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Churches

Agios Panteleimon

Agios Panteleimon is a small Orthodox church on the island of Kimolos, dedicated to one of the most venerated healer-saints in the Greek Orthodox calendar. Despite its modest size, the chapel carries the quiet authority common to whitewashed Cycladic churches: a single nave, an icon screen separating the nave from the sanctuary, and the faint smell of beeswax candles left by previous visitors. Kimolos itself is one of the quieter Cyclades, sitting just northeast of Milos with a permanent population of a few hundred. The island has no shortage of small chapels — like most Greek islands, it counts more churches per square kilometre than almost anywhere in Europe — but Agios Panteleimon holds a 4.9 rating from the handful of visitors who have recorded it, which for a place this intimate is a meaningful signal. Visiting the chapel costs nothing and requires only a respectful attitude. Whether you come as a pilgrim or simply as someone who appreciates the spare beauty of Cycladic religious architecture, the church offers a few minutes of genuine stillness away from the seafront. What to Expect The exterior of Agios Panteleimon follows the Cycladic vernacular closely: thick whitewashed walls, a small bell above the entrance, and a door framed in the blue or grey paint typical of island chapels. The interior is compact — likely a single-nave structure with a wooden or carved iconostasis bearing icons of Christ, the Virgin Mary, and Saint Panteleimon himself. Saint Panteleimon is depicted in Orthodox iconography as a young physician holding a small medical box or a spoon, with a martyr's cross. His icon is almost always present in churches bearing his name, and it is common for visitors to light a thin beeswax candle in front of it before leaving. The surrounding landscape on Kimolos is characteristically spare: low scrub, pale volcanic rock, and the wide Aegean light that makes even the smallest chapel look considered against the hillside. The coordinates place the church at approximately 36.78°N, 24.56°E, in the island's interior or on a slope above the main settlement of Chorio — a location consistent with the tradition of building chapels on elevated ground to be visible from the sea. The church is almost certainly locked outside of feast days and liturgical services, as is standard practice for small Greek island chapels. On the feast of Saint Panteleimon — 27 July in the Orthodox calendar — the church is likely to hold a liturgy and a small panegyri, the traditional post-liturgy gathering with food and sometimes music. How to Get There Kimolos is reached by ferry from Piraeus, Milos (Pollonia), and occasionally other Cycladic islands. The crossing from Pollonia on Milos takes roughly 30 minutes and runs several times daily in summer. Once on Kimolos, the main settlement is Chorio, a short walk or taxi ride from the port of Psathi. The church coordinates (36.7827463, 24.5565743) place it within or close to the Chorio area. From the port, follow the road uphill toward the main village; local signage or a brief ask at the port will confirm the exact lane. The island is small enough that most points of interest are reachable on foot from Chorio, though a rented ATV or scooter makes the hillier routes easier in summer heat. Parking is not a concern on Kimolos in the way it would be on larger islands. There are no large car parks, but the roads near Chorio are navigable by small vehicles, and walking from the village center to most chapels takes under 20 minutes. Accessibility is likely limited: Cycladic chapel approaches often involve uneven stone paths or steps. Visitors with mobility constraints should confirm the route on the ground before attempting it. Best Time to Visit The feast day of Saint Panteleimon falls on 27 July. If you are on Kimolos around that date, the church will almost certainly be open for a morning liturgy and may host a small celebration afterward. This is the single most rewarding time to visit any Greek chapel — the doors are open, candles are lit, and the community gathers. Outside of feast days, summer mornings before 10:00 are the best time to walk to island chapels: the light is clear, the heat is manageable, and the paths are quiet. In July and August, midday temperatures on Kimolos regularly exceed 30°C, and exposed hillside paths offer little shade. Spring (April–May) and early autumn (September–October) are ideal for exploring the island on foot. The ferry connections are less frequent outside summer, but the island itself is far more peaceful, and the vegetation on the slopes above Chorio is greener than the bleached summer landscape. Winter visits are possible but the church will almost certainly be locked, and ferry schedules to Kimolos thin out considerably between November and March. Tips for Visiting Dress appropriately. Cover shoulders and knees before entering any Greek Orthodox church. A lightweight scarf or wrap kept in a bag is sufficient for summer visits. Check the feast day. The most reliable way to find the church open is to visit on or around 27 July, Saint Panteleimon's feast day in the Orthodox calendar. Bring cash for a candle. Most small Greek chapels keep a box of thin beeswax candles near the entrance with a small donation box. Lighting one is the standard way visitors participate, regardless of their own faith background. The church may be locked. This is normal for small Cycladic chapels outside of service times. Walk around the exterior and note the architectural details; the visit is still worthwhile. Combine with Chorio exploration. The main village of Kimolos is compact and walkable, with a Venetian-era kastro, other small churches, and a local museum. A single morning covers several of these easily. Carry water. There are few or no shops or cafes on the approach paths to hillside chapels. In summer, bring at least half a litre per person. Photograph respectfully. If a liturgy is in progress, do not photograph. At other times, interior photography is generally tolerated in small chapels, but ask if anyone is present. Noise. Keep voices low inside and near the chapel, even when it is locked. Other visitors may be there for quiet reflection. About the Saint Saint Panteleimon — whose name derives from the Greek for "all-merciful" — is one of the Holy Unmercenary Physicians (Anargyroi) in Orthodox tradition, a group of saints who reportedly healed the sick without accepting payment. He is believed to have lived in Nicomedia (in present-day Turkey) during the late third and early fourth century, practicing medicine before converting to Christianity. According to hagiographic accounts, Panteleimon was executed during the persecutions under Emperor Maximian, around 305 AD, and was subsequently venerated as both a martyr and a miracle-worker. He is one of the most popular saints in Greece, Russia, and the broader Orthodox world, and hospitals, monasteries, and chapels across the Aegean bear his name. In the Greek island context, chapels dedicated to Panteleimon are often found in or near settlements with a historical connection to fishing or healing, and the 27 July feast draws significant local observance even in small communities. On Kimolos, as on other Cycladic islands, the chapel likely predates the modern era and may have been built or rebuilt by a local family fulfilling a religious vow.

