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Cinema

Naxos · regular stop

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Agia Anna
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Naxos Town
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Nearby Points of Interest

ATMs

National Bank of Greece

The National Bank of Greece (NBG) branch in Naxos Town sits on the Chora–Agios Prokopios road, making it one of the more conveniently located bank branches on the island for visitors arriving from the port or heading south toward the beaches. As Greece's largest bank, NBG offers both counter services and an ATM, so whether you need to withdraw euros, handle a transfer, or speak with a teller, this is the branch most likely to meet the need.\n\nFor most travelers, the ATM is the primary draw. It accepts major international cards (Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, and typically American Express) and dispenses euros around the clock, independent of branch opening hours. The branch itself is staffed and open on weekdays only.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nInside, the branch provides the full range of retail banking services typical of an NBG location: deposits, withdrawals, foreign exchange, loan inquiries, and bill payments. English is generally spoken at the counter in tourist-facing branches on Greek islands, though the level of service can vary by staff member.\n\nThe exterior ATM is the more practical option for visitors who simply need cash. Naxos has several ATMs scattered around the port and Chora, but this branch ATM is well-maintained and positioned on one of the main approach roads rather than in the busiest pedestrian lanes, which can mean shorter queues during peak summer months.\n\nThe branch has a Google rating of 3.3 from 26 reviews — a score that reflects typical expectations of a functional utility rather than a hospitality business.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe branch is located on Odos Choras–Agiou Prokopiou (the road connecting Naxos Town with Agios Prokopios), at coordinates 37.0995°N, 25.3803°E. On foot from the port, head south through Naxos Town center; the branch is reachable in roughly 10–15 minutes depending on your starting point. By car or scooter, it sits along the main southbound artery — parking is available on the street or in nearby public areas, though spaces fill quickly in July and August. There is no dedicated parking lot attached to the branch.\n\nLocal buses running between Naxos Town and the southern beach villages pass along this corridor; the branch is walkable from the main Naxos Town bus stop.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nThe branch is open Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 2:00 PM, and closed on weekends and public holidays. If you need counter services, arrive early in the week and early in the morning — Friday afternoons and any day during peak summer season can see longer waits. The ATM is accessible at any hour, seven days a week, which makes it useful if you arrive on the overnight ferry or need cash on a Saturday before heading to a beach.\n\nNote that Greek public holidays will close the branch; check the NBG website or call ahead if your visit coincides with a national or religious holiday.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **ATM fees:** Your home bank may charge a foreign transaction fee in addition to any NBG withdrawal fee. Withdrawing a larger sum in one transaction reduces the per-euro cost.\n- **Weekend planning:** The branch is closed Saturday and Sunday. If you arrive on a weekend and need cash, the ATM is your only option here — confirm your card works internationally before you travel.\n- **Contact:** The branch can be reached at +30 2285 027704 during opening hours.\n- **Digital banking:** NBG's mobile app and online portal allow existing NBG customers to manage accounts remotely, useful if you hold a Greek bank account.\n- **Currency:** Greece uses the euro (EUR). ATMs on Naxos do not dispense foreign currencies.\n- **Card declines:** If your card is declined, it is often a security block by your home bank rather than an ATM fault — notify your bank before traveling.\n\n## Other Banking Options on Naxos\n\nNaxos Town has a small concentration of banks and ATMs near the port and the main commercial street (Papavasileiou). Alpha Bank, Piraeus Bank, and Eurobank all have a presence in Chora, so if this branch is closed or the ATM queue is long, alternatives are within walking distance. For visitors staying in villages further south — Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, or Plaka — this NBG branch is among the closest banking facilities before the road thins out.

191m away2 min walk

Beach Bars

Naxaki Beach Lounge and Restaurant

Naxaki Beach Lounge and Restaurant occupies a stretch of Agios Georgios Beach, the long sandy bay that curves south from Naxos Town port. It is one of the closest proper beach bars to the Chora, which makes it a practical choice for visitors staying in town who want a full beach day without committing to a long drive. The combination of reserved sunbeds, a full food menu, and a cocktail program keeps guests anchored here from mid-morning well into the evening.\n\nWith a Google rating of 4.8 from 471 reviews, it consistently ranks among the better-regarded beach operations on the island — a signal worth noting when you're deciding between the dozen or so lounges that line Agios Georgios.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe setup follows the classic Greek beach-club model: plush sunbeds arranged in rows facing the water, a bar running signature cocktails and cold drinks throughout the day, and a restaurant serving food that draws from both Greek and Italian culinary traditions. The kitchen works with local ingredients and puts out dishes that go beyond the usual beach-snack fare — expect proper plates alongside lighter options you'd want after a morning swim.\n\nThe beach itself at Agios Georgios is sandy, gently shelving, and sheltered enough that the water stays calm on most summer days. The shallow entry makes it one of the more family-friendly spots on this part of the island. Naxaki's section is organized but not overcrowded, and the vibe leans toward relaxed rather than high-energy club territory.\n\nSunbed reservations are bookable in advance through the Naxaki website, which is worth doing in July and August when the beach fills up by mid-morning.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nAgios Georgios Beach begins roughly 800 metres south of Naxos Town's main port square. On foot from the Chora, follow the waterfront road south past the children's playground and the sailing school — the walk takes around ten to twelve minutes along a flat, paved path.\n\nBy car or scooter, take the coastal road south from the port. Parking near Agios Georgios can be tight in peak season; arriving before 10:00 improves your chances of finding a spot along the road. There is no dedicated car park at the beach itself.\n\nLocal buses connect Naxos Town to the beaches further south (Plaka, Agia Anna), and some stop near the Agios Georgios end of the route — check the KTEL Naxos timetable at the bus station near the port for current stop locations.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nAgios Georgios faces west, which means afternoons bring direct sun and the light on the water is good from around 14:00 until sunset. If you want the sunbeds before the midday rush, aim to arrive by 10:00 — or book ahead.\n\nThe beach bar season on Naxos typically runs from late May through early October, with July and August being the busiest months. Shoulder season visits in June or September offer the same beach setup with fewer people and slightly cooler temperatures that make sitting in the sun for several hours more comfortable.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book sunbeds in advance** during July and August via the Naxaki website — walk-in availability at peak times is not guaranteed.\n- **Combine lunch with your beach day** rather than leaving to find food elsewhere; the restaurant menu is substantial enough to make this worthwhile.\n- **Bring cash as backup** — card machines work at most Greek beach bars, but connection issues on busy days are not unusual.\n- **The walk from Chora is genuinely easy** — flat, shaded in parts, and along a proper path, so there is no need to take a taxi for this particular beach.\n- **Contact the venue directly** at [email protected] or +30 2285 024572 to confirm current opening times and sunbed pricing before your visit, as these details can change between seasons.\n\n## Food and Drinks\n\nNaxaki's menu takes Greek and Italian traditions as its starting point. On the Greek side, expect fresh seafood, local Naxian ingredients (the island is known for its potatoes, cheeses, and meat), and straightforward preparations that let the produce speak. The Italian-inflected dishes round out the menu for those who want something familiar. The cocktail list runs signature recipes alongside the standard drinks menu — the kind of offering designed to keep you at the sunbed rather than wandering off to find a bar.\n\nFor a coffee or light breakfast before settling in, the bar typically opens earlier than the full kitchen service. The best approach is to confirm current hours by phone or email before planning a morning visit.

422m away5 min walk

Beaches

Saint George Beach

Saint George Beach (Agios Georgios) is the closest beach to Naxos Town port, running south from the main waterfront along a shallow, sandy bay. It's a working beach, not a postcard one — sunbeds, umbrellas, tavernas, watersports — but the water is calm, the sand is clean, and you can walk here in five minutes from the ferry dock.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe beach runs about 1 kilometer, wide enough that you can find quiet stretches even in August. The water is shallow for 20–30 meters out, which makes it safe for children and a favorite with Greek families. The sand is fine and golden, though you'll share it with a mix of tourists and locals. Most of the beach is lined with sunbed concessions (€8–10 per set), but there are free public sections at either end. A paved promenade backs the beach, dotted with cafés, seafood tavernas, and a few beach bars. The southern end of the beach tends to be calmer and less crowded.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nFrom the Naxos Town port, walk south along the waterfront promenade past the National Bank and the bus station. The beach starts just after the small church of Agios Georgios, about 400 meters from the ferry terminal. If you're staying in the Old Town, exit through the southern gates near the Metropolis Cathedral and follow Papavasiliou Street downhill — the beach is a 5-minute walk. No car needed.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Go early (before 10am) or late afternoon (after 5pm) if you want the free sections without crowds\n- The north end near the port gets choppier; the south end stays calmer even on windy days\n- Bring water shoes if you're sensitive — small pebbles mix with the sand in places\n- The beachfront tavernas serve lunch, but prices run 20–30% higher than inland spots\n- Several watersports outfits offer paddleboard and kayak rentals (€15–20/hour)\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nSaint George Beach works year-round. May and June give you warm water without the crowds. July and August bring full sunbed rows and shoulder-to-shoulder swimmers by midday, though the evenings thin out. September and early October are warm and quieter. Even in winter, locals walk the promenade and swim on calm days — the beach is open 24 hours, though most facilities close from November to March. On very windy days (common in July and August), Saint George stays swimmable when the north-facing beaches turn choppy.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nNaxos Town is a 5-minute walk. The Old Town's marble lanes, Portara sunset viewpoint, the Archaeological Museum, and dozens of restaurants are all within 10 minutes on foot. The bus station is 300 meters north if you want to catch a ride to Plaka or Agia Anna beaches. South along the coast, a 15-minute walk takes you to the quieter end of the bay where the hotels thin out and you can sometimes have a stretch of sand to yourself.

