May through early October. July and August are the busiest months, with the Chora's nightlife scene drawing younger crowds island-wide. The marina area where Relux Ios sits remains noticeably calmer than the Chora even during peak season, making it a good base if you want proximity to the action without being in the middle of it. June and September are the most comfortable months for guests who prioritise warmth without extreme heat or crowds. Sea temperatures are excellent from late June onwards. May and October offer quieter stays but some facilities around the island may operate on reduced hours. Early mornings at the marina are particularly peaceful — the port comes to life in the afternoon when ferries arrive, and settles again by late evening once day-trippers have moved on. Tips for Visiting Book the jacuzzi suite early. The hotel has only 18 rooms, and the suite categories with private jacuzzis are limited. During July and August they fill weeks in advance. Use the marina location strategically. Gialos beach is a flat, easy 350-metre walk. Mylopotas beach — Ios's longest and most facilities-heavy — is further south and better reached by bus or scooter. Eat at the hotel at least once. The on-site restaurant's Greek and Mediterranean menu is a credible option, not just a fallback for tired guests. The wine list has been selected rather than assembled from a default supplier. Arrive by ferry without stress. Being at the port means you can time your check-in to coincide almost exactly with your ferry arrival. Confirm early check-in availability directly with the hotel if your boat docks in the morning. Contact the hotel directly for bookings. The email address ( [email protected] ) and phone (+30 2286 091050) are live. Direct bookings sometimes come with flexibility that third-party platforms do not offer. Pack layers for the evenings. Even in August, the Aegean breeze at the marina drops the temperature noticeably after sunset. Veranda evenings are pleasant but not warm enough for a single layer in most of the season. Ask about event packages if you're planning something. The hotel specifically offers private event hosting, and the team is experienced with weddings and celebrations. The marina setting makes it logistically straightforward for guests arriving by ferry. Ios is not just a party island anymore. The hotel deliberately targets a different visitor than the backpacker-hostel crowd. The Chora still has a lively nightlife scene, but the port area and southern beaches function independently of it. Facilities and Location Relux Ios offers a swimming pool, an on-site restaurant serving Greek and Mediterranean cuisine, and a selection of rooms and suites — several with private jacuzzis and sea-view verandas. The property operates 24 hours a day, which is useful for guests on early or late ferry schedules. The marina address (Port, Ios 840 01) places it at the functional entry point of the island. The immediate surroundings are quieter than the Chora, with boats moored along the waterfront and the rhythm of the port rather than the rhythm of the nightlife strip. Gialos beach — a sandy bay directly adjacent to the marina area — is a short walk, giving guests a beach option without requiring transport. The hotel describes itself as suitable for guests seeking a romantic or relaxed stay, and the 4.7 Google rating across 146 independent reviews suggests it delivers consistently on that positioning. For Ios — an island that has historically skewed very young and very loud — Relux Ios occupies a distinct and useful niche.

485m verderop6 min lopen
Avra Pension

Avra Pension sits directly at Yalos, the port neighbourhood of Ios, roughly 50 metres from the small marina and immediately adjacent to Yalos beach. It is a family-run property that has accumulated a 4.7 rating from over 170 Google reviews — an unusually strong score for a self-described budget pension, and a reliable indicator that it punches well above its price category. The pension operates from the same address where ferries from Piraeus, Santorini, and Mykonos dock, which means you can walk off the boat and reach your room in a few minutes. That location convenience alone separates Avra from the accommodation concentrated up in Ios Chora, which requires a bus or taxi ride to reach. For travellers arriving late or departing early on a ferry, the Yalos address is a practical advantage that budget considerations only reinforce. The property markets itself on three straightforward promises: clean rooms, a homemade breakfast, and attentive staff. Guest commentary on Booking.com, referenced on the pension's own website, singles out exactly those qualities — spotless rooms, friendly personnel, and proximity to the port and restaurants. That kind of consistent feedback across categories suggests the basics are executed reliably rather than accidentally. What to Expect Avra Pension is positioned as honest budget accommodation in the Cycladic style — whitewashed walls, functional layouts, and the kind of cleanliness that reflects family pride rather than a corporate checklist. The property describes its rooms as clean and spacious, which, taken alongside the strong rating, suggests reasonable square footage relative to the price tier. Breakfast is homemade and included, which distinguishes the pension from many comparably priced options on the island that offer no meals at all. Having breakfast on-site matters at Yalos: the port area has tavernas and cafes, but walking up to Chora for the first meal of the day adds time and cost that a quick pension breakfast sidesteps. The staff are described across multiple reviews as friendly and well-trained — a phrase that, coming from a family-run operation, typically