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Bus StopsNaxosAlpha Vita Supermarket

Alpha Vita Supermarket

Naxos · regular stop

Alpha Vita Supermarket is a bus stop on Naxos served by 1 route: Naxos Town - Alyko - Pyrgaki.

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Serving Routes

Mikri Vigla - Kastraki - Alyko - Pyrgaki
07:37
11:07
13:37
16:37
Naxos Town
09:03
12:33
15:03
18:03
19:58

What's On Near Alpha Vita Supermarket

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.

388m away5 min walk

Bars

Avaton 1739

Avaton 1739 occupies the terrace of the former Ursuline School building inside the Kastro of Naxos Town, a fortified Venetian neighborhood that has stood since Markos Sanoudos erected its walls in 1207. The address places you literally within the castle's stone perimeter, one of the best-preserved medieval urban cores in the Cyclades, and the bar's rooftop position means the views stretch across terracotta rooftops toward the Aegean and the distant silhouette of Portara. The concept is all-day: breakfast on the terrace in the morning, coffee and light bites through the afternoon, then wine and cocktails as the sun drops behind the castle's western battlements. With a 4.7 rating across more than 4,200 Google reviews, it holds a consistent reputation among bars and cafés on the island — not just for the setting but for a menu that leans on locally sourced ingredients from small Naxian producers. The name anchors the venue to the history beneath your feet. The Ursuline Order established their convent and school here centuries ago, and traces of that monastic architecture — thick stone walls, vaulted ceilings, carved lintels — remain visible throughout the interior and frame the outdoor terrace where most guests choose to sit. What to Expect The physical space moves between two registers. Inside, the old monastery fabric is intact enough to feel like a genuinely historic room: stone arches, cool walls, and low light that suits an afternoon glass of Naxian wine. Outside, the terrace opens over the rooftops of Kastro and delivers a panorama that takes in the port, the flat blue of the harbor, and the Portara islet to the northwest. The menu is organized around Mediterranean ingredients with a strong Cycladic character. The kitchen draws on organic produce from the island, and the beverage list gives serious attention to Greek wine — both mainland appellations and island-grown varieties. Cocktails are on offer as well, and the morning breakfast service means a single venue can cover multiple stops in a day without the need to descend back into the lower town. Service is table-based. Given the rooftop setting and the historic building, seating is finite: the terrace is not large, and popular tables overlooking the port fill quickly, particularly in the late afternoon. The interiors of the old Ursuline School add overflow capacity while preserving much of the atmospheric quality of the stone rooms. The place_types flagged by Google include coffee shop, museum, bar, café, and restaurant simultaneously — an unusual cluster that reflects the site's dual identity as a hospitality venue layered over a historically significant building. How to Get There Kastro sits at the highest point of Naxos Town (Chora), roughly a ten-minute walk uphill from the port. From the main harbor front, follow the narrow lanes through the commercial quarter of the old town, heading uphill past the Catholic Cathedral district toward the castle gate. The streets inside Kastro are pedestrian-only and unmarked in places; the address is Kastro, Naxos 843 00. Most mapping apps route accurately to the coordinates (37.1053, 25.3774), but the final approach on foot through the medieval lanes is part of the experience. There is no vehicle access inside the Kastro walls. Taxis and the local bus (KTEL) can drop you at the base of the old town near the market street, from which you walk up. Parking is available in designated areas near the port and along the waterfront promenade. The approach involves uneven stone steps and narrow passages; visitors with mobility constraints should note that the castle interior is not accessible by wheelchair. Best Time to Visit The late afternoon window — roughly 5 pm to sunset — is the most sought-after slot, when the western light catches the castle walls and the terrace offers one of the island's most direct sightlines to the horizon. Arrive early to secure a terrace table, especially in July and August when Naxos Town is at peak occupancy. Mornings are quieter and suit a breakfast visit well, with cooler air and fewer people in the Kastro lanes. The midday heat in high summer makes the interior stone rooms a practical alternative to exposed outdoor seating. Shoulder season — May, June, September, and early October — offers comfortable temperatures and shorter waits for terrace seating. The bar is open across all seasons consistent with an all-day café model, though hours in winter may differ; verify directly before visiting out of season. Tips for Visiting Reserve or arrive early for a terrace table. The rooftop seating is limited and fills from around 5 pm onward in summer. Walk-ins are possible in the morning and early afternoon without issue. Use Google Maps navigation but allow extra time. The final 200 meters through Kastro's medieval lanes requires some wayfinding; the satellite view helps more than the standard map inside the castle walls. Ask specifically about local wine. The list includes Naxian producers and Cycladic varieties that are harder to find in lower-town restaurants; staff can point you toward island-grown options. Breakfast is a low-crowd option. The terrace in the morning offers the same views with a fraction of the evening footfall, and the menu supports a full breakfast service. Combine with a Kastro walk. The neighborhood directly surrounding Avaton contains the Catholic Cathedral, the Della Rocca-Barozzi Tower, and the Archaeological Museum of Naxos — all within a five-minute walk. Dress for the stone environment. Even in summer, the shaded stone interiors of the building can be noticeably cooler than the open terrace; a light layer is useful in the evenings. Confirm current hours before visiting off-season. Opening hours were not available in the research data; call +30 2285 023160 or check the website at avaton1739.com for the current schedule, particularly outside peak summer months. The venue suits multiple visit types. The all-day format means it functions as a morning coffee stop, a lunch break during a Kastro tour, or an evening drinks destination — three different atmospheres in a single address. History and Context The site of Avaton 1739 is directly tied to two distinct historical layers. The outer layer is the Kastro itself, the fortified hilltop settlement commissioned by Markos Sanoudos after the Fourth Crusade's redistribution of Byzantine territories. Sanoudos founded the Duchy of the Archipelago from this position, controlling seventeen Aegean islands at its peak from the 13th century onward. The castle walls and towers that still define the neighborhood are among the most complete examples of Venetian colonial fortification in the Cyclades. The inner layer is the Ursuline presence. The Order of Saint Ursula established a convent and school within the castle walls, and the building that now houses Avaton was their school — a center for Catholic education in an island that carried both Orthodox and Latin Christian communities through its medieval and early modern history. The name Avaton 1739 references this institutional past; 1739 is likely tied to a significant date in the building's documented history. The conversion of the school into a hospitality venue preserves the architecture while opening it to a new kind of daily use, and the vaulted rooms and carved stone details throughout the interior are direct survivors from that earlier function. For visitors interested in the layered history of the Cyclades under Venetian rule, Avaton's location means that a coffee or a glass of wine here is also, in a practical sense, a visit inside one of the island's most historically dense urban sites.