533m away7 min walk

Churches

Agios Nikodimos

Agios Nikodimos is a traditional Greek Orthodox church on Naxos, dedicated to Saint Nikodimos — a revered figure in the Orthodox calendar best known as the 18th-century monk and theologian Saint Nikodimos the Hagiorite, compiler of the *Philokalia*. The church sits at coordinates placing it just east of Naxos Town (Chora), within easy reach of the island's main settlement and port. With a rating of 4.9 from over 160 reviews, it draws both local worshippers and visitors who take time to step inside.\n\nNaxos falls under the jurisdiction of the Holy Metropolis of Paronaxia, which oversees the ecclesiastical life of Naxos, Paros, and Antiparos. That regional church authority maintains a visible and active presence on the island, and Agios Nikodimos is part of that wider fabric of Orthodox religious life that shapes the rhythms of the island year — from the fasting weeks of Lent through to the bells of Easter night.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe church follows the architectural conventions common to Cycladic Orthodox chapels and churches: whitewashed exterior walls, a modest forecourt or threshold, and an interior oriented east toward the altar screen (iconostasis). Inside, expect the characteristic atmosphere of a working Greek Orthodox church — oil lamps burning before icons, the faint scent of incense from recent services, and an iconostasis separating the nave from the sanctuary.\n\nThe iconostasis typically features painted icons of Christ, the Theotokos (Virgin Mary), and the church's patron saint. In a church dedicated to Saint Nikodimos, you may find an icon depicting him in monastic habit, often holding the *Philokalia* or a scroll. The interior is likely modest in scale — a single-nave or three-aisle basilica form is standard for island churches of this type — but the care taken by the local community is evident in the near-perfect review score.\n\nVisitors should dress modestly: covered shoulders and knees for both men and women. Photography inside Orthodox churches is generally acceptable when no service is in progress, but it is courteous to ask or to observe whether others are doing so.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe coordinates (37.1019, 25.3814) place Agios Nikodimos close to the eastern edge of Naxos Town, within the broader Chora area. From the main port and the landmark Portara islet, the church is reachable on foot in roughly 10–15 minutes, heading inland and slightly south through the town's street grid.\n\nBy car or scooter, Naxos Town is served by the main island road running south from the port. Parking in Chora can be tight in high summer; arriving on foot from the waterfront is often easier than searching for a space near the church. The bus station in Naxos Town connects to villages across the island, but for a location this close to Chora, the port-area bus stop is the practical starting point.\n\nThere is no ferry connection specific to this church — it is a land-based site within the main town area.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nGreek Orthodox churches are most alive on their patronal feast day. The feast of Saint Nikodimos the Hagiorite falls on **14 July** in the Orthodox calendar. On that day, a liturgy will typically be served at the church, often followed by a brief community gathering. If your visit to Naxos coincides with mid-July, attending the morning service is a genuinely authentic experience.\n\nFor a quieter visit — to sit, light a candle, or simply look at the icons — any weekday morning outside peak tourist hours (before 10:00 or after 17:00) works well. Orthodox churches in Greece are generally unlocked during daylight hours when not hosting a service, though small chapels sometimes remain locked between liturgies; if you find it closed, returning around the time of an evening service (usually around 18:00–19:00 in summer) is the most reliable approach.\n\nSpring and early autumn offer the most comfortable conditions: temperatures are moderate, the island is less crowded, and the quality of light in the late afternoon is particularly good for appreciating whitewashed architecture.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Dress code:** Bare shoulders and short skirts or shorts are not appropriate inside. A lightweight scarf or sarong carried in a bag solves this quickly in summer.\n- **Candles:** Lighting a thin beeswax candle in the narthex (entrance vestibule) and placing it in the sand tray is the standard act of devotion for visitors of any background — a small donation in the collection box accompanies this.\n- **Silence during services:** If a liturgy or prayer service is underway when you arrive, wait at the back or in the narthex and observe quietly. Entering mid-service and moving around is considered disruptive.\n- **Photography:** Ask before photographing inside. A nod from a church warden or priest is sufficient permission; if no one is present and no service is in progress, brief, respectful photography is generally tolerated.\n- **Phone contact:** The listed number (+30 2285 026686) connects to the Holy Metropolis of Paronaxia administration, which can confirm service times or feast-day events for the church.\n- **Combined visiting:** Several other Orthodox churches and chapels are within walking distance in Naxos Town, including the Cathedral of Zoodochos Pigi in the Kastro district. A short walking loop can take in two or three churches in under an hour.\n- **Easter:** If you are on Naxos for Orthodox Easter (the date changes annually), the midnight Resurrection service is the most significant liturgical event of the year. Churches across the island participate, and the bells — as the Metropolis notes — ring out across Naxos, Paros, and Antiparos simultaneously.\n\n## Saint Nikodimos and His Significance\n\nSaint Nikodimos the Hagiorite (1749–1809) was born on Naxos itself — making a church bearing his name on this island especially meaningful. He grew up in Naxos Town before entering monastic life on Mount Athos. His most enduring contribution was co-editing the *Philokalia*, a foundational anthology of Orthodox spiritual writing that has shaped Eastern Christian monasticism from the 18th century to the present day. He was formally glorified (canonized) by the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 1955.\n\nFor Orthodox Christians, visiting a church dedicated to a saint with direct roots in the local community carries particular weight. For secular visitors, the Naxian origin of Saint Nikodimos gives this otherwise modest church a thread of genuine historical significance — a local boy who became one of the most influential figures in the intellectual history of Orthodox Christianity.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Nikodimos sits within the gravitational pull of Naxos Town's main attractions. The Venetian Kastro — the 13th-century fortified hilltop quarter — is a short uphill walk and contains several Catholic and Orthodox churches of its own, along with the Archaeological Museum of Naxos. The waterfront promenade and the causeway to the Portara (the Temple of Apollo gateway) are within easy walking distance to the north and west. The central market street, Papavasiliou, runs through Chora and offers the full range of island bakeries, cafés, and produce shops for after your visit.

479m away6 min walk

Hotels

Sagterra

Sagterra Hotel sits on Andrea Papandreou street in Naxos Town (Hora), about 500 metres from Saint George Beach and a short walk from the old town's harbour front. It's a family-run property built in the white-and-blue Cycladic style, with a swimming pool and garden that make it easy to decompress between sightseeing days.\n\nWith a Google rating of 3.5 from 152 reviews, Sagterra positions itself as a practical, affordable base rather than a luxury retreat — the kind of place where the owners know your name by day two.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nRooms come as studios or apartments, sleeping between two and five people, so it works for couples, solo travellers, and families who need a bit more space. All units include the amenities you'd expect: Wi-Fi, daily housekeeping, and access to the pool area with sun loungers and parasols. A breakfast service and a lounge area round out the on-site facilities, and laundry is available at an extra cost.\n\nThe building follows traditional Cycladic architecture — thick whitewashed walls, blue accents, compact but considered layout. The garden and pool create a quiet pocket away from the busier streets, though you're still central enough to walk to supermarkets, restaurants, and the Chora's Venetian castle quarter in under ten minutes.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nSagterra is at Andrea Papandreou 100, Naxos 843 00. From the Naxos ferry terminal, it's roughly a 10–15 minute walk south along the waterfront, then inland a couple of streets. If you're arriving by ferry from Piraeus, Rafina, or any of the other Cycladic islands, you'll dock at the main port in Naxos Town — the hotel is close enough that a short taxi ride or a brisk walk with luggage is realistic.\n\nCar hire is available through agencies in town if you plan to explore the island's villages and beaches beyond Hora. Street parking on Andrea Papandreou is possible, though it fills quickly in July and August.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town runs year-round, and the hotel's listed hours suggest operation from 8:00 AM to 12:30 AM daily. For the best combination of beach weather and manageable crowds, aim for late May through June or September into early October. July and August bring peak summer heat and the highest occupancy across Naxos, so booking well in advance is essential. Spring and autumn arrivals will find quieter streets, lower rates, and the island's interior more accessible for day trips.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early for summer.** Family-friendly properties at this price point in central Naxos Town fill up fast in July and August.\n- **Saint George Beach is a 7–10 minute walk.** The long sandy beach is one of the most accessible on the island and suits families with children.\n- **Ask about breakfast options on arrival.** The hotel offers breakfast service; confirming timing and what's included helps you plan your mornings.\n- **Pack light for arrival.** Andrea Papandreou is a regular street, not a narrow alley, but rolling luggage over cobblestones in the older parts of Hora is harder work than it looks on a map.\n- **Use the hotel as a base for day trips.** Bus connections to Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, and the mountain villages of Halki and Apeiranthos run from a stop near the waterfront.\n- **Contact the hotel directly.** Reach the front desk at +30 2285 026280 or [email protected] for room queries, early check-in requests, or airport/port transfer advice.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe Portara — the ancient marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo — is visible from the harbour and a 15-minute walk north of the hotel. Naxos Town's Venetian-era Kastro district, with its medieval walls, Catholic cathedral, and small archaeology museum, is about 10 minutes on foot uphill. The town's main market street, Papavasiliou, runs parallel to the waterfront and has bakeries, tavernas, and shops within a few minutes of the hotel. For longer excursions, the fertile Tragaea plateau and the villages of the interior are 20–30 minutes by car or bus.

103m away1 min walk
Irene Pension II

Irene Pension II is a straightforward, apartment-style guesthouse on Sotiros Street in Naxos Town (Chora), the island's main settlement. It sits within easy reach of the Chora waterfront, the old market lanes of the Kastro district, and the bus terminal that connects to the rest of the island. For travelers who want a clean base without paying boutique-hotel prices, this is a practical option with a solid track record — 122 Google reviews average out to 4.4 out of 5.\n\nThe pension is the second property run under the Irene brand, which also operates Irene Pension I nearby. Both are managed through the same team and website, giving guests the option to compare availability across the two buildings.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nRooms here follow the apartment-style model common to Greek island pensions: self-contained units with basic kitchen or kitchenette facilities, private bathroom, and enough space to spread out for a few days. The setup suits independent travelers and couples who prefer not to rely entirely on restaurants for every meal. At least some rooms include a pool view, which is a noticeable step up for a budget property in this price bracket.\n\nThe atmosphere is quiet and family-run rather than hostel-social. There is no on-site restaurant or bar, which keeps costs down and keeps the property calm. Expect functional furnishings, air conditioning (standard across Naxos accommodations at this level), and a location that puts you within ten to fifteen minutes' walk of the main port and the Portara.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nFrom Naxos Town port, head south along the waterfront and then turn inland toward the Kastro area. Sotiros Street is within the broader Chora neighborhood — a short walk from the central square and the covered market arcade. If you are arriving by ferry, the walk from the dock takes roughly ten minutes on foot with luggage.\n\nBy car or taxi from Naxos Airport, the drive is about five minutes. Street parking in Chora can be limited in July and August; if you are renting a car, ask the property in advance about nearby parking options. The main KTEL bus terminal for the island is close by, making day trips to Apollonas, Apiranthos, or Halki straightforward without a vehicle.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town operates year-round, though many smaller pensions close from November through March. The peak summer window of July and August brings higher prices and lower availability across all accommodation categories; booking two to three months ahead is advisable for that period. June and September offer the best combination of warm weather, open businesses, and manageable crowds. Spring visits (April–May) are quieter still, with pleasant temperatures for exploring the Chora on foot.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book directly through the website** at irenenaxos.com or by phone to avoid third-party booking fees and to confirm room type.\n- **Ask about pool-view rooms** when booking — not all units have the same outlook.\n- **Use the kitchenette** to shop at the local market stalls and the supermarkets along the main road; it cuts daily costs significantly.\n- **The Chora location** means you can walk to most of what you need — the waterfront tavernas, the bakeries in the old town, and the ferry ticket offices are all within ten minutes.\n- **Bring cash** for incidental expenses; smaller pensions in Greece sometimes prefer cash for the final balance, though card acceptance is increasingly common.\n- **Confirm check-in time** before arrival, particularly if your ferry docks late or early — contact the property directly at +30 697 333 7782.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nSotiros Street sits inside Naxos Chora, which means the pension's immediate surroundings include most of the town's main attractions. The Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia — is a fifteen-minute walk north of the town center. The Venetian Kastro, the Archaeological Museum of Naxos, and the Catholic Cathedral are all within the upper town, reachable on foot in under ten minutes. The nearest town beach, Agios Georgios, begins just south of the port and is an easy walk for a morning swim before the day trips begin.\n\nFor day trips, the fertile Naxos interior — the villages of Halki, Filoti, and Apiranthos — is accessible by KTEL bus from the central station nearby.