710m away9 min walk

Hotels

To Rantevou Tis Alykis '"Rooms & Apartments"

To Rantevou Tis Alykis is a small accommodation unit on the main road through Alyki, a quiet coastal settlement on the southwestern side of Kimolos. The property sits 400 metres from Alyki's pebble beach and 100 metres from the village bus stop, placing guests within easy reach of the island's main amenities without the noise of a port-side location. With a rating of 4.8 from 90 reviews, it consistently ranks among the most-praised places to sleep on the island. Alyki itself is a low-key seaside hamlet that faces Milos across a narrow channel. The salt flats the property's name references — alyki means salt flat in Greek — sit nearby and are one of the understated natural features of this corner of Kimolos. The village has a handful of tavernas, some shade trees along the shore, and a pace that suits visitors who want to slow down rather than be entertained. The property offers a mix of rooms and one-room apartments, each finished in white, suited for couples or families travelling together. The owners emphasise attentive hosting: they provide island orientation for guests who want guidance on beaches, walks, and local spots. What to Expect The accommodation is described as a small unit, which in Kimolos terms means a compact, owner-managed property rather than a complex with a reception desk and a pool. Rooms and apartments are painted in white tones consistent with Cycladic style. The website notes that the spaces are well-maintained and that hosts take visible pride in the upkeep — a claim backed by the volume and quality of guest ratings. The one-room apartment format works well for couples wanting self-sufficiency or families with a child who prefer a little more floor space and flexibility. Specific amenities are not detailed in the available sources, but the property's own language suggests included facilities rather than a bare-bones setup. Breakfast is available on request, according to guest reviews — one French-language review on the property's own page references a generous, carefully served breakfast. This is not a standard included service, so confirm directly with the property when booking if this matters to your stay. The location on the main road through Alyki means you are close to the bus that links the village to Psathi port and to Chorio, the island's hilltop capital. The 2.5 km distance to both Psathi and Chorio makes a car useful but not essential, especially given the bus connection. How to Get There Kimolos is reached by ferry from Piraeus or, more commonly for island-hoppers, by the short crossing from Pollonia on Milos. The port of arrival is Psathi, on the eastern side of the island. From Psathi, Alyki is 2.5 km to the southwest — a straightforward drive or taxi ride of around five minutes. A local bus runs between Psathi, Alyki, and Chorio, and the property is 100 metres from the Alyki bus stop, making car-free arrival practical. If you rent a car or scooter on Kimolos — options are available near the port — the drive along the coastal road to Alyki is short and scenic. Parking on the main road through Alyki is generally possible without difficulty given the village's size, though the island sees higher traffic in July and August. Best Time to Visit Kimolos has a genuine shoulder season that rewards visitors who avoid peak summer. June and September offer warm water, manageable crowds, and lower accommodation rates. The Meltemi wind that sweeps through the Cyclades in July and August affects Kimolos as it does its neighbours, which can make some exposed beaches choppy but keeps temperatures bearable. Alyki's beach, being partially sheltered and backed by trees, handles windier days better than more open stretches on the island. The property's reception hours — listed as 9:00 AM to 11:30 PM daily — suggest it operates through the main summer season; verify directly for exact opening months as most small Kimolos accommodation closes outside the April-to-October window. Arrivals on the afternoon ferry from Milos or Piraeus are common, and with the bus stop 100 metres away, getting to the property without a car is straightforward even if you arrive in the evening. Tips for Visiting Contact the property directly before booking if breakfast or specific apartment configuration matters. The email on file ( [email protected] ) and the phone (+30 698 329 8679) are the clearest routes to getting specific answers about what is included. Ask the hosts for beach recommendations. Kimolos has several beaches that don't appear on most maps, and owner-managed properties on small islands are often the best source of current, practical guidance. The Alyki beach is 400 metres away on foot — a flat, short walk along the main road, suitable for carrying beach bags without difficulty. Kimolos has limited ATM infrastructure , so carry enough cash before leaving Milos or Piraeus. Psathi has basic services but the island is small. A scooter or small car is useful if you want to explore beyond Alyki and Chorio. Rentals are available near Psathi port. The island is compact and most points of interest are reachable in under 20 minutes. Book early for July and August. With only 90 ratings accrued, the property is not large. Peak-season availability on Kimolos tightens quickly because the island's total accommodation stock is small. The bus timetable on Kimolos is limited — check current schedules with the property or at the port on arrival. Departures are infrequent, and an afternoon schedule may not align with late ferry arrivals. Alyki faces Milos , so the view across the water at dusk has a clear western orientation — useful to know if you are choosing between accommodation options based on outlook. Facilities and Location The property sits in the Alyki settlement at coordinates 36.780055, 24.560853, on the main road through the village. The surrounding area is low-density and residential in character, with tavernas and the beach within walking distance. Psathi port, where all ferries dock, is 2.5 km to the northeast. Chorio, the whitewashed hilltop village at the island's centre, is also 2.5 km away and worth a half-day visit for its Venetian-era layout and views toward Milos and Polyaigos. The salt flats referenced in the property's name are a local geographical feature that gives Alyki its character — shallow, brackish pans that attract birdlife in spring and early summer before they dry back in the heat. The property's name, To Rantevou (the rendezvous), and its location next to these flats frames it as a deliberate destination rather than a default stopping point. The property website is www.rantevou-kimolos.gr , and the Instagram account (@to_rantevou_tis_alykis_kimolos) shows current images of the rooms and the surrounding area.

