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MYLOPOTAS (NOTIA PARALIA)

Ios · regular stop

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What's On Near MYLOPOTAS (NOTIA PARALIA)

Nearby Points of Interest

ATMs

Atm

This Alpha Bank ATM in Ios Chora operates around the clock, seven days a week, so you can withdraw cash whenever you need it regardless of bank opening hours. It sits in Chora at the postal address 840 01 — the main settlement on Ios — placing it within easy reach of the island's restaurants, shops, and ferry connections. Ios runs largely on card payments in established venues, but smaller tavernas, local buses, beach vendors, and ferry tickets from smaller operators often require cash. Having a reliable ATM nearby in Chora removes that uncertainty, especially during the summer peak when queues at machines can build up in the evenings. The machine is linked to the Alpha Bank network, one of Greece's four systemic banks, which means it accepts a broad range of international debit and credit cards including Visa, Mastercard, and Maestro. Non-Euro cardholders should expect a currency conversion fee from their home bank on top of any ATM transaction charge. What to Expect The ATM is a standard Alpha Bank outdoor or lobby-mounted machine with a Greek and English interface. Alpha Bank machines typically offer denominations of €20 and €50, which is useful when you need smaller notes for taxis, food stalls, or tipping. The on-screen instructions switch to English (and several other languages) after the initial language selection prompt. Withdrawal limits vary by the issuing bank on your card rather than by the machine itself, but Alpha Bank ATMs generally allow up to €600 per transaction for international cards, though your own bank may impose a lower daily cap. If your card is declined, the most common causes are a foreign transaction block set by your home bank, a daily limit already reached, or a chip-read error — try again with a slower card insertion. The address places the machine in Chora, which is the hilltop village and commercial centre of Ios. Most accommodation, dining, and nightlife on the island concentrates here, so this ATM is conveniently positioned for the majority of visitors. How to Get There Chora is accessible from Ios port (Ormos) by a frequent bus service that runs along the main road connecting the port, Chora, and Mylopotas beach. The bus stop in Chora is near the central square, and the ATM is within Chora itself — a short walk from the square along the main commercial street. Journey time from the port by bus is around 10 minutes. If you are arriving by ferry and need cash before heading to your accommodation, the port area also has ATM options, but the Chora machine is convenient if you are already in the village. On foot from the port, the uphill walk to Chora takes approximately 20–25 minutes. Taxis are available at the port and outside Chora's main square. Parking in Chora is limited; if you are driving, use the designated parking areas on the approach road to the village and walk in. Best Time to Visit Because the machine operates 24 hours every day, there is no restricted window. That said, late evenings in July and August — particularly from around 22:00 onward when Chora's nightlife peaks — can produce short queues. If you anticipate needing cash for a night out, withdraw earlier in the afternoon or morning to avoid waiting. During the shoulder seasons (May, June, September, October) the machine is rarely busy and withdrawals are quick at any hour. In the low season (November through March), visitor numbers on Ios drop sharply, and while the ATM remains operational, it is worth confirming your card works internationally before you travel, as fewer backup options may be open. Tips for Visiting Notify your bank before travelling. Many banks flag overseas ATM withdrawals as suspicious and block the transaction. A quick call or app notification before you leave avoids this. Withdraw larger amounts less frequently. Each transaction typically incurs a fixed fee from your home bank, so fewer, larger withdrawals cost less overall than multiple small ones. Check your daily limit in advance. If you need a significant amount of cash — for a boat trip, villa deposit, or market shopping — confirm your card's daily ATM limit before you arrive on the island. Use the English-language interface. After the initial screen, select English to navigate the menus accurately and avoid accidental confirmation of unwanted services like dynamic currency conversion. Decline dynamic currency conversion (DCC). If the machine offers to charge you in your home currency rather than euros, decline. The exchange rate offered by the ATM operator is almost always worse than your own bank's rate. Keep a small cash reserve. Even with a 24-hour ATM available, it is sensible to carry €30–50 in cash at all times on Ios for small purchases, local buses, and any vendor that does not accept cards. Alpha Bank's customer service number is +30 21 0326 0000 if you experience a card retention issue or a transaction dispute involving this machine. Practical Information Detail Information Operator Alpha Bank Location Chora, Ios 840 01, Greece Hours 24 hours, 7 days a week Phone (Alpha Bank) +30 21 0326 0000 Website alpha.gr Cards accepted Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, and other major networks Language options Greek, English, and additional languages Alpha Bank is headquartered in Athens and operates one of the larger ATM networks in Greece, with machines across the islands as well as the mainland. In the event of a card being retained by the machine, the contact number above connects to Alpha Bank's central customer service line, which can log a retention report and advise on next steps. Note that card retrieval from ATMs typically requires a branch visit during working hours, and the nearest Alpha Bank branch to Ios may be on a neighbouring island such as Naxos or Syros — another reason to keep a backup payment method available.

34m away1 min walk
Atm

The Alpha Bank ATM at Mylopotas is one of the few cash machines outside of Ios Town (Chora), making it a practical stop for anyone based at or visiting the island's main beach. It operates around the clock, every day of the week, so whether you need cash before an early morning boat trip or late at night after dinner, the machine is accessible. Mylopotas sits roughly 3 km south of Ios Chora along the main road that winds down toward the beach. Most visitors in this area are staying at one of the hotels or camping grounds that line the bay, or spending the day at the long sandy beach itself. Having an ATM here removes the need to make a separate trip up to Chora just to withdraw cash. The machine is associated with Alpha Bank, one of Greece's major commercial banks. It accepts standard international cards on the Visa, Mastercard, and Maestro networks, though it is always worth checking with your home bank about foreign transaction and withdrawal fees before travelling. What to Expect This is a standard outdoor ATM unit. You can expect the usual screen prompts in both Greek and English, with language-selection options for other European languages as well. The machine dispenses euros in common denominations. Because Mylopotas is a busy beach destination in summer — particularly with a younger crowd during the peak July and August weeks — the ATM can see a queue during busy evening periods when people are heading out for the night. Withdrawing cash earlier in the day or late at night generally means shorter waits. Keep in mind that many smaller beach bars, sunbed operators, and local vendors across Ios still operate primarily on a cash basis, especially for small purchases. Having euros on hand at Mylopotas saves repeated trips to the Chora, where the majority of the island's banks and ATMs are concentrated. The coordinates place the machine at the Mylopotas end of the road, close to the beach infrastructure — restaurants, rooms, and the bus turnaround point. It is not inside a bank branch; it is a standalone unit, so there is no counter service or currency exchange available at this location. How to Get There From Ios Chora, the most direct route to Mylopotas is by the local bus, which runs regularly during the summer season between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas beach. The journey takes around 10 minutes from Chora. A taxi from Chora to Mylopotas is also straightforward and takes about the same time by road. If you are arriving by ferry at Ios port (Ormos), buses connect the port to both Chora and Mylopotas throughout the day. By car or scooter — common rental choices on Ios — Mylopotas is reached via the main road south of Chora; parking is available near the beach area. On foot from Chora, the downhill walk to Mylopotas takes around 30–40 minutes depending on pace. The return uphill walk is more demanding, particularly in summer heat. Best Time to Visit Because the ATM is open 24 hours, the only real consideration is avoiding peak-use periods. Mid-morning tends to be quiet, before beach crowds fully build and before the evening rush. Late July and the first two weeks of August are the busiest weeks on Ios overall, and ATM queues across the island are at their longest during this window. Outside of peak summer, from late September onward, Mylopotas becomes significantly quieter and the ATM will see far less demand. If you are visiting in the shoulder season — May, June, or September — access is rarely an issue at any hour. Tips for Visiting Withdraw enough for a few days. Ios has limited ATM infrastructure outside of Chora, so it is practical to take out enough cash to cover several days of small purchases rather than making repeated trips. Check your card's international fees before you travel. Greek ATMs will typically offer a dynamic currency conversion option; declining this and letting your home bank handle the conversion usually results in a better rate. The machine accepts major international networks. Visa, Mastercard, and Maestro cards are standard; American Express acceptance at Greek ATMs is less consistent. Keep your PIN private. Use your free hand to shield the keypad when entering your PIN, particularly during busy evening hours. Carry small denominations. The ATM dispenses larger notes; ask for a mix or use a small purchase at a nearby shop to break a 50-euro note if vendors have limited change. The nearest bank branch is in Chora. If you have a card issue, need to report a problem, or require counter service, you will need to go to Ios Town where Alpha Bank and other banks have branches. Combine the cash stop with your beach day. The ATM's location near Mylopotas beach makes it easy to withdraw cash on arrival rather than as a dedicated separate trip. Practical Information Operator: Alpha Bank Address: Mylopotas, 840 01, Ios, Greece Hours: Open 24 hours, 7 days a week Phone (Alpha Bank general): +30 210 326 0000 Website: www.alpha.gr Type: Standalone outdoor ATM unit (no branch services on site) Networks accepted: Visa, Mastercard, Maestro (standard international networks) Currency dispensed: Euros (EUR)