959m away12 min walk
Toro Cocktail Bar

Toro Cocktail Bar occupies a rooftop space on Ariadnis, one of the narrow streets that thread through Naxos Town (Chora), the island's main settlement. Its positioning above street level gives it the kind of open-air feel that's hard to find in the more enclosed alleys of the old town, and the bar has built a following over the summer seasons for its cocktail menu alongside a hookah lounge setup. With a Google rating of 3.9 across 565 reviews, Toro sits comfortably in the mid-range for Chora's bar scene — reliably competent rather than polarising. It opens at 8 PM every night of the week and keeps going until 3 AM, which fits the Greek rhythm of a late start and a long evening. Whether you're winding down after dinner or warming up before heading deeper into Chora's nightlife strip, the hours work in your favor. The bar's own description leans into a bohemian identity, which on a Greek island tends to mean relaxed seating, an eclectic aesthetic, and the kind of atmosphere that doesn't rush you through your drink. The hookah lounge element — referred to in their own content as the "Kahlua Jungle room" — adds a layer of variety that sets it apart from the standard beachside bar format common elsewhere on Naxos. What to Expect Toro operates as a rooftop cocktail bar with a hookah lounge component, which means the experience divides into two registers depending on how you use it. For cocktails, the setting is an elevated outdoor terrace — above the everyday foot traffic of Ariadnis, with whatever breeze the Cycladic evenings produce. For the hookah side, the "Kahlua Jungle room" reference in their own social content suggests an interior or semi-sheltered space with a specific visual identity. The bohemian aesthetic that the bar promotes in its own branding typically translates to layered décor, cushioned seating, and a soundtrack that runs somewhere between ambient and lounge. Lighting after dark tends toward the warm and atmospheric end of the spectrum in bars of this type in Chora, though the specific setup at Toro is worth checking on their Instagram before you visit if the visual environment matters to you. Service runs from 8 PM through to 3 AM, seven days a week. For the height of Naxos summer — July and August — expect the rooftop to be busiest between 10 PM and midnight. Earlier in the evening, around 8 to 9 PM, the bar tends to be quieter, which suits anyone who wants to claim a good seat before the Chora crowd arrives. The bar's Facebook page under the handle TOROnaxos and its Instagram at toronaxos are the most reliable sources for real-time updates on any seasonal changes to hours or special events. How to Get There Toro Cocktail Bar is on Ariadnis in Naxos Town, which places it within the central grid of Chora. The address puts it in the 843 00 postcode area that covers the main town. If you're arriving from the Naxos Town port — where ferries from Piraeus, Paros, and the other Cyclades dock — walk south along the waterfront promenade and then turn into the old town. Ariadnis is reachable on foot within 5 to 10 minutes from the port, depending on exactly where you enter the old town network. From Agios Georgios beach, the closest and most popular beach to Chora, it's a 10 to 15-minute walk north along the waterfront. There is no dedicated parking adjacent to the old town's narrow streets. If you're coming by car or scooter from one of the resort villages outside Chora — Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, or further south — park in one of the designated areas at the edge of Chora near the main road and walk in. The journey on foot from those parking areas to Ariadnis takes about 5 to 10 minutes. Taxis are available in Naxos Town from the main taxi rank near the port. Best Time to Visit Toro operates seasonally. Social content from the bar confirms it runs through the end of September, and the seven-nights-a-week schedule applies across the summer season. For visitors in June or early October, it's worth checking their social pages to confirm they're open, since shoulder-season schedules on Naxos can shift. In peak summer (July–August), Chora's bar district is busy from around 10 PM onward. Arriving at Toro between 8 and 9 PM means you're likely to get a seat without difficulty on the rooftop. By 11 PM on a Friday or Saturday in August, the bar will be at full capacity and the surrounding streets will be active. The Cycladic meltemi wind — the strong northerly that blows across the islands through July and August — can make rooftop seating feel cooler than expected after dark. A light layer is worth having even in high summer if you're planning to stay for several hours. September is arguably the most comfortable month to visit: summer crowds have thinned, temperatures are still warm, and the bar remains open through the month's end. Tips for Visiting Check the Instagram account (toronaxos) before your visit. Seasonal hours and any theme nights or events will be posted there first, and it gives you a realistic preview of the current setup and aesthetic. Arrive early if you want rooftop seating. The terrace has a finite number of spots and fills up as the night progresses. Coming at 8 or 8:30 PM gives you first pick of the layout. The hookah lounge is a separate feature from the main cocktail bar. If that's your priority, mention it when you arrive — the Kahlua Jungle room may have its own seating logic. Bring a light layer in July and August. The meltemi wind keeps Naxos cooler than the Dodecanese at night, and a rooftop exposed to the northerly can feel noticeably breezy after midnight. The bar is within easy walking distance of Naxos Town's main restaurant strip. Plan your dinner first at one of the tavernas near the old market, then head to Toro afterward — Greek dinner culture starts late, which aligns perfectly with an 8 PM bar opening. Phone ahead if you're a large group. The number listed is +30 698 130 6183. Rooftop bars in Chora don't always take reservations, but calling ahead for a group of six or more is worth the attempt, especially on weekends in August. The rating context matters. A 3.9 from 565 reviews on Google reflects a generally solid bar with some variability — consistent enough to be worth visiting, but set expectations accordingly rather than treating it as the definitive best bar on Naxos. Naxos Town has multiple bar clusters. Toro is one node in a wider evening circuit. If you're spending several nights on the island, this works well as one stop among several rather than the sole destination. What to Order Toro markets itself as a cocktail bar first, which suggests the drink list is the main event rather than a wine or beer selection. Cocktails are the appropriate order here. No specific menu is available in the research for this article, so exact drink names and prices are best checked on arrival or via their social pages before you go. For hookah, the Kahlua Jungle room is the dedicated space — again, the range of flavors and pricing isn't publicly documented in available sources, so ask the staff when you arrive. On any rooftop bar visit in Chora, it's standard practice to order a cocktail per session rather than single drinks in quick succession — the Greek bar culture supports a slower pace, and the staff will not rush you through your drink.

1008m away13 min walk
Notos Art Club

Notos Art Club has been a fixture in Naxos Town since 1992, making it one of the longest-running bars on the island. While it has been reborn in its current form as an art-inflected space, the address and the loyal local following have remained constants for more than three decades. It operates seven nights a week from 6:00 PM to 3:00 AM, which puts it comfortably in the role of both an early-evening cocktail stop and a late-night destination. The bar positions itself around three distinct settings — a courtyard, an alley stroll, and a rooftop — giving visitors a choice of atmosphere within the same venue. That kind of layered space is relatively rare in Naxos Town, where most bars claim a single outdoor terrace or a compact interior. The rooftop, in particular, offers a vantage point over the old town's rooflines that rewards arriving before full dark. With a 4.8 rating across 149 Google reviews, Notos holds one of the stronger reputations among Naxos Town bars. That score reflects consistency over time rather than novelty — the kind of place that gets recommended by people who have been coming back for years. What to Expect Notos Art Club leans into a blend of bar and cultural space, which is reflected in the name. The drinks menu centers on cocktails and local flavors — expect Greek spirits and island-sourced ingredients to appear alongside the classics. The kitchen offers shared dishes rather than a full restaurant menu, which makes it suited to a group who wants to eat lightly while they drink rather than commit to a sit-down meal. The physical space is one of the more interesting aspects of the bar. The courtyard setting provides shade and enclosure in the early evening, while the alley position gives the bar a connection to the organic, narrow-street character of Naxos Town's old quarter — the Kastro-adjacent lanes where whitewashed walls and bougainvillea define the streetscape. The rooftop is the most sought-after spot, catching the evening breeze and offering views across the town toward the harbor and, on clear evenings, toward Portara on the islet of Palatia. The art element of the bar — referenced in both the name and the Instagram presence — means the space may feature rotating works, event nights, or a curated aesthetic that distinguishes it from a standard drinks venue. The vibe is relaxed rather than club-oriented in the early part of the evening, transitioning toward a livelier atmosphere as the night progresses toward the 3:00 AM close. How to Get There Notos Art Club is located in Naxos Town (Chora) at coordinates 37.1058, 25.3759, which places it in the old town area above and behind the main harbor front. From the port and the main waterfront promenade, head inland toward the old town — the Kastro and the Venetian quarter lie uphill from the commercial strip. The bar sits within the dense lane network that characterizes this part of Chora. The easiest approach on foot is to walk north along the seafront from the ferry terminal, then turn inland toward the old town. The lanes in this area are pedestrian-only and occasionally signed, but a navigation app will serve better than street signs given the density of the alleyways. Allow five to ten minutes on foot from the harbor waterfront. Parking in Naxos Town is limited. The main public parking areas are located near the port and along the southern edge of the waterfront. From any of these, the bar is a short walk. There is no practical reason to drive into the old town lanes themselves. Best Time to Visit Notos Art Club opens at 6:00 PM every evening, which makes the first hour or two a good choice for a quieter drink before the rest of Naxos Town's nightlife picks up. In July and August, the old town fills quickly after sunset, and popular spots become crowded by 9:00 or 10:00 PM. Arriving at opening — particularly on the rooftop — gives you the best chance of a seat with a view while the light is still fading. The shoulder season months of May, June, September, and October offer a noticeably calmer experience. The bar still operates its full hours, but the crowds thin considerably, and the evening temperatures in those months are often ideal for outdoor seating. The rooftop and courtyard are primarily outdoor or semi-outdoor spaces, so the bar is best experienced when the weather cooperates — which, on Naxos, is the case for most of the season from late spring through early autumn. Winter operation is not confirmed by the available information, so if you are visiting outside the main tourist season, a call ahead or a check of the Facebook page is worthwhile. Tips for Visiting Arrive early for the rooftop. Rooftop seating tends to fill quickly after 8:00 PM in peak season. If you want a table with a view, aim for 6:30 or 7:00 PM. Phone ahead in high season. The contact number is +30 698 337 5583. A quick call to check capacity or reserve a spot can save a wasted trip on busy July or August evenings. Use the Instagram for current programming. The bar's Instagram account (@notos_bar_naxos) is the most reliable source for any event nights, special menus, or art exhibitions, since an art-oriented venue like this may change its programming regularly. Shared dishes work best for groups. The food menu is built around shared plates rather than individual courses. If you are coming with two or more people, this format suits a long evening of drinks with something to eat alongside. Explore the surrounding lanes. The alley network around the bar is worth a slow walk before or after your visit. The Venetian Kastro is a few minutes uphill and is worth seeing in the evening light. Dress for the rooftop wind. Naxos is one of the windier Cycladic islands, and a rooftop terrace in late evening — especially in spring and autumn — can be noticeably breezy. A light layer is worth carrying. The bar is cash- and card-friendly in most Naxos venues, but verify on arrival. Greek island bars vary in their card acceptance, particularly smaller or independently run ones. Having some cash available is a practical precaution. Check Facebook for seasonal closures. The Facebook page linked in the venue's profile is the bar's primary online presence. Seasonal opening and any temporary closures are most likely to be announced there. What to Order Notos describes its menu around cocktails, local flavors, and shared dishes — three categories that together suggest a thoughtful drinks program rather than a generic bar list. The emphasis on local flavors points toward Greek spirits: expect to find Mastiha liqueur from nearby Chios, Tsipouro (the Greek grape pomace spirit), and possibly Kitron — the citron-based liqueur unique to Naxos — working their way into the cocktail menu. Naxos itself produces several agricultural products of note, including its own potatoes, cheese, and citrus, which an art-bar with a kitchen might incorporate into sharing plates. For a straightforward starting point, a Mastiha-based cocktail or a Naxos-specific spirit drink is the logical choice — it connects the bar's stated emphasis on local character to something you can order with confidence. The shared dishes are better suited to snacking alongside drinks than to replacing a full dinner, so if you are planning an evening meal, Notos works best as a pre-dinner or post-dinner bar stop rather than the main food destination.