137m away2 min walk
Simos

Simos Luxury Apartments sits in the Agios Georgios district of Naxos Town, 150 metres from the long sandy arc of Saint George Beach. The complex offers fully furnished studios designed for self-catering stays — a practical option if you want a base close to the water without committing to full hotel service for every meal.\n\nThe property is positioned on one of Naxos's most developed and family-friendly stretches of coastline, which means restaurants, mini-markets, car and motorbike rentals, and watersports operators are all within easy walking distance.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nSimos operates as a studio apartment complex rather than a traditional hotel. Each unit comes fully furnished and equipped for independent living, with the conveniences needed to cook in, eat out, or do a mix of both. Daily room service is included, which takes some of the self-catering edge off and keeps things comfortable for longer stays.\n\nThe location in the Saint George area puts you in Naxos Town's main beach resort zone. Agios Georgios Beach itself stretches over a kilometre with fine sand and shallow, calm water — conditions that suit families with young children. Windsurfing tuition and rental (the bay gets a reliable afternoon breeze), pedaloes, and beach volleyball are all available on or near the sand.\n\nThe surrounding area has the full range of resort infrastructure: tavernas and cafes line the beachfront road, and the main commercial strip of Naxos Town — with its bakeries, supermarkets, and waterfront bars — is around a ten-minute walk north toward the port.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNaxos Town (Chora) is the main hub of the island, and Agios Georgios is its southern beach extension. From the port and main square of Naxos Town, head south along the waterfront road for roughly 1.2 kilometres — the Saint George area begins where the main promenade curves toward the beach. On foot this takes about 15 minutes from the port.\n\nIf you're arriving by ferry, taxis wait outside the port gate and the fare to Agios Georgios is short. The local KTEL bus also serves Agios Georgios from the main bus terminal near the port — check current schedules at the terminal on arrival. By car or scooter, parking in the immediate area can be tight in July and August, so arriving mid-morning before the beach fills is practical.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long tourist season running from late April through October. Agios Georgios Beach is busy from late June to late August, when Naxos Town sees its peak crowds. The shoulder months — May, June, and September — offer warm sea temperatures, fewer people on the sand, and lower accommodation rates. The Meltemi wind, which blows across the Aegean most reliably in July and August, keeps temperatures manageable and makes the Saint George bay a draw for windsurfers.\n\nFor quieter evenings and easier restaurant bookings, aim for September or early October, when the sea is still warm from summer but the resort has exhaled.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Contact the property directly via phone (+30 2285 026439) or email ([email protected]) to confirm unit availability and current rates before booking through third-party platforms.\n- If you plan to explore the rest of Naxos, renting a car or scooter from one of the rental outlets nearby is more efficient than relying on buses, especially for the inland villages and more remote beaches.\n- The shallow water at Agios Georgios suits young children and nervous swimmers, but if you want wilder, less developed beaches, Plaka and Agia Anna are a short drive south.\n- Bring a shopping bag for the nearby mini-markets — stocking your studio kitchen with local Naxian cheese, potatoes, and wine is one of the better ways to eat well and cheaply on the island.\n- Evenings along the Agios Georgios beachfront are lively through summer, with several bars and restaurants open late. Request a room away from the road if you're a light sleeper during peak season.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios Beach is the immediate draw, but the surrounding area connects easily to the rest of Naxos Town's attractions. The Portara — the marble gateway of an unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia — is visible from the port and about a 20-minute walk north. The Kastro, the Venetian hilltop fortification at the centre of Chora, is also reachable on foot, with narrow lanes and the Archaeological Museum of Naxos inside its walls. For day trips, the mountain village of Halki and the Byzantine Panagia Drosiani church are roughly 30 minutes by car into the island's interior.

142m away2 min walk
Korali Garden Hotel

Korali Garden Hotel sits in Naxos Town (Chora), the island's capital, on the western edge of Naxos facing the Aegean. It's a family-run property offering rooms and apartments in a green, garden setting — practical, genuinely welcoming, and about a ten-minute walk from the sandy beach that stretches south of the old port.\n\nThe hotel is managed by the same family that owns it, and the hospitality reflects that: guests are treated less like bookings and more like returning friends. The pool is a particular draw during July and August, when temperatures in the Cyclades routinely push above 35°C.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nKorali Garden offers several room types to suit different party sizes. Standard double rooms come with one double or two single beds. Triple rooms add a sofa bed to the double configuration. For longer stays or families, the apartments include two rooms and kitchen facilities — useful if you want to prepare your own breakfast and take it out to the balcony rather than paying café prices every morning. Superior triple rooms and superior apartments round out the range, described as more spacious and modern.\n\nThe swimming pool is clean and well-maintained — reviewers specifically call it out as a genuine relief during the hottest part of the day. Room sizes get consistent praise too, with guests noting more floor space than is typical for island hotels in this price bracket.\n\nThe address places the hotel in the 843 00 postal zone of Chora Naxos, within easy walking distance of the town's main square, the market street (Papavasiliou), and the old Venetian kastro.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nFrom Naxos port, where ferries arrive from Piraeus, Paros, Santorini, and other Cycladic islands, the hotel is reachable on foot in roughly 10–15 minutes through the town center. By taxi from the port it's a two-minute ride — the taxi rank sits just outside the ferry terminal.\n\nIf you're arriving by car or rental vehicle, Naxos Town has limited but workable parking near the waterfront and in the streets south of the castle hill. The hotel can advise on the closest options at the time of booking. There is no scheduled bus route that terminates at the hotel's door, but the KTEL bus station in Naxos Town is within walking distance, connecting to villages and beaches across the island.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nKorali Garden operates as a seasonal property aligned with the Aegean tourism calendar. The peak season runs from late June through August, when rooms fill quickly and the pool sees heavy use. Booking several weeks in advance is advisable for those months.\n\nShoulder season — May, June, and September — offers drier, warm weather, smaller crowds, and more flexibility on rates. October brings cooler evenings but still pleasant daytime temperatures for exploring the island. The Naxos meltemi wind picks up in July and August; it keeps afternoons bearable but can be strong enough to affect beach comfort.\n\nFor town-based sightseeing — the Portara, the kastro, the Archaeological Museum — any time of year works. For beach days at the hotel's 10-minute walk, late May through late September is the practical window.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book the apartment if traveling with children or staying five nights or more** — the kitchen facilities and extra space make a real difference at that point.\n- **Ask the family about beach access** — the closest sandy beach south of the port is St. George (Agios Georgios), a long, gentle-sloped stretch with shallow water suitable for families.\n- **The pool hours may vary** — the listed reception hours are 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM daily; confirm pool access times directly with the hotel.\n- **Bring or buy a beach umbrella in town** — St. George beach has rental infrastructure, but Naxos Town market sells supplies at lower prices if you plan multiple beach days.\n- **Wi-Fi is standard in Greek hotels at this level** — but verify with the hotel if you need a reliable work connection, as signal quality varies by room location relative to the router.\n- **Ferry schedules change seasonally** — if you're combining this stay with island-hopping to Paros or Santorini, check current Blue Star or SeaJets timetables before booking departure dates.\n\n## About the Property\n\nKorali Garden has accumulated 227 reviews on Google with a 4.5 rating, which for a small family hotel in Naxos Town represents consistent performance over multiple seasons. The feedback pattern suggests the hotel's strengths are cleanliness, pool quality, room size, and the warmth of the family staff — the kind of factors that matter more than a gym or a spa for most island-holiday travelers.\n\nContact the hotel directly at [email protected] or by phone at +30 2285 025709 for reservations and questions. The website at koraligarden.com handles online booking.

152m away2 min walk
Naxos Diamond

Naxos Diamond Studios Apartments is a recently built self-catering property in Naxos Town, positioned 200 metres from Agios Georgios (St. George) Beach — the long, sandy stretch that runs south of the port and is the most accessible beach from the town centre. Units range from studios to full apartments, sleeping between two and five guests, making this a practical choice for couples, families, and small groups who want to cook for themselves without sacrificing comfort.\n\nThe property sits on Aloádon street in Naxos Town, within easy walking distance of the waterfront promenade, the market street, and the bus terminal that connects the town to the rest of the island. With a 4.9-star rating across 62 Google reviews, guest satisfaction appears consistently high for a property of this type.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nEvery studio and apartment at Naxos Diamond comes equipped for a fully independent stay. The kitchens include hot plates, a microwave oven, a kettle, a coffee machine, and a complete set of utensils and crockery — enough to shop at the nearby supermarkets and prepare your own meals. Each unit also has a private bathroom with 24-hour hot water, air-conditioning, satellite smart TV, a hair dryer, and a safe box.\n\nAll units have either a balcony or a veranda with outdoor furniture, which is worth factoring in if you want somewhere to sit with a coffee in the morning or a glass of local wine in the evening. Wi-Fi is free throughout. The reception desk also offers car and motorbike rental, which is useful if you plan to explore the island's interior villages and more remote beaches.\n\nThe property accommodates groups of up to five, so larger studios or apartments work well for families who would otherwise be splitting across two hotel rooms.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNaxos Diamond is in Naxos Town (Chora), the island's main port and only major urban centre. If you're arriving by ferry from Piraeus, Mykonos, Santorini, or another Cycladic island, the port is a short walk or a quick taxi ride from the property.\n\nFrom the ferry terminal, head south along the waterfront promenade toward Agios Georgios Beach — the property is in that direction, roughly 200 metres from the beach itself. Taxis are available at the port and in the town square. The main bus station (KTEL) is within walking distance, connecting Naxos Town to Filoti, Apiranthos, Halki, and coastal villages like Pyrgaki and Agia Anna.\n\nIf you're renting a car or motorbike on arrival, parking in Naxos Town can be tight in peak season; the reception's rental service may simplify logistics from day one.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has one of the longest tourist seasons in the Cyclades, running from April through October. July and August bring the most visitors and the highest temperatures, with Agios Georgios Beach getting busy by mid-morning. Staying in a self-catering unit during these months lets you avoid peak restaurant hours and manage your own schedule.\n\nMay, June, and September offer a better balance: warm water, fewer crowds, and lower nightly rates. The famous Naxian meltemi wind picks up in July and August, which keeps temperatures bearable but can make some exposed beaches rough for swimming — Agios Georgios, being in a sheltered bay, handles it better than west-facing shores.\n\nThe reception office is open daily from 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM, so plan arrivals and any rental arrangements within that window.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios Beach is the obvious draw — a broad, shallow-entry sandy beach ideal for families with children and non-strong swimmers. The southern end of the beach is calmer and less crowded than the stretch directly in front of the main hotels.\n\nNaxos Town's old Venetian kastro is a ten-to-fifteen minute walk north through the market area. The Portara, the freestanding marble doorway of an unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia, is visible from the port and accessible on foot. For provisions, there are supermarkets, bakeries, and a covered market within the town centre.\n\nThe road south along the coast from Agios Georgios leads to Agios Prokopios and Agia Anna beaches, both reachable by bus or by motorbike in under fifteen minutes.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Book direct via the official website or by phone if you want to discuss room size and layout before committing — with units sleeping 2–5, it's worth confirming which configuration suits your group.\n- Reception hours are 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM daily; if you expect a late ferry arrival, contact the property in advance to arrange key handover.\n- Use the in-house car or motorbike rental to reach Naxos's inland villages — Apiranthos, Halki, and Filoti are within 30 minutes by road and worth a half-day trip.\n- Stock up at one of the town supermarkets on arrival; the fully equipped kitchen means you can handle breakfasts and packed lunches without eating every meal out, which adds up quickly during a longer stay.\n- Agios Georgios Beach has sunbed and water-sports rental directly on the sand, so you don't need to bring equipment from the property.\n- Confirm any specific room preferences (balcony orientation, floor level) at booking — in a smaller apartment property, these details can make a meaningful difference.