signals owners or close family members handling front desk duties directly rather than rotating seasonal employees. That tends to produce more consistent service in small Greek pensions than the alternative. The surrounding neighbourhood is Yalos itself: a short seafront strip of tavernas, small shops, a few bars, and the boat jetties. It is quieter than Chora at night, which sits on the hilltop about two kilometres inland. If the party atmosphere of Ios Chora is your primary reason for visiting, the Yalos location means a short bus or taxi ride each evening; if you prefer to sleep at a reasonable hour, the port area is the better base. Reception hours are listed as 8:00 AM to 11:30 PM daily, so late-night check-ins after midnight are not accommodated — factor this into ferry arrival planning. How to Get There Ferries from Piraeus, Santorini, Mykonos, and Naxos all dock at Yalos port. Once you disembark, Avra Pension is a short walk along the port front — the address places it within the Yalos waterfront strip, no more than a few minutes on foot from the main jetty. If you are arriving by car on a day trip or have rented a vehicle on the island, Yalos has limited roadside parking along the port front. Street parking is free but fills quickly in July and August, so morning arrival gives you a better chance of a space close to the property. The island bus service connects Yalos port to Ios Chora and Mylopotas beach several times an hour during the main season. The bus stop is at the port, effectively outside the door. Taxis are also available at the port rank. There is no need for a rental vehicle if your plan is to stay near the port or use public transport. For travellers with mobility considerations, the port-level location avoids the steep stepped streets of Chora, though specific accessibility details for the pension's interior are not confirmed in available sources — contact the property directly before booking. Best Time to Visit Ios is a high-season island. The main visitor window runs from late June through late August, when ferries run at full frequency and almost all businesses are operating. Avra Pension's Yalos location means you benefit from the full transport schedule during this period — ferries to Santorini or Mykonos are straightforward day trips. Shoulder season — May to mid-June and September — is quieter and cooler, with sea temperatures still warm enough for swimming from mid-June onward. Prices at budget pensions tend to drop noticeably in shoulder months, and the port village has a noticeably different character without the peak-season crowds. If your trip is about beaches and a relaxed pace rather than the Chora nightlife, late September on Ios is particularly pleasant. The Meltemi wind, the strong northerly that affects the Cyclades from July through August, can make the port choppy and occasionally delays or redirects ferries. Arriving with at least a one-day buffer around any ferry connection is sensible during peak Meltemi weeks. Winter opening is not confirmed for Avra Pension — like most small pensions on Greek islands, it likely closes from late October or November through early April. Verify directly if travelling outside the main season. Tips for Visiting Book early for July and August. A 4.7-rated budget pension at Yalos port fills quickly. If your travel dates fall in the peak six weeks, reserve several months in advance. Check the ferry schedule before booking arrival night. Reception closes at 11:30 PM. If your ferry arrives after that, contact the property in advance to arrange key handover or shift your first night accordingly. Bring cash for incidentals. Small Greek pensions vary in card acceptance; having euros on hand avoids friction at check-in or for any extras. Eat breakfast at the pension. The homemade breakfast is one of the consistently praised details in guest reviews. Skipping it to find a cafe elsewhere at Yalos is an unnecessary trade-off. Use the port bus stop for day trips. The Yalos bus runs to Mylopotas, the island's main long beach, and up to Chora several times an hour in season. You don't need to rent transport for these routes. Manage expectations on room size. This is a budget pension, not a boutique hotel. The rooms are described as clean and adequate — pack light and you'll find the space works fine. Contact the property by email or phone for late arrivals. The email [email protected] and phone +30 2286 091985 are the confirmed contacts; the website at avrapension.gr also carries current booking information. The beach is immediately nearby. Yalos beach, the small sandy stretch at the port, is essentially at the door. For Mylopotas beach, the larger and busier option, take the bus — it runs the coastal road south. Facilities and Location Avra Pension sits within walking distance of the main port facilities: the ferry jetty, the bus stop, a cluster of waterfront tavernas, and Yalos beach. The port area has several supermarkets, a pharmacy, and ATMs — practical services that are useful to know about without having to walk uphill to Chora for them. The property's own facilities centre on the accommodation basics: rooms and a breakfast service. It is a family-run pension rather than a resort, so there is no pool, spa, or extensive amenity list. What it offers — a clean base with breakfast and a strong service record, positioned at the island's main transport hub — is the value proposition, and the guest ratings suggest that proposition is delivered consistently. The TikTok account listed in some sources (@avrabeachresort) appears to belong to a separate resort in Rhodes rather than this property. The verified contact points for Avra Pension Ios are the website, email, and phone number listed above.