235m away3 min walk

Beach Bars

Far Out Beach Club

Far Out Beach Club occupies the southern end of Mylopotas Beach, the long sandy arc that curves around a sheltered bay roughly 2.5 km south of Ios Town (Chora). It has been running since 1977, which makes it one of the longer-established beach clubs in the Cyclades, and it has grown from a simple camping outfit into a full complex that includes accommodation, a spa, a restaurant, and a music venue — all anchored by the open-air beach club itself. The club has a DJ Mag ranking (listed at #55 in the World's 100 Best Clubs at the time of writing), which tells you plainly what kind of place this is. It draws a young, international crowd who treat Mylopotas as a base for a few days rather than a day trip. At the same time, the beach frontage and afternoon hours mean it also gets visitors who simply want a sunbed, a drink, and access to the water before the evening sets in. With a 4.4-star rating across more than 2,255 Google reviews, the club sits at the well-regarded end of the Ios party scene — not a rough-edged backpacker bar, but not a sterile VIP operation either. The atmosphere is deliberately unpretentious: open air, sandy underfoot in places, and loud when it needs to be. What to Expect Far Out Beach Club runs daily from 3:00 PM to 10:00 PM according to its listed hours, though evening events and DJ sets regularly extend beyond that window — check the club's website or social channels for specific lineup dates before you visit. Mylopotas Beach itself is a long, fine-sand beach with clear Aegean water in shades of pale green and blue. The bay is relatively sheltered compared to the exposed northern coasts of Ios, which makes it calmer for swimming and water activities. The beach club occupies a defined section at the southern end, where you'll find organized sunbeds, bar service, and access to water sports equipment. The venue is not a single building but a cluster of structures and open areas. There's a main bar area, a stage zone used for DJ events and live performances, a pool area, and a restaurant serving food to guests. The Far Out complex also wraps in several accommodation options — from the budget-friendly Far Out Beach Resort and Camping right on the sand, to the mid-range Far Out Village Hotel, the Far Out Hotel and Spa set against the hillside above, and the boutique Hide Out Suites and Villas with private pools. For a day visitor, none of this is required, but knowing the layout helps you understand why the venue feels like a small self-contained resort. Water sports are part of the offering, though the specific equipment available in any given season should be confirmed directly with the venue. How to Get There Mylopotas Beach is accessible from Ios Town by two main routes. On foot, the walk from Chora takes approximately 30–40 minutes downhill via a signposted path — pleasant in the morning, less so in midday heat on the way back. A local bus service runs between Ios Town, the port (Ormos), and Mylopotas Beach at regular intervals throughout the day during summer; the Mylopotas stop is close to the beach entrance. Taxis from Chora are available and the fare is short. By car or scooter, the road down to Mylopotas is a single paved route off the main Ios road network. Parking is available near the beach, though it fills early in peak season (July–August). If you're staying at one of the Far Out accommodation properties, transfers or proximity reduce the transport question entirely. The venue is on flat beachfront terrain, though the wider Far Out complex includes hillside sections that involve steps and uneven paths. Best Time to Visit Far Out Beach Club operates seasonally, broadly from late May through early October, with the peak program running through July and August. If you're coming specifically for music events or DJ nights, the summer months are when the full lineup is active — check the club's website for scheduled dates, as headline acts are typically announced in advance. For the beach experience without the densest crowds, late May, June, and early September offer warm water (the Aegean reaches comfortable swimming temperatures by June), fewer people on the sand, and a slightly lower price environment around the island generally. July and August are when Ios operates at full capacity — accommodation books out, the bus to Mylopotas gets crowded, and the beach fills by mid-morning. Time of day matters too. Arriving at 3 PM when the club opens gives you first pick of sunbeds and the full afternoon on the water. By early evening the music volume rises and the social scene takes over from the swimming scene. Tips for Visiting Book accommodation early if you're staying on-site. The Far Out Beach Resort and Camping is the most affordable option and books out fast in peak season; the Hide Out Suites require advance reservations, especially for pool-villa rooms. Check the events calendar before you go. The club publishes its DJ lineup online and on Instagram. If a specific act is your reason for visiting, confirm dates — not every night has a major set. The bus from Ios Town is the simplest transport option. It runs frequently in summer and drops you near the beach, avoiding the parking scramble and the uphill walk back after dark. Arrive before 4 PM for sunbeds. The organized beach area fills quickly on hot summer days, and the best positions closest to the water go first. Bring cash as backup. Card payments are generally accepted at the bar and restaurant, but water sports and incidental costs sometimes operate on a cash basis. Water conditions at Mylopotas are generally calm , but the beach faces south and can pick up afternoon wind in unsettled weather. If the meltemi is running, conditions change quickly — the water sports operators will advise. The walk back up to Chora is steep. If you've had a long afternoon, the late bus or a taxi is far more practical than the footpath. Follow the club's social channels for pop-up events. Facebook and Instagram are where last-minute additions to the summer schedule are announced — the club is active on both, with 33,000-plus followers on Instagram. Activities and Facilities The core draw at Far Out Beach Club is straightforward: sunbeds on Mylopotas Beach, bar service, and music. The water sports component adds a more active dimension, giving swimmers, snorkelers, and watersport enthusiasts a reason to stay beyond the afternoon. The specific roster of activities — typically jet skis, paddleboards, tubes, and similar equipment at comparable Cycladic beach clubs — should be confirmed directly with Far Out, as availability varies by season and conditions. The on-site restaurant serves food throughout the afternoon and evening. The pool area, shared with adjacent accommodation guests, offers an alternative to the open sea for those who prefer a controlled swimming environment. For music, the club's DJ Mag ranking is not incidental — it reflects a genuinely curated summer program with international acts. The stage setup is built for outdoor festival-scale sound rather than background bar music. On event nights, the transition from beach club to music venue happens in place: same location, same crowd, higher volume. The broader Far Out complex means that if you're traveling in a group with different priorities — some wanting a quiet villa, others wanting to be in the middle of everything — there is a spread of accommodation types within the same compound to accommodate that.

32m away1 min walk
Free Beach Bar

Free Beach Bar is a beachfront lounge bar and restaurant sitting directly on Mylopotas Beach, about two kilometres south of Ios Town (the Chora). The bar operates on one of the longest stretches of sand on the island — a blue-flag beach roughly one kilometre long — and is among the more established setups on this coast, combining a full sunbed service with a food and drinks menu. The venue positions itself as a step up from the typical beach-bar experience, with 40 king-size beach beds and 20 standard sun loungers with umbrellas spread across its section of the beach. Food leans Mediterranean and international, running from fresh fruit salads and snacks through to more substantial plates, so it functions as both a drinks stop and a sit-down lunch spot. Live music features during the season, which shapes the atmosphere into something more animated than a quiet beach café. With a 4.5 rating across 246 Google reviews, Free Beach Bar has built a consistent reputation among visitors to Mylopotas. It is not the only beach bar on this stretch — Mylopotas hosts several — but its combination of sunbed service, kitchen, and bar makes it one of the more complete options on the beach. What to Expect Arriving at Free Beach Bar, you walk directly from the sand onto its designated section of Mylopotas, which is soft white sand meeting exceptionally clear Aegean water. The beach here is wide and the water shelves gradually, which makes it comfortable for swimming of all levels. The blue-flag designation means the water quality and beach management meet European environmental standards — a practical detail worth noting if swimming is the priority. The seating setup divides into king-size beach beds, which are larger and lower than standard sun loungers, and conventional sunbeds with umbrellas. Expect to reserve or occupy a bed and receive bar service directly at your spot — the model is common on Ios beaches and usually involves a minimum spend rather than a separate hire fee, though specific pricing should be confirmed with the venue directly. The food menu runs Mediterranean and international lines: fresh fruit salads, snacks, and light dishes suited to eating in a swimsuit between swims. The bar produces cocktails, cold shots, and standard drinks. Live music is part of the regular programming during peak season, which means the mood in the afternoon and evening can shift from relaxed to notably lively. If you prefer a quieter beach experience, mornings are calmer before the crowd builds. The overall aesthetic is lounge-focused — the website describes it as a luxury beach experience — but Mylopotas is fundamentally a busy, social beach, and Free Beach Bar reflects that character. How to Get There Mylopotas Beach is approximately two kilometres from Ios Chora (the main village). On foot, the walk from the Chora takes around 25–30 minutes, mostly downhill on the way there. A local bus service runs between Ios port, the Chora, and Mylopotas during the summer season, and it is the most convenient option if you are coming from the port or prefer not to walk in the heat. Taxis from the Chora to Mylopotas are a short ride. By car, follow the road south from the Chora toward Mylopotas. Parking is available in the Mylopotas area, though in peak July and August it fills early in the day. Motorbike and scooter rental from the port or Chora is a common and practical way to reach the beach independently. The address is Mylopotas Beach, Ios 840 01. The coordinates (36.7141, 25.2960) place it on the eastern section of the beach. Free Beach Bar can be contacted at +30 698 017 2446 or [email protected] , and reservations can be made through the website at freebeachbar.gr. Best Time to Visit Free Beach Bar operates during the Greek island summer season, which on Ios runs from approximately late May through September, with July and August being the peak weeks. Ios has a strong party-island reputation, and Mylopotas in high season is one of the busiest beaches in the Cyclades — Free Beach Bar reflects that energy. For sunbeds, arriving before 10:00 in July and August gives you the best choice of positions. By mid-morning the better spots near the water fill up. The afternoon between 13:00 and 17:00 is when the beach is at its most crowded and when the bar and music are at full volume. Early June and September offer the same clear water and reliable sunshine with noticeably fewer people. The meltemi wind, which can be strong across the Cyclades in July and August, typically comes from the north and Mylopotas faces southwest, so it is relatively sheltered compared to the island's eastern and northern shores. Water temperatures on Ios are comfortable from June and warmest in August and September. Tips for Visiting Book ahead if you want a specific sunbed type. King-size beach beds are limited to 40 units. The website and phone line (+30 698 017 2446) both support reservations — use them in July and August. Confirm the sunbed arrangement upfront. Beach beds here typically operate on a minimum consumption model. Ask when you arrive what the current arrangement is so there are no surprises at the end. Bring cash as a backup. Card payment is standard on Ios, but having euros on hand avoids any issue at a beach-service venue. The water at Mylopotas is shallow and clear. It is a good swimming beach for all ages, but there is no lifeguard service guaranteed — supervise children near the water. Live music and the afternoon crowd can be loud. If you want to read or sleep on a beach, mornings or the shoulder season are better fits for your temperament. Parking fills fast in August. If you are driving, aim to arrive before 09:30 or use the bus from the Chora. The Chora is uphill from Mylopotas. After a long beach day, taxis back up are a reasonable call, particularly in the evening when the walk is dark and steep in sections. Ios Chora has the majority of the island's restaurants and nightlife. Free Beach Bar is a full day option — food, drinks, and music — but the Chora is where the evening continues if you plan to stay out. What to Order The food menu at Free Beach Bar covers Mediterranean and international dishes suited to the beach setting. Fresh fruit salads are a reliable choice in the heat — practical, light, and usually made with seasonal fruit. Snacks and light plates work well mid-afternoon when a full meal feels too heavy after swimming. On the drinks side, the bar produces cocktails and cold shots. In the Cyclades in summer, a cold Mythos or Alfa beer is as good a call as any cocktail when the temperature is above 30°C, but the bar is set up to produce mixed drinks. The morning option — arriving early, ordering a coffee or juice, settling into a beach bed before the crowd arrives — is underused by visitors who assume beach bars only function in the afternoon. For anything more substantial — grilled fish, proper Greek salads, local wine — the Chora's restaurants cover that ground better than most beach setups.