159m away2 min walk
Pasas Castle

Pasas Castle is a thematic apartment complex in the center of Naxos Town, built in a fortified castle style and operated as a family-run luxury accommodation since 2018. Each self-contained unit has its own private entrance and a distinct identity — named after figures from Greek mythology, including Hyperion, Aphrodite, Aeolus, Atlas, and Poseidon. It's a deliberate, considered alternative to standard hotel rooms, and with a Google rating of 4.7 across 58 reviews, it consistently delivers on that promise.\n\nThe location puts you within easy reach of Naxos Town's archaeological sites, the old Kastro quarter, the waterfront, and Agios Georgios Beach — the long sandy stretch just south of the port that serves as the town's most accessible swimming spot.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nPasas Castle operates as a complex of houses within a single building, each apartment fully independent with a separate entrance. The setup is closer to a collection of private residences than a traditional hotel: no shared lobby to pass through, no communal corridors. The mythological naming theme extends into the design of each unit, meaning the feel varies from one apartment to the next.\n\nThe property positions itself around sustainability and environmental responsibility, a commitment that has been part of the operation since its founding. Guests contact the property directly via phone or the official email for reservations, and the complex is open around the clock every day of the week.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nPasas Castle is in Naxos Center (84300), the main town on the island, also known as Chora. If you're arriving by ferry, the port is within walking distance — Naxos Town is compact enough that most of the center is reachable on foot from the dock in under 15 minutes.\n\nBy car or scooter, Naxos Town is well signed from the island's main road network. Parking in the town center itself can be tight in summer; arriving early in the day or asking the property about nearby parking options is advisable. No airport serves Naxos directly for commercial flights, so most visitors arrive by ferry from Piraeus, Mykonos, Paros, or Santorini.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long tourism season running from April through October. July and August bring the highest demand, so booking well in advance is essential for summer stays. The shoulder months — May, June, and September — offer warm temperatures, calmer seas, and less pressure on accommodation availability. Naxos Town remains lively through October, with many restaurants and shops staying open later into autumn than on smaller islands.\n\nFor those sensitive to the meltemi, the strong north wind that sweeps the Cyclades in mid-summer, Naxos Town itself is reasonably sheltered compared to the island's exposed northern coastline.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Book directly via the property's email ([email protected]) or phone (+30 2285 026493) to ensure you get the specific apartment that suits your group size and preferences.\n- Each apartment has a distinct character; it's worth asking which unit is available and what makes it different before confirming.\n- Agios Georgios Beach is a short walk south from the town center — useful to know if beach access is a priority when choosing your dates.\n- The Kastro, Naxos Town's medieval fortified quarter, is within easy walking distance and worth a morning visit before the day heats up.\n- The property follows sustainability guidelines, so expect environmentally conscious practices in amenities and waste management.\n- The complex suits couples and small families looking for privacy over hotel-style service; if you need a concierge or daily housekeeping by default, clarify arrangements when booking.\n\n## The Setting: Naxos Town's Historic Center\n\nNaxos Chora is the island's largest settlement and administrative hub. The old Kastro sits above the harbor on a hill, its Venetian-era tower houses and Catholic cathedral still largely intact. Below it, the Bourgo neighborhood fans out toward the waterfront, lined with bakeries, cafes, jewelry workshops, and restaurants serving local specialties — Naxian potatoes, graviera cheese, and fresh fish.\n\nStaying centrally means you have immediate access to this entire streetscape on foot, and day trips to the island's interior villages (Halki, Filoti, Apeiranthos) or its famous beaches (Plaka, Agia Anna, Mikri Vigla) are straightforward by rental car or scooter.

171m away2 min walk
Zefiri Studios

Zefiri Studios sits a short walk from Plaka Beach on the southwest coast of Naxos, about 7 km from Naxos Town (Chora). The property combines the whitewashed, low-rise aesthetic of Cycladic architecture with practical self-catering facilities — a straightforward setup that earns it a 4.9 rating from 71 Google reviews, which is unusually consistent for a small studios property.\n\nPlaka itself is one of Naxos's longest stretches of sand: golden, wide, and backed by low dunes rather than dense development. The water stays shallow for some distance out, which makes it popular with families and swimmers rather than just sunbathers.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nZefiri Studios (also listed as Zefyros Studios) offers double studio apartments with balconies oriented toward the Aegean. The self-catering format means each unit comes with kitchen or kitchenette facilities, so you can manage your own meals — useful on the Plaka stretch where dining options are more limited than in Chora. The property operates a 24-hour front desk and provides transfer services to and from Naxos Airport, which removes the guesswork from arrival logistics. The reception hours listed are 7:00 AM to 11:30 PM daily; for late arrivals, contact the property in advance to confirm arrangements.\n\nThe Cycladic design keeps rooms bright and cool: thick walls, simple furnishings, whitewash exteriors. Balconies face the sea, so the sunset view is west-facing and unobstructed from most units.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**By bus:** KTEL Naxos runs regular services between Naxos Town and Plaka Beach. The stop closest to the studios is on the main coastal road. Journey time from Chora is roughly 20–25 minutes depending on stops.\n\n**By car or scooter:** From Naxos Town, follow the coastal road south through Agios Georgios, Agios Prokopios, and Agia Anna, then continue to Plaka. The drive takes about 15 minutes. Parking is available on the road beside the property.\n\n**By taxi:** Taxis from Naxos Town to Plaka run at a fixed short-haul rate; the trip takes around 15 minutes. The studios also offer airport transfers directly — contact them at +30 694 581 4701 or [email protected] to arrange.\n\n**From the port:** The ferry terminal is in Naxos Town. From there, take the bus or arrange the studio's transfer service.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nPlaka Beach gets busy in July and August, but even at peak season the beach is long enough that it rarely feels crowded. The studios are worth booking in late May, June, or September when sea temperatures are still warm, prices tend to be lower, and the coastal road is noticeably quieter. The Aegean wind (meltemi) picks up on this coast from mid-July onward — useful context if you plan to windsurf, less ideal if you want flat water for swimming. For the best sunsets from your balcony, arrive any time from late April through October.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early for July and August.** A 4.9-rated property with a small number of units fills up fast in peak season. Contact them directly via email or check the website at zefyrosstudios.com.\n- **Use the airport transfer.** Naxos Airport is a small regional hub with limited taxi availability on busy arrival days. The studio's own transfer service saves waiting time.\n- **Buy groceries in Chora or Agia Anna.** Self-catering makes most sense if you stock up before arriving; the larger supermarkets are in Naxos Town.\n- **Rent a vehicle from the studios or nearby.** Plaka is a good base for the southern beaches — Kastraki, Aliko, and Orkos are all within a 10-minute drive — but you'll want your own transport to reach them comfortably.\n- **Windsurfing equipment is available on Plaka Beach.** The meltemi wind that builds in summer makes this one of the better beginner-to-intermediate windsurfing stretches on Naxos.\n- **Check the bus timetable before your first evening in Chora.** The last bus back to Plaka from Naxos Town runs in the early evening during shoulder season; confirm the current schedule with KTEL Naxos on arrival.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nPlaka Beach extends several kilometers along the coast and connects north to Agia Anna and Agios Prokopios, both of which have a wider range of tavernas, cafes, and small shops. The village of Vivlos (also called Tripodes) sits a few kilometers inland and has a handful of traditional kafeneions and a working windmill visible from the road. For Naxos Town's waterfront, the Portara, and the Kastro, you're a 15-minute drive or 20-minute bus ride north. The island's mountain villages — Halki, Filoti, Apeiranthos — are reachable in under an hour by car from Plaka.

179m away2 min walk
Depis Place

Depis Place and Apartments sits in the Agios Georgios neighbourhood of Naxos Town, close enough to Chora's main street to walk for groceries or dinner, and close enough to the beach to make morning swims part of the daily routine. With 13 self-catering units, it pitches itself at independent travellers and families who want a base rather than a resort — somewhere to keep food in a fridge and come and go on their own schedule.\n\nThe property is part of the broader Depis Hotels group on Naxos, which also manages villas and a second apartments complex in the Plaka area. The Agios Georgios location is the most central of the group's offerings.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nDepis Place runs 13 fully equipped studios and apartments sleeping two to four people. Each unit is self-catering, meaning a kitchen or kitchenette with the basics covered — useful for cutting costs during longer stays or when travelling with children. Rooms are soundproofed and made up with hypoallergenic mattresses and linen.\n\nFacilities beyond the room itself include free Wi-Fi throughout the property and free on-site parking, which matters on Naxos if you plan to hire a car and explore the interior villages or reach the longer beaches to the south. Breakfast is available on request for an additional charge. Towels and toiletries are provided. The property is non-smoking and does not accept pets.\n\nFor guests who want more from their stay, the team can arrange transfers from Naxos Airport or the port (surcharge), car and motorbike hire, guided minibus or hiking tours, and even optional yoga sessions, cooking classes, and traditional weaving lessons — all bookable on request.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nDepis Place is located on the Naxos–Paros road on the southern fringe of Naxos Town, close to the Agios Georgios beach turn-off. By foot from the port, the walk takes around ten minutes heading south along the waterfront promenade. From Naxos Airport, the property is roughly 1.5 km — a five-minute taxi ride.\n\nIf you arrive by ferry, the port is 800 m away. KTEL buses from the main bus station in Naxos Town serve the Agios Georgios area frequently in summer. Taxis are plentiful at the port and at the central square. Free parking on site makes arriving by rental car or hired scooter straightforward.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long tourist season running from late April through October. The Agios Georgios area is livelier from June to September, when the beach fills up and the tavernas along the strip stay open late. July and August bring peak crowds and higher accommodation prices; booking well in advance is essential for those months.\n\nFor a quieter stay with warm enough water for swimming, May, June, and September offer a good balance. Shoulder-season guests will also find Naxos Town itself easier to explore — the alleys of the Kastro are noticeably less congested once the summer peak passes.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book airport or port transfers in advance** if you're arriving late — taxis can be limited during busy ferry arrivals in summer.\n- **Request breakfast** when booking if you want it; it's not included by default, and having the option sorted ahead saves the first-morning scramble.\n- **Hire a car or scooter on arrival** — the property assists with rentals, and having wheels unlocks Agios Prokopios, Plaka, and the mountain villages with ease.\n- **The reception hours listed are 8:00 AM–12:00 PM daily.** If you expect a late arrival, contact the property directly so check-in can be arranged outside those hours.\n- **Agios Georgios beach** is a short walk for a calm, shallow swim; for more open-water conditions, Agios Prokopios is a few minutes south by car.\n- **Naxos Town centre is 100 m away** — all the waterfront cafés, supermarkets, and the path up to the Venetian Kastro are effectively on your doorstep.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios is the first organised beach south of the port — sandy, shallow, and well-equipped with sunbeds and tavernas, making it reliable for families. Continuing south, Agios Prokopios (around 6 km) is the island's busiest cosmopolitan beach, with water sports and a long Blue Flag stretch. Agia Anna and Plaka follow further down the same coastal road, the latter known for its dunes and more relaxed atmosphere.\n\nNaxos Town itself — the medieval Kastro, the Temple of Apollo gateway (Portara), the Archaeological Museum, and the market street of Papavasileiou — is a ten-minute walk north. The Naxos ferry terminal, connecting the island to Paros, Mykonos, Santorini, Piraeus, and other Cycladic destinations, is 800 m from the property.

