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Agia Anna
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08:06
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10:06
Naxos Town
08:21
08:51
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Naxos Town
08:18
08:48
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Plaka
07:38
08:08
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09:08
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10:08
Naxos Town
08:26
11:56
13:26
14:26
15:26
17:26
Mikri Vigla Beach
07:36
11:06
12:21
13:36
14:21
16:36

What's On Near Princess

Nearby Points of Interest

Bars

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.

1163m away15 min walk
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.

1400m away17 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.

1422m away18 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.

1436m away18 min walk

Beach Bars

Naxaki Beach Lounge and Restaurant

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

434m away5 min walk

Beaches

Saint George Beach

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

458m 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

1143m away14 min walk

Hotels

Hotel Princess Naxos

Hotel Princess Naxos occupies the southern end of St. George Beach, the long sandy bay that stretches south from Naxos Town port. It sits in a quieter stretch of that beach — away from the busiest tavernas and watersports concessions closer to town — while remaining within a 10-minute walk of the waterfront and the old market lanes of Hora.\n\nWith a 4.6 rating from 289 Google reviews, the property draws a mix of couples, honeymooners, and families looking for a comfortable base with direct beach access and easy reach of the island's main transport hub.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe hotel offers a range of room types that scale from straightforward doubles and studios up to suites designed for longer stays or special occasions. The Superior Double Room and Superior Triple Room suit travelers who want a clean, well-located base without extra frills. The Junior Suite steps things up with more space and improved sea-facing outlooks, while the Deluxe Apartment works well for couples or small groups wanting a self-catering element.\n\nAt the top end, the Honeymoon Suite is pitched as a romantic stay — expect more considered interiors and added privacy. The Superior Suite with Hot Tub is the flagship room type, offering an in-room hot tub alongside the suite layout. The hotel also runs a car rental service from the property, which is useful if you want to reach more remote beaches on the island's west coast or the mountain villages of the interior without depending on infrequent buses.\n\nFront desk hours run from 8:30 AM to midnight daily, which covers most arrival windows including late-night ferries from Piraeus.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**On foot from Naxos Town:** The hotel is a 10-minute walk from the center of Naxos Town (Hora). Head south along the St. George Beach promenade past the main cluster of beach bars and tavernas — the hotel is at the quieter far end.\n\n**By car or taxi:** From the port, follow the coastal road south along St. George Beach. The address is on the St. George Beach road (Naxos ke Mikres Kiklades 843 00). Street parking exists along the beach road, and the hotel's car rental desk means guests can arrange a vehicle directly on arrival.\n\n**By bus:** The KTEL bus station is in Naxos Town, roughly a 10-minute walk from the hotel. Buses connect Naxos Town to Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, and Plaka to the south, as well as to the inland villages. For most day trips you can walk into town to pick up the bus.\n\n**By ferry:** Naxos port receives regular ferries from Piraeus (4–6 hours depending on service), as well as fast catamarans and connections from Mykonos, Paros, and Santorini. The port is within walking distance of the hotel.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nSt. George Beach is a sheltered west-facing bay, which keeps it calm for swimming even when the meltemi wind picks up across the Aegean in July and August. That said, peak summer — particularly the first two weeks of August — brings maximum crowds to the beach and higher room rates across the island.\n\nLate June, September, and early October offer the best balance: warm enough to swim comfortably, fewer day-trippers, and generally lower rates. The hotel's walking distance to town also makes it a reasonable base in shoulder season (May, late October) when some more remote beach hotels close.\n\nFor the beach itself, mornings are calmer and clearer before afternoon wind fills in. The west-facing orientation means St. George gets direct afternoon and evening sun, making it a good spot for a late swim before dinner in town.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book the car rental in advance** if you plan to visit Naxos's remote beaches — Aliko, Pyrgaki, or Kalantos — since rental availability can thin out in August.\n- **Request a sea-view room** when booking if that matters to you; the hotel's position at the quieter end of the beach means views vary by room and floor.\n- **The hot-tub suite** is a meaningful upgrade at this property if you're visiting for a honeymoon or anniversary — ask about availability when you book rather than hoping to upgrade on arrival.\n- **Walk into town for dinner** rather than eating exclusively at beach-strip tavernas; Naxos Town has a strong local restaurant scene in the back lanes of the old market.\n- **Check ferry times** before booking late-arrival nights — the Piraeus overnight ferry often docks very early in the morning, which can mean an awkward wait before check-in.\n- **The Portara** (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia) is a 15-minute walk from the hotel along the waterfront and is the obvious first-evening landmark to visit.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nSt. George Beach itself runs for about 1.5 km from the port south to where the hotel sits. The northern stretch has watersports rentals, sun-lounger rows, and several beach bars. The area around the hotel is calmer and better for families with children.\n\nNaxos Town (Hora) is the island's main hub: the Venetian Kastro, the Archaeological Museum, the covered market, and the ferry port are all within walking distance. The road heading south from the hotel connects to Agios Prokopios and Agia Anna beaches, both reachable by bike or a short drive.

60m away1 min walk
Alkyoni Beach Hotel

Alkyoni Beach Hotel sits on Agios Georgios beach — the long, sandy bay that stretches south from Naxos Town port — with 4,000 square metres of private gardens separating it from the seafront promenade. It's one of the few hotels in this part of the island where the water is a short walk across the property rather than a drive, and the Chora's tavernas, bakeries, and the marble Portara gateway are all within ten minutes on foot.\n\nThe hotel's position makes it equally practical for families who want calm, shallow water close by, and for couples who prefer a beach base with easy access to the town's evening scene.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nAccommodation spans several room types: standard doubles with sea views, Executive sea-view double rooms, Junior Suites, Junior Suites with Spa, Honeymoon Suites, Family Rooms, and a Seaside Residence with a private Jacuzzi. The spread means the hotel works for groups with different budgets under the same roof. Room categories facing the sea overlook the gardens and the bay of Agios Georgios; the beach itself is sandy and sheltered, with generally calm water suitable for young children.\n\nOn-site dining comes from the hotel's own traditional taverna-restaurant, which focuses on home-style Greek cooking made with locally sourced produce. This keeps the food close to what you'd find in a family-run village kitchen rather than a resort buffet line.\n\nThe hotel has a 4.5-star rating based on 205 Google reviews, which points to consistent, rather than flashy, service.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**On foot from Naxos Town:** The Chora waterfront is roughly a ten-minute walk north along the beach promenade. From the port, follow the seafront road south past the windmill roundabout; Agios Georgios beach begins immediately after and the hotel sits along its northern end.\n\n**By car or taxi:** Agios Georgios is signposted from the main port junction. Taxis from the ferry terminal take under five minutes. If you're arriving with a rental car, note that parking near Agios Georgios can be tight in July and August; the hotel can advise on nearby options.\n\n**By bus:** KTEL Naxos buses connect the main bus station near the port to various island destinations. Agios Georgios is close enough to the Chora that it's within comfortable walking distance of the central bus stop.\n\n**By ferry:** Naxos Town port receives daily connections from Piraeus, Paros, Mykonos, and Santorini. From the port, the hotel is reachable on foot in around ten minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nAgios Georgios is one of the more sheltered beaches on Naxos's west coast, which makes