381m away5 min walk
Bamboo Ios

563m away7 min walk

Beaches

Mylopotas

Mylopotas is the longest beach on Ios, a broad crescent of golden sand that runs for roughly two kilometres along the southwest coast of the island, about three kilometres from Ios Town (Chora). The water is a clear, pale blue that deepens gradually from a shallow shoreline, making it good for swimmers of all confidence levels. It is also the social centre of Ios in summer — the place where beach bars, sunbeds, and watersports converge into a single long strip of activity that runs from mid-morning well into the evening. Ios has a reputation as a party island, and Mylopotas is where that energy spills onto the sand. That said, the beach is long enough that the atmosphere changes noticeably as you move along it. The section closest to the main beach road tends to be the most animated, with music and bar service. Further along toward the southern end the crowd thins, the bars give way to quieter stretches of sand, and the scale of the surrounding hillside becomes more apparent. The bay is framed by low, sun-bleached hills with the occasional white cube of a villa or studio apartment, and a handful of tavernas and accommodation options face the beach directly from the road behind. For a beach on a small Cycladic island, Mylopotas is unusually well-equipped. It is one of those rare places on Ios where you can spend an entire day without needing to go anywhere else — water, food, sun loungers, shade, and activities are all within easy reach. What to Expect The sand at Mylopotas is fine and golden, soft underfoot and comfortable even at the hottest part of the day. The bay faces roughly southwest, which means the water catches the afternoon light well and the beach stays sunny until early evening. The seabed shelves gently, so the water remains shallow for a reasonable distance from shore — useful if you are swimming with children or simply prefer to wade before committing to deeper water. Sunbeds and parasols are available for hire along most of the organised section of the beach. Several beach bars operate here through the summer season, serving drinks, light food, and, in some cases, full meals. The bars range from the kind that pipe out electronic music to quieter spots where you can get a coffee or a snack without feeling like you are in a club. Water sports are well represented: expect to find jet ski hire, banana boat rides, paddleboards, and sometimes canoe or kayak rental depending on the season and the operator. Behind the beach, a road runs parallel to the shoreline and is lined with studios, small hotels, and tavernas. Some accommodation is positioned so that rooms look directly out over the bay, which makes Mylopotas a practical base if you want to be on or near the water without staying in Chora. The bay itself is sheltered enough that it remains swimmable on most summer days, though a strong south or southwest wind can occasionally push some chop into the bay. The water clarity is consistently good — clear enough to see the sandy bottom in the shallows and watch small fish move around the edges of any rocks. There is no coral or dramatic underwater topography in the main bay, but the visibility in calm conditions is generally excellent. How to Get There From Ios Town (Chora), Mylopotas is about three kilometres by road. The most straightforward option is the island bus, which runs a regular route between the port (Ormos), Chora, and Mylopotas throughout the summer. Buses run frequently during peak season — roughly every twenty to thirty minutes at the height of summer — and the fare is inexpensive. The bus drops you at the main beach access point near the centre of the strip. By car or scooter, the drive from Chora takes around five minutes. Parking is available near the beach, though spaces fill quickly during August and on weekends throughout July. Arriving before 10am or after 5pm gives you the best chance of finding a spot without difficulty. Walking from Chora is possible — the road descends from the hilltop village to the beach and the walk takes around thirty to forty minutes downhill. The return uphill is more demanding in the heat of the day. Taxis are available from the rank in Chora and from the port. The beach is accessible at ground level from the road, with no significant steps or barriers at the main entry points, though the sand itself is uneven underfoot. Best Time to Visit Mylopotas is a summer beach in the fullest sense — it operates from roughly late May through September, with the busiest period concentrated in July and August. During these peak weeks the sunbed area fills completely by mid-morning, and the beach bars are at full volume through the afternoon. If you want space, arrive early: before 9am you will often have long stretches of sand almost to yourself. June and September offer a noticeably different experience. The water is warm, the beach is operational, but the crowd is smaller and the atmosphere is more relaxed. September in particular is a good month for Ios beaches — the summer heat has eased slightly, the meltemi wind has usually quietened, and the island is far less saturated with visitors. Time of day matters for light as much as for crowds. The beach faces southwest, so mornings have softer, cooler light and the sun moves toward the bay through the afternoon. Sunset is visible from the water and the beach bars, making early evening a pleasant time to still be on the sand. The meltemi — the prevailing north wind of the Aegean summer — affects the north-facing beaches of Ios more than Mylopotas, which is partially sheltered by the island's terrain. Strong southwesterly weather is the exception rather than the rule, so Mylopotas is generally swimmable on most summer days. Tips for Visiting Arrive early in August. The sunbed rows fill up by 10am at peak season. Getting there before 9am means you choose your spot rather than taking what remains. Walk to the southern end of the beach for more space. The quieter, less organised section of the shoreline is still within easy reach but noticeably less crowded than the main beach bar area. Take the bus if parking is a concern. The service between Chora, the port, and Mylopotas is frequent and cheap; it removes the stress of finding a space in August completely. Bring cash for some vendors. While established beach bars typically accept cards, smaller operators and occasional vendors on the sand may not. Having a few euros available avoids inconvenience. The water depth increases gradually — the shallow entry is comfortable for non-swimmers or young children, but deeper water is reachable with a short swim. Beach bars are louder midday through the afternoon — if you want a quieter swim, the bookend hours of the day are better. Wind can pick up in the afternoon on some days, which can affect paddleboard or kayak sessions. Morning water sports sessions are typically calmer. Sunscreen use is high here , as the beach is open to direct sun with limited natural shade. Umbrellas are available for hire but are snapped up early. Nearby tavernas behind the beach are generally good for a sit-down lunch if you want a break from the beach bar menu — the road behind the beach has several options ranging from grilled fish to standard Greek taverna fare. Activities and Facilities Mylopotas supports a broader range of beach activities than most beaches on Ios. Water sports operators set up on the beach through the summer and typically offer jet ski hire, banana boat rides, inflatable tubes, and paddleboard or kayak rental. The calm, shallow conditions near shore make it one of the more practical beaches on the island for first-time paddleboarders or families wanting supervised water activity. Sunbed and parasol hire covers the organised section of the beach. Beach bars provide food and drink service directly to the sunbeds in some cases, or from bar counters a few metres from the water. Music plays throughout the day at the more active bars, and some establishments run into the early evening with a DJ set. For those who want a break from the sun, the road immediately behind the beach has tavernas, small supermarkets, and a handful of accommodation providers. Studios and small hotels directly facing the beach are a practical choice for visitors who want to minimise travel time between their room and the water. Snorkelling is possible around the rocky edges of the bay where the sand gives way to stone. The main sandy section of the bay does not have extensive marine life, but the water clarity is good enough to make snorkelling enjoyable around the periphery.