198m away2 min walk
Porto Naxos Hotel

Porto Naxos Hotel sits on Andrea Papandreou street in Naxos Town (Chora), rated 4.5 out of 5 across 207 guest reviews. It is a short walk from both the sandy beach of Agios Georgios and the medieval lanes of the Old Town, which makes it a practical base whether you are here to swim, explore the Venetian Kastro quarter, or day-trip to the island's interior villages.\n\nThe hotel markets itself on a direct-booking proposition — best-rate guarantee, loyalty benefits, and a more personalised stay — so it is worth checking its own site before committing to a third-party platform.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nPorto Naxos has 33 rooms, each measuring 30 square metres. Superior double rooms look out over either the garden or the swimming pool. The design is described on the hotel's own website as contemporary, with the Aegean breeze factored into the experience — rooms are not sealed off from the island's natural ventilation rhythm, which matters in July and August when the meltemi wind provides welcome relief from the heat.\n\nOn-site food and drink options include a pool bar, a lobby lounge called Thyme & Olive, and a Greek breakfast served each morning. A traditional Greek hotel breakfast typically means a spread of local cheese, honey, yogurt, olives, bread, and eggs — a better start to the day than most buffet alternatives. The hotel also has facilities for meetings and small weddings.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe hotel's address — Andrea Papandreou, Naxos 843 00 — places it in the lower part of Naxos Town, close to the seafront promenade. From the port, where ferries from Piraeus, Mykonos, and Paros dock, the hotel is roughly a 10-minute walk south along the waterfront. Taxis are available at the port exit and the fare to the hotel is minimal.\n\nIf you are driving, Naxos Town has limited on-street parking near the seafront; the hotel can advise on the nearest options when you book. The island has no airport-to-town bus service in the conventional sense, but taxis from Naxos Airport (SMI) take about 10 minutes.\n\nAgios Georgios beach is walkable — typically 5 to 10 minutes on foot heading south from the hotel.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a longer viable season than many Cycladic islands. May and June offer warm temperatures, manageable crowds, and fully operational hotels without peak-summer prices. July and August are the busiest months; the meltemi wind is consistent during this period, which keeps temperatures bearable but can make some northern beaches rougher. September and early October remain warm, and Naxos Town quietens noticeably after the school holiday period ends in late August.\n\nFor the hotel itself, arriving outside the midday heat makes check-in more relaxed. If you are catching a morning ferry from Piraeus, you will arrive in Naxos by early afternoon — a reasonable time to settle in before exploring.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book direct.** The hotel's website states a best-rate guarantee, so compare the direct price before using aggregators.\n- **Request a pool-view room** if garden quietness is less important to you than the visual payoff — the pool is the hotel's social focal point.\n- **Have breakfast on-site at least once.** A proper Greek breakfast with local Naxian products (the island produces well-regarded graviera cheese and thyme honey) is a better introduction to the island than grabbing coffee on the go.\n- **Walk to Agios Georgios early.** The beach fills up by 10 am in summer; heading down before 9 am gives you the pick of sunbeds and calmer water.\n- **Use the hotel as a base for day trips.** Apiranthos, Halki, and the Tragaea plateau are all reachable by car or bus within 30–45 minutes, and a concierge or front desk can point you toward the KTEL bus schedule.\n- **Confirm arrival time.** The hotel is open 24 hours, so late ferry arrivals are not a problem, but a quick message ahead of an after-midnight check-in is courteous.\n\n## Location and Surroundings\n\nAndrea Papandreou street feeds into the main Naxos Town waterfront, which means the Portara — the freestanding marble gateway of an unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia — is visible across the harbour from the hotel's general vicinity. The Old Town's Kastro, a 13th-century Venetian fortification with intact walls and a small archaeological museum inside, is a 10-to-15-minute walk uphill from the seafront.\n\nFor dining, the promenade and the streets immediately behind it have a concentration of tavernas serving fresh fish and mezedes. The market street running parallel to the waterfront has local shops selling Naxian spirits (kitron, made from citron leaves, is the island's signature liqueur), cheese, and produce — useful if you want to put together a picnic for a beach day.

214m away3 min walk
Porto Naxos

Porto Naxos is a hotel on Andrea Papandreou street in Naxos Town, positioned close to the island's main port and the commercial waterfront. With a 4.5-star rating across more than 200 Google reviews, it draws consistently positive feedback from travelers who want a central base without straying far from the ferry terminal or the old town.\n\nThe address places it on one of Naxos Town's main access roads, making it straightforward to reach whether you're arriving by ferry, rental car, or taxi from the airport. The surrounding area is walkable to the Chora's seafront promenade, the market street, and the causeway leading to the Portara.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nPorto Naxos operates around the clock, with 24-hour reception every day of the week — useful if you're arriving on a late-night ferry or an early-morning flight connection. The hotel's location on Andrea Papandreou puts it within easy reach of the port's bus station, where KTEL coaches depart for the island's villages and beaches.\n\nThe central position means you're trading seclusion for convenience: the waterfront restaurants, supermarkets, and the entrance to the Venetian kastro neighbourhood are all reachable on foot in under ten minutes. For travelers who want to use Naxos Town as a hub and explore the island by bus or rented vehicle, this setup works well.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**By ferry:** Porto Naxos is a short walk from the Naxos port terminal. From the ferry disembarkation point, head along the waterfront promenade and turn onto Andrea Papandreou — the journey takes under five minutes on foot.\n\n**By bus:** The KTEL bus station sits adjacent to the port. Buses from all major villages and beaches on the island terminate here, dropping you within easy walking distance of the hotel.\n\n**By car or taxi:** If arriving by rental car, Andrea Papandreou is accessible directly from the port road. Street parking exists in the area, though it can be competitive in high summer. A taxi from Naxos Airport (about 8 km south of Chora) takes roughly 15 minutes.\n\n**By air:** Naxos National Airport (JNX) serves domestic routes from Athens. From the airport, taxis and occasional bus services connect to Naxos Town.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town stays active from April through October, with peak crowds in July and August when ferry traffic is highest. Staying centrally during peak season means noise from the port area is a realistic consideration — rooms facing away from the waterfront will be quieter. Shoulder months (May, June, September, early October) offer calmer conditions, lower prices, and more comfortable temperatures for walking around the Chora. The hotel's 24-hour operation makes it equally practical for winter arrivals, though many island-facing businesses reduce hours outside summer.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book ahead for August.** Naxos is one of the Cyclades' most popular islands, and central hotels fill quickly in peak season.\n- **Confirm room type at booking.** A central location can mean varied room sizes and views; clarify what faces the port versus the town side.\n- **Use the port bus station.** With Porto Naxos a short walk from KTEL departures, you can reach Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, Plaka, and Apollonas without renting a vehicle.\n- **Walk to the Portara at sunset.** The causeway to the Temple of Apollo's remaining gateway is about 10–15 minutes on foot from the waterfront and is best visited in the early evening.\n- **Ask about parking.** If you plan to rent a car during your stay, verify whether the hotel has dedicated parking or can advise on nearby options.\n- **Contact directly for current rates.** Prices vary significantly by season; calling +30 2285 023970 or checking portonaxos.gr gives you the most accurate availability.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe Portara (Temple of Apollo gateway) on the islet of Palatia is the most recognizable landmark within walking distance. The Venetian kastro — the medieval fortified hilltop neighbourhood with its distinctive tower houses and narrow lanes — is about 10 minutes on foot uphill from the port. The main market street, Papavasiliou, runs parallel to the waterfront and carries the bulk of Naxos Town's bakeries, delis, and shops selling local products like graviera cheese and Naxian potatoes. Agios Georgios Beach, the closest sandy stretch to the Chora, begins at the southern edge of the waterfront and is reachable in under 10 minutes on foot.

219m away3 min walk
Naxos City Hostel

Naxos City Hostel sits on Ioannou Paparigopoulou, a street in Naxos Town (Chora), putting guests within easy reach of the port, the Portara, and the maze of alleys that runs through the Venetian kastro district. It operates as a straightforward budget property, offering both dormitory beds and private rooms for travelers who want a central base without paying boutique hotel prices.\n\nThe hostel is a practical choice for solo travelers and backpackers passing through the Cyclades. Naxos Town is a natural hub — ferries connect directly to Piraeus, Paros, Santorini, and Mykonos — so a hostel near the waterfront makes logistical sense for those island-hopping on a schedule.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nNaxos City Hostel offers the standard split that budget travelers look for: shared dormitory rooms for the lowest nightly rate, and private rooms for those who want a door they can close. The address on Ioannou Paparigopoulou places it within the older residential fabric of Chora, a short walk from the main waterfront promenade and the covered market street. Facilities details are limited in publicly available information, so confirm specifics — Wi-Fi, linen, locker availability, air conditioning — directly with the property before booking.\n\nThe rating in available data is based on a very small number of reviews, so it should not be treated as a reliable signal in either direction.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe hostel is in Naxos Town, which is the island's main port settlement. If you're arriving by ferry, the port is the first thing you'll see; from the dock, Ioannou Paparigopoulou is walkable in under ten minutes heading into the town center. There is no airport on Naxos — the island does have a small airstrip served by domestic flights from Athens, and from there a taxi into Chora takes around ten minutes. Local buses on Naxos radiate from the main square in Chora, making it straightforward to reach beaches and villages across the island from this central location. Street parking in Naxos Town is limited; if you're renting a car or scooter, ask the hostel about nearby parking options before you arrive.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town is a year-round settlement, but the hostel experience will vary significantly by season. July and August are peak months — the island fills with Greek and international visitors, prices rise, and bed availability tightens. Booking ahead is essential in summer. May, June, and September offer a better balance: warm enough to swim, less crowded, and often cheaper. Outside of summer, some budget accommodation on the Cyclades closes for the winter, so verify directly that the hostel is open if you're planning an off-season stay.\n\nFor sightseeing in Naxos Town itself, mornings are the most comfortable time to walk the kastro alleys and visit the Portara before the midday heat sets in.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Confirm room availability and current pricing directly through the hostel's website, as the booking process for small properties can change seasonally.\n- Bring a padlock if you're staying in a dorm — many Cycladic hostels provide lockers but not locks.\n- The hostel's location in Chora means you can cover the town's main sights — the Portara, the kastro, the Archaeological Museum of Naxos — entirely on foot.\n- Naxos Town's covered market street (parallel to the waterfront) has bakeries, fruit sellers, and a good selection of tavernas at lower prices than the seafront.\n- If you're island-hopping, check ferry schedules at the port directly or via the KTEL bus timetable for day trips inland to Mount Zas and Halki village.\n- Motorbike and scooter rentals are available near the port and significantly expand your range from a central Chora base.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe hostel's position in Naxos Town gives guests immediate access to the island's densest concentration of sights. The Portara — the marble doorway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo — is roughly a ten-minute walk north along the waterfront on the islet of Palatia. The kastro, the medieval Venetian-built hilltop fortification that rises above Chora, is walkable in five minutes from most points in the lower town. Inside the kastro walls you'll find the Naxos Archaeological Museum, the Catholic cathedral, and several well-preserved Venetian tower-houses. The nearest beach to the hostel is Agios Georgios, a broad sandy bay a short walk south of the port, which is calm enough for families and easy to reach without transport.