496m verderop6 min lopen

Kerken

Saint John

Ios is dotted with hundreds of small Orthodox chapels, and the Church of Saint John is one of them — a place of quiet religious life that reflects the spiritual rhythm running through every Greek island community. Dedicated to Saint John the Theologian (or, in some local traditions, Saint John the Baptist), chapels bearing this name are among the most commonly found across the Cyclades, each one typically maintained by a local family or the parish and brought to life on the saint's feast day. The coordinates place this chapel in the broader Ios landscape at 36.7225° N, 25.2811° E, situating it in the southern Cyclades, roughly in the middle section of the island between Ios Town (the Chora) and the surrounding hillside settlements. Like most chapels of its kind, it likely sits at a road junction, on a hilltop, or beside an older settlement path — locations Greek communities traditionally chose to mark sacred or protective ground. For visitors traveling through Ios beyond the beaches and the Chora's nightlife, stopping at a small chapel like Saint John offers a different register entirely: the smell of beeswax candles, the faint ring of a bell on a feast day, and the particular silence of a whitewashed interior that holds no tourists but every local who has lit a candle there for generations. What to Expect Small Orthodox chapels on Ios follow a familiar architectural pattern: a cube-shaped body in whitewash, a blue or terracotta dome, a narrow arched doorway, and a small bell mounted on an exterior wall or a separate campanile. Inside, the space is compact — often just large enough for a handful of worshippers — with an iconostasis (the carved wooden or stone screen) separating the nave from the sanctuary. Icons of Saint John and other saints are typically displayed on the screen, and a kandili (oil lamp) burns before the principal icon. The church is an active place of worship rather than a museum, so the interior will generally be accessible only when unlocked by the keyholder or during services. On the feast day of Saint John — 7 January for Saint John the Baptist, or 26 September for Saint John the Theologian — the chapel will see its most activity: a liturgy in the early morning, followed by the informal gathering that Greek Orthodox communities call a panigiri, often with food, local wine, and music nearby. Even when the interior is locked, the exterior repays a brief stop. The setting, the condition of the building, and the small candle stand or incense tray outside the door all tell you something about how actively the chapel is maintained by its local community. How to Get There The chapel's coordinates (36.7225° N, 25.2811° E) place it accessible by the road network connecting Ios Town to other parts of the island. Ios is small enough that most points of interest are within 15–20 minutes by scooter or car from the port at Ormos Iou (Ios Port) or from the Chora. If you are driving or riding a scooter, enter the coordinates directly into Google Maps or Maps.me before setting out — rural Ios chapels are not always signed, and the road leading to a small chapel may branch off a main route without obvious signage. Parking near small rural chapels is typically informal; a flat verge or a widened section of the road usually serves as a stopping point. There is no dedicated bus service to individual chapels. The main KTEL bus on Ios connects the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas Beach; reaching outlying chapels generally requires your own transport or a taxi from Ios Town. Accessibility: rural Cycladic chapels are rarely designed with step-free access, and the approach path may be unpaved or uneven. Visitors with mobility limitations should check the terrain via satellite view before making the journey. Best Time to Visit The feast day of the patron saint is the single best time to visit any Greek Orthodox chapel. For Saint John, this falls either in early January or late September depending on which Saint John the chapel honors. A morning liturgy is typically held, often starting before sunrise and concluding around 8–9 am, after which local families gather outside. Outside of feast days, the chapel is at its most photogenic and peaceful in the early morning and late afternoon. Midday light in summer on Ios is harsh and flat; the low-angle light of early morning or the hour before sunset brings out the whitewash and shadow detail that makes Cycladic architecture compelling to photograph. In summer (June through August), Ios draws a large crowd to its beaches and the Chora. The countryside around outlying chapels remains quiet regardless, and a short detour to a chapel like Saint John can offer a deliberate pause in an otherwise busy day. Spring (April–May) and early autumn (September–October) are the most comfortable seasons for exploring on foot or by scooter. Tips for Visiting Check whether the chapel is open before making a special journey. Small rural chapels are typically locked outside of services and feast days. If the door is closed, knock quietly — a nearby keyholder may be available, particularly in smaller settlements. Dress modestly. Cover your shoulders and knees before entering any Orthodox church. A light scarf or wrap in your bag handles this easily. Do not disturb an ongoing service. If a liturgy is in progress, wait by the door or outside until it concludes before entering. Light a candle if you wish. It is the standard way for visitors to show respect in an Orthodox chapel. A small donation box for the candles is usually present near the