278m away3 min walk

Churches

Panagia

Panagia — meaning "All-Holy," the title Greeks give to the Virgin Mary — is one of the Orthodox churches on Ios dedicated to the most venerated figure in the Greek Christian tradition. Churches bearing this name are found on nearly every Cycladic island, and Ios is no exception: the island's rugged terrain and whitewashed villages have long supported a dense network of chapels and parish churches, each serving a community and marking the liturgical rhythms of island life. This particular Panagia sits at coordinates placing it in or near the main settlement area of Ios (lat 36.7120, lng 25.3008), which corresponds to the general zone between Ios Town (the Chora) and the surrounding hillside neighborhoods. Like most churches in the Cyclades, it is likely a compact, whitewashed structure with a blue or terracotta dome, an iron bell hanging from a simple arch, and an interior that holds icons, candles, and the particular hush that Orthodox sacred spaces carry. Ios is not primarily known as a pilgrimage island, but its religious architecture is genuine and deeply rooted. Visiting this church offers a different register from the island's beach clubs and clifftop bars — a chance to observe the settled, devotional side of Cycladic life that continues regardless of tourist season. What to Expect Orthodox churches dedicated to the Panagia follow a broadly consistent form across the Cyclades, and this one on Ios is unlikely to differ dramatically. The exterior will almost certainly be rendered in bright white lime plaster, with the sharp shadows and geometric simplicity that define Cycladic ecclesiastical architecture. A low arched gate or a modest courtyard may surround the building, sometimes shaded by a single tree. Inside, even a small chapel will contain an iconostasis — the carved or painted screen separating the nave from the sanctuary — hung with icons of the Virgin, Christ, and local saints. Oil lamps or candles flicker before the images. The air carries a faint scent of beeswax and incense from past services. Floors are typically stone or simple tile, and the walls may be plain or faintly frescoed depending on the church's age and wealth. The church is dedicated to the Virgin Mary, which means its principal feast day falls on 15 August, the Dormition of the Theotokos (Κοίμηση της Θεοτόκου). On and around that date, services draw local worshippers and any visitors who happen to be on the island. Outside of feast days and Sunday liturgies, smaller Panagia churches are often unlocked during daylight hours but may be closed at midday or in the early afternoon. Dress modestly before entering: shoulders and knees should be covered out of respect for the sacred space and for any worshippers present. How to Get There The coordinates (36.7120, 25.3008) place this church within the broader Chora area of Ios — the main hilltop settlement that clusters around the island's central ridge. Ios Chora is most easily reached on foot from the port of Ormos Iou (about a 20-minute uphill walk) or by the local bus, which runs frequently between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas Beach during the summer season. Taxis are also available from the port. Within Chora itself, navigation is on foot: the village's lanes are too narrow for vehicles. If you are approaching from the port by car or scooter, park at the designated areas at the edge of the Chora before heading into the pedestrian zone. From the main plateia of Chora, local signage and the simple logic of following church bells or domed rooftops will help orient you. Accessibility within the Chora is limited for visitors with mobility impairments due to the stepped, uneven stone lanes typical of Cycladic hill towns. Best Time to Visit The most atmospheric time to visit any Panagia church in the Cyclades is the morning, when light falls cleanly on the whitewashed walls and the village is relatively quiet. On Ios specifically, the Chora area sees heavy foot traffic from mid-morning onward during July and August, so arriving before 10:00 gives you a more reflective experience. The feast of the Dormition on 15 August is the single most significant date for a Panagia church. Evening vespers on 14 August and the full liturgy on the morning of 15 August are worth attending if you are on the island — not as spectators, but as quiet, respectful observers of a living tradition. Services may run late into the evening on the eve of the feast. Shoulder season — May, June, and September — offers the most comfortable conditions for exploring Ios Chora on foot. Summer heat on Ios can be intense by midday, and the island's famous winds (meltemi) pick up through July and August, making early morning or late afternoon the most pleasant time for any walking tour of the Chora. Winter visits are possible but most chapels see reduced access outside of specific feast days and Sunday services from October through April. Tips for Visiting Dress appropriately before you arrive. Carry a light scarf or a layer you can tie around your waist if you are wearing shorts; most small Greek churches do not provide coverings at the door. Enter quietly if a service is in progress. You may stand at the back and observe, but avoid walking around, taking photographs, or speaking above a whisper during active worship. Look for the name day. The church's feast on 15 August (Dormition of the Theotokos) is a public holiday in Greece and often involves a panegyri — an outdoor celebration with food and music — following the liturgy. Check locally for what is planned in any given year. Bring coins for a candle. Lighting a small beeswax candle and placing it in the sand tray is the customary way for visitors to participate in the devotional life of an Orthodox church. A small contribution box is usually present. Photography inside requires judgment. There is no universal rule, but photographing the interior during a service is not appropriate. Outside of services, a brief, discreet photograph is generally tolerated; always check if anyone is present who might object. Combine the visit with Chora exploration. Ios Chora has one of the finest Cycladic townscapes in the southern Aegean — its lanes, windmills, and clifftop views are worth extended time. The Panagia church fits naturally into a walking loop of the village. Note midday closures. Many smaller Greek churches close from roughly 13:00 to 17:00. If the door is locked on arrival, returning in the morning or late afternoon is the most reliable strategy. Respect the space as a working parish. Even if the church appears to function mainly as a visitor attraction, it serves a real community. Treat it accordingly. History and Context The Cyclades have one of the highest concentrations of Orthodox churches and chapels per capita in the world — some estimates place the total number across the archipelago in the tens of thousands. On Ios, as on neighboring islands, this density reflects centuries of island culture in which each family, guild, or community might commission a small chapel, and in which the major Marian feast days structured the annual social calendar. Devotion to the Panagia intensified across the Aegean during the Byzantine and post-Byzantine periods, when Marian theology and iconography became central to Orthodox identity. Many Cycladic churches dedicated to the Virgin were built or rebuilt during the period of Venetian and later Ottoman administration, when local communities maintained their Orthodox faith as a core of cultural survival. The whitewashed aesthetic associated with these chapels today partly reflects the 20th-century standardization of Cycladic architecture, but the structural forms — barrel vaults, compact footprints, arched belfries — are often much older. Ios itself has a long settlement history, with evidence of ancient habitation and a medieval Venetian presence visible in the Chora's layout and the remnants of a kastro at its summit. Churches like this Panagia are part of that continuous layering of sacred use across the island's landscape. Without more specific documentation on this particular church's founding date, patron, or history, it is not possible to be more precise — but the dedication to the Virgin Mary and its location within or near the Chora places it squarely within the central tradition of Ios's religious and communal life.

448m away6 min walk

Hotels

Ios Plage

Ios Plage sits at the far end of Mylopotas bay, one of the longest and most popular beaches on Ios, positioned on the hillside above the sand at the area known as Psili Ammos. The hotel has been here since the 1970s, making it one of the earliest purpose-built hotels on this part of the island, and its traditional Cycladic architecture — white cubic volumes, terraced into the slope — fits the landscape as naturally as the rock it's built on. Every room comes with a balcony, and because the building rises above the beach on the mountainside, that panoramic view of the Aegean is genuinely available from whichever room you book. The port at Ios is roughly 8 km away by road, and the Chora — the hilltop village with its windmills, maze of lanes, and most of the island's nightlife — sits about 5 km from the hotel. A bus stop is within a one-minute walk of the property, putting both the port and the village on a straightforward public route. With a 4.7-star rating from 79 Google reviews, Ios Plage earns consistently high marks for its position, its views, and the personal character that comes with a property that has been part of the Mylopotas landscape for more than five decades. What to Expect The hotel is built in the Cycladic idiom: whitewashed walls, terraced layout, balconies oriented toward the sea. Rooms are distributed across the hillside above Mylopotas beach, giving each one unobstructed water views. The property does not sit directly on the sand, but the beach is immediately below and accessible on foot within a few minutes. Breakfast is a buffet served each morning from 08:30 to 10:30. The spread includes local honey, seasonal fruit from the hotel's own garden, homemade marmalades, and standard continental items. Guests can take breakfast on their balcony if they prefer. There is a bar on the premises serving espresso drinks and cocktails — a practical convenience given the hotel's position at the quieter end of the bay, away from the main cluster of Mylopotas beach bars. Daily room cleaning is included. Parking is available in the lot directly in front of the hotel. Wi-Fi is available throughout the property. The on-site team can advise on the best spots around the island, from lesser-known beaches to boat trip operators working out of Mylopotas. The overall character of Ios Plage is low-key and settled. It is not a large resort with a pool deck and entertainment programme; it is a well-located, long-established property where the view, the beach access, and the proximity to Ios village combine to make a practical and comfortable base for exploring the island. Facilities and Location Beach access: Mylopotas beach is directly below the property. The beach itself is a long arc of golden sand with calm, clear water, lined with sunbed operators and beach bars closer to its northern end. Breakfast: Buffet served 08:30–10:30 daily, with garden fruit, local honey, and homemade preserves; balcony service available. Bar: On-site bar offering espresso and cocktails. Parking: Dedicated parking area immediately in front of the hotel. Wi-Fi: Available throughout. Daily housekeeping: Included. Bus stop: Within a one-minute walk, connecting to Ios village (Chora, 5 km) and the port ( 8 km). Contact: +30 2286 092475 | [email protected] How to Get There Ios is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, Paros, and Mykonos. Most routes dock at Ios Town port, which is roughly 8 km from Mylopotas along the main road that loops through the Chora. The journey from port to Mylopotas takes around 15 minutes by taxi or car. Public buses run regularly between the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas throughout the day in summer — the schedule intensifies from June through August. The bus stop serving Ios Plage is a one-minute walk from the hotel entrance, making it straightforward to reach without a rental vehicle. If you are driving or have hired a scooter, follow the main road from the Chora down toward Mylopotas and continue to the far, southern end of the bay toward Psili Ammos. The hotel's parking area is in front of the building. Taxis from the port cost a fixed rate and are available at the port and in the Chora; the hotel can arrange pickups if contacted in advance. Best Time to Visit Ios has a short but intense tourist season. The island is lively from mid-June through late August, when Mylopotas beach is at its busiest and temperatures regularly exceed 30°C. Sea breezes along the bay help in the afternoon, but midday heat is significant in July and August. May, early June, and September offer noticeably quieter conditions: the beach is accessible, ferries run reliably, and the Chora retains most of its restaurants and cafes without the high-summer crowds. Water temperatures in September are at their warmest of the year, typically around 25°C, making it a practical time to base yourself at a beachside property. The hotel's elevated hillside position means morning light on the balconies is excellent, and the south-facing aspect gives long afternoon and evening views across the bay. The Meltemi wind, which blows north-to-northwest across the Cyclades from July through August, can be brisk at this end of the island, but the Mylopotas bay is partly sheltered by the surrounding hills. The hotel is closed in the off-season (October through April), in line with most accommodation on the island. Tips for Visiting Book early for July and August. Ios Plage has a small number of rooms and a strong repeat-guest following. The peak weeks fill well in advance — contact the hotel directly via email or phone if the website calendar is not showing availability. Use the bus. The stop is a one-minute walk away, and the route covers port, Chora, and Mylopotas. You do not need a car or scooter to reach the village or port from this property. Take breakfast on your balcony at least once. The morning sea view across Mylopotas is the reason to stay here. The buffet runs until 10:30, which gives you time to linger before the day heats up. Bring sun protection for Mylopotas. The beach faces south and receives full sun from morning until late afternoon. The hotel's hillside position means you return to shade easily, but the beach itself offers limited natural cover. Ask the team about boat trips. The web snippets in the research data reference watersports operators and beach-hopping boat tours departing from Mylopotas. The hotel staff are well placed to point you toward current operators. The Chora is 5 km away, not walkable in summer heat. Plan your evenings around the bus schedule or organise a taxi in advance if you want to be out late. Ios village nightlife runs very late in peak season. Pack a light layer for evenings. The Meltemi wind off the Aegean can make hillside balconies cooler after sunset than the temperature in the Chora, which is sheltered by its topography. Contact the hotel for special requests. With a small, family-style operation, direct communication before arrival tends to get better results than third-party booking platforms for room preferences or early check-in.