220m away3 min walk
Saint Vlassis

Saint Vlassis is a luxury hotel on Konstantinou Karamanli, one of the main approach roads into Naxos Town (Chora). With a 4.8 rating across 247 Google reviews, it sits at the upper end of what the island offers for accommodation — and the property leans into that positioning deliberately, marketing itself to travelers who want personal service alongside comfort rather than anonymous resort scale.\n\nThe ethos here is personal. The website excerpt references knowing guests by name, and the on-site concierge team is a recurring point in guest feedback. If you're planning a honeymoon or a longer stay on the island and want a base that handles logistics — beach suggestions, restaurant bookings, local itineraries — Saint Vlassis is built for exactly that.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nRooms range from standard categories up to a Honeymoon Suite with a rain shower. The hotel runs its own restaurant, which focuses on local Naxian cuisine and hosts periodic events — useful if you want to eat well without heading out every night. Mornings start with a Mediterranean buffet breakfast included for guests.\n\nThe setting is described as peaceful and countryside-adjacent despite being within reach of Naxos Town's harbor and narrow Kastro lanes. That balance — walkable to the old town but removed from its noise — is one of the property's clearer practical advantages. Parking is available on site, which matters in high season when Chora's streets become difficult to navigate by car.\n\nThe hotel is open 24 hours, with front desk and concierge coverage around the clock.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nSaint Vlassis sits on Konstantinou Karamanli in Naxos Town, roughly a 10–15 minute walk from the Naxos port ferry terminal. If you're arriving by ferry, you can walk with light luggage or take one of the taxis that wait at the port. The hotel's coordinates place it just south of the main Chora area, accessible by the coastal road.\n\nBy car from Naxos Airport, the drive is under 10 minutes — the airport sits close to the southern edge of Naxos Town. On-site parking means you won't need to hunt for a space if you're renting a vehicle to explore the island's interior villages.\n\nLocal buses connect Naxos Town to major beaches and villages; the main KTEL bus station is near the port, a short walk or taxi ride from the hotel.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town runs year-round at a low hum, but the island's high season runs from late June through August, when ferry traffic is heaviest and rooms fill quickly. Saint Vlassis's rating suggests consistent quality across seasons, but booking direct in advance is advisable for July and August, particularly if you want the Honeymoon Suite.\n\nShoulder months — May, June, September, and early October — offer calmer streets, warm sea temperatures, and more availability. The meltemi wind that sweeps the Cyclades in August can make north-facing beaches choppy; the hotel's concierge can steer you toward sheltered alternatives like Alyko Beach on the southwest coast during those windows.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book direct** via the hotel's website or by phone; the hotel runs an SV Hotel Loyalty Club suggesting benefits for direct bookings.\n- **Ask the concierge** about beach conditions and current restaurant recommendations — local knowledge here is a genuine resource, not a formality.\n- **Bring or rent a vehicle** if you plan to explore Naxos's mountain villages (Apeiranthos, Filoti, Halki) — the island rewards those with wheels.\n- **Check the restaurant's event calendar** before arrival; the hotel hosts local cuisine evenings that are worth timing your stay around.\n- **For honeymoon stays**, contact the hotel directly at [email protected] to discuss suite availability and any arrival arrangements in advance.\n- **Sunset at Alyko Beach** is referenced in the hotel's own content as a recommended end-of-day destination — it's about 15 km south of Naxos Town along the west coast road.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nKonstantinou Karamanli feeds directly into Naxos Town center, putting the Portara (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia) within a 15-minute walk. The Kastro, Naxos's medieval Venetian citadel, is similarly close — its narrow lanes contain several small museums and churches worth an hour of exploration.\n\nNaxos Town's harbor promenade holds the main concentration of cafes, tavernas, and bars. Agios Georgios Beach, the long sandy stretch immediately south of the port, is the closest swimming option and reachable on foot in under 20 minutes. For day trips, the bus to Plaka Beach on the west coast runs regularly in summer.\n\n---

224m away3 min walk
Studios Maria

Studios Maria — listed under the Naxos Enjoy Apartments brand — sits in the Koti area of Naxos Town (Chora), a quiet residential pocket that keeps you close to everything without putting you on a noisy tourist strip. Agios Georgios beach is 250 metres away, the main square 200 metres, and the ferry port 600 metres — distances you can cover on foot in minutes.\n\nThe property was fully refurbished in 2019, so the studios and apartments look fresh rather than worn-in. With a Google rating of 4.0 across 29 reviews, it sits in reliably decent territory for self-catering accommodation at this price point.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe accommodation spans four unit types: a Deluxe Double Studio, a Deluxe Triple Studio, a One-Bedroom Apartment, and a Two-Bedroom Apartment — covering solo travellers, couples, families, and small groups. Every unit includes a kitchenette with refrigerator (practical for storing beach snacks and breakfast supplies), flat-screen satellite TV, air conditioning, free Wi-Fi, and a private bathroom with shower and hairdryer.\n\nThe kitchenette setup suits travellers who want flexibility — you can skip the restaurant bill on quieter evenings without being tied to a full kitchen. The property has a working arrangement with a café 40 metres away where guests can take breakfast, which is a straightforward alternative to cooking in the room.\n\nWithin 150 metres you'll find car and motorbike rental companies, restaurants, and bars. A supermarket is 50 metres from the door — unusually convenient for self-caterers who want to stock up on local produce, wine, or anything they need for the beach.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nStudios Maria is located in the Koti neighbourhood of Naxos Town (843 00). The coordinates place it inland from Agios Georgios beach, on the south side of Chora.\n\n- **On foot from the port:** The ferry port is 600 metres away — roughly an eight-minute walk through town. Manageable with luggage.\n- **By bus:** The nearest bus stop is 100 metres from the property. The KTEL Naxos bus network connects Naxos Town with the main beaches and villages across the island.\n- **By car or motorbike:** Free public parking is available within 150 metres. Car and motorbike rental is available from agencies within the same radius, making it easy to pick up transport on arrival.\n- **From the airport:** Naxos Airport is 2 kilometres away — a short taxi ride or, for light packers, a doable bike ride.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town is a year-round destination, but Studios Maria will appeal most to travellers visiting between late April and October, when Agios Georgios beach is swimmable and the island's restaurants, shops, and boat connections are fully operational.\n\nJuly and August are peak season: Agios Georgios gets crowded, Naxos Town buzzes until late, and accommodation books up quickly. Shoulder months — May, June, and September — offer calmer beaches, lower prices, and more availability. The Meltemi wind arrives in earnest from July onward and can make the west-facing beach choppy on some afternoons, though mornings are typically calm.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early for summer.** With only a handful of unit types, the property fills up fast in July and August. Booking directly via the website may give you more flexibility.\n- **Use the kitchenette.** The supermarket 50 metres away stocks local Naxian produce — the island is known for its potatoes, cheese (graviera and arseniko), and citrus. Stocking up saves money and adds to the experience.\n- **Rent a vehicle on arrival.** Car and motorbike rental is steps from the door. Naxos has some of the best road access of any Cycladic island, and having wheels opens up Halki, Apeiranthos, and the less-visited beaches on the east coast.\n- **Walk to Agios Georgios.** The beach is 250 metres away — a shallow, sandy bay that's calm and well-suited to families. It's one of the longest sandy beaches within walking distance of any Cycladic town.\n- **Ask about breakfast.** The affiliated café 40 metres from the property is a convenient starting point for the day without adding much to your bill.\n- **Check in at the port.** If you're arriving by ferry, the 600-metre walk is easy — but confirm whether the property offers any luggage assistance or meet-and-greet, especially for late-night sailings.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe location genuinely earns its keep. Agios Georgios beach starts at the southern edge of Naxos Town and stretches south for roughly 1.5 kilometres — wide, sandy, and sheltered from the worst of the Meltemi. It has sunbed rentals, a couple of beach bars, and shallow water near the shore.\n\nThe Kastro (Venetian castle) is 800 metres away on the hill above the old town — worth the uphill walk for the views and the medieval lanes inside. The Portara, the iconic marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo, sits on the islet of Palatia at the northern tip of the port, about 15 minutes on foot from the property. The main square and Naxos Town's market street (with bakeries, delis, and shops selling local products) are a two-minute walk.

225m away3 min walk
Santa Katerina

Santa Katerina Studios & Apartments occupies a quietly enviable position in Naxos Town — 200 metres from the long sandy arc of Agios Georgios beach and about 400 metres from the Chora's old market lane. It's a recently renovated property that blends Cycladic stonework, exposed wood, and rock finishes into something that reads as both local and considered. With a 4.9-star rating across 70 Google reviews, it consistently punches above its size for independent travellers who want a real base rather than a passing bed.\n\nThe property bills itself as a studios-and-apartments operation, which means it's designed around guests who intend to stay a few days, cook occasionally, and move at their own pace. Families, small groups, and couples all feature in the target mix — and the room range reflects that breadth.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nSanta Katerina offers several room configurations, from Superior Double Rooms and Superior Double Studios to Two-Bedroom Suites, a Two-Bedroom Grand Suite, and a Penthouse One-Bedroom Suite with a view. The standout design feature across the apartments is the living room with fireplace — unusual for a beach-adjacent property and practical for shoulder-season visits when Naxos evenings cool quickly. Every unit includes a fully equipped kitchen, so you're not dependent on eating out for every meal.\n\nThe interiors lean into Cycladic style without being a pastiche of it: whitewashed walls alongside natural wood accents and stone detailing give the rooms texture and warmth. The renovation appears recent enough that finishes remain fresh and the overall feel is tidy rather than tired.\n\nThe rooftop garden studio is the most distinctive option in the lineup — a self-contained unit with outdoor space that likely offers views toward the beach or the old town's hillside profile.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nSanta Katerina is at Saint George Beach, Naxos 843 00, coordinates 37.0988, 25.3777. From the Naxos Town ferry port, the walk takes roughly 10–12 minutes south along the waterfront promenade. If you're arriving by ferry with luggage, the port is well-served by taxis; the ride to St George Beach costs only a few euros.\n\nBy car, Agios Georgios is signposted from the main road entering Naxos Town from the airport. Parking in the St George area is generally easier than in the Chora proper, though it tightens in July and August. The island's KTEL bus connects the main bus terminal near the port to Agios Georgios regularly in summer.\n\nNaxos Airport is approximately 3 kilometres south; a taxi from arrivals to Santa Katerina takes around five minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nAgios Georgios beach is sheltered and family-friendly, which makes it popular from late June through August. If you're staying at Santa Katerina in peak season, book well ahead — a 4.9-rated property with kitchens this close to the beach fills early. May, June, and September offer cooler temperatures, fewer crowds on the beach, and the chance to appreciate the fireplace-equipped apartments for what they are rather than what they look like in a photo.\n\nNaxos benefits from the meltemi wind in July and August, which keeps temperatures tolerable even in the height of summer, though it can make the beach blustery on some afternoons.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book direct or early.** With only a handful of suite configurations, availability at this rating level goes fast in summer. Contact the property at [email protected] or call +30 2285 025431.\n- **Use the kitchen.** Naxos Town's market street (a short walk north) sells excellent local products — Naxian potatoes, graviera cheese, and fresh produce. A self-catering stay makes sense here.\n- **Ask about the penthouse view.** If you're celebrating something or simply want the best outlook, the Penthouse One-Bedroom Suite is the unit to enquire about first.\n- **Walk to the beach early.** Agios Georgios is only 200 metres away. Reaching it before 9am means you'll have choice of sunbeds and calm water before the beach fills.\n- **Use the property as a base.** The hotel's location at the edge of Naxos Town gives you quick access to the Chora for evenings out, while the beach is directly on your doorstep for daytime.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios beach itself offers water sports facilities — a useful bonus if you're travelling with children or want to add activity to a relaxed stay. The beach is sandy and gently shelving, making it one of the safest swimming spots on the island.\n\nThe Chora's old town (Kastro quarter) is about a 10-minute walk north. The Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia — is visible from the waterfront and reachable in under 15 minutes on foot from the property. The main commercial strip along the port has bakeries, supermarkets, tavernas, and cafes within easy walking distance.\n\nFor day trips, Naxos's interior villages (Halki, Apeiranthos, Filoti) are all reachable by car within 30–45 minutes, and the island's wilder west-coast beaches (Plaka, Agia Anna, Mikri Vigla) are a short drive south.