278m away3 min walk
Aliki studios

Aliki Studios sits in the quiet coastal settlement of Alyki on the southern shore of Kimolos, a small Cycladic island that sees far fewer visitors than its larger neighbours Milos and Sifnos. The property offers straightforward studio accommodation in a location that puts you close to the sea and away from any tourist crowds — which, on Kimolos, is saying something. With 33 guest reviews and a perfect 5.0 rating on Google, the studios have built a reputation on the fundamentals: cleanliness, quiet, and value. For travellers who want a base from which to explore Kimolos rather than a resort experience, that combination is exactly what the island asks for. The address places the property in Alyki (Αλυκή), a small area on the southern coast of Kimolos distinct from Chora, the island's main village further inland and uphill. The name Alyki refers to the salt flats historically found in this part of the island, and the setting remains low-key and largely undeveloped — a reasonable match for the kind of trip most people take to Kimolos. What to Expect Aliki Studios offers self-catering studio units — compact, functional rooms that typically include a sleeping area, small kitchen or kitchenette, and a bathroom. The source description characterises the accommodation as simple, which in the context of Kimolos is not a criticism: the island has no large hotels and very few amenities outside Chora, and travellers who arrive here have generally chosen it precisely because it is unpolished. The studios are positioned near Alyki Beach, a calm beach on the southern coast that benefits from the shelter the coastline provides in this part of the island. Web snippets associated with the property mention olive trees and a seafront position, which suggests some units may look directly out to water or sit just a short walk from the shore. Given the studio format, guests should arrive prepared to be self-sufficient for some meals. Kimolos has a small number of tavernas concentrated in Chora and around Psathi port, and a couple of seasonal options near the beaches, but it is not an island where food and supplies are available around every corner. A basic shop run in Chora at the start of your stay is practical. The property can be reached by phone or Viber at +30 694 468 9921. There is no website listed, which is typical of small family-run studios throughout the smaller Cyclades. How to Get There Kimolos is accessed by ferry from Piraeus, with most routes stopping first at Milos (Adamas port). A smaller car ferry also runs the short crossing between Pollonia on Milos and Psathi, the port of Kimolos — this crossing takes around 25 minutes and is the most practical option if you are arriving from Milos. From Psathi port, Alyki is a short drive south along the coastal road. The settlement is roughly 2–3 kilometres from Psathi; the exact route depends on road conditions, which on Kimolos can include unpaved stretches. A taxi from the port is usually available to meet ferries, or you can arrange a pickup through the studios by calling ahead. Having your own vehicle — a rental car or scooter picked up from the port — is genuinely useful on Kimolos if you want to explore beaches beyond walking distance. The island is small enough that most points of interest are reachable within 15–20 minutes by road. Parking is not formally indicated in the research available, but in Alyki the roads are quiet and space is generally not a problem. Best Time to Visit Kimolos is a warm-weather destination. The main season runs from late June through early September, when ferries are more frequent and most tavernas and shops are open. July and August bring the highest temperatures and the most visitors, though Kimolos never becomes crowded in the way that Santorini or Mykonos do. May, June, and September are the best months for anyone who wants the beaches and scenery without midsummer heat or the slight pressure on accommodation that August brings. The water in June is already warm enough for comfortable swimming, and the island feels at its most relaxed. October through April sees reduced ferry services and most tourist-facing businesses closed. Kimolos has a small permanent population, and off-season visits are possible but require advance planning and direct contact with accommodation providers. For Alyki itself, the south-facing position means the beach and surrounding area get good sun through the morning and early afternoon. Wind, which affects all the Cyclades, tends to come from the north (the meltemi), so a south-coast location offers some natural shelter during the peak summer wind period. Tips for Visiting Book directly by phone. There is no website or online booking platform listed for Aliki Studios. Call or message +30 694 468 9921 on Viber to check availability and confirm your dates, especially for July and August when Kimolos accommodation fills up. Arrive knowing which ferry you're taking. The Psathi–Pollonia crossing from Milos is the most flexible option, running multiple times daily in summer. The direct Piraeus–Kimolos routes are less frequent and tend to arrive late at night. Bring cash. Kimolos has limited ATM provision. Confirm with the studios whether card payment is accepted, and carry euros as a backup regardless. Stock up before you settle in. Chora has a small supermarket and a few shops. Alyki itself has minimal retail, so gather supplies on your first trip into the village. Pack a bag for day trips. Kimolos's best beaches — Prassa, Bonatsa, Mavrospilia — are spread around the island. From Alyki, some are driveable and others reachable only by boat taxi in summer. Expect studio-level amenities. Simple studios in small Greek islands typically provide bed linen, towels, and basic kitchen equipment, but not daily housekeeping or hotel services. Confirm specifics with the host when you book. Kimolos is very quiet. This is part of the appeal. If you are travelling with children or prefer more structured evening entertainment, factor in that the island has a handful of bars and a small number of restaurants, mostly in Chora. The Alyki area has its own beach. Alyki Beach is close to the studios and calm enough for easy swimming. It tends to be less frequented than the northern beaches, which makes it well suited to early-morning or late-afternoon swims. Facilities and Location Aliki Studios is a small, owner-operated property in the Alyki area of southern Kimolos. The studio format means guests have their own space with cooking facilities, which suits longer stays and independent travellers who want to move at their own pace on the island. The Alyki location puts you on the quieter southern coast, a few minutes from Psathi port by road. Chora — the main village, with its whitewashed Cycladic architecture, central kastro, and most of the island's tavernas — is reachable in under 10 minutes by car or scooter. The Archaeological Museum of Kimolos, housed in Chora, and the medieval kastro are both worth the short trip. The property's coordinates (36.7794472, 24.5591932) place it on the south coast of the island, consistent with the Alyki address. The proximity to the waterfront, suggested by web snippets, is one of the main practical advantages of staying here versus accommodation in Chora itself. Given the small scale and the direct-contact booking model, it is worth treating this stay as a personal arrangement rather than a hotel booking — flexibility and clear communication before arrival will smooth out any uncertainty about check-in logistics.