entrance. Use the coordinates, not just the name. There are several churches named Saint John on Ios and across neighboring Cycladic islands. Save the exact coordinates (36.7225° N, 25.2811° E) to your navigation app to reach this specific chapel. Combine with a broader island drive. The chapel's location makes it a natural stop during a circuit of the island's interior or southern areas. Ios Town, Mylopotas, and the village of Chora are all reachable within a short drive. Photograph respectfully. Photography of the exterior is generally unproblematic. Inside, avoid photographing during services, and ask before photographing icons or the iconostasis if anyone is present. Visit the Chora for context. Ios Town's Chora contains a concentration of white-domed churches that gives you a useful reference point for the island's ecclesiastical architecture before seeking out more isolated chapels. History and Context Saint John — whether the Baptist or the Theologian — holds a prominent place in the Orthodox calendar and in Greek popular devotion. Saint John the Baptist (Agios Ioannis Prodromos, meaning "the Forerunner") is one of the most venerated figures in the Orthodox tradition, commemorated on 7 January, 24 June, and 29 August. Saint John the Theologian (Agios Ioannis Theologos), the Apostle and Evangelist, is commemorated on 8 May and 26 September. On Ios and across the Cyclades, the naming of a chapel after a particular saint often reflects a vow made by a local family in exchange for protection or healing — a practice called a tama. The chapel then becomes that family's responsibility to maintain and to open for the saint's annual feast. This tradition has persisted for centuries and is still practiced today, which is why so many small Greek islands support far more chapels than their populations would otherwise require. Ios itself has a layered religious history that predates the Byzantine period, with evidence of ancient cult sites giving way to early Christian communities and then to the medieval Venetian and Ottoman periods that shaped the current settlement pattern. The Chora of Ios sits on a naturally fortified hilltop, the typical Cycladic response to the threat of piracy, and the concentration of churches within the Chora walls reflects the importance of communal religious life within that defensive settlement. Rural chapels like Saint John extended that sacred geography into the countryside. The architectural style — thick whitewashed walls, small windows, a single nave with a barrel vault or dome — is a direct inheritance from Byzantine ecclesiastical building adapted to the material and labor constraints of a small Aegean island. Many of these chapels were built or rebuilt between the 17th and 19th centuries, though the sites themselves may be older.

78m verderop1 min lopen
Saint Catherine

Saint Catherine is a place of worship on the Cycladic island of Ios, dedicated to one of the most widely venerated saints in the Eastern Orthodox tradition. The chapel sits at coordinates placing it in the inland or hillside terrain characteristic of Ios — an island whose landscape is dotted with hundreds of small whitewashed chapels, each maintained by a local family or community association and typically opened on the feast day of its patron saint. Ios is better known to many visitors for its beaches and nightlife, but the island holds a quieter, deeply rooted religious geography. Chapels like Saint Catherine are woven into the fabric of daily life here, perched on ridgelines, tucked into village lanes, or standing alone in the fields between settlements. They are rarely grand in scale but are almost always carefully kept, with oil lamps, an iconostasis, and votive offerings inside. The chapel's position — latitude 36.7224744, longitude 25.2813111 — places it within the central part of Ios, which encompasses the main settlement of Ios Chora, the port of Gialos, and the surrounding hillsides. If you are traveling the island and pass a small whitewashed building with a blue dome or a simple bell arch, you may well be looking at this chapel or one very like it. What to Expect Small Orthodox chapels on Ios follow a consistent architectural pattern: a single-nave rectangular structure, usually whitewashed outside, with a shallow dome or a simple gabled roof, a compact bell tower or arch, and a low wooden door. Inside, the space is often no larger than a single room, with an iconostasis separating the nave from the sanctuary, several framed icons, hanging oil lamps or candle stands, and a wooden pew or two along the walls. The chapel dedicated to Saint Catherine is a private or community place of worship, not a tourist attraction in the conventional sense. There is no admission fee, no gift shop, and no formal guided visits. If the door is unlocked — which it may well be during daylight hours or around feast days — you are welcome to enter quietly, light a candle if you wish, and spend a few minutes inside. Orthodox chapels in the Cyclades are generally open to respectful visitors regardless of faith. The decoration inside will almost certainly include an icon of Saint Catherine herself — typically depicted as a young woman holding a martyr's palm and a wheel, the instrument of her legendary torture. The iconostasis may include additional icons of Christ, the Virgin Mary, and other saints common to the Greek Orthodox calendar. Do not expect a staffed site, a printed information board, or set visiting hours. The chapel functions primarily for the local community and is used most actively on 25 November, the feast day of Saint Catherine