162m away2 min walk
Psili Ammos

Psili Ammos is a family-run seafront hotel sitting directly on Mylopotas beach, one of the longest sandy stretches on Ios. The property has been in the Drakos family since 1963, when George Drakos built it — famously with the help of his donkey, Petros. Six decades on, it remains one of the better-known addresses on this stretch of coast, rated 4.7 out of 5 across 70 reviews. The hotel's position is its defining feature: rooms face the Aegean directly, and the white Cycladic architecture means you get the classic blue-and-white aesthetic without having to travel into Ios Town. On the ground floor, Drakos Fish Taverna — described in the website excerpt as the most popular tavern on the island — serves fresh seafood and Greek dishes, so guests rarely need to go far for dinner. For travelers who want a quieter base than the nightlife-heavy Ios Town (Chora), Mylopotas offers easy beach access while still keeping the island's main hub reachable by bus in a matter of minutes. What to Expect Every room at Psili Ammos is decorated in traditional Cycladic style — whitewashed walls, simple lines — and comes with a private balcony overlooking the Aegean Sea. Standard in-room amenities include a flat-screen TV, air conditioning, a safety deposit box, a refrigerator, and coffee and tea making facilities. Free Wi-Fi is provided throughout the property, and daily housekeeping is included. Breakfast is a buffet served each morning from 8:30 to 11:00. Guests can take it on their own balcony rather than in a communal dining room, which suits the relaxed pace the hotel promotes. The buffet features local honey, fruit from the hotel's garden, and homemade marmalades — straightforward but rooted in local produce. On the ground floor, Drakos Fish Taverna gives guests direct access to fresh seafood and Greek cuisine without leaving the property. This is a useful practical point: Mylopotas has a handful of tavernas and beach bars along the strip, but having a well-regarded restaurant at the base of the building simplifies evenings. Parking is available free of charge at a public area near the hotel. The bus stop connecting Mylopotas to Ios Chora and the port is a two-minute walk away, making car-free travel entirely practical. How to Get There Psili Ammos is located in Mylopotas, approximately 5 km from Ios Chora (the Chora / capital) and 8 km from Ios Port. The address is Mylopotas, Ios, Cyclades 84001. By bus: The island's KTEL bus runs regularly between Ios Port, Chora, and Mylopotas during the summer season. The stop is a two-minute walk from the hotel, making bus travel the simplest option if you arrive by ferry. By car or scooter: From the port, follow the main road up through Chora and descend toward Mylopotas. Free public parking is available near the property. By taxi: Taxis operate on Ios and can be arranged from the port or Chora. The 8 km drive from the port takes roughly 15 minutes. On foot: Mylopotas is not walkable from the port given the distance and hill terrain, but once you are in Mylopotas, the beach and most amenities are within easy walking distance of the hotel. Best Time to Visit Ios has a classic Cycladic climate: dry, warm summers from June through September, with August being the hottest and most crowded month. Mylopotas beach fills up noticeably in July and August, and the island as a whole attracts a younger, party-oriented crowd during peak season. If you want a quieter stay with shorter beach crowds, late June or September are the practical alternatives — temperatures are still well above 25°C, but the beach is less packed. For the hotel itself, mornings before 10:00 tend to be the calmest on the beach. The northwest-facing aspect of some Cycladic properties means afternoon light can be strong; the sea-view balconies at Psili Ammos likely catch the full afternoon sun, so an early start is worth it if you want a cooler breakfast on the balcony. Ios is less wind-exposed than Naxos or Paros, though the meltemi can pick up in August and create choppier conditions on the beach. Tips for Visiting Book directly when possible. The hotel's contact email is [email protected] and the phone is +30 2286 091010. Direct bookings sometimes allow more flexibility with check-in timing. Ask about room numbers. Social media posts from the hotel reference specific room numbers (Room 9, Room 11 appear on their Instagram). If you have a view or floor preference, mention it at the time of booking. Use the bus. The stop is two minutes away and connects you to both Chora and the port. On a small island like Ios, renting a vehicle is optional if Mylopotas beach is your main destination. Time your breakfast. The buffet runs 8:30–11:00. Going early means a quieter balcony and cooler temperatures before the beach day begins. Dine at Drakos Taverna early in the evening. Popular waterfront restaurants on Greek islands fill up quickly after 20:00 in summer. The ground-floor taverna's reputation means tables go fast. Pack reef shoes if you plan to explore. Mylopotas is a fine-sand beach, but other coves on Ios involve rockier entry points. The hotel can advise on lesser-visited spots around the island. Check the ferry schedule in advance. Ios Port is 8 km away, and ferries to Santorini, Mykonos, Piraeus, and other Cyclades can book up. Factor in the 15-minute transfer when planning departure days. Follow their Instagram (@psiliammosbay) for seasonal updates on opening dates and any changes to services, especially if you are traveling in shoulder season (May or October). Facilities and Location Psili Ammos sits on the seafront at Mylopotas, one of Ios's most accessible and popular beaches. The beach itself is a long arc of fine sand with sun loungers and beach bars operated by various businesses along the strip — the hotel's position gives guests direct access without needing to walk far. The surrounding area of Mylopotas has additional tavernas, a supermarket, and water sports facilities typical of a developed Cycladic beach resort. For nightlife, Ios Chora — 5 km away and served by the bus that stops two minutes from the hotel — is where the island's bars and clubs are concentrated. This separation means guests at Psili Ammos can choose their own level of engagement with the island's party scene. The hotel does not publish a room count in available sources, but the family-scale operation and Cycladic-style construction suggest a boutique rather than large-resort experience.

182m away2 min walk
Villa Gorgona

Villa Gorgona sits at the seafront of Mylopotas Beach, one of the longest and most popular beaches on the island of Ios. The property is a family-run guest house rated 4.8 out of 5 across 82 Google reviews, which puts it among the more consistently praised places to stay on the island. Rooms are positioned at sea level and on upper floors, and the owners have built the property so that the Aegean is visible from every room. This is not a large resort-style hotel. Gorgona operates with the attentiveness of a family business, and that comes through in the morning — breakfast features cheeses from boutique local cheeseries, thyme and heather honey, homemade jams, yoghurt, fresh bread, and organic seasonal fruit and vegetables from the owners' own orchard nearby. For travellers who want a genuine Cycladic feel rather than a buffet-hall experience, that distinction matters. The property also manages a separate option called Perivoli, a stone-built independent house set roughly 700 metres inland within a 6,000 sq.m. orchard planted with fruit trees, olive trees, and grapevines. Perivoli suits guests who want more privacy and space while remaining connected to Mylopotas. What to Expect Gorgona's architecture respects the Cycladic tradition — whitewashed surfaces, clean lines, and a layout that keeps the sea at the centre of attention. Accommodation is available at ground level, which suits guests who want direct, flat access to the beach, and on upper floors reached by a staircase, which typically come with better views. The website confirms sea views from every room, so the trade-off is primarily about elevation versus step-free access rather than view quality. Mylopotas Beach is a long arc of sand that curves around a sheltered bay on the southwestern side of Ios. The water is clear and the bay is calm enough for families with younger children. Watersports and beach facilities are available along the beach from separate operators — Gorgona's location means you are within easy walking distance of these without being inside the noise of the busiest central beach section. The family-run character shows up in the details: locally sourced breakfast products, orchard fruit from the owners' own land, and a level of personal service that chain hotels on the island don't replicate. The reception operates 24 hours a day across all days of the week, which is useful if you're arriving by late ferry. For guests who book Perivoli, the independent orchard house adds a layer of seclusion that suits couples or small groups wanting a quieter stay with more outdoor space, while still being a short drive from the beach. How to Get There Mylopotas Beach is approximately 7 kilometres from Ios Town (Chora) by road, and the journey takes around seven minutes by car or bus. Villa Gorgona benefits from a public bus stop immediately outside the property, which connects directly to Chora and to Ios Port (Ormos). This is a meaningful practical advantage — you can use the bus freely without arranging your own transport for day-to-day movement around the island. Ios Port receives ferry services from Athens (Piraeus), Santorini, Naxos, Paros, and other Cycladic islands. From the port, the bus to Mylopotas passes through Chora and continues to the beach, stopping outside Gorgona. A taxi from the port to Mylopotas is also straightforward and takes around ten minutes. If you are arriving by car or renting a vehicle on Ios, Mylopotas is signposted from the main island road, and parking near the beach is generally available, though it becomes limited in peak summer. The property's address is Mylopotas Beach, Ios Cyclades, 840 01. Best Time to Visit Ios has a standard Cycladic summer season running from late May through early October, with July and August being the busiest and hottest months. Mylopotas is particularly popular in summer because of its beach, and the road between Chora and the beach sees heavy traffic in August. For a stay at Gorgona that balances good weather with fewer crowds, late May, June, and the first two weeks of September are the most practical choices. The sea is warm enough from June onward, and September retains summer temperatures while the island quietens considerably after mid-August. Ios has a reputation as a party destination, particularly around Chora. Mylopotas Beach has its own beach bars and evening activity, but the atmosphere is notably more relaxed than the village nightlife circuit. Gorgona's seafront position means you hear waves rather than club music, which is worth keeping in mind if you're choosing between accommodation in Chora and accommodation on the beach. Early morning at Mylopotas — before 9am — is consistently the quietest and most photogenic time on the beach, with flat light and almost no foot traffic. Tips for Visiting Book early for July and August. With only 82 reviews, Gorgona is not a large property, and rooms in high season fill well in advance. Contact the property directly at [email protected] or call +30 2286 091307. Ask about Perivoli if you want privacy. The stone house in the orchard 700 metres inland is a distinct accommodation option from the beachfront rooms — confirm availability and what is included when enquiring. Use the bus stop outside the property. The public bus to Chora and the port runs regularly in season. This removes any need to rent a vehicle purely for accessing the village or catching a ferry. Arrive for breakfast. The morning spread uses products sourced locally and from the owners' orchard. It is included in the family-run operation, so confirm whether it is included in your rate at booking. Pack light for the beach. The property is on the seafront, so sunbeds, towels, and beach access are steps away — there is no need to haul beach gear through the village. Check ferry timing against reception hours. Reception is open 24 hours, so a late arrival by ferry is manageable, but let the property know your arrival time in advance as a courtesy. Bring cash for incidentals. Ios has ATMs in Chora and at the port, but Mylopotas's facilities are more limited. Cover yourself before arriving at the beach. Verify seasonal opening dates directly. Many Ios properties close between October and April. Confirm the property's open dates when booking for shoulder-season travel. Facilities and Location Gorgona's most important locational asset is the beachfront position at Mylopotas. Everything within the immediate area — beach access, sunbeds operated by various beach bars, watersports, tavernas, and beach cafes — is reachable on foot. Chora, the main village with restaurants, bars, and the island's famous nightlife, is seven minutes away by bus or car. The property's own facilities include the family breakfast service and what the owners describe as a commitment to Cycladic architecture and Greek hospitality traditions. The orchard that supplies some of the breakfast produce is located nearby, and the Perivoli house sits within that orchard plot, which covers 6,000 square metres. For practical connectivity, the property has an official website at gorgona-ios.gr, a Facebook page at facebook.com/GorgonaIos, and an Instagram account at instagram.com/gorgona_ios. These are the most reliable channels for viewing current photos, checking seasonal updates, and making direct enquiries.