436m away5 min walk
Kentriko

Kentriko is a budget hostel on Kimolos, one of the smallest and least-touristed islands in the Cyclades. For travellers who want to keep costs low while spending time on an island that still feels largely unhurried and local, a place like Kentriko fills a real gap — Kimolos has limited accommodation overall, and affordable options are scarce compared to better-known Cycladic neighbours. Kimolos itself sits just off the northeastern tip of Milos, connected by a short ferry crossing from Pollonia. The island's main settlement, Chorio (also written Kimolos Town), is a compact hilltop village of whitewashed houses, a central square, and a handful of tavernas. The coordinates for Kentriko place it in this general area, within reach of the village on foot. With no website, phone number, or online booking platform identified in current research, Kentriko appears to operate as a simple, locally run hostel — the kind of place that suits independent travellers arriving by ferry and looking for a clean, inexpensive base rather than resort-style facilities. What to Expect As a budget hostel, Kentriko is best understood as functional accommodation rather than a leisure retreat. On a small island like Kimolos, budget hostels typically offer dormitory-style or simple private rooms, shared bathroom facilities, and minimal amenities — the value is in location and price rather than in-room features. The surrounding environment is what draws people to Kimolos in the first place. From Chorio, you can walk to the windmills that line the ridge above the village, reach the small port of Psathi in under twenty minutes on foot, and access several beaches — including Prassa and Aliki — by scooter or local transport within a short ride. The island has no traffic to speak of, and the pace of daily life in Chorio is slow even by Greek island standards. For travellers accustomed to hostel stays, the trade-off here is clear: you spend less on accommodation and more on ferry tickets, day trips to nearby Milos, fresh fish at a taverna on the port, or boat excursions to sea caves. Kimolos rewards that kind of allocation. Because this property has limited publicly available information, prospective guests should verify room types, facilities, and availability directly before arrival. Arriving without a booking during July and August is a risk — Kimolos accommodates far fewer visitors than the island's reputation can attract in peak season. How to Get There Kimolos is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens) or, most conveniently, by the short crossing from Pollonia on Milos — a trip of roughly thirty minutes that runs multiple times daily in summer. Ferries dock at the port of Psathi, from which Chorio is a short walk uphill or a quick taxi ride. The coordinates for Kentriko (36.7791°N, 24.5573°E) place it in the Chorio area. There is no public bus network on Kimolos, but the island is small enough that a scooter or ATV rental from one of the port-adjacent rental outfits covers all practical ground. Taxis are also available at the port, though supply is limited. Parking is not a concern for most guests arriving on foot from the ferry, though if you bring a vehicle across from Milos, street parking in Chorio is informal and generally manageable outside peak weeks. Best Time to Visit Kimolos is a genuinely seasonal destination. The island is lively — by its own quiet standards — from late June through early September, when ferries run more frequently and most tavernas and shops are open. July and August bring the highest visitor numbers, which on Kimolos still means far fewer crowds than on Milos or Santorini, but accommodation is proportionally limited, so even a small surge in demand fills available rooms quickly. May, June, and September offer the best balance: warm enough to swim, uncrowded, and with the practical infrastructure (shops, transport, food) still operating. Outside these months, services contract significantly and some accommodation may close entirely for the winter. For the hostel specifically, arriving mid-week rather than at weekends in high season reduces competition for beds. The ferry from Pollonia runs frequently enough that you can make a same-day decision from Milos, but confirming availability in advance — even by phone if a number becomes available — is advisable in July and August. Tips for Visiting Verify before you arrive. Kentriko has no confirmed online booking presence. Contact the property directly or ask at the port of Psathi on arrival — locals and port-side businesses typically know which rooms are available island-wide. Bring cash. Kimolos has very limited ATM infrastructure. Carry enough euros to cover accommodation and meals for your full stay; do not rely on being able to withdraw on the island. Pack light for the room. Budget hostels on small Greek islands rarely offer luggage storage, safes, or laundry facilities. A small bag simplifies both the ferry journey and the stay. Rent a scooter or ATV on arrival. The port of Psathi has rental outfits that will get you to Prassa Beach, the kaolin quarry landscape, and the far end of the island in under twenty minutes. Most guests staying in Chorio find walking practical for the village itself but limiting for beach days. Stock up in Chorio. There is a small supermarket in the village. Supplies are more limited and slightly more expensive than on larger islands — pick up snacks, water, and sunscreen rather than relying on beach kiosks. Respect the quiet-island rhythm. Kimolos shuts down midday. The siesta is observed genuinely here. Plan outdoor activities and beach time for mornings and late afternoons. Day-trip to Milos from Psathi. The short ferry crossing makes Milos easily accessible for a day trip to see Sarakiniko, the catacombs, or the fishing village of Klima — without the cost of accommodation there. Check ferry schedules at the port. Timetables change seasonally and, on this route, sometimes daily. Confirm your return crossing the evening before departure. Facilities and Location Kentriko's confirmed details are limited to its category (budget hostel) and its location in the Chorio area of Kimolos. No room count, facility list, meal service, Wi-Fi availability, or accessibility information has been verified. What the location does offer is proximity to the core of island life on Kimolos. Chorio's central square is the gathering point in the evenings, with tavernas serving straightforward Greek food — grilled fish, local cheese (Kimolos produces its own soft cheese, kimoliokopanisti), and the island's own chickpea fritters. The fortified medieval settlement within Chorio, the Castro, is a short walk from the village centre and worth an hour of exploration. For travellers whose priority is immersing themselves in an authentic, small-scale Cycladic island rather than in hotel amenities, the location suits the purpose well. The hostel appears to be a base, not a destination in itself — which on an island like Kimolos is exactly the right model.