233m away3 min walk
Naxos holidays

Naxos Holidays Hotel is a three-star property on the southern edge of Naxos Town (Chora), positioned within a five-minute walk of both the town center and the long sandy stretch of Agios Georgios beach. It sits in the Agios Georgios neighborhood — one of the most convenient parts of the island for travelers who want easy access to the waterfront, the main square, and the bus station without paying the premium of the old Venetian kastro quarter.\n\nThe hotel is built in the whitewashed Cycladic style, with the bright geometry and calm color palette typical of the Cyclades. It targets visitors who want a comfortable, well-located base rather than a boutique resort, and its price point reflects that — one of the more accessible three-star options in this part of the island.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nRooms at Naxos Holidays are described as comfortable and spacious, with the amenities you'd expect at the three-star level. Several room types offer sea views, which at this location means sightlines toward the bay of Agios Georgios and the open Aegean. The hotel's standout communal feature is its swimming pool, which is among the larger ones available at similarly priced properties in Naxos Town. A pool bar operates during the day and into the evening, serving snacks and drinks to guests relaxing on the sundecks. The gardens around the pool are well maintained and add some shade and greenery to the outdoor areas.\n\nWith a Google rating of 3.7 from 361 reviews, the property has a solid volume of feedback — enough to give a reliable read. Guests consistently point to location and value as strengths. Service consistency appears to vary more than the physical setup, so managing expectations around a budget-friendly three-star experience is worthwhile.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNaxos Holidays Hotel is located in the Agios Georgios area of Chora, the island's main town and the point of arrival for all ferries. If you're arriving by ferry from Piraeus, Santorini, or any other Cycladic island, the port is about a 10-minute walk north along the waterfront promenade. Taxis are available at the port for a short ride.\n\nIf you're driving or renting a car on Naxos, the hotel is easy to find off the main coastal road skirting Agios Georgios beach. Parking in this neighborhood can be tight in high summer, so check with the hotel directly about any on-site or nearby options. The main KTEL bus station in Naxos Town — the hub for routes to Filoti, Apiranthos, Apollonas, and the southern beaches — is within walking distance, making it practical to explore the interior of the island without a vehicle.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has one of the longer and more reliable summer seasons in the Cyclades, running from late April through mid-October. July and August bring the most visitors, the strongest meltemi wind (which keeps temperatures bearable but can affect beach conditions at exposed spots), and the highest room rates. If you want Agios Georgios beach at its calmest and the hotel at its best value, aim for late May through June or September into early October. The light in those shoulder months is excellent for photography, the sea is warm enough from June onward, and Naxos Town's restaurants and shops are fully operational without the peak-season crowds.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Book directly through the hotel website or call ahead if you want a sea-view room confirmed — these tend to go first in peak season.\n- The Agios Georgios beachfront is an easy walk from the hotel; for quieter or more dramatic beaches like Plaka or Agia Anna, you'll need the bus or a vehicle.\n- The Portara (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo) is about a 15-minute walk north along the harbor — a worthwhile detour at any time of day, especially at dusk.\n- Naxos Town's main market street, Papavasileiou, runs just inland from the waterfront and has a concentrated stretch of tavernas, bakeries, and shops — close enough to walk to for dinner without needing transport.\n- The hotel's pool bar is a practical alternative to beach clubs on days when the meltemi picks up and makes open-sea swimming choppy.\n- Confirm check-in time when you book — ferry arrivals from Athens (Piraeus) can be early morning, and early access is not guaranteed.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios beach itself begins essentially at the hotel's doorstep — it's a broad, gently shelving sandy beach well suited to families and less experienced swimmers, with sun-lounger rentals, a few beach bars, and calm water on most days. A short walk north along the seafront brings you to the old port, the covered market, and the base of the kastro hill. The Archaeological Museum of Naxos, which holds a notable collection of Cycladic figurines and Mycenaean-era finds, is a ten-minute walk from the hotel through the old town lanes. For day trips, the village of Halki in the Tragaea valley is about 20 kilometers inland and makes a good half-day excursion by bus or car.

239m away3 min walk
Spiros Hotel

Spiros Hotel sits a few metres from Saint George Beach, the long sandy stretch that curves south from Naxos Town (Chora) and serves as the island's most popular swimming spot. It's a family-run property built in Cycladic style — whitewashed walls, clean lines — and it draws a consistently high rating (4.6 from more than 300 guests) by keeping things practical and comfortable rather than flashy.\n\nThe location does a lot of the work. Saint George Beach is walkable from the Chora waterfront, which means the port, the Portara islet, the old market lanes of the Venetian kastro, and dozens of tavernas are all within fifteen minutes on foot. At the same time, the hotel sits far enough along the beach road that mornings are quiet.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe hotel offers several room categories — junior suites, superior suites, grand suites, and two-room suites — designed to sleep anywhere from one person up to five. Every suite comes with air-conditioning, a balcony or veranda, a refrigerator, a fully equipped kitchenette, satellite TV, and a hair dryer. Views vary by room: some face the sea, others overlook the pool or garden. The self-catering setup makes Spiros a practical choice for longer stays, since you can handle breakfasts and lunches in-room and eat out selectively.\n\nOn-site wellness facilities go beyond what most comparably priced Naxos hotels offer. The Elixir Spa includes a jacuzzi, sauna, hammam, gym, and a menu of massage and beauty treatments — useful if you want downtime that doesn't involve another beach afternoon.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**From the port:** Naxos Town port is roughly a 10–15 minute walk south along the waterfront promenade and then along the Saint George Beach road. Most arrivals can walk it with rolling luggage.\n\n**By bus:** KTEL Naxos buses connect the main bus terminal near the port to Agios Georgios (Saint George) regularly in high season. The stop is close to the hotel.\n\n**By car or taxi:** Taxis from the port take under five minutes. If you're renting a car, parking is generally available along the Saint George Beach road, though it fills quickly in July and August. Coordinates: 37.0986° N, 25.3774° E.\n\n**By ferry:** Naxos is served by Blue Star Ferries and Fast Ferries from Piraeus (roughly 3.5–5 hours depending on route), as well as connections from Paros, Mykonos, and Santorini.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nSpiros Hotel is open in the main tourist season. Saint George Beach is swimmable from May through October, but July and August bring the most activity — and the most competition for rooms. Book well ahead for peak summer. June and September offer calmer seas, fewer crowds, and often lower rates while still delivering reliable beach weather. If you're travelling as a family or planning a longer stay, the shoulder months are worth considering.\n\nMornings at Saint George Beach are notably calmer before 10:00, and the evening light on the water looking back toward the Portara is worth timing a walk for.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book a sea-view balcony room early** — they sell out faster than garden or pool-view options.\n- **Use the kitchenette.** Naxos Town has a good fresh produce market and several well-stocked supermarkets within walking distance; self-catering for breakfast cuts costs significantly.\n- **Ask about spa availability on arrival.** The Elixir Spa is on-site, but treatments can be in demand during peak season — scheduling on day one avoids disappointment.\n- **Walk to the Chora in the evening.** The old town is 10–15 minutes on foot along the waterfront; far pleasanter than driving and finding parking.\n- **Bring reef-safe sunscreen.** Saint George Beach gets crowded in high season and the water stays clear — keeping it that way matters.\n- **Check the ferry schedule before your last night.** Early-morning ferry departures are common from Naxos; if yours leaves at 06:00, talk to the front desk about early checkout.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nSaint George Beach itself stretches for roughly 1.5 km and offers sunbed and umbrella hire, a handful of beach bars, and calm, shallow water that works well for children and casual swimmers. At the northern end, the beach connects to the Chora waterfront promenade, lined with cafes and restaurants.\n\nFurther along the same coastal road heading south, you reach Agios Prokopios Beach and then Agia Anna — progressively quieter and equally good for swimming. Renting a scooter or car from Naxos Town gives you easy access to the entire western coast.\n\nThe Portara (the monumental doorway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo) is one of the island's most recognisable landmarks and a short walk north from the hotel. The Venetian Kastro, the Archaeological Museum of Naxos, and the main shopping and dining streets of the old town are all within comfortable walking distance.

242m away3 min walk
Nastasia Village

Nastasia Village is a small, carefully considered hotel in Naxos Town (Chora), built around 18 renovated rooms and a stone-tiled herbal garden that smells of lavender, thyme, and spearmint. The architecture is Cycladic in spirit — whitewashed walls, clean lines, local stone — updated with contemporary finishes rather than the kind of rustic-for-its-own-sake aesthetic common in the region. It sits in the Kotti district, within walking distance of the port, the main bus station, and the restaurants and cafes that line the streets leading toward Naxos Old Town.\n\nThe hotel's 4.8 rating across 184 reviews on Google suggests it consistently delivers on its positioning as a boutique property rather than a large resort. It is pet-friendly, which is still uncommon enough on the island to be worth noting if you're travelling with an animal.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe property has 18 rooms split across three types. Exclusive Double rooms are on the ground floor and look out onto the garden. Elegant Studios — also ground floor — come with a kitchenette, useful for longer stays or self-catering preferences. Deluxe rooms sit on the first floor and open up to unobstructed views over Naxos Town and, beyond it, the Aegean. All rooms are described as minimalistic in style, which in practice means the rooms don't fight with the island's natural light and stone textures.\n\nThe garden is a genuine asset. Breakfast is served there, and the property maintains a wine cellar from which guests can select bottles to enjoy on-site. The combination of a working herb garden and a curated wine offering gives Nastasia Village a character that standard hotels in this price band rarely achieve.\n\nFront desk hours run from 7:00 AM to 11:00 PM daily, so late-night arrivals after the last ferry should be arranged in advance by contacting the hotel directly.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNastasia Village is located at Chora Naxos Kotti, a short walk from the main seafront road. From the port — where ferries from Athens (Piraeus), Mykonos, Santorini, and other Cycladic islands dock — the hotel is roughly a 5–10 minute walk heading inland toward the Kotti neighbourhood.\n\nBy car or taxi from Naxos Airport, the drive takes around 10 minutes. Taxis queue at the port and airport. The main bus station (KTEL) is close to the seafront and within easy walking distance of the hotel, which is useful for day trips to Naxia beach, Agios Prokopios, or the mountain villages of the island's interior.\n\nIf you're driving, be aware that parking in central Naxos Town is limited. Street parking is available on surrounding roads but can be tight in high season (July–August).\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town is a year-round destination in a way that many Cycladic islands are not. The island is larger, more self-sufficient, and less dependent on summer tourism than Mykonos or Santorini. That said, the hotel's garden and outdoor spaces are most pleasant from late April through October, when temperatures are warm without July and August's midday heat.\n\nShoulder season — May, June, and September — offers the best balance of good weather, manageable crowds, and full access to restaurants and services across the island. Staying in Naxos Town rather than at a beachside resort means you're better placed to enjoy the island during spring and autumn, when the Old Town, the market streets, and the area around the Portara are noticeably quieter.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book direct.** The website notes direct booking rates; contacting the hotel at [email protected] or +30 2285 024202 may yield better pricing than third-party platforms.\n- **Request a first-floor Deluxe room** if sea views matter to you — ground-floor rooms face the garden, not the water.\n- **If you're arriving late**, confirm check-in arrangements in advance since front desk hours end at 11:00 PM.\n- **Bring your pet.** The hotel explicitly welcomes four-legged guests, which is not universal on Naxos.\n- **Use the location.** The Portara (the freestanding gate of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia) is a 15-minute walk from the hotel along the waterfront — go at sunset.\n- **Ask about the wine cellar.** The on-site selection draws from the island and wider Greek producers; it's a better evening option than hunting for a bottle in nearby shops.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe hotel's central location in Kotti puts you close to most of what makes Naxos Town worth staying in. The Old Town (Kastro), the Venetian-era walls, and the Archaeological Museum of Naxos — which holds one of the better collections of Cycladic figurines in Greece — are all within a 10–15 minute walk. The market street (parallel to the waterfront) runs from the port area past bakeries, delis selling local Naxian cheese and potatoes, and small bars that stay lively into the early hours.\n\nSeveral well-regarded restaurants serving local specialties — including dishes made with Naxian graviera cheese, local beef, and fresh seafood — are within a few minutes on foot. The nearest sandy beaches, Agios Georgios and Agios Prokopios, are a short bus or taxi ride south of town.