184m away2 min walk
Island House Hotel

Island House Hotel occupies a prime spot in the Mylopotas area of Ios, one of the Cyclades' most popular stretches of sand. The main building sits roughly 200 metres from the waterline, while a second complex — Island House Mare — is just 80 metres from the beach, with only about 50 metres separating the two buildings. That proximity makes this a genuinely practical base for anyone whose priority is quick access to the water. The property is structured around studios and apartments rather than standard hotel rooms, which gives it a self-catering feel while still providing hotel services. With a rating of 4.9 from 180 reviews, guest satisfaction is consistently high — unusual for a beach-area property on an island known for its busy summer season. Ios itself sits in the southern Cyclades, roughly midway between Naxos and Santorini on the ferry routes. Mylopotas is the island's largest and most visited beach, a long arc of fine sand on the southwest coast, and most of the island's beach infrastructure — sun beds, water sports, beach bars — is concentrated here. Island House Hotel positions you directly within that scene while remaining far enough back to avoid the noise of the shorefront. What to Expect The property splits across two residential complexes. The Island House Hotel building, the further of the two from the beach, contains several distinct room types. Standard Studios run 25–30 m² and sleep up to three people via a double or twin bed arrangement plus a sofa bed; views vary between pool, sea, and garden depending on floor. Ground-floor Apartments cover 28 m² with pool and garden views and also accommodate up to three guests. Superior Double Studios on the second floor measure 30 m² and are configured for two people with a double bed and combined sea, pool, and garden views. Superior Triple Studios are the largest listed unit in the main building at 35 m², sleeping three from the second floor, again with sea, pool, and garden outlooks. Superior Quadruple Studios offer pool views at ground level. Island House Mare, the beachfront-adjacent complex, brings guests 80 metres from the sand — close enough that early-morning swims before breakfast are a realistic option rather than an effort. The two buildings share the same management, booking platform, and contact details, so guests choosing between them are essentially trading a slightly longer beach walk for what may be a quieter position. The reception desk operates daily from 8:00 AM to 10:00 PM, which covers most practical needs including late afternoon arrivals. Facilities and Location Based on the available information, the property has a pool and outdoor garden areas referenced across multiple room view descriptions. The pool appears to be a shared amenity visible from rooms on multiple floors and in both standard and superior categories. Mylopotas beach itself, effectively on the doorstep, functions as an extension of the property's leisure offer. The beach has its own water sports operators, sun-bed rentals, and food and drink options independent of the hotel, so guests are not reliant on in-house facilities for a full beach day. Ios Village (Chora) is uphill from Mylopotas, reachable by local bus or the short road that winds up from the beach area. The village holds the majority of the island's dining and nightlife. The port (Ormos) is in the bay below Chora, a separate direction from Mylopotas. How to Get There Ios is served by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, Naxos, and Paros. Fast ferries from Piraeus take roughly four to five hours; slower conventional ferries take longer. From the port at Ormos, a bus service runs to Mylopotas via Chora throughout the day in summer — the route is short and the buses are frequent during peak season. Taxis are also available from the port. If you arrive by ferry, the Mylopotas bus stop is a short walk from the beach access point, and the hotel is within easy reach on foot from there. Driving to Ios is not an option, but if you rent a scooter or ATV on the island, parking near Mylopotas is available, though it fills quickly in July and August. The hotel's coordinates place it at approximately 36.7144°N, 25.2990°E — use these in Google Maps if the address formatting causes any ambiguity on navigation apps. Best Time to Visit Ios has a classic Cycladic climate: hot and dry from June through September, with the meltemi wind providing some relief in July and August. Mylopotas faces southwest, which means it catches afternoon breeze and is generally good for swimming throughout summer. July and August are the island's peak months. Ios has a reputation as a party destination, and Mylopotas in high summer is busy and social. If you want the beach with fewer crowds, late May to mid-June or September into early October offer calmer conditions, lower prices, and a more relaxed atmosphere. The water is still warm in September and the light is excellent for the entire shoulder season. Arriving mid-week rather than on a Friday or Saturday in peak season typically means a quieter check-in and better availability of sun beds on the beach. Tips for Visiting Book early for peak season. Ios is a popular destination and properties at Mylopotas fill up weeks or months in advance for July and August. Contact the hotel directly at [email protected] or via the website to confirm availability. Choose your complex based on priorities. Island House Mare at 80 metres from the beach suits those who want the shortest possible walk to the water. Island House Hotel at 200 metres may offer a slightly quieter environment, particularly in the evenings. Check the room type carefully. Studios and apartments at this property vary in size, occupancy, floor level, and view. A Superior Triple Studio at 35 m² is meaningfully different from a standard Studio at 25 m², especially for a longer stay. Use the local bus. The Mylopotas–Chora–port bus runs regularly in summer and is the most practical way to reach the village for dinner or to catch an early ferry without needing a taxi. Reception closes at 10:00 PM. If your ferry arrives late, contact the hotel in advance to arrange key collection or late check-in so you're not waiting outside. Pack light footwear for Chora. The village is built on a steep hill with cobbled lanes. Sandals or light trainers are far more practical than beach flip-flops for an evening out. Water sports are available on-site at Mylopotas. The beach has independent operators offering equipment rental and lessons; these are not affiliated with the hotel but are a short walk away. Verify seasonal operating dates. Many Ios properties operate only from April or May through October. Confirm the hotel's open dates before booking travel in the shoulder months.

492m away6 min walk
Deep Blue

Deep Blue is a small guest house sitting directly above Mylopotas Beach on the island of Ios, one of the Cyclades' most visited shores. With 15 rooms split between doubles and triples, it operates at a scale where service stays personal and the sea view from most balconies is genuinely the first thing you see in the morning. The property earns a 4.7-star rating across 110 Google reviews — a consistent score for a place this size, which suggests the basics are reliably delivered: clean rooms, working air-conditioning, and a position that puts you steps from the sand. The beach strip at Mylopotas runs directly below, lined with restaurants, cafes, mini-markets, and water sports stations, so you don't need a car to eat well or stay occupied. For visitors who want the energy of Ios Town's nightlife without staying inside it, Deep Blue offers a practical middle ground. The main village is a five-minute bus ride away, and the road between the two runs frequently during summer. You sleep within the sound of the sea rather than the bars. What to Expect Deep Blue has 15 rooms in total: 10 doubles (several configured with double beds for couples) and 5 triples. Every room comes with a private bathroom, fridge, balcony, air-conditioning, flat-screen TV, and free Wi-Fi. A number of rooms also include a kitchenette — useful for longer stays or if you want to skip paying for every breakfast out. Select rooms look directly over Mylopotas Beach and out to the Aegean, and those views are the property's strongest selling point. The renovation of all rooms means the interiors are clean and functional rather than dated. Don't expect a resort lobby or a pool — this is a guest house, and it presents itself honestly as one. The value is in the location, the room quality relative to the price point, and the straightforward hospitality that typically accompanies family-run properties on the Cyclades. Reception hours run daily from 8:00 AM to 11:00 PM, so late-arriving ferries from Piraeus or Santorini may require advance coordination if you're checking in after 11:00 PM. Facilities and Location The address places Deep Blue directly at Mylopotas, the long sandy bay on the southern side of Ios roughly 3 km from Ios Town (also called Chora). Mylopotas is the island's main beach and one of the busiest in the southern Cyclades during July and August, drawing a young crowd largely because of Ios's reputation for summer nightlife. The beach strip immediately in front of the property includes a full range of day-to-day facilities: tavernas, beach bars, cafes, a mini-market, and water sports hire. Jet skiing, pedal boats, and windsurfing equipment are available along the same stretch. You have essentially everything you need for a beach-focused holiday within easy walking distance of the front door. For anything beyond the beach — the Cycladic streets of Chora, the hilltop windmills, the archaeological museum — the local bus connects Mylopotas with the main village throughout the day and into the evening. How to Get There Ios is reached by ferry from Piraeus (roughly 7–8 hours on slow ferries, 4–5 hours on high-speed catamarans), or by shorter crossings from Santorini (about 45 minutes by fast boat), Naxos, or Paros. The island's main port is at Gialos, the harbour at the base of the hill. From Gialos port, a local bus runs up to Chora and on to Mylopotas Beach throughout the day in summer, and the journey to Mylopotas takes around 10–15 minutes. Taxis are available at the port. If you're driving, follow the main road south from Chora toward Mylopotas; parking is available near the beach, though it fills quickly in peak season. The coordinates for Deep Blue (36.7150624, 25.2951255) place it at the eastern end of the Mylopotas bay. There is no ferry or boat access directly to Mylopotas; all arrivals use the port at Gialos. Best Time to Visit Ios's high season runs from late June through late August. During this window, Mylopotas Beach is busy from mid-morning onward, and the bus between Chora and the beach runs frequently. Rooms at Deep Blue should be booked well in advance for July and August, particularly the sea-view doubles. Shoulder season — late May through mid-June and September — offers calmer conditions: the beach is less crowded, the Aegean is still warm enough for swimming, and rates at small guest houses typically drop. The island's famous nightlife winds down considerably after mid-September, which makes the tail end of the season better suited to travelers who prefer the beach without the party crowd. Ios faces the prevailing Meltemi winds that sweep the Cyclades in July and August. At Mylopotas, the bay's orientation provides some protection, but afternoons can still be breezy, and the sea picks up chop. Morning hours are typically calmer for swimming. Tips for Visiting Book the sea-view rooms early. Not all 15 rooms face the beach. If the Aegean view matters to you, confirm the specific room type when you book and ask about balcony orientation. Coordinate late arrivals in advance. Reception closes at 11:00 PM. If your ferry docks after that, call or email ahead (+30 2286 091742 / [email protected] ) to arrange key handover. The kitchenette rooms are worth requesting for longer stays. Having a fridge and basic cooking facilities reduces dependence on the beach restaurants for every meal. The bus to Chora is reliable and cheap. There is no need to rent a car solely to reach the village; the bus runs frequently and the journey is short. A scooter or quad is useful if you want to explore the rest of the island. Water sports are walkable. The hire stations along Mylopotas are a short walk from the property, so you can book a session spontaneously rather than planning ahead. Pack earplugs if you're a light sleeper in peak season. Mylopotas is lively at night in July and August; while the property is quieter than Chora itself, the beach strip does not go entirely silent. The beach becomes very crowded by 11:00 AM in high summer. Getting down to the sand before 9:30 AM means better positioning and fewer people. Verify check-in and checkout times directly. The website is the best source of current policy; contact details are listed above.