607m away8 min walk
Alikaki Kimolos

Alikaki Kimolos is a budget-oriented hostel located in Aliki, on the small Cycladic island of Kimolos. It sits within the portfolio of Aria Hotels Group — a collection that spans Santorini, Crete, Athens, and several other Greek destinations — making it one of the few professionally managed budget options on an island that sees relatively modest tourist infrastructure compared to its neighbours. Kimolos itself is a low-key island lying just north of Milos, accessible by a short ferry crossing or by the small boat from Pollonia on Milos. The island has a single main settlement, Chorio (also called Kimolos Town), and a handful of beaches reachable on foot or by scooter. Aliki is the port area where ferries from Piraeus and Milos arrive, which makes Alikaki's location practically convenient: you step off the boat and your accommodation is close at hand. With a Google rating of 4.0 from 28 reviews, Alikaki sits solidly in the acceptable-to-good range for its price tier. The source description characterises it as simple and affordable — fitting for travellers who want a base for walking, swimming, and exploring the island rather than resort-level comfort. What to Expect Alikaki is run under the Aria Hotels umbrella, which also operates other Kimolos properties including Aria Kimolos Residence, Milaki Kimolos, Psathi Beach House, and Bonatsa Beach House. That group structure means bookings, enquiries, and check-in logistics are handled through a centralised reservation system rather than a sole owner-operator, which can simplify communication for non-Greek speakers. As a hostel-category property in Aliki, the physical offering is intentionally straightforward. Expect clean, functional rooms or shared accommodation rather than suites or pools. The surrounding area at Aliki is the ferry port of Kimolos — not a scenic beachfront strip, but a practical entry point to the island. The port has basic amenities: a taverna or two, a small café, and the necessities you'd need on arrival or departure day. From Aliki, the main village of Chorio is a short drive or a longer walk inland. Psathi beach, one of the island's most accessible sandy shores, is also within easy reach. The property's location makes it well-suited to travellers doing a short island hop — arriving by ferry from Milos or Piraeus, spending a night or two, and moving on — as well as budget-conscious visitors who plan to spend most of their time outdoors. Given the hostel designation, this is not the right choice if you're after air-conditioned villas, daily housekeeping, or hotel-grade facilities. It is the right choice if you want a clean, affordable, professionally managed bed within walking distance of the ferry. How to Get There Aliki is Kimolos's main port, so arriving is straightforward. Ferries from Piraeus (Attica) call at Kimolos directly several times a week depending on the season, and the crossing from Pollonia on Milos takes around 30 minutes on the small passenger-and-vehicle ferry. The journey from Piraeus takes approximately five to six hours on conventional ferry. Once you disembark at Aliki, the port area is compact and Alikaki is located in the immediate vicinity at the Aliki 840 04 address. No taxi or transfer should be necessary from the port itself. If you're arriving by car from elsewhere on the island, the port road is the main access route and signage is limited, so confirming the exact location with the property in advance is worthwhile. Kimolos has no airport. All visitors arrive by sea. Best Time to Visit Kimolos has a classic Cycladic climate: hot and dry from June through August, with the meltemi wind providing some relief in July and August. The shoulder months of May, June, September, and October offer more moderate temperatures and far fewer visitors, which suits Kimolos well — the island's appeal is its quietness, and that quality is diluted in the peak summer weeks. For budget travellers, the shoulder season also tends to bring lower accommodation rates. Spring (late April to early June) is particularly pleasant for walking the island's trails and visiting the Prassa mineral springs or the unusual volcanic landscape near the old chalk quarries. Autumn into early October keeps sea temperatures warm enough for swimming without the August crowds. If you're island-hopping and using Kimolos as a stopover, even a midsummer visit works well — the island moves at its own pace regardless of the calendar. Tips for Visiting Book directly through Aria Hotels. The official website at ariahotels.gr lists all their Kimolos properties, including Alikaki. Direct booking may offer flexibility or loyalty benefits through their programme that third-party platforms don't provide. Contact the property before arrival. The email address [email protected] and phone number +30 2287 051677 are the best channels. Kimolos accommodation operates on shorter staff hours than larger island hotels, so confirming your arrival time — especially if coming on a late ferry — avoids complications. Pack for self-sufficiency. Kimolos has limited shops and supermarkets. If you're staying on a tight budget, bring snacks and essentials from Athens or Milos before crossing. Rent a scooter or ATV on arrival. The island's beaches and the Paleokastro medieval castle ruin require some mobility. Several rental options operate near the port in season. The Aliki port area is functional, not scenic. If you want to be closer to the old village atmosphere, Chorio is a short drive away. Factor this into your daily plans. Kimolos has one main ATM. Bring cash or check ATM availability in Chorio before heading out to remote parts of the island. Check ferry schedules carefully. Connections between Kimolos and Milos are frequent in summer but reduce significantly off-season. If you're doing a day trip from Milos to Kimolos and staying overnight at Alikaki, confirm return times before you go. Aria Hotels runs multiple Kimolos properties at different price points. If Alikaki feels too basic after arrival, Milaki Kimolos and Bonatsa Beach House within the same group offer more comfort, and switching may be manageable through the same reservations contact. Facilities and Location Alikaki Kimolos is managed by Aria Hotels Group, which handles reservations centrally. The property's official web listing is at ariahotels.gr/hotels/alikaki-kimolos. Aria Hotels maintains active social media channels across Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and Twitter/X, which can be useful for seeing current photography of the property and reading guest commentary. The Aliki 840 04 address places the property within the port zone of Kimolos. Coordinates 36.7807°N, 24.5562°E confirm a location close to the waterfront, consistent with the ferry port area. Basic port amenities — a taverna, café, and the ferry landing — are nearby. The island's main medical and pharmacy services are in Chorio. No specific room count, in-room amenity list, or detailed facility information was available in the research bundle. For specifics on room configuration, check-in times, or what is included, contact the property directly.

693m away9 min walk

Restaurants

To Rantevou Tis Alykis "Kafe - Snack Bar"