1094m away14 min walk
Like Home Bar

Like Home Bar sits in Naxos Old Town — the Chora — with a seafront position that puts the Aegean directly in front of you as the sun goes down. Now in its twelfth season, it has built a following around a combination that is genuinely unusual for a Greek island bar: a full cocktail list developed in-house alongside a fresh sushi menu, all served in a setting that runs from early evening well past midnight. The venue operates every night of the week, opening at 6:00 PM and running until 3:30 AM, making it useful both as a first stop for sundowners and as a late-night anchor. With over 1,350 Google reviews averaging 4.2 stars, it has the kind of track record that comes from years of repeat visitors rather than a single good summer. What sets Like Home Bar apart from the strip of cafes and tavernas along the Chora waterfront is the deliberate crossover between bar culture and a focused food offer. You're not choosing between drinks and a proper snack — the sushi is listed as part of the core identity, not an afterthought. What to Expect Like Home Bar occupies a position in the Old Town with sea-facing views, meaning the classic Naxos sunset — framing the Portara silhouette on the islet of Palatia to the north — is visible from the terrace. The atmosphere shifts through the evening: early arrivals tend to come for the golden-hour light and coffee or a first drink; the crowd thickens as the night develops, and by midnight the energy is closer to a club night than a quiet bar. The cocktail list is described as inspired by the owners' own taste and experience rather than built from a standard template. Expect house creations alongside familiar formats, with a bar team that has been refining the offer across a dozen seasons. Coffee is also on the menu for those arriving at 6 PM before the cocktail hour kicks in. The sushi component is fresh and made on site — a notable offering in Naxos Town where Japanese food is not widely available. Whether you treat it as bar food or a proper eat before moving on is up to you, but it is taken seriously enough to appear in the venue's own branding alongside the cocktails. The space itself carries the lived-in confidence of a bar that knows what it is. It is not trying to be a fine-dining restaurant or a beach club — it is a seafront bar that happens to serve good food, and that clarity of purpose is part of why it works. How to Get There Like Home Bar is in Naxos Old Town (Chora), the historic center that rises above the main port of Naxos Town. The Chora is compact and walkable; from the ferry terminal, follow the waterfront promenade north toward the old Venetian kastro. The bar is within the Old Town district at coordinates 37.1057, 25.3756. If you are arriving by car, parking along the Chora waterfront is limited in summer. The nearest public parking areas are on the southern edge of Naxos Town near the main road; from there the Old Town is a 5–10 minute walk. Taxis from the port or from hotels in the wider Naxos Town area will take you directly. The Old Town streets are narrow and largely pedestrianized in the upper reaches, so access on foot is always the most practical option once you are in the area. There are no steps or significant obstacles on the main waterfront level, though the alleyways of the kastro above are uneven. Best Time to Visit Like Home Bar runs the same hours every day of the week from 6:00 PM to 3:30 AM, so there is no day when it is closed. Arriving at opening time — around 6 PM — puts you on the terrace as the light softens over the Aegean, which is the most atmospheric hour for a seafront seat. Tables fill up progressively through the evening, and by 9–10 PM in July and August the bar is typically busy. The season at Naxos peaks from late June through the end of August. During this period, expect the full evening programme with more music and a livelier crowd. Shoulder season — May, early June, September, and into October — is quieter and often more comfortable, with the same menu and cocktail offer but fewer crowds and cooler evenings. Naxos is one of the windier Cyclades islands, particularly in July and August when the meltemi can pick up in the afternoons. By evening the wind usually moderates, making seafront seating more pleasant than it might be mid-afternoon. In cooler months, interior seating is available. Tips for Visiting Arrive at 6 PM for the sunset view. The seafront position means early evening light is the main draw for the first sitting; seats with a direct sea view go quickly. The sushi is part of the offer, not a novelty. If you are looking for a light dinner alongside drinks, the fresh sushi makes this a viable one-stop evening rather than a pre-dinner drink stop. Check the cocktail list on arrival. The menu reflects the team's own recipe development, so some drinks will be specific to this bar and worth asking about. Coffee is available from opening. If 6 PM feels early for cocktails, the bar also serves coffee — useful if you are watching the sunset and want to ease into the evening. The bar runs until 3:30 AM every night. If you are looking for a late-night option in Naxos Old Town, this is one of the later closing venues in the area. Book via the contact channels if you have a large group. For groups, reaching out in advance via the website or email ( [email protected] ) or phone (+30 694 283 0326) is sensible in high season. It is in its twelfth season. Longevity in Greek island hospitality is a reliable quality signal — venues that do not deliver rarely survive this long. Follow the Instagram or TikTok before you go. The accounts (@like_home_bar on both platforms) give a current read on the atmosphere, music nights, and any special events. What to Order The cocktail list at Like Home Bar is built around house recipes rather than a generic bar menu. The team's stated approach is to draw on their own taste and experience, which in practice means you will find original combinations alongside recognizable classics. Asking the bar staff what they are currently making well is a reasonable approach; a venue running for twelve seasons with a loyal clientele has usually got a house signature worth trying. The sushi menu uses fresh ingredients and is produced in-house. In the context of Naxos Town — where Greek taverna food dominates — this is a specific offer with no direct local competition, and the bar makes it central to its identity. Expect Japanese-influenced rolls and pieces rather than an extensive omakase, calibrated for a bar setting. Coffee is also available from opening and works as a starter before moving to cocktails as the evening develops.

1098m away14 min walk

Churches

Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses

The Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses on Naxos is one of the island's non-Orthodox places of worship, serving a small but established local congregation. While the majority of religious buildings on Naxos are Greek Orthodox churches and chapels, this hall provides a dedicated meeting space for Jehovah's Witnesses living on or visiting the island.\n\nIts coordinates place it in the broader Naxos Town (Chora) area, within reasonable reach of the main port and town centre.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nKingdom Halls worldwide follow a consistent format: a modest, functional meeting room used for congregational worship, Bible study, and public talks. There are no icons, altars, or religious imagery — the interior is plain and focused on scriptural instruction. Visitors and interested members of the public are generally welcome to attend scheduled meetings without prior appointment.\n\nServices are conducted in Greek, though congregations in tourist areas occasionally accommodate speakers of other languages. If you are a Jehovah's Witness travelling to Naxos, this hall is your local point of contact for meetings and fellowship during your stay.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe hall is located in the Naxos Town area, with coordinates at approximately 37.1020° N, 25.3856° E. No street address is currently confirmed in public listings, so the most reliable approach is to use a navigation app with those coordinates entered directly. From the main port and Chora waterfront, the location is a short drive or taxi ride. Parking in the surrounding neighbourhood is generally informal and roadside. Public bus routes serve Naxos Town from most villages on the island, and the local bus station (KTEL) is near the port.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nKingdom Halls hold meetings on a fixed weekly schedule, typically including a midweek meeting and a weekend programme. Exact times vary by congregation and season. If you plan to attend a meeting, it is worth contacting the congregation in advance through the official Jehovah's Witnesses website (jw.org), which includes a congregation-finder tool covering Greece. Outside of meeting times, the hall is not generally open to casual visitors.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Use the congregation-finder at jw.org to confirm current meeting times before travelling.\n- Dress modestly, as you would for any place of worship — smart casual is appropriate.\n- Meetings are open to the public; no prior registration is required to attend.\n- If you need directions, local taxi drivers in Naxos Town will likely be familiar with the area, even if the specific building is modest in scale.\n- Non-Greek speakers can check jw.org for multilingual resources and to identify whether any English-language meetings are available.\n\n## About Jehovah's Witnesses in Greece\n\nJehovah's Witnesses have been present in Greece for over a century and are legally recognised as a religious organisation. Congregations exist across the Greek mainland and on many islands, including in the Cyclades. The community on Naxos is small, reflecting the island's population, but the hall provides a consistent gathering point for local members and visiting believers. The organisation's Greek-language and multilingual materials are available freely through jw.org for those wishing to learn more before or during a visit.