496m away6 min walk

Restaurants

Drakos Fish Taverna

Drakos Fish Taverna has been at the end of Mylopotas beach since 1963 — long before Ios developed its reputation as a party island — and the kitchen has stayed in the same family for three generations. George Drakos opened the place, his recipes passed down intact, and the dining room still faces the water with an unobstructed view of the bay. With 893 Google reviews averaging 4.2 out of 5, Drakos draws a steady mix of repeat visitors and first-timers who end up wishing they had found it earlier in the week. The setting is uncomplicated: tables close enough to the sea that you can hear the waves, an open-air atmosphere, and the kind of casual pace that makes a two-hour lunch feel completely reasonable. The address — Mylopotas 840 01 — places it at the far end of the beach road, away from the busiest concentration of sunbeds and water-sport concessions, which means the noise level at dinner is manageable even in high summer. What to Expect Drakos is a straightforward fish taverna in the Greek tradition: you choose what you want to eat, it arrives when it's ready, and nobody rushes you out. The menu centers on seafood prepared using methods the family has used for sixty years — grilled, baked, or served with pasta — and the ingredients are bought or caught locally. The standout dishes listed on the menu include grilled fresh fish caught the same day, Mediterranean lobster served either plain or with pasta, and seafood orzo made with a house seafood sauce. Beyond those headings, the kitchen puts out the full range of Greek taverna seafood: calamari, salads, and whichever daily catch arrived that morning. The atmosphere is relaxed by design. Tables are oriented toward the water, which means the sea breeze comes through consistently, and the sound of the waves is audible throughout the meal. The dining room is casual rather than formal — this is not a white-tablecloth establishment, and it does not try to be. Families, couples, and groups of friends all fit comfortably here. The wine list and beer selection are adequate for the food — reviewers mention both positively without describing anything remarkable — which is consistent with a taverna where the fish is the focus. The kitchen closes at 11:00 PM every day of the week, and service opens at 1:00 PM, making Drakos a strong option for a long late lunch or an early dinner before the Ios nightlife picks up. How to Get There Mylopotas beach is roughly 2 kilometers south of Ios Town (the Chora) by road. From the Chora, you can take the local bus that runs frequently between the port, the Chora, and Mylopotas during summer months — the bus stop at the beach is close to the main cluster of facilities, and Drakos is a short walk further along the beach road toward the far end of the bay. By car or scooter, follow the main road south out of the Chora toward Mylopotas; parking is available along the road that runs behind the beach, though space fills up quickly in July and August. On foot from the main Mylopotas beach area, walk west along the shore toward the quieter end of the bay — you'll see the taverna positioned directly at the waterfront. Taxis from the port or Chora take under ten minutes and are widely available during the day. If you are staying at one of the hotels or rooms on the Mylopotas hillside, the walk down to the beach and along to Drakos takes around fifteen minutes. Best Time to Visit Ios runs a long summer season from roughly May through late September, and Drakos is open throughout. The beach itself is at its most crowded in July and August, and the road behind Mylopotas can be congested by mid-afternoon on peak days. For the most relaxed experience, come for lunch on a weekday — the beach crowd starts to thin after 4:00 PM, and the taverna's 1:00 PM opening means you can beat the dinner rush. If dinner is the plan, arriving at 7:00 or 7:30 PM gives you good light on the water before sunset and a table before the later evening wave of diners. The shoulder months of May, early June, and September offer calmer conditions: fewer visitors, cooler evenings, and the same fresh fish supply without the high-season wait times. The Aegean winds that affect Ios — particularly the northern meltemi that picks up in late July and August — do not make Mylopotas uncomfortable for dining, since the bay faces south and the taverna's position at the beach end provides some shelter. Tips for Visiting Book ahead in high season. The taverna has an online booking link at drakostaverna.com and a phone line (+30 2286 091281). In July and August, turning up without a reservation at dinner risks a long wait. Ask what came in that day. The fresh fish selection changes with the daily catch, and the kitchen will tell you what's available before you order. This is the standard way to order fish at a Greek taverna, and Drakos operates on the same model. The lobster requires advance notice at some tavernas. If Mediterranean lobster is the specific reason you are coming, call ahead to confirm availability on your intended visit date. The seafood orzo is the most distinctive dish on the menu. Made with a house seafood sauce, it's the kind of preparation that doesn't appear everywhere on Ios and is worth ordering if you're eating a full meal. Combine with a beach afternoon. Drakos opens at 1:00 PM, which makes it practical to spend the morning on Mylopotas, move to the taverna for a late lunch, and return to the beach before the sun drops. Portions at Greek fish tavernas are typically generous. A table of two sharing a fish, a plate of calamari, and a salad will usually be well fed. Factor this into ordering. The location at the far end of the beach is quieter than it sounds. Mylopotas has a lively main section near the entrance road, but by the time you reach Drakos the pace is noticeably calmer. Check the website for seasonal changes. The current hours show 1:00–11:00 PM daily, but shoulder-season hours at Greek tavernas can differ; verify directly if visiting outside peak summer. What to Order The three signature items on the Drakos menu give a clear picture of the kitchen's strengths. The grilled fresh fish — whatever was caught that morning — is the most direct expression of what the taverna has been doing since 1963. Grilled whole fish in Greece is typically priced by weight and presented simply with lemon and olive oil; the quality of the fish itself is the point. The seafood orzo (kritharoto or giouvetsi-style, depending on the preparation) uses a house seafood sauce developed over decades, and it represents the kind of slow-built recipe that a family taverna with sixty years of history can actually deliver on. It is a heavier dish than grilled fish and works best as a main course for one rather than a shared plate. Mediterranean lobster — the spiny lobster common to the Aegean, distinct from Atlantic lobster in texture and flavor — arrives either plain with oil and lemon or over pasta. This is the most expensive item on any table that orders it, and at most Greek fish tavernas it is priced per kilogram. Beyond these, calamari and fresh salads (horiatiki, tomato, or green) are the most frequently mentioned supporting dishes in reviews. Wine ordered by the carafe is common practice at this category of taverna. History and Context Drakos Taverna opened in 1963 under George Drakos, which means it predates the significant tourist development of Ios by at least a decade. In that era, Mylopotas was a working beach community rather than a resort, and a fish taverna there served a local clientele first. The handover across three generations of chefs has kept the recipes intact while the island around the restaurant changed substantially. Ios shifted toward youth tourism in the 1970s and 1980s, becoming known for its nightlife, and Mylopotas developed accordingly with hotels, beach bars, and water sports. Drakos remained a sit-down fish taverna through all of it, which is a meaningful form of continuity on an island where businesses turn over frequently. Sixty-plus years of operation also means the family has an established relationship with local suppliers and fishermen — the same sourcing infrastructure that makes a same-day fresh fish claim credible rather than decorative. This kind of long-standing local connection is not something that can be replicated by newer restaurants, regardless of their investment in décor or marketing.