254m away3 min walk
Blue Sky Summer

Blue Sky Summer is a small hotel on the edge of Saint George Beach in Naxos Town, positioned close enough to the sand that you can hear the Aegean from your room. With a 4.8 rating across 29 reviews, the property punches well above its size, drawing guests back with spacious rooms, private jacuzzi options, and a location that needs no car to enjoy the beach or the waterfront of Naxos Town.\n\nThe address places it in Kinidarou, the quiet residential pocket that runs south of the old port along the Saint George bay. It is well away from the noise of the ferry terminal but still within easy walking distance of the Chora's restaurants, bakeries, and the causeway leading out to the Portara.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nBlue Sky Summer offers several distinct room types, ranging from standard studios up to a top-floor suite with an outdoor hot tub and hammock. The suite tier — which includes an outdoor hot tub option, an outdoor spa bath suite, and an indoor spa bath suite — is geared toward couples wanting a self-contained retreat. All rooms are described as very spacious and are decorated in a clean, contemporary Cycladic style. The Superior Studio can accommodate up to three guests, while the Deluxe Double and Deluxe King rooms cap at two.\n\nServices across all room types include free Wi-Fi and daily maid service. Breakfast is available either as an optional add-on or included in the rate, depending on the room category — check the booking details for your specific room before arriving.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nSaint George Beach runs directly south from Naxos Town port, about a 10-minute walk from the main ferry terminal along the seafront promenade. If you are arriving by ferry, follow the waterfront road south past the cluster of tavernas and the long sandy bay will open up on your right — the hotel sits just metres back from the sand.\n\nBy car or scooter from the island's interior, take the main road into Naxos Town and follow signs toward Agios Georgios (Saint George). Parking along the Saint George area is generally easier than in the Chora itself, though spaces fill up in July and August. A taxi from the port takes under five minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nThe hotel operates on a summer-season basis. Saint George Beach is sheltered and faces west into the bay, making it one of the calmer swimming spots on Naxos — ideal for families and those who find the island's more exposed west-coast beaches too windy in the afternoons. July and August are peak months; if you want the same beach with fewer people, late May, June, and September offer warm water without the full-season crowds. Afternoons at Saint George get a strong meltemi breeze in midsummer, which cools the beach pleasantly but can kick up chop.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book the top-floor suite early.** The outdoor hot tub and hammock combination books out quickly in July and August — it is the most requested room.\n- **Ask about breakfast inclusion.** Some room types include it in the rate; for others it is an optional daily add-on. Clarify at booking to avoid surprises on checkout.\n- **Walk to the Chora at sunset.** The Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia — is roughly a 15-minute walk north along the waterfront and is the island's signature sunset viewpoint.\n- **Saint George Beach is shallow at the entry.** The bay bottom is sandy and gradual, which makes it one of the best beaches on Naxos for confident non-swimmers and children.\n- **Contact the hotel directly.** Reach the team at [email protected] or +30 690 872 5753 for questions about room availability, late arrivals, or airport transfer options.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nSaint George Beach itself stretches for nearly a kilometre and has sunbed hire, a cluster of beach bars, and several seafood tavernas directly on the sand. The northern end of the beach meets the start of the Naxos Town waterfront promenade, where you will find the main square, the market street leading into the Venetian Kastro neighbourhood, and the causeway to the Portara. Naxos Town has a well-stocked supermarket, a bakery open from early morning, and a bus station that connects to the island's main villages and beaches further south, including Agios Prokopios and Agia Anna.

259m away3 min walk
Galaxy Hotel

Galaxy Hotel occupies one of the most practical addresses on Naxos: the southwestern edge of Naxos Town (Chora), a short walk from the Blue Flag-awarded sandy shore of Agios Georgios Beach. With 54 renovated rooms, direct-booking incentives, and a rating of 4.6 across 284 reviews, it consistently ranks among the better-value beachfront options in town.\n\nThe hotel underwent a full renovation in 2019, bringing its interiors in line with Cycladic architectural style — whitewashed walls, clean lines, and light-filled rooms — while adding modern amenities. It pitches itself at travelers who want genuine beach access without the long taxi ride that comes with staying further out of Chora.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nGalaxy Hotel has 54 rooms across its renovated building, each equipped with contemporary fittings designed for a comfortable island stay. The Cycladic aesthetic runs throughout: expect the restrained palette and geometry typical of the Naxos built environment rather than generic resort décor.\n\nThe beach is the main draw. Agios Georgios is a long, gently curving bay with shallow, calm water — well suited for families and anyone who prefers to wade in gradually rather than drop off a rock. The Blue Flag certification means the water quality and beach facilities meet independently verified standards. Sun loungers and water-sports rental typically operate along the beach in season.\n\nThe hotel encourages direct bookings and backs that up with a best-rate guarantee, straightforward cancellation terms, and a reservations team you can reach by phone or email rather than through a third-party chat bot.\n\nNote that specially modified (accessible) rooms are not available at this property.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nGalaxy Hotel is in the southwest corner of Naxos Town, within easy walking distance of the port and the main Chora waterfront — roughly a 10-to-15-minute walk from the ferry terminal along the seafront road.\n\n- **On foot from the port:** Follow the waterfront promenade south past the town beach toward Agios Georgios. The hotel sits just back from the sand.\n- **By bus:** The KTEL bus station is near the port in Naxos Town. Local buses serve Agios Georgios in summer; confirm current schedules on arrival.\n- **By car or taxi:** The hotel is on Saint George Beach road (Naxos 843 00). Taxis from the port take under five minutes. Limited street parking is available in the immediate area, though it fills up in July and August.\n- **From the airport:** Naxos Airport is approximately 4 km south of Chora. A taxi to the hotel takes around 10 minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long season, and Galaxy Hotel's beachfront position suits the shoulder months particularly well. May, June, and September offer warm water, lower room rates than peak summer, and a noticeably less crowded Agios Georgios Beach. July and August bring the meltemi wind, which keeps temperatures bearable but can kick up chop on exposed beaches — Agios Georgios, being a sheltered southwest-facing bay, is one of the calmer options on the island during this period.\n\nFor the beach itself, mornings are cooler and quieter; the sand fills by midday in high season.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book direct** through hotel-galaxy.com to access the best rate guarantee and easier cancellation terms.\n- **Request a sea-view room** when booking if the view matters to you — not all 54 rooms face the water.\n- **Bring or rent a bicycle:** Naxos Town and the immediate coastal road are flat and bikeable, making it easy to reach the port, restaurants on the main square, and the Portara islet.\n- **Accessible travel note:** The hotel does not offer specially modified rooms; travelers with mobility requirements should confirm arrangements directly before booking.\n- **Parking:** If arriving by car, plan to park early in the day during July and August. The beachfront road gets congested by late morning.\n- **Contact the hotel directly** at +30 2285 022422 or [email protected] for room queries — the team responds to individual booking questions rather than routing everything through OTA messaging.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios Beach stretches south from the hotel and is lined with tavernas, beach bars, and water-sports outfitters in season. A 15-minute walk north along the waterfront brings you into the heart of Naxos Town, with its covered market, Venetian Kastro neighborhood, and the causeway walk out to the Portara. The main KTEL bus station — the departure point for routes to Apollonas, Halki, Filoti, and other inland villages — is near the port and reachable on foot. The Naxos Town Archaeological Museum is a short uphill walk into the Kastro district.

260m away3 min walk
Vaya Naxos

Villas Vaya sits roughly five minutes from Naxos Town, close enough to walk to the port, the Portara, and the old market, yet far enough removed to feel like a private retreat. The property offers self-catering villas and apartment units built in a Cycladic aesthetic — whitewashed volumes, clean lines, and the kind of finish that photographs well but also holds up to daily island use.\n\nThis is accommodation aimed at travelers who prefer to set their own schedule: cook when they like, leave when they like, and return late without disturbing anyone. Families with children are welcome; pets and smoking are not permitted on the property.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nVillas Vaya describes itself as a luxury villa property with flawless Cycladic aesthetics. Units are self-catering, meaning they come equipped for guests who want to shop at the Naxos Town market and prepare meals themselves — a practical advantage on an island where restaurant prices climb steeply in July and August. The property is brand new by the account of its own listing, so finishes and fittings should be in good condition. Children are welcome, making it a workable option for families who need the extra space and kitchen that a hotel room rarely provides.\n\nA minimum stay of two nights applies to all reservations. Payment terms and cancellation conditions are detailed on the official booking page at villasvayanaxos.com.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe coordinates place Villas Vaya just outside Naxos Town (Chora), in the area immediately south or southwest of the main settlement. If you arrive by ferry at the Naxos Town port, a taxi from the port taxi rank takes under ten minutes. There is no public bus that serves the immediate vicinity of most villa properties outside the town center, so if you plan to explore the island — Apeiranthos, Halki, the Tragaea plateau, or the beaches along the west coast toward Plaka — a rental car or scooter is highly practical. Several rental agencies operate within Naxos Town.\n\nParking is typically available on-site at villa properties of this type, though you should confirm with the host at booking. The address registered is Naxos 843 00, Greece; use the Google Maps listing or contact the property directly for precise turn-by-turn directions.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long season by Cycladic standards, running from late April through October. Villas Vaya, as a self-catering property, suits the shoulder months — May, June, and September — particularly well. During these periods the beaches are uncrowded, produce at the local markets is excellent, and the island's interior villages are accessible without the traffic of peak summer. July and August bring the meltemi wind, which cools the island but can make the west-facing beaches choppy in the afternoons. Book well ahead for any summer dates; Naxos fills up faster than many visitors expect.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book directly through the official website** at villasvayanaxos.com or via the property's booking engine to confirm rates and availability — the website URL in some listings routes through a third-party booking aggregator.\n- **Bring or rent a car.** The five-minute proximity to Naxos Town is walkable, but the beaches south of town — Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, Plaka — require transport, as does any trip into the island's interior.\n- **Stock the kitchen early.** Naxos Town's market and supermarkets carry local cheeses (graviera, arseniko), fresh vegetables from the Tragaea valley, and local wine. Buying once and cooking some meals significantly reduces daily costs.\n- **Minimum two-night stay applies.** If your itinerary includes Naxos as a one-night stop between ferries, this property is not the right fit — look for a hotel in Chora instead.\n- **Follow the property on Instagram (@villasvaya) or TikTok (@villavaya1)** to see current room presentation before booking, as these accounts are maintained by the property owner.\n- **Confirm check-in logistics before arrival.** Self-catering villas often have keybox or meet-and-greet arrangements rather than a staffed front desk — clarifying this in advance avoids friction after a long ferry crossing.\n\n## About the Property\n\nVillas Vaya was founded by Andreas Dimitrokallis and operates under the name Villas Vaya Naxos. The Instagram account has grown to over 1,400 followers, and the property is reachable by phone at +30 694 974 9342 or by email at [email protected]. The Cycladic design approach — evident from the property's own social media posts — fits the island's architectural vernacular without being a pastiche of it.\n\nFor travelers who have done Santorini or Mykonos and want the same quality of finish without the price premium or the crowds, a self-catering villa on Naxos represents a genuinely different kind of Greek island stay.

295m away4 min walk