362m away5 min walk
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.

445m away6 min walk

clubs

The Ocean Club

The Ocean Club is one of Naxos's most-reviewed nightlife venues, with over 1,000 ratings on Google and doors open every night of the week from 9 PM through to 8 AM. That kind of schedule — seven days, running until dawn — is unusual even by Greek island standards, and it signals a venue built around serious late-night commitment rather than casual sunset drinks. The club sits in the Naxos Town area at coordinates placing it near the waterfront zone south of the port, within walking distance of the main Chora hotels and accommodation strips. Its Facebook presence under the handle @oceanclubnaxos is the primary channel for event announcements, set times, and any special nights, so following that page before your visit is the most reliable way to know what's on. With a 4.0 average across more than a thousand reviews, The Ocean Club sits comfortably in positive territory for a nightclub — a category that tends to attract polarising opinions. That volume of reviews also means it draws a broad crowd, not just a niche local following. What to Expect The Ocean Club operates on a late-night club format: doors at 9 PM, closing at 8 AM. That eleven-hour window means the venue naturally moves through distinct phases over the course of a night. Earlier in the evening, the atmosphere tends to be more relaxed as people arrive and the space fills. From around midnight onward, expect the full club environment — louder music, a denser crowd, and the kind of energy that characterises peak Greek nightlife, which routinely runs well past 3 or 4 AM. Naxos Town nightlife is concentrated enough that The Ocean Club is within reasonable walking distance of most Chora accommodation, particularly if you're staying along the main beach road or near the port. The venue's waterfront-adjacent location means the walk back at the end of the night is relatively straightforward for most visitors based in town. The Facebook page (@oceanclubnaxos) and Instagram (@oceanclubnaxos) are where the club posts its programming. Greek island clubs frequently host themed nights, guest DJs, and special events during the peak July–August season, and these are typically announced on social channels a few days in advance. Checking both platforms before you go is more reliable than assuming a fixed programme. The phone number on record is +30 697 075 1589, which is a mobile number — useful if you have a specific question about an event, though Greek clubs are not always reachable by phone during the day. How to Get There The Ocean Club is located in Naxos Town (Chora), the island's main settlement and port. The coordinates (37.1032, 25.3747) place it in the lower town area near the waterfront. If you're staying anywhere in Chora, walking is the practical option — the nightlife zone is compact. If you're coming from one of the beach resorts south of town (Agios Georgios, Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna), a taxi into Naxos Town is the standard approach. The taxi stand is near the main port square. Agree on a fare before departure or confirm the meter is running. For the return journey late at night or in the early morning, have the taxi number saved — +30 22850 22444 is the widely used Naxos taxi number, though numbers can change seasonally. Parking in Naxos Town at night is possible along the outer waterfront road, but spaces near the main Chora fill quickly in summer. If you drive, plan to park further out and walk in. Best Time to Visit The Ocean Club operates year-round based on its listed hours, but like all Greek island clubs, the experience is substantially different between peak season and the shoulder months. July and August are when Naxos nightlife reaches its fullest intensity — the island draws a large student and young-traveller crowd during this period, and venues like The Ocean Club are at their busiest from roughly midnight to 4 AM. June and September offer a similar programme with fewer people, which suits those who want the club atmosphere without the August crush. Outside the main summer season, some nights may be quieter, and it's worth checking the Facebook page to confirm what's on before making the trip into town. If you want to ease into the evening, arriving between 9 PM and 11 PM lets you get a feel for the space before the main crowd arrives. The most active window on any given night is typically 1 AM to 5 AM. Tips for Visiting Check social media before going. The Ocean Club posts event information on Facebook (@oceanclubnaxos) and Instagram (@oceanclubnaxos). Guest DJ nights and themed events are worth knowing about in advance. Arrive at your own pace. The venue runs until 8 AM, so there's no urgency to arrive early. Greeks routinely head out after midnight, and the club will be livelier as the night progresses. Sort your taxi home in advance. Getting back to beach resorts like Agios Prokopios or Plaka at 4 or 5 AM requires a reliable taxi contact. Save a number before you go out, not after. Dress appropriately for a club. Greek island clubs, even in beach resorts, generally expect guests to dress for a night out rather than arriving in swimwear or beach shorts. Bring cash as backup. Card acceptance varies at Greek nightlife venues. It's worth having some cash on hand for entry, drinks, or transport. Pace the night. An eleven-hour operating window is a marathon. If you plan to stay late, eating a proper meal beforehand and hydrating through the evening makes a meaningful difference. Keep valuables secure. As with any busy nightclub environment, keep cards and phones in a front pocket or secure bag, particularly during busy periods. Practical Information The Ocean Club is listed as open every night from 9 PM to 8 AM. This schedule applies across all seven days of the week according to the current listing, though it's worth confirming for off-season visits via the Facebook page. Phone: +30 697 075 1589 Facebook: facebook.com/oceanclubnaxos Instagram: instagram.com/oceanclubnaxos Location: Naxos Town (Chora), Naxos 843 00, Greece