To Rantevou Tis Alykis — also known locally as "Sinantisi" (meaning "the meeting place") — is a café and snack bar positioned near the Alyki salt flats on Kimolos, one of the quieter corners of the Cyclades. It operates out of a stone building beside the 17th-century Church of Agios Georgios in the Parathyria area, and it has been a gathering point on this island for generations: the building first functioned as a kafeneio run by the current owners' great-grandfather. With a 4.8 rating from over 320 Google reviews, this is not simply the most convenient stop near the salt flats — it's one of the most consistently well-regarded spots on the island. The hours are long (8:30 AM through to 3:30 AM every day of the week), which makes it useful at almost any point in your day, whether you want a Greek coffee at breakfast or a glass of tsipouro late in the evening. The menu spans a wide range: handmade pies, salads, mezedes of sausage, meatballs, octopus and anchovy, homemade sweets, and a full coffee and drinks selection from frappe to espresso. Spirits — tsipouro, ouzo, raki, rakomelo, and local wine — are served with proper meze. It's the kind of place where a summer afternoon game of tavli can stretch into the evening without anyone noticing. What to Expect The physical space reflects the building's age well. Stone walls, a small interior sala, a terrace (pezoulia) with views toward the surrounding landscape, and what the owners describe as a "secret little alley" running alongside — a narrow shaded passage that stays cool even in peak July heat. In the evenings, the crowd spills onto the terrace and into the lane, which gives the place an informal, communal feel that is typical of island kafeneio culture but increasingly rare in tourist-oriented Cycladic villages. Breakfast here leans toward local flavor: the morning spread includes handmade pies and sweets alongside juices and the full range of Greek and international coffees. By midday the kitchen pivots to light plates — salads, mezedes — that pair with cold beer or a carafe of wine. After dark the tone shifts again toward drinks-led socializing, with raki, rakomelo, and oinos (wine) accompanied by snacks and occasional live music. The service style matches the setting: relaxed, unhurried, and rooted in the island hospitality tradition. You are not going to be rushed. The stone building stays noticeably cooler than the open street in summer, which makes the interior sala a practical choice on the hottest afternoons. The overall atmosphere is that of a working kafeneio that has been updated without losing its character — Greek coffee and frappe sit on the same menu as cold brew and herbal teas, and tsipouro with meze coexists with craft beer. That range makes it accessible to different kinds of visitors without feeling designed for any particular demographic. How to Get There The café sits near the Alyki salt flats on the southwestern side of Kimolos, in the Parathyria area. If you are coming from Kimolos Chora (the main village), head southwest along the road that runs toward Alyki — the salt flat basin is a visible landmark, and the stone building beside the small church of Agios Georgios is hard to miss once you are in the area. Kimolos is a small island and most of it is navigable on foot or by scooter. There is no formal public bus network connecting all corners of the island, so a rental scooter, ATV, or car is the most practical option for reaching the Alyki area independently. The road from the Psathi port to Parathyria is driveable and takes around 10 minutes by vehicle. Parking near the café is informal and limited, as is common in rural Cycladic settings. Arrive early in peak season if you are driving. The area around Alyki is also accessible by bicycle for those who do not mind a climb on the return leg. Best Time to Visit The café is open