in the Orthodox calendar. How to Get There The coordinates for Saint Catherine place it within reach of Ios Chora, the island's main hilltop settlement. From Chora, the chapel is most likely accessible on foot or by the local road network. The main road connecting Gialos port, Chora, and Mylopotas beach passes through the central part of the island and provides the most practical route for visitors arriving by bus or on foot. Public buses on Ios run frequently in summer between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas. If the chapel is near Chora, it is within walking distance of the bus stops in the village. If it sits outside the village on a hillside path, a short walk along a marked or unmarked track will likely be required. Taxis are available at the port and in Chora. Renting a scooter or ATV is a practical way to reach smaller chapels spread across the island, as the roads between settlements are narrow but generally paved. Parking near small chapels is typically informal — a roadside pull-off or a short walk from the nearest track. There is no dedicated parking area and no signage confirmed for this specific chapel. Use the coordinates (36.7224744, 25.2813111) in Google Maps or maps.me to navigate directly. Best Time to Visit The feast day of Saint Catherine falls on 25 November in the Greek Orthodox calendar. On this day, if the chapel has an active community behind it, you may find it open for a liturgy, with candles lit and local families gathered. This is the most meaningful time to visit if you want to witness the chapel in its full religious context rather than simply as a building. For general visits, the shoulder seasons — late April through early June, and September through October — offer the most comfortable conditions on Ios. Summer heat on the island peaks between late June and August, when midday temperatures regularly exceed 30°C and the direct Aegean sun makes outdoor walking uncomfortable between roughly 11:00 and 16:00. A chapel visit pairs naturally with an early-morning or late-afternoon walk. In winter, Ios is quiet, many businesses close, and small chapels may be locked for extended periods. If you are traveling outside the summer season specifically to visit this site, November around the feast day remains the most reliable time to find it open. Tips for Visiting Use the coordinates directly. With no confirmed address or signage, navigate to latitude 36.7224744, longitude 25.2813111 using a mapping app downloaded offline — mobile data coverage in parts of Ios can be patchy away from the main settlements. Dress appropriately for entry. Orthodox chapels in Greece expect covered shoulders and knees. Carry a light shawl or layer if you plan to enter, especially if visiting during summer when beach dress is the norm. Bring coins for a candle. Many Cycladic chapels have a candle box near the entrance with a small collection dish. Lighting a candle is the customary gesture of respect when visiting as a non-parishioner. Go quietly. If a service is in progress or someone is praying inside, wait outside or come back later. These are active places of worship, not monuments. Photograph the exterior freely; be discreet inside. There is no formal photography prohibition in most small Greek chapels, but flash photography of icons and the iconostasis is discourteous. Ask if anyone is present, or simply leave the camera in your bag. Check the door without forcing it. A locked chapel door means the chapel is closed. The key is usually held by a local family (the epitropos or warden). In some villages, asking at a nearby house will get the door opened for you. Combine with other Ios sites. The island is compact. A visit to Saint Catherine can be combined with a walk through Ios Chora, a visit to the hilltop windmills, or a stop at one of the nearby traditional churches in the village. Respect the surrounding land. Small chapels on Ios often sit on private or agricultural land. Stay on the path, do not move or touch votive offerings, and close any gate you open. About the Saint Saint Catherine of Alexandria is one of the most venerated saints in both the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic traditions. According to hagiographic accounts, she was a young Christian noblewoman in Alexandria, Egypt, who was martyred under the Roman Emperor Maxentius in the early 4th century AD, reportedly around the year 305. The accounts describe her as a scholar who publicly debated and refuted fifty pagan philosophers, leading many of them to convert to Christianity. For this, Maxentius ordered her executed on a spiked breaking wheel — the instrument now inseparably linked with her iconography. When the wheel reportedly broke at her touch, she was beheaded instead. Her body, according to tradition, was carried by angels to Mount Sinai, where the famous Saint Catherine's Monastery was later built in her honor in the 6th century. In Greek Orthodoxy, Saint Catherine is commemorated on 25 November. She is considered a patron of scholars, students, philosophers, and unmarried young women, and her name is one of the most common in the Greek Orthodox baptismal tradition. Chapels dedicated to her appear throughout the Greek islands and mainland, frequently on elevated ground — a nod both to her supposed heavenly transport and to the Cycladic tradition of placing chapels on ridgelines visible from the sea. On Ios and throughout the Cyclades, chapels dedicated to Saint Catherine are small-scale and community-maintained, lit on feast days and otherwise kept locked or simply on the latch for passing visitors.