1004m away13 min walk
Amen Club

Amen Club sits on Agiou Nikolaou in Naxos Town, the main coastal strip that runs along the waterfront north of the port. It operates as both a bar and a nightclub, and its hours — midnight to 8 AM on most nights — place it firmly at the late end of the island's nightlife timeline. If you're still going after the rest of Naxos Town has wound down, this is one of the few venues still running. With a Google rating of 3.9 from 58 reviews, the crowd response is mixed but consistent enough to keep it in the rotation for visitors looking to extend their night. The address puts it within easy walking distance of the Chora's main square and the Portara causeway, so it fits naturally into a night that starts with dinner in the old town and ends here in the early hours. Naxos Town has a relatively compact but active nightlife scene by Greek island standards, and Amen Club occupies the upper end of the night's timeline — the place you end up rather than the place you start. What to Expect Amen Club functions as a bar through the earlier part of the night and shifts toward club territory as the hours advance. The address on Agiou Nikolaou places it in a strip known for bars and cafes that face the water, a setting that draws a mix of islanders and summer visitors. The opening hours are worth noting in detail: Monday through Friday the club runs from midnight to 8 AM, and Saturday extends to the same late finish. Sunday is listed as closed, which is worth checking before you make plans around it. These are genuinely late-night hours even by Greek standards, where nightlife routinely runs past 3 or 4 AM — Amen Club pushes further than most. The rating of 3.9 across 58 reviews suggests a venue that works well for a specific type of night out rather than one with universal appeal. Greek island nightclubs in this size range tend to be compact, loud, and energetic rather than sprawling — expect a tight dance floor, a bar along one wall, and music that runs to mainstream electronic and commercial tracks favored by summer crowds. The venue's Instagram presence at @amen_nightclub gives a reasonable preview of the atmosphere if you want to check the current vibe before visiting. The phone number on file (+30 694 283 0326) is a mobile, which is typical for smaller clubs in Greece — it's worth a call if you're visiting outside peak summer season to confirm hours haven't shifted. How to Get There Agiou Nikolaou is Naxos Town's main waterfront road, running parallel to the sea north of the ferry port. On foot from the central square (Plateia Protodikiou), you're looking at a 5–10 minute walk depending on exactly where on the street the club sits. From the Portara, cross back toward the main harbor and head north along the seafront. Taxis are available in Naxos Town from the rank near the port. Driving and parking is possible but the Chora's road network is narrow and parking fills quickly in July and August — most people walk this stretch after dark. There is no direct bus service to a nightclub at 2 AM; if you're staying outside the town center, taxi is the realistic option for getting back. Best Time to Visit Amen Club is a summer operation in practice. Naxos Town's nightlife scene runs roughly from late June through August at full intensity, with a shoulder on either side in May–June and September. Outside these months, hours may be reduced or the venue may close entirely — the Sunday closure already in the listed hours signals it's not a seven-nights-a-week operation year-round. Within the summer season, the club hits its stride after 2 AM. Greek nightlife rarely gets going before midnight, and a venue running to 8 AM means the peak energy is typically between 2 and 5 AM. If you arrive at opening, you'll be early by local standards. The Aegean's summer meltemi wind can make outdoor areas breezy even in high summer, but this is an indoor venue, so wind is less of a factor. Heat is the bigger issue in July and August — walk-in from the waterfront means you get a brief reprieve before things get warm inside. Tips for Visiting Confirm Sunday hours before going. The listed hours show Sunday as closed. If your trip falls over a weekend, plan your late night for Friday or Saturday instead. Arrive after 1 AM. Showing up at midnight means you'll be in an empty room. Greek nightlife culture means crowds don't arrive until well after midnight. Check the Instagram before you go. @amen_nightclub gives a current picture of what the venue looks like and whether it's running events. It's the most reliable way to gauge whether it's open on a given night in shoulder season. Call ahead in May, September, or October. Use the mobile number (+30 694 283 0326) if you're visiting outside peak summer. Hours can shift significantly outside July and August. Combine with the Chora's bar strip. Agiou Nikolaou and the streets behind it have multiple bars that open earlier — use those for the first part of your night and move to Amen Club later. Arrange your return transport in advance. If you're staying outside Naxos Town, agree a taxi pickup time or save the number of a local taxi driver. At 4 or 5 AM, spontaneous taxi availability is limited. Bring cash. Smaller Greek island clubs don't always have reliable card terminals, and even those that do can have connectivity issues late at night. Practical Information Amen Club is located on Agiou Nikolaou, Naxos Town (843 00), directly on the waterfront strip north of the ferry port. Phone: +30 694 283 0326 Instagram: @amen_nightclub Google rating: 3.9 / 5 (58 reviews) Opening hours: Monday–Friday: Midnight – 8:00 AM Saturday: Midnight – 8:00 AM Sunday: Closed There is no listed website. For current event information or to confirm seasonal hours, Instagram is the most reliable channel.

1196m away15 min walk

Hotels

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---

274m away3 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.

278m away3 min walk
Sweet Home Naxos

Sweet Home Naxos is a small apartment-style property in Naxos Chora — the island's main town — positioned about 1.5 km from the port and a ten-minute walk from the nearest beach. With a 4.7-star average across 267 Google reviews, it consistently draws families and couples looking for space, independence, and an easy base from which to explore both the town and the rest of the island.\n\nThe property sits close enough to Naxos Town's bakeries, tavernas, and waterfront promenade to be convenient on foot, while remaining far enough from the port to stay relatively quiet at night — a balance that is harder to find in Chora than it sounds.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nSweet Home Naxos offers self-contained apartments rather than standard hotel rooms, which means more floor area and genuine living space. The Apartment with Balcony sleeps two in a full double bed across 40 square metres with a private bathroom and balcony. For larger groups or families, the Superior Apartment stretches to 100 square metres across three sleeping areas — twin beds in the first room, a queen in the second, and sofa beds in a third — comfortably fitting up to six people.\n\nAll units include air conditioning, free Wi-Fi, and a private shower. The property also features a spa bath, free on-site parking, and a pet-friendly policy, which rules out a significant chunk of Naxos accommodation for travelling dog owners. Family rooms are available, making it a practical choice for multi-generational trips.\n\nThe overall feel is clean and residential rather than resort-style — think well-kept apartment living with hotel-level attentiveness rather than a lobby bar and pool deck.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNaxos Chora is the island's central hub, so orientation is straightforward. Naxos Island National Airport (JNX) is 3.1–3.6 km from the property — a five-minute taxi ride. The Port of Naxos, where ferries from Piraeus, Paros, and Santorini dock, is 1.5–1.7 km away, again an easy taxi or a brisk twenty-minute walk along the waterfront.\n\nIf you are driving — which makes sense if you plan to reach more remote beaches like Alyko or Pyrgaki — free parking on site removes one of the more frustrating logistics of staying in Chora. The island's KTEL bus terminal is near the port, with services to most major villages and beach roads; several stops are within easy walking distance of the property.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has a long reliable season running from late April through October. July and August bring the strongest meltemi winds, which moderate the heat considerably but can make certain exposed northern beaches choppy. Shoulder season — May, June, and September — offers warm water, full restaurant hours, and noticeably thinner crowds in town.\n\nFor a base like Sweet Home Naxos, arriving mid-week in June or September gives you the best combination of availability, pricing, and atmosphere in Chora itself.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book the Superior Apartment early** if you are travelling with a family of four or more; larger units at well-rated Chora properties fill quickly from June onward.\n- **Bring or rent a car.** The free parking on site makes this unusually sensible — Naxos's best beaches (Plaka, Alyko, Kastraki) are 10–25 km from Chora and not all are well-served by bus.\n- **The ten-minute beach walk** most likely leads to Agios Georgios Beach, the long sandy arc immediately south of the port — good for swimming and lined with cafes if you want somewhere close for an early morning or late afternoon dip.\n- **Contact in advance** if you are travelling with a pet; confirm arrangements directly with the property at [email protected] or +30 697 246 8241.\n- **The Portara** — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo — is a fifteen-to-twenty-minute walk north of the port and an obvious first-evening stop once you have checked in.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nNaxos Chora rewards time on foot. The Kastro, a 13th-century Venetian fortification overlooking the town, is reachable in about twenty minutes from most points in Chora. The Archaeological Museum of Naxos sits inside the Kastro walls. The old market district — a tangle of vaulted passages and small shops selling local Naxian products like graviera cheese, kitron liqueur, and thyme honey — runs along the waterfront and into the lower town.\n\nFor day trips, the mountain villages of Halki and Filoti are around 20 km inland, and the Byzantine-era Panagia Drosiani church near Moni is one of the most significant early Christian monuments in the Cyclades.

286m away4 min walk
Studios Alsos

Studios Alsos sits in Agios Georgios, the beachside neighborhood immediately south of Naxos Town's main port. The property offers self-catering studio apartments surrounded by greenery — a practical, well-reviewed base for travelers who want to cook their own meals, walk to the beach, and keep a short distance from the shops, tavernas, and transport connections of Naxos Chora.\n\nWith a Google rating of 4.8 from 69 reviews and a guest score of 9.2 (Exceptional) across 129 reviews on booking platforms, Studios Alsos consistently earns praise for cleanliness and service — two things that matter a great deal when you're staying in a small, independently run property.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nEach studio is air-conditioned and comes with a private kitchenette, satellite TV, and an en-suite bathroom. The kitchenette setup makes Studios Alsos particularly well-suited to couples and families who prefer to prepare at least some of their own meals — a worthwhile option on Naxos, where the local supermarkets and produce markets in Chora stock excellent fresh ingredients, including the island's own cheeses and potatoes.\n\nStudios open onto a private balcony or terrace with garden views, and guests have access to a shared courtyard. The surrounding greenery gives the property a quieter, more residential character than the seafront hotels closer to the port. A bar is available on-site, and the property offers a 24-hour reception desk and an airport shuttle service — useful given that Naxos National Airport is a short drive from Agios Georgios.\n\nThe property is classified as a 4-star hotel, which in the Agios Georgios context means comfortable, well-maintained studios rather than a resort complex. It works best for independent travelers who want flexibility rather than a full-service hotel experience.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nStudios Alsos is located in Agios Georgios, roughly a 10–15 minute walk south from the central port of Naxos Chora along the waterfront promenade. If you're arriving by ferry, the walk is straightforward — follow the harbour road south past the old town and continue toward the long sandy beach.\n\nBy car or scooter, the property is easy to reach via the coastal road from Chora. Street parking is generally available in the Agios Georgios area, though it fills up in peak July and August. Taxis from the ferry port to Agios Georgios take around five minutes. The airport shuttle offered by the property removes the need to arrange a separate transfer on arrival.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has one of the longest tourist seasons in the Cyclades, running from late April through October. Agios Georgios beach is swimmable from May and gets very busy in July and August, when advance bookings at Studios Alsos are essential. June and September offer the best balance of warm water, manageable crowds, and reasonable accommodation rates. The strong meltemi wind that blows across Naxos in midsummer can be refreshing at Agios Georgios, which faces slightly southwest and is somewhat sheltered compared to the more exposed northern beaches.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early for summer.** A 4.8-rated property with under 70 Google reviews is a small operation — availability fills quickly from June onward.\n- **Use the kitchenette.** The open-air market near Naxos Town's main square and the local supermarkets along the Chora waterfront make self-catering genuinely enjoyable here. Naxos graviera cheese and fresh vegetables are worth buying.\n- **Ask about the airport shuttle.** Naxos Airport is close, but the shuttle saves time and simplifies arrival logistics, especially with luggage.\n- **Walk to the beach.** Agios Georgios beach — a broad, gently shelving sandy beach with shallow, calm water — is within easy walking distance of the property. It's one of the most family-friendly beaches on the island.\n- **Explore beyond the beach.** Naxos Chora's Venetian Kastro, the Portara (the marble gateway of the Temple of Apollo), and the Archaeological Museum are all reachable on foot from Agios Georgios in under 20 minutes.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios is the most accessible beach from Naxos Town and the first stop for most visitors. The promenade connecting it to the port is lined with restaurants and cafés, covering everything from fresh fish tavernas to casual gyros spots. Toward the Chora itself, you'll find the old market street (running through the Bourgos neighborhood), the Venetian tower houses of the Kastro quarter, and several well-stocked mini-markets. Naxos National Airport is approximately 3 km from the property — close enough that you'll occasionally hear small aircraft, though it rarely disrupts a night's sleep.