year-round based on the hours listed, though Kimolos receives significantly fewer visitors outside the July–September window and some businesses reduce operations in shoulder months. If you are visiting in spring or autumn, it is worth calling ahead (+30 2287 051801) to confirm. In summer, the peak crowd arrives in the evenings, when the terrace and alley fill up with a mix of locals and visitors. For a quieter experience, mornings from opening until around 10:30 AM are consistently calm — good for a coffee and a pie before heading to the nearby beaches. Midday in July and August can be intensely hot near the salt flats, but the stone interior of the café provides real relief. The afternoon tsipouro-and-tavli crowd typically peaks between 3 PM and 6 PM. If you want to experience the evening social atmosphere, arrive after 9 PM. The Alyki area itself is most dramatic in late afternoon light, when the salt flat surface catches the sun. Pairing a walk around the flats with a stop at Sinantisi on the way back is a natural combination. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in the off-season. The café lists year-round hours, but Kimolos is a small island and schedules can shift outside summer. A quick call to +30 2287 051801 takes 30 seconds and saves a wasted trip. Order the meze spread if you are drinking. Tsipouro and ouzo are served here with proper accompaniments — octopus, anchovy, sausage, meatballs. This is not bar snacks; it is a proper light meal if you order broadly. Try the handmade pies in the morning. The kitchen makes its own pies and sweets, and they tend to go earlier in the day. By mid-afternoon the selection may be reduced. Bring cash. Card acceptance is not confirmed for this café. On small Cycladic islands, cash is always a safe backup, particularly at traditional kafeneios. The alley seating is the best seat in the house in peak summer. The narrow shaded passage beside the building stays significantly cooler than the open terrace and has a distinct atmosphere worth experiencing. Combine with the Alyki salt flats. The flat basin is directly adjacent and worth a short walk before or after your stop. Early morning light on the salt crust is particularly photogenic. Don't expect fast service in the evening. The pace here is deliberately slow during the evening social hours. Order early if you need to catch transport. Rakomelo is worth ordering once. This honey-and-raki combination is a Cycladic specialty and the café does it well — particularly pleasant on a cooler evening. What to Order The menu at To Rantevou Tis Alykis covers a wider range than the "café-snack bar" label suggests. A few standouts worth knowing about: For breakfast: The handmade pies — tyropita (cheese), spanakopita (spinach), or whatever the kitchen has made that morning — are the strongest argument for arriving before 10 AM. These are made on-site, not pre-packaged. Pair with a Greek coffee or a fresh juice. For a midday stop: A simple salad alongside a cold beer or glass of local wine is the practical choice in the heat. The mezedes plates — particularly the octopus and the anchovy (gavros) — are worth ordering if you want something more substantial. For an afternoon session: Tsipouro or ouzo with a mixed meze plate is the classic choice and the one the café does best. Order a round of meze alongside your first drink; the kitchen will keep refilling the spirit as long as you are eating. For the evening: Rakomelo (raki with honey, served warm), local wine, or cold beer. The homemade sweets make a reasonable ending to the evening if you want something sweet before heading back. The coffee range covers all the standard Greek options (ellinikos, frappe, freddo espresso, freddo cappuccino) as well as filter and hot drinks — so whatever your coffee preference, it is covered.

285m away4 min walk
Sardis (i tis Mpebas)