79m verderop1 min lopen
Annunciation

The Annunciation church on Ios is an Orthodox place of worship dedicated to the Evangelismos tis Theotokou — the feast commemorating the Archangel Gabriel's announcement to the Virgin Mary that she would bear the Son of God. This is one of the most theologically significant dedications in the Greek Orthodox calendar, observed on 25 March, a date that in Greece also coincides with national Independence Day. The church sits at coordinates 36.7226°N, 25.2810°E, placing it in the central part of the island not far from Ios's characteristic whitewashed hilltop Chora. Ios is often associated with its beaches and lively nightlife, but the island has a quieter, deeply devout side expressed through its many small chapels and churches scattered across the hillsides, lanes, and village squares. The Annunciation church is part of that fabric — a place where local Orthodox life continues in the rhythm of feast days, liturgies, and the steady passage of the ecclesiastical year. Visitors who take the time to seek it out will find a contrast to the busier parts of the island. Like most Orthodox churches on the Cyclades, it is likely a modest, cube-shaped whitewashed building with a blue or plain dome, a small bell tower or hanging bell, and an iconostasis inside separating the nave from the sanctuary. The simplicity of Cycladic church architecture is intentional — these structures are built to endure Aegean winds and summer heat while directing the attention of the faithful inward. What to Expect Step inside an Orthodox church like this one and you will find a compact, cool interior that feels set apart from the bright heat outside. The iconostasis — the screen of icons dividing the nave from the altar — is the visual and spiritual focal point. On or near it you would expect to find an icon of the Annunciation itself: the Archangel Gabriel on the left, the Virgin Mary on the right, the divine light passing between them. Candles in a sand tray near the entrance allow visitors and worshippers to light a taper as a gesture of prayer or respect. The walls may carry frescoes or painted panels in the Byzantine tradition, with flat, gilded figures rendered in the elongated style that has defined Greek Orthodox iconography for centuries. The smell of beeswax candles and incense, if a recent service has been held, is characteristic. The floor is often stone or simple tile. As a working church rather than a museum or tourist site, the Annunciation is primarily a place of worship. There are no ticket desks, no guided tours, and no entrance fee. It functions on the schedule of the local Orthodox community, meaning it may be locked outside of service times or feast days. The name-day feast of the Annunciation on 25 March is when this church would be most active, with a liturgy typically held the evening of the 24th and the morning of the 25th. The setting on Ios — an island whose interior and hillsides are studded with hundreds of small chapels — means the Annunciation church fits into a broader landscape of quiet devotion that predates the island's modern tourist identity by many centuries. How to Get There The church's coordinates (36.7226°N, 25.2810°E) place it in the central part of Ios, in the vicinity of Ios Chora, the island's main village. Chora is accessible from the port of Gialos by a frequent bus service that runs along the main road connecting the port, the village, and Mylopotas beach. The journey from the port takes around ten minutes by bus or taxi. From Chora's main square or the church-lined steps of the village, the Annunciation church is likely reachable on foot. Ios Chora is compact and best navigated by walking — its lanes are too narrow for vehicles. If the church is on one of the outlying hillside paths rather than in the village core, a short walk of five to fifteen minutes from the square should bring you to it. Using a maps application with the coordinates above will give you the most accurate walking route. Parking is available at the edge of Chora for those arriving by car or scooter, the most common rental transport on Ios. From any parking area on the periphery of the village, the church is within easy walking distance. Best Time to Visit The single most significant day to visit the Annunciation church is 25 March, the Feast of the Annunciation (Evangelismos). An evening vespers service on 24 March and a morning Divine Liturgy on 25 March are standard in the Greek Orthodox tradition. On this day the church is open, lit, and in full use, and the atmosphere is unlike any ordinary tourist visit. Outside of feast days, the best time to find a Cycladic chapel open is in the morning, roughly between 08:00 and 11:00, when a caretaker or priest may have unlocked it for morning prayers or cleaning. Late afternoon, around 17:00–19:00 in summer, is another window when churches are sometimes opened for evening prayers. For a visit focused on atmosphere and quiet rather than liturgy, the shoulder seasons — late April through May and September through October — offer cooler temperatures, fewer tourists on the lanes of Chora, and the chance to experience the island's religious sites without crowds. Midsummer on Ios is hot and the island is at its busiest, which can make a visit to a small church feel more like a rushed stop than a meaningful