169m away2 min walk
Almyra

Almyra — formally known as Almyra By the Sea — sits directly on Mylopotas Beach at the southern end of Ios, operating as the signature restaurant and beach bar of Dionysos Seaside Resort. It opens at 7:30 AM every day of the week and stays open until midnight, making it one of the longer-hours dining options on this stretch of coast. With a 4.6 rating across nearly 200 Google reviews, it consistently ranks among the better-regarded spots on the beach. The address places it within the Mylopotas area — the wide, sandy bay roughly 2 km south of Ios Town (Chora) — and the connection to Dionysos Seaside Resort means the setup combines a sit-down taverna menu with the relaxed infrastructure of a resort beach bar. That combination suits Mylopotas well: the beach draws both day-trippers from the Chora and resort guests who want to eat, drink, and stay put without moving far from the water. The email on record ( [email protected] ) and the website (dionysos-ios.gr) both fall under the Dionysos Resort umbrella, which signals that Almyra is managed as part of that property rather than as a standalone restaurant. For practical purposes, that means the quality and consistency you'd expect from a hotel F&B operation, with a beachfront position that independent tavernas on the same bay don't always have. What to Expect Almyra operates across a long stretch of the day — breakfast from 7:30 AM through to cocktails and dinner at midnight — so the atmosphere shifts considerably depending on when you arrive. Early in the day, the setting is calm: coffee, the first light on the water, and a relatively quiet beach before the sun-lounger crowd arrives. By mid-morning and through the afternoon, the beach bar side comes into its own, with drinks and lighter food for people spending the day on Mylopotas. Evenings bring a more settled dining mood, with traditional Greek dishes served as the sky darkens over the Aegean. The physical setting is the strongest card the restaurant holds. Mylopotas is one of the longest and most organised beaches on Ios — fine pale sand, clear water, and views back toward the Chora perched on the hillside to the north. Almyra's tables and loungers sit close enough to the shore that the sound of the water is a constant backdrop. As a Mediterranean restaurant attached to a resort, the menu draws on the standard language of Greek taverna cooking — grilled fish, mezedes, salads built on local produce — with the kind of presentation you'd expect from a property that describes itself as a "refined hospitality experience." The relaxed setting keeps it from feeling overly formal, and the long opening hours mean it functions equally as a place to linger over an afternoon drink or to have a proper dinner. Service is run through the Dionysos Resort team, and the Facebook presence (facebook.com/DionysosResort) reflects activity from the wider property rather than the restaurant alone. How to Get There Mylopotas Beach is approximately 2 km from Ios Town (Chora) by road. From the Chora, follow the main road south toward the beach — the descent is clear and well-signed. On foot, the walk takes around 25–30 minutes and involves a noticeable downhill stretch; the return uphill can be tiring in summer heat. A local bus runs between Ios Port, the Chora, and Mylopotas Beach during the summer season. The Mylopotas stop drops you at the top of the beach road, and Dionysos Resort is one of the beachfront properties — follow the path down toward the waterline and look for the Almyra signage along the resort frontage. By car or scooter, Mylopotas Road leads directly to the beach from the Chora junction. Parking is available near the beach approach, though it fills quickly on busy summer afternoons. Arriving before noon or after 6 PM avoids the tightest squeeze. Taxi service operates between the port, Chora, and Mylopotas — a short and inexpensive ride. Water taxis are not a standard access option for this beach. Best Time to Visit Ios is a summer island, with the main season running from late May through September. Almyra follows that rhythm: the full operation — beach bar, lunch service, and evening dining — is at its peak from June through August. Outside of July and August, the beach is significantly quieter and the energy is lower, which suits travelers who prefer a calmer lunch stop over the full Mylopotas summer crowd. For the best combination of good light, cooler temperatures, and manageable crowds, aim to arrive for breakfast or an early lunch before 12:30 PM. Sunset from the Mylopotas waterfront faces roughly southwest, and the last hour of light over the water makes the evening sitting — from around 7:30 PM onward — particularly good for a longer dinner. Mylopotas in late July and early August is busy. If you are not a resort guest and want a guaranteed table at a prime waterfront position during peak weeks, it is worth calling ahead on +30 2286 091215 to check whether reservations are accepted. Tips for Visiting Call ahead during peak season. The number +30 2286 091215 connects to the Dionysos Resort front desk, which handles Almyra bookings. In July and August, beachfront seats fill early in the evening. Arrive for breakfast if the beach is your plan for the day. Opening at 7:30 AM, Almyra lets you set up on the beach early and fuel up before the heat builds. Use the long hours strategically. With service running until midnight, there is no rush to arrive at 8 PM with everyone else. A 9:30 or 10 PM dinner is quieter and cooler. Check the website before your visit. The dionysos-ios.gr site carries the most current menu and any seasonal changes to hours or offerings. Non-resort guests are welcome. Almyra is not exclusively for Dionysos Resort guests — the beach bar and restaurant serve the wider public on Mylopotas. Dress code is genuinely casual. Beachwear with a cover-up is standard for lunch; something slightly more presentable works for dinner, but the setting is relaxed. Combine with a full beach day. Mylopotas has water sports operators and sunbed rentals along the bay — Almyra's position within the resort stretch means you can eat, drink, and return to the beach without moving far. The beach road has a gradient. If you are walking from the Chora or renting a scooter for the first time on Ios, note that the road down to Mylopotas is steep in sections — easy on the way down, slower on the way back up. What to Order The source material identifies Almyra as a traditional Greek taverna with a Mediterranean lean, operating under a resort that emphasizes "authentic, easy-going seaside leisure." Without a published menu available for verification, the safest approach is to look for the grilled fish of the day — most Cycladic beachfront restaurants source fresh catch daily in season — alongside the standard taverna lineup of Greek salad, tzatziki, grilled meats, and seafood. The breakfast service from 7:30 AM likely covers coffee, pastries, and egg-based options suited to guests starting their beach day. For drinks, the beach bar element means the cocktail and wine list will be a proper focus rather than an afterthought. Ios island produces no significant local wine, so the list will draw from elsewhere in Greece — look for wines from Santorini (Assyrtiko in particular) or other Cycladic producers if you want regional relevance. Sundowner cocktails on the waterfront are a practical reason to be there between 6 and 8 PM.

209m away3 min walk
Karma

Karma sits on the Milopotas strip in Ios, one of the Cyclades' liveliest beach fronts, and pulls in a consistent crowd across the full arc of the day. With a 4.2-star rating from more than 640 Google reviews, it has built a clear following among both island regulars and first-time visitors looking for something reliable after a long day in the sun. The address places it at number 21 on the Milopotas road, which runs parallel to the bay's long sandy shore. Milopotas is roughly 2 km south of Ios Town (Chora), making Karma a natural stop whether you've spent the afternoon on the beach or are arriving from the port. The Italian restaurant classification in Google's data suggests the menu leans toward pasta and pizza alongside broader Mediterranean options — a combination that works well in a beach setting and explains the breadth of its appeal across age groups. The kitchen runs from 10:30 in the morning through to midnight every day of the week, which is genuinely useful on Ios, where the rhythm tends to shift late. You can sit down for a proper lunch at noon, return for an early dinner at six, or show up at ten in the evening without worrying about catching the kitchen before it closes. What to Expect Karma operates in the relaxed, come-as-you-are style that fits Milopotas. The beach road draws a mix of younger travelers and families, and a restaurant that stays open across thirteen-and-a-half hours daily needs to accommodate both — which appears to be the working formula here. The Italian-leaning menu likely anchors around pasta dishes and pizza alongside grilled proteins and salads, which are standard Cycladic fare in any restaurant catering to an international crowd. On a Greek island, even a place classified as Italian will typically carry Greek salad, fresh fish, and grilled meats alongside its core offering. Don't arrive expecting a narrow trattoria-style card; the "varied menu" noted in the source data suggests a range designed to cover the table when four people each want something different. The long hours reflect the pace of Milopotas specifically. The beach fills up by mid-morning, the midday heat sends people looking for shade and food, and the early evening crowd arrives sun-tired from the water. Late at night, the action in this part of Ios stays relatively low-key compared to Chora's bar scene, so Karma's midnight closing fits the beach-road atmosphere rather than competing with it. Service style at this type of Milopotas restaurant tends toward informal — expect to flag someone down if you need attention at a busy table rather than timed service courses. The consistent rating across a large number of reviews suggests the kitchen maintains standards through the summer season, which is not a given at restaurants that turn over heavy tourist volumes. How to Get There Milopotas is 2 km south of Ios Chora and accessible by road. From Chora, taxis make the short run regularly; the journey takes under five minutes by car. A local bus service connects the port (Ormos), Chora, and Milopotas throughout the day in summer — check timetables at the port or ask at your accommodation, as schedules shift by season. On foot, the walk from Chora down to Milopotas takes roughly 20–25 minutes along a paved road with some gradient. It's a pleasant enough walk in the cooler morning or evening but less appealing at midday in July or August. Parking along the Milopotas road exists, but spaces fill quickly in peak season. If you're driving from elsewhere on the island, arriving before noon or after 7 PM gives you better odds. The coordinates place Karma at 36.7149, 25.2945 — entering these into Google Maps or a navigation app will take you directly there. The restaurant's phone number is +30 698 664 1657 if you need to call ahead for any reason. Best Time to Visit Ios peaks in July and August, when the island fills fast and Milopotas beach is at full capacity by late morning. At that point, every restaurant on the strip gets busy at standard meal times. Arriving at Karma at 1 PM or 8 PM during high season means competing with the full beach crowd for tables. For a less pressured meal, come for a late lunch — between 2:30 and 4:30 PM — when the main rush has cleared and the kitchen is still fully staffed. Similarly, an early dinner around 6 to 6:30 PM beats the second wave. The late-night window (after 10 PM) is quieter for eating, though the beach road has its own low-key foot traffic at that hour. Shoulder season — late May through June and September into early October — brings cooler evenings and fewer people. Ios in September is still warm enough for the beach and considerably more comfortable for sitting outside at a restaurant table. Off-season visitors should confirm the restaurant is open, as some Milopotas businesses close after October. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in peak season. The number +30 698 664 1657 is the direct line. Even on a walk-in island like Ios, a quick call at midday to check wait times is worth it in July and August. The kitchen runs until midnight every night. If you're planning a late meal, you can arrive as late as 11 PM without worrying about catching the last orders cutoff. Milopotas road has limited parking in August. If you're driving, consider parking slightly up the hill from the beach and walking the last few hundred meters. Check Google Maps for current hours before you visit. Restaurants on Greek islands occasionally adjust hours in very early or late season, and the listed hours of 10:30 AM to midnight are the standard operating window. The rating of 4.2 across 647 reviews reflects genuine consistency. On Ios, where turnover is high and the tourist season is concentrated, maintaining that average over a large sample is a useful signal of kitchen reliability. The beach-road location means noise and foot traffic are part of the setting. If you want a quieter table, ask for one set back from the main pedestrian path when you arrive. Ios Chora's bars come alive late. If you're planning to head up to Chora after dinner, Karma's midnight closing fits neatly — finish at 10 or 10:30 PM and the Chora scene will be starting up. The restaurant is classified as Italian , but expect Mediterranean range. Don't assume a narrow menu; the "varied menu" description suggests flexibility for groups with different preferences. What to Order The Italian restaurant classification points toward pasta and pizza as the core of the menu. On Ios, that typically means wood-fired or stone-baked pizza and fresh pasta dishes rather than fine-dining tasting menus — calibrate expectations to a beach-casual level and you'll find it accurate. Alongside the Italian anchors, a varied menu at a Milopotas restaurant will almost certainly carry Greek salad and feta-forward starters, grilled chicken or pork options, and likely fresh fish depending on that day's catch and season. For vegetarians, pasta dishes and salads are usually the safest route. For drinks, Greek islands restaurants at this level typically carry a selection of local and national wines alongside standard spirits, beer, and soft drinks. If the menu includes any Aegean wine by the glass — a bottle from Santorini's Assyrtiko grape or a basic table wine — it pairs cleanly with the lighter pasta dishes. Given the long operating hours, the kitchen serves both a full lunch and a full dinner menu without a break — but some dishes offered in the evening may not be available at 11 AM. If you're arriving soon after opening, check what's running before you order.

495m away6 min walk