Sardis — known to locals and returning visitors as tis Mpebas — sits roughly 30 metres from the sand at Aliki Beach on the southwest coast of Kimolos. It is one of the island's most consistently rated places to eat, with 822 Google reviews averaging 4.6 stars, which is a meaningful number for a small Cycladic island where word of mouth is the standard currency. The restaurant is part of a family-run complex that also offers rooms, and that combination tells you something about the place: it is built around hospitality rather than throughput. Aliki is one of Kimolos's better-known beaches, and the position of Sardis — close enough to the water to catch the breeze, with views that shift from the sea to the rocky island profile — gives it a setting that earns the meal before a plate arrives. Kimolos is a quiet, little-developed island, and Sardis fits that character. You won't find a DJ booth or a printed cocktail menu, but you will find cooking that reflects what the island and the sea produce, served by people who have been doing this for years. What to Expect Sardis operates as the dining arm of the Sardis Complex, a Cycladic-architecture property in Aliki. The restaurant has an outdoor seating area appropriate to its beachside position — tables positioned to take in the water and the surrounding landscape. The interior follows the whitewashed, clean-lined aesthetic of the rooms complex. The kitchen leans on what works in this part of the Cyclades: fresh fish, grilled meats, and the kind of straightforward Greek dishes — horiatiki, tzatziki, grilled octopus — that benefit from good ingredients rather than elaborate preparation. Kimolos itself has a long tradition of fishing, and Aliki's position on the island means the catch comes in close. The atmosphere is relaxed and unhurried in the way that characterises smaller Greek island tavernas. Families, couples, and solo travellers all seem to find it comfortable. The 822-review count suggests it draws both island residents and tourists, which is usually a good sign — a place that only works for one group rarely sustains a rating like this. Service is family-run in character: attentive when needed, not hovering. Given the dual role of the complex as accommodation and restaurant, regular guests who stay in the rooms tend to return to the taverna each evening, which shapes the atmosphere toward something more personal than transient. What to Order The research bundle does not include a menu, so specific dishes cannot be confirmed here. What is reliable is the context: Sardis is a traditional Greek taverna adjacent to a working beach on a fishing island. In that setting, the fresh fish of the day — whatever the boats brought in — is typically the most worthwhile choice. Ask the staff what arrived that morning; on small islands the answer changes daily and is almost always more interesting than the printed menu. For starters, the standard Cycladic approach holds: small plates of taramosalata, tzatziki, grilled vegetables, or saganaki cheese alongside bread. A carafe of local white wine rather than a bottled import is usually the better call at a place like this. If fish is not your preference, grilled lamb or pork chops are a reliable second option in any Cycladic taverna that has been operating for years. For dessert, the kitchen likely keeps to seasonal fruit and Greek sweets rather than an elaborate patisserie selection. How to Get There Sardis is located at Aliki on Kimolos, addressed as Αλυκή Κιμώλου (Aliki, Kimolos 840 04). The GPS coordinates are 36.7784, 24.5574. Aliki is one of the island's accessible beaches, reachable by the road that runs along the southwestern coast from Chora, the island's main village. The drive from Chora takes roughly 5–10 minutes by car or scooter. Kimolos does not have a wide public bus network, so most visitors travel by hired vehicle, scooter, or taxi. Taxis on Kimolos are limited — the island is small enough that most people walk, ride, or drive. If you are staying elsewhere on the island, arranging a taxi in advance is sensible, particularly for an evening meal when you may not want to navigate back on a scooter in the dark. Parking at Aliki is informal and generally not an issue outside peak August weeks. The restaurant is accessible from the road that runs to the beach; the 30-metre distance from the shore means it is essentially at beach level. Kimolos itself is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), or more commonly by a short connection ferry from Milos — the Psara ferry crossing takes under 30 minutes from Pollonia on Milos's northern coast. Best Time to Visit Sardis is open every day of the week, 12:30 PM to 11:00 PM, which covers both lunch and dinner. Kimolos's season runs roughly May through October, with July and August being the busiest months. During peak summer, Aliki attracts a steady stream of day-trippers from Milos, and the taverna will be fuller at lunch. For a more relaxed dinner, aim for weeknights in June or September, when the island population drops back toward its year-round level and tables are easier to secure. Late lunch — arriving around 2:30–3:00 PM — can also work well, catching the tail of the midday service with fewer people around. Sunset at Aliki, depending on the time of year, falls while the restaurant is mid-service. If the table positioning allows a western view, this is worth factoring into your reservation timing. Kimolos can be windy — it sits in the central Cyclades and catches the meltemi from the north during summer. The outdoor seating at Sardis is exposed enough that a strong afternoon meltemi may make terrace dining less comfortable. Early evening, when the wind typically eases, tends to be the sweet spot. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in high season. The phone number is +30 2287 051458. With 822 reviews and a beachside position in a small island, peak-season evenings can fill. A call the same afternoon is usually sufficient. Combine with a swim at Aliki. The restaurant opens at 12:30 PM, which makes a lunch visit natural after a morning at the beach — 30 metres is close enough to arrive directly from the water. Ask about the fish of the day. On a small island, the fresh catch changes daily. The printed menu is a baseline; the verbal specials are usually more interesting. Bring cash as backup. Card acceptance is common at Greek tavernas now, but island infrastructure can be unreliable. Having euros on hand avoids the issue. The complex also has rooms. If you want to be based at Aliki rather than in Chora, Sardis Rooms offers accommodation on the same property — the website is kimolosrooms.com. Factor in the meltemi. Summer afternoons can be windy on this coast. If you are sensitive to strong wind at an outdoor table, a dinner booking after 7:00 PM is more likely to be comfortable. Email for enquiries. The contact email [email protected] is available for room or event enquiries. For same-day table questions, the phone is quicker. Getting to Kimolos: most visitors come via the short ferry from Pollonia (Milos) rather than directly from Piraeus. Factor this into trip planning if Kimolos is a day trip from Milos.

618m away8 min walk