pause. Tips for Visiting Dress modestly before entering. Shoulders and knees should be covered for both men and women. If you arrive in beach clothing, a sarong or light scarf tied around the waist is sufficient for a short visit. Observe silence inside. Even if no service is in progress, the interior is treated as a sacred space. Keep voices low and avoid using flash photography near icons or the iconostasis. Light a candle if you wish. Candles are usually available near the entrance for a small donation left in a box. This is a normal act of respect recognized by the local community, not exclusively a religious one. Do not touch the icons. Icons in active Orthodox churches are objects of veneration; handling them is not appropriate for visitors. Check the door — it may simply be unlocked. Small Cycladic chapels are often left open during daylight hours without any obvious sign. Push gently before assuming it is closed. Combine with the wider Chora circuit. Ios Chora contains numerous chapels and churches within its whitewashed lanes. A slow walk through the village will reveal several, and the Annunciation is one stop on a route that also includes the hilltop churches overlooking the port. Respect services in progress. If a liturgy, baptism, or memorial service is underway, either wait quietly at the back or return at another time. Services are not performances for visitors. 25 March is a public holiday in Greece. If you plan to visit specifically for the feast day, note that services are well attended and the island's transport and businesses may operate on a holiday schedule. History and Context The Feast of the Annunciation — Evangelismos tis Theotokou in Greek — marks the moment recounted in the Gospel of Luke when the Archangel Gabriel told Mary she would conceive and bear Jesus. In Orthodox theology this is one of the twelve Great Feasts of the liturgical year, carrying enormous theological weight as the moment the divine entered human history. Churches dedicated to the Annunciation are found throughout Greece, from grand urban cathedrals to small island chapels, and they represent one of the oldest continuously observed feast traditions in Eastern Christianity. On Ios specifically, the Christian tradition is layered over an ancient past — the island was inhabited from at least the early Bronze Age, and the Cycladic tradition of small shrine-like places of worship has deep roots. The Orthodox chapel tradition on the Greek islands developed strongly during and after the Byzantine period, with many islands building dozens or even hundreds of small churches, each with its own patron dedication and feast day. Ios is said to have more churches per capita than almost any other Greek island, a claim common to several Cycladic islands but reflective of a genuine reality: the religious landscape here is exceptionally dense. The Annunciation as a dedication was particularly common in communities that wanted to honour the Virgin Mary in her role as the Theotokos — the God-bearer — rather than specifically through her Dormition or Nativity, which carry separate dedications. A church with this dedication would have been a focal point for the local community on 25 March each year, a day when work traditionally stopped and the entire village gathered for liturgy.

83m verderop1 min lopen
Timios Stavros

Timios Stavros — meaning "Holy Cross" in Greek — is one of the small whitewashed Orthodox chapels scattered across the island of Ios. Like dozens of similar chapels throughout the Cyclades, it exists as a quiet act of devotion, marking the landscape with a cross and a locked wooden door that opens on its name day and, occasionally, by arrangement with the local parish. Its coordinates place it away from the main tourist corridors of Ios Town and Mylopotas, making it a point of genuine local religious life rather than a visitor attraction. The chapel belongs to the broader Orthodox tradition of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, one of the Twelve Great Feasts of the Greek Orthodox calendar. That feast falls on 14 September each year, and it is the date most likely to see the chapel lit, incensed, and attended by the faithful. Outside that occasion, the building reads as part of the Cycladic scenery: cube-shaped, lime-rendered, with a small bell arch or dome depending on its specific form. Research data on this particular chapel is limited, so the sections below draw on well-established practice for visiting small Orthodox chapels on Ios and across the Cyclades. What to Expect Timios Stavros is a small, privately maintained or community-maintained Orthodox chapel. Chapels of this type on Ios rarely exceed the footprint of a single room, with interior space for an iconostasis, a handful of hanging oil lamps, a few icons, and a candle stand near the entrance. The walls are thick and whitewashed, the floor typically stone or tile, and the light inside dim and cool even in August. The exterior will be the main visual experience for most visitors, as the chapel is likely kept locked outside of religious services and its name-day celebration. The surrounding ground is often swept and maintained by a local family or the parish of the nearest village, and a small olive tree or cypress may mark the boundary. Depending on its precise position within the coordinates given — a