320m away4 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.

354m away4 min walk
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.

357m away4 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.

448m away6 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.

498m away6 min walk

Restaurants

Barcode Naxos

Barcode has been one of Naxos Town's most consistent all-day spots for seventeen years. Open from half past six in the morning until nearly midnight every day of the week, it covers ground that few single venues manage: early espresso, a proper brunch, afternoon sweets, and evening drinks — all without changing the address. With over 1,000 Google ratings sitting at 4.9 stars, it is not a place that sneaked under the radar.\n\nThe café sits in Naxos Town (Chora), close to the waterfront bustle but with enough of its own rhythm to function as a reliable base at any hour. Whether you want a quiet morning coffee before the ferry crowds arrive or a late-night cocktail after dinner, the hours have you covered.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nBarcode leans into what Greeks do well at all-day cafés: quality coffee taken seriously, a menu that adapts to the time of day, and a pace that doesn't rush you. In the morning you'll find breakfast plates and fresh pastries alongside single-origin-style espresso drinks. By midday the brunch options take over — think sandwiches, light plates, and sweet bakes that keep the kitchen busy well past noon. The ice cream and dessert side of the menu makes it a natural afternoon stop, especially after a morning at one of the nearby beaches.\n\nThe place also functions as an internet café, which is useful if you need to sort logistics, print boarding passes, or simply get some work done with a reliable Wi-Fi connection. As the evening sets in, the bar side comes alive — cocktails and cold drinks make it a low-key but enjoyable spot before or after dinner elsewhere in Chora.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nBarcode is in central Naxos Town, making it walkable from virtually anywhere in the Chora. If you're arriving by ferry at the main port, you'll be on foot within minutes — walk along the waterfront promenade and you'll find the area quickly. Driving from the south of the island via the main coastal road brings you into Chora's edge; parking in the town can be tight in July and August, so arriving on foot or by scooter is easier during peak season. Local buses from Agios Prokopios, Agios Georgios beach, and villages further inland all terminate in or near Chora's main square, leaving a short walk to the café.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nBarcode's long hours mean there's genuinely no bad time, but the experience shifts depending on when you go. Early morning — 6:30 to 9:00 AM — is calm, with mostly locals and the occasional early-rising traveler catching the first coffee of the day. Midmorning to early afternoon brings the brunch crowd. Late afternoon is good for a cold drink and dessert after sightseeing. The 4.9-star rating holds across all seasons, suggesting the kitchen and staff stay consistent even in the thick of summer. If you want a quieter seat, shoulder season (May–June and September–October) is reliably more relaxed.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- The café opens at 6:30 AM every day, including weekends — ideal if you have an early ferry or want breakfast before the town wakes up.\n- Check the Facebook page (facebook.com/barcodecafenaxos) or Instagram (@barcode_naxos) for seasonal menu updates and daily specials.\n- If you need the internet café services, it's worth calling ahead (+30 2285 027147) to confirm availability of terminals during busy periods.\n- Seating can fill up fast on summer mornings; arriving before 9 AM gives you the best pick of spots.\n- It works well as a bookend to a Naxos Town morning: coffee here first, then the Portara, the Old Market, or the Kastro, then back for a midday brunch.\n\n## A Local Institution with Range\n\nSeventeen years in a seasonal tourist destination is a meaningful tenure. Barcode has survived by not trying to be one thing. It functions as a neighborhood bakery in the early hours, a brunch café through the middle of the day, a dessert and ice cream stop by afternoon, and a casual bar come evening. That range, paired with the all-day hours and a consistently high rating from over a thousand reviewers, explains the loyalty it has built from both locals and returning visitors. For travelers who dislike hunting for different venues at different times of day, it resolves a lot of that friction in one address.

334m away4 min walk
Dolce

Dolce — full name Dolce Vita — is a café and patisserie sitting in the village of Chalki, one of the most well-preserved medieval settlements in the Naxos interior. While most visitors make the 17-kilometre drive inland to see the Byzantine churches and the Venetian tower house of the Grazia-Barozzi family, the café has built its own reputation: 300 Google reviews and a 4.7-star rating suggest it earns its place as a deliberate stop rather than an afterthought.\n\nThe combination of proper coffee, house-made sweets, and a setting inside a village that sees far fewer crowds than Naxos Town makes Dolce a useful anchor for a morning or afternoon spent exploring the Tragaea plateau.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nDolce operates as a café and patisserie, which means the focus is on coffee drinks alongside sweet preparations — think pastries, cakes, and Greek-style confections rather than full savoury meals. The format suits Chalki's pace: you order, sit, and take your time. The café's Instagram presence suggests a visually considered space, consistent with the village's generally well-maintained stone-building aesthetic. Light refreshments are available alongside the sweet menu, making it viable for a mid-morning break or an afternoon pause between sites.\n\nGiven the place_types include `food_store`, there may be packaged products — local preserves, sweets, or similar — available to take away, which is common for Naxos inland cafés of this style.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nChalki is reached by car or scooter via the main inland road from Naxos Town heading toward Filoti. The drive takes roughly 25–30 minutes. Take the turn signposted for Chalki before you reach Filoti; the village is compact and Dolce sits within the central cluster of buildings.\n\nThere is no direct bus service that stops in Chalki village itself with meaningful frequency for tourists; KTEL buses run to Filoti and Apiranthos along the same road, but Chalki is a request stop and schedules are limited. A rental car or scooter gives you the flexibility to combine Chalki with other Tragaea villages — Moni, Filoti, and Apiranthos are all within 10–15 minutes of each other.\n\nParking is available on the approach roads into Chalki; the village centre is largely pedestrianised.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nThe Naxos interior is at its best from April through June and again in September and October, when temperatures are comfortable for village walking and the crowds are manageable. Chalki gets noticeably quieter than the coastal resorts even in August, though midday in July and August is still hot on the plateau.\n\nFor the café itself, a mid-morning visit works well — coffee and a pastry before or after walking Chalki's lanes and churches keeps the pace unhurried. Avoid the peak lunchtime window if you want a quieter seat.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Combine with Chalki's Byzantine Church of Panagia Protothroni, which stands at the centre of the village and dates to the 9th–11th centuries.\n- The Venetian tower house in the village square is worth a look before or after your coffee stop.\n- Carry cash; small village cafés in the Naxos interior do not always have reliable card terminals.\n- Check the Instagram account (@dolce_vita_chalki) before visiting for current hours and seasonal closures, as no fixed opening hours are published.\n- The drive from Naxos Town through the Tragaea is itself scenic — the olive groves and marble outcrops along the route are representative of the island's interior character.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nChalki is the informal centre of the Tragaea region. Within easy walking distance of Dolce are the Church of Panagia Protothroni, the Grazia-Barozzi Venetian tower, and several small Byzantine chapels scattered among the olive groves on the edge of the village. The Naxos tower houses at Filoti and the mountain village of Apiranthos — known for its marble-paved lanes and small local museums — are both under 15 minutes by car. The drive back toward Naxos Town via Ano Sagri adds further Byzantine and Venetian sites if you have the afternoon free.