rural or semi-rural location in the interior or coastal hills of Ios — the views toward the sea or neighboring ridges can be considerable, even if the chapel itself is modest. You will not find facilities, signage in multiple languages, or an entry fee. This is not a monument; it is a functioning, if infrequently used, place of worship. How to Get There The coordinates for Timios Stavros (36.7231°N, 25.2808°E) place the chapel in the central-to-southern part of Ios island. Enter the coordinates directly into Google Maps or Maps.me before leaving Ios Town (Chora), as rural chapels of this type are rarely signposted on the road. A rental car, scooter, or ATV is the most practical option for reaching chapels outside the Chora–Mylopotas–Manganari corridor. The road network on Ios has improved significantly, but a short unpaved track to the final approach is common for hillside chapels. Check satellite view before you go to judge the last few hundred meters. On foot, the chapel may be reachable via one of the island's marked hiking trails if it falls near a designated route. The Ios trail network connects Chora to several inland points; local walking maps, available at the port or from hiking-focused guesthouses, are the most reliable guide. No bus route is likely to stop near a rural chapel of this size. Taxis from Ios Town can drop you nearby if you share the coordinates in advance. Best Time to Visit The most meaningful time to visit Timios Stavros is 14 September, the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross (Ipsosis tou Timiou Stavrou). Local families associated with the chapel typically organize a brief liturgy and sometimes a small panegyri — a gathering with food, wine, and music — afterward. Attendance by respectful visitors is generally welcome at such events, though you should follow the lead of those present. For a quiet exterior visit at any other time of year, late spring (May to early June) and early autumn (September to October) offer the most comfortable walking conditions. Summer heat in Ios can be intense by mid-morning, and the terrain around rural chapels offers little shade. Early morning, around sunrise, gives pleasant light and cool air regardless of season. Winter visits are possible but the island's population drops sharply from November onward; the chapel will be closed, and access roads may not be maintained. Tips for Visiting Save the coordinates offline. Cell signal can be unreliable in the interior of Ios. Download the relevant map tile in Google Maps or use a navigation app with offline capability before leaving Ios Town. Dress appropriately. Orthodox chapels require covered shoulders and knees for entry. Even if the chapel is closed, carrying a light cover-up respects the character of the site. Do not force the door. If the chapel is locked, it is locked for a reason. Peering through the keyhole or a small window is acceptable; anything more is not. Check for a candle box. Many Cycladic chapels leave a tin of thin beeswax candles and a small collection box outside or just inside the door. Lighting a candle and leaving a coin is customary and appreciated. Bring water. There is no café, kiosk, or fountain at a rural chapel. Carry more water than you think you need, especially between June and September. Combine with nearby sites. Use the chapel as one stop on a longer inland route. The interior of Ios has several small villages — including Agia Theodoti in the north and the area around Pano Kambos — worth exploring on the same outing. Respect an ongoing service. If a liturgy or memorial service is in progress when you arrive, wait quietly outside or return later. Do not photograph the interior during a service. Note the name day. If your travel dates include 14 September, this is the most rewarding day to visit. Arrivals should be timed to the early morning liturgy, typically starting at or before sunrise on major feast days in Orthodox practice. History and Context The dedication to the Holy Cross — Timios Stavros — is one of the most common chapel dedications in the Greek Orthodox world. The theological and historical foundation is the discovery of the True Cross by Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the Great, in Jerusalem in the 4th century AD, and the subsequent proclamation of the Feast of the Exaltation by the Church. That feast, on 14 September, marks the elevation of the relic for veneration by the faithful and remains one of the most widely observed in the Greek calendar. On islands like Ios, private chapels bearing this dedication were often built by families as an act of thanksgiving — following survival from a shipwreck, recovery from illness, or safe return from migration — and then maintained across generations. The chapel may carry a founder's name on a lintel inscription, though such details are not available in current records for this particular building. The Cyclades have an unusually high density of small chapels relative to population, a legacy of both the Byzantine period and the centuries of Venetian and Ottoman rule during which private devotion sustained religious continuity in the absence of large institutions. Timios Stavros on Ios fits within this tradition: a small, enduring marker of faith embedded in the island's physical landscape.

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