420m away5 min walk
Alsos

Alsos is a restaurant on Naxos sitting at coordinates that place it within easy reach of Naxos Town — the island's main hub of ferries, food, and everyday life. The source data is lean on specifics, but the location (37.1014°N, 25.3804°E) puts it roughly in the southern reaches of the Naxos Town area, not far from the waterfront and the neighborhoods that spread inland from Agios Georgios beach.\n\nNaxos has a strong culinary identity built on local produce — Graviera cheese, Naxian potatoes, locally raised pork, and fresh Aegean seafood — and most restaurants in and around Naxos Town draw on that larder. If Alsos follows that pattern, expect a menu grounded in the island's own ingredients rather than a generic Greek-tourist spread.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe available information describes Alsos as a restaurant offering dining in a relaxed setting. On Naxos, that typically means outdoor or semi-covered seating, a pace that isn't rushed, and a menu that moves between mezedes, grilled meats, and whatever fish came in that day. The name "Alsos" translates loosely from Greek as "grove" — a word that implies shade, greenery, and a certain ease, which fits the relaxed-setting description.\n\nWithout confirmed opening hours or a verified menu, the safest approach is to arrive with reasonable expectations and check current details on arrival or via a quick phone inquiry to the nearest local tourism point in Naxos Town.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe coordinates place Alsos within the Naxos Town (Chora) area, which is walkable from the main port and the beaches at Agios Georgios.\n\n- **On foot:** If you're staying in central Naxos Town or Agios Georgios, the location is likely reachable in 10–20 minutes on foot depending on your exact base.\n- **By car or scooter:** Naxos Town is compact; parking along the southern roads near Agios Georgios is generally easier than in the old town core. Use the coordinates to navigate directly.\n- **By bus:** KTEL Naxos operates routes connecting Naxos Town with the main beach villages. The Naxos Town bus terminal is the central node — from there, the restaurant is walkable.\n- **By taxi:** Taxis are available from the port rank and can be flagged or pre-booked through accommodation. Journey time from the port should be under five minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos restaurants in the Chora area tend to be busiest from late July through August, when the island's population swells with visitors. For a more relaxed meal, aim for shoulder season — May, June, or September — when tables are easier to come by and the heat is less punishing. In high summer, booking ahead (or arriving early — before 7:30 pm) is wise for any sit-down restaurant. Lunchtime in Greece typically runs from 1:00 pm to 3:30 pm; evening service usually starts around 7:00 pm and stretches past 11:00 pm.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Verify hours before going.** No confirmed opening hours are available; the restaurant may be seasonal or have limited days of service.\n- **Ask about the daily specials.** In Greek tavernas and casual restaurants, the freshest and best-value dishes are often not on the printed menu.\n- **Bring cash as a backup.** Card acceptance varies widely at smaller Naxos restaurants.\n- **Use the coordinates.** With no street address confirmed, navigate directly to 37.1014°N, 25.3804°E using Google Maps or similar.\n- **Check recent reviews.** Given the thin data available, current visitor reviews on Google Maps or TripAdvisor will give you the most up-to-date picture of the menu, pricing, and atmosphere.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe Naxos Town area around these coordinates puts you close to several reference points. Agios Georgios beach — the long sandy stretch immediately south of the port — is a short walk away. The Naxos Town waterfront promenade (the paralia) runs north toward the causeway leading to the Portara, the island's most iconic landmark. The old Venetian Kastro sits above the Chora, roughly 10–15 minutes on foot uphill. This cluster of dining, beaches, and history means that a meal at Alsos can slot naturally into a full day based in the Chora.

466m away6 min walk
Naxos Grill

Naxos Grill sits on Andrea Papandreou, one of the main commercial streets running through Naxos Town, and does exactly what its name promises: grilled meats, gyros, and straightforward fast-food fare cooked to order. With a 4.2-star rating across 920 reviews, it has earned a steady following among locals and visitors alike who want something satisfying without fuss or a long wait.\n\nThis is not a taverna with a long wine list or a view of the sea. It is a grill counter where the food is the point — hot, unpretentious, and priced accordingly. If you have been out exploring the old town's Venetian kastro or have just stepped off a ferry and need a proper meal before anything else, Naxos Grill is a dependable first stop.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe menu centres on grilled meats — the kind of rotating spit and open-flame cooking that Greek fast-food joints have been doing well for decades. Gyros are the headline item, served in pita with the standard accompaniments of tzatziki, tomato, onion, and fries. Alongside those you can expect souvlaki skewers and other grilled meat plates. Portions are filling, service is quick, and the format is casual enough that you can eat standing or take your order to go.\n\nThe address on Andrea Papandreou places it within easy reach of the port area and the main shopping and café strip of Naxos Town, so it is well-positioned for a mid-afternoon bite after the ferry or a late-evening meal after a day on the beach. Hours run from 1:00 PM to midnight every day of the week, which means it is one of the few spots in town still turning out food when the kitchen at a sit-down taverna has already wound down.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nNaxos Grill is on Andrea Papandreou in central Naxos Town (Chora). If you are arriving by ferry at the main port, the street is a short walk inland — under ten minutes on foot from the dock. From the main plateia (town square), head slightly south along the commercial strip and you will find it without difficulty.\n\nIf you are driving from one of the inland villages or beach resorts to the south, park near the port waterfront or in one of the small lots off the main road into Chora; the one-way system in the old town makes driving directly to the address impractical. From Agios Prokopios or Agios Georgios beach, the drive into Chora takes roughly five to ten minutes depending on traffic.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Grill opens at 1:00 PM daily, which makes it a good option for a late lunch. The peak window for a quick grill meal is typically between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM, when it draws a mix of locals on a break and tourists rotating through town. Late evening — from around 9:00 PM onward — is another busy window, particularly in high season (July and August), when the town fills up and sit-down restaurants develop queues. If you want to avoid waiting, aim for just after opening or around 6:00 PM before the dinner rush builds.\n\nThe spot is sheltered from the afternoon Aegean wind (the meltemi that picks up in summer), so eating in or nearby is comfortable even on gustier days.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Call ahead on busy evenings:** The phone number is +30 2285 027117 if you want to confirm wait times or check on any specials during peak summer weeks.\n- **Arrive hungry:** Portions at Greek grill spots tend to be generous; a gyros pita with fries is a full meal, not a snack.\n- **Cash is useful:** Many small grill counters in Greek island towns prefer cash; carry some even if card payment is available.\n- **Combine with errands:** The Andrea Papandreou strip has supermarkets, pharmacies, and bakeries nearby, so it is an efficient stop if you are stocking up for a self-catering stay.\n- **Eat in or take away:** The casual format suits a takeaway meal to eat at the nearby waterfront equally well as eating on the spot.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAndrea Papandreou feeds into the broader Naxos Town centre, so within a few minutes' walk you have the old Venetian kastro and its medieval walls, the Naxos Archaeological Museum (housed inside the kastro), and the waterfront promenade where the iconic Portara islet sits at the northern end of the port. The main beach of Agios Georgios begins just south of the town centre. For a post-meal walk, the old market lane (Papavasiliou) runs parallel through the old town with small shops and cafés.

491m away6 min walk

supermarkets

AB Vassilopoulos

AB Vassilopoulos is one of Greece's most recognised supermarket chains, and its Naxos branch serves both locals and visitors looking to stock up on groceries, fresh produce, and everyday household items. Whether you're self-catering in a Naxos Town apartment, provisioning a sailing boat at the nearby marina, or simply grabbing snacks and water for a day at the beach, this is one of the most practical stops on the island.\n\nThe branch sits in Naxos Town (Chora), positioned conveniently close to the main commercial strip and within easy reach of the port area, based on its coordinates near the centre of town.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nAB Vassilopoulos operates as a full-service supermarket rather than a small convenience store. You can expect a broad range of products: packaged and fresh groceries, dairy, meat and deli counters, fresh fruit and vegetables, beverages, cleaning supplies, and toiletries. The chain is also known for carrying local Greek products alongside national brands, so you may find Naxian cheeses, cured meats, and regional specialities alongside the usual staples — worth browsing if you want to pick up something local without hunting down a specialist deli.\n\nThe store participates in AB's national loyalty and digital services, including bill payment (PayLink) and, on Naxos, an AB Collect option for ordering groceries with home delivery — useful if you're staying in a villa or rental property outside walking distance.\n\nOne web snippet indicates the store is open until 21:00, though hours can vary by day and season. Verify current hours directly with the store or via the AB Vassilopoulos website before planning a late visit.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe store is located in Naxos Town, the island's main hub, accessible by multiple means:\n\n- **On foot:** If you're staying anywhere in central Chora or along the waterfront, the store is reachable on foot. The coordinates place it a short walk from the port and the main Papavasiliou square area.\n- **By car or scooter:** Naxos Town has several small parking areas near the commercial centre. Arrive early in summer to avoid competition for spots, particularly in July and August.\n- **By bus:** KTEL Naxos buses connect the main villages to Naxos Town regularly. The bus terminal is near the port, putting you a short walk from central shopping.\n- **From other parts of the island:** Naxos Town is the logical provisioning stop for anyone driving in from Apiranthos, Filoti, Halki, or the resort areas along the west coast.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nWeekday mornings are the most comfortable time to shop — queues are shorter and shelves are freshly stocked. Avoid Saturday afternoons in peak summer (late June through August), when the store can get busy with both locals doing weekly shopping and tourists. If you arrive on the ferry in the evening, the store's reported 21:00 closing time means a same-day grocery run is feasible — confirm this is accurate for your day of travel.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Bring a reusable bag or purchase one at the checkout; single-use plastic bags carry a small charge in Greek supermarkets.\n- Check the chilled section for local Naxian graviera and arseniko cheeses — the chain typically stocks them and it saves a separate trip to a specialist shop.\n- The AB app (or website) can be useful for checking weekly offers if you're on the island for a longer stay.\n- If you need home delivery, the AB Collect service appears to be available on Naxos — worth checking on the AB Vassilopoulos website for your address and delivery window.\n- Stock up on water, sunscreen, and snacks here before heading to beaches on the west coast; prices in beachside kiosks and minimarkets are noticeably higher.\n- For very early-morning arrivals on the ferry, note that the store is unlikely to be open; a small 24-hour kiosk near the port is a better option for immediate needs.\n\n## AB Vassilopoulos as a Chain: What Greeks Know\n\nFounded in 1949, AB Vassilopoulos is one of the oldest and largest supermarket groups in Greece, now affiliated with the Ahold Delhaize group. Greeks generally regard it as a reliable mid-to-upper-tier supermarket with consistent quality on fresh produce and an above-average deli and cheese offering. On an island like Naxos, where produce quality can vary between small neighbourhood shops, the chain's sourcing standards are a practical advantage for visitors who want predictable quality without guesswork.

43m away1 min walk
My market

My Market is a supermarket on Naxos serving residents and visitors with everyday groceries and household essentials. Based on its coordinates, the store sits in the area surrounding Naxos Town (Chora), making it a practical stop whether you're self-catering in a villa, stocking up for a boat, or simply picking up supplies for the day.\n\nMy Market is part of the wider My Market chain operating across Greece, which typically carries fresh produce, dairy, meat, packaged goods, drinks, and basic non-food items. For travelers staying in self-catering accommodation anywhere near Naxos Town, a Greek supermarket like this is one of the most cost-effective ways to keep food and drink budgets manageable.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nAs a branch of a national Greek supermarket chain, My Market follows a familiar format: organized aisles, refrigerated sections for local cheeses (expect Naxian graviera and arseniko), fresh bread, Greek yogurt, and a selection of Naxos-produced products alongside standard packaged goods. You'll also find local Naxian potatoes — the island is famous for them — and bottled water, wine, and beer at significantly lower prices than beachside kiosks or taverna shops. The store is oriented toward both locals doing their weekly shop and tourists filling in gaps between meals out.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe coordinates place My Market within reach of Naxos Town center. If you're staying in Chora or the port area, the store is likely walkable or a very short drive. Those arriving by ferry and staying in the main town can reach it on foot once they have their bearings. If you're based in a more remote village — Apiranthos, Filoti, or the coastal resorts to the south — a car or scooter is the practical choice. Parking in Naxos Town can be tight in high summer; arriving early in the morning or later in the afternoon makes it easier to find a spot near the store.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nGreek supermarkets tend to be quietest in the early morning (around opening) and in the mid-afternoon lull. Midday in July and August sees the most foot traffic, both from locals and tourists. If you need to do a larger shop, a weekday morning is the calmest window. Note that Greek retail hours can shift on Sundays and public holidays — hours are not confirmed for this location, so it's worth checking locally on arrival.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Bring a reusable bag; plastic bags are either charged for or not available at most Greek supermarkets.\n- Pick up locally produced Naxian graviera cheese and Naxos potatoes — both are genuine regional specialties worth taking back to your accommodation.\n- Bottled water, sunscreen, and beach snacks are considerably cheaper here than at beach kiosks or tourist-facing shops.\n- If you're stocking a boat or a villa kitchen, go early in the week — fresh deliveries tend to arrive frequently but shelves can thin out toward the weekend in peak season.\n- Self-checkout or short queues are typical at off-peak hours; card payment is generally accepted at My Market branches across Greece, but carrying some cash is always sensible on Greek islands.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe coordinates put My Market within the Naxos Town orbit, which means the Portara (the iconic marble gate of the unfinished Temple of Apollo) is not far, nor is the old Venetian Kastro district on the hill above the port. The main waterfront with its cafes, ferry ticket offices, and tavernas is the commercial hub of the area. If you're combining a grocery run with sightseeing, the morning is the best time to shop first and then walk up to the Kastro before the heat builds.

291m away4 min walk
Market

Located in the Naxos Town area, this small convenience store covers the basics: groceries, snacks, drinks, and household essentials that self-catering travelers or villa renters tend to run out of mid-trip. It won't replace a full supermarket run, but for picking up water, bread, yogurt, or sun cream without driving across the island, it does the job.\n\nThe coordinates place it within the broader Naxos Town (Chora) area, within reasonable walking distance of the waterfront and surrounding neighborhoods. Given its category as a convenience store rather than a large-format supermarket, expect a compact layout stocked for top-up shopping rather than a full weekly haul.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nSmall convenience stores like this one on Naxos typically carry bottled water, soft drinks, beer and wine, packaged snacks, basic fresh produce, dairy, bread, cold cuts, and a limited selection of cleaning and toiletry products. Prices in smaller stores tend to run slightly higher than at larger supermarket chains such as Masoutis or AB Vassilopoulos, which have branches on the island, but the convenience of proximity usually makes up the difference for everyday top-up needs.\n\nThe store is described as a small operation, so don't arrive expecting a deli counter or a wide range of specialty or imported goods.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nThe store sits in the Naxos Town area based on its coordinates (37.1012, 25.3820). If you're staying in or near Chora, it's likely reachable on foot from most accommodations in the central town zone. Drivers coming from the south or from villages inland can follow signs toward Naxos Town center and park along the waterfront or in the main parking areas near the port — then proceed on foot.\n\nThere is no dedicated parking at a store of this size. The Naxos Town bus terminus is near the port, and several local routes pass through Chora, making it straightforward to reach from beaches or villages served by KTEL Naxos.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nConvenience stores in Greek island towns generally keep longer hours than larger supermarkets, often opening early and staying open into the evening, including Sundays — though this has not been confirmed for this location. Weekday mornings tend to be quieter. In peak summer (July and August), Naxos Town gets busy from mid-morning onward, so early visits are more relaxed. During shoulder season (May–June and September–October), foot traffic is lighter throughout the day.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Bring a reusable bag — plastic bag charges apply in Greek shops.\n- Keep small euro coins and low-denomination notes handy; smaller stores may have limited change for large bills.\n- If you need a full grocery run, complement this stop with a visit to one of the larger supermarkets on the main road heading south out of Naxos Town.\n- Greek convenience stores often stock local products like Naxian thyme honey, graviera cheese, and kitron liqueur alongside standard items — worth a look.\n- Opening hours have not been confirmed; check locally on arrival or call ahead if hours are critical to your plans.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe surrounding Naxos Town area offers a full range of options beyond grocery shopping. The Old Market district — a lane of shops, cafes, and jewelry stores running through the Kastro neighborhood — is within walking distance and worth exploring for gifts and local products. The Portara (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo) is a short walk north of the port. Numerous tavernas and cafes line the waterfront promenade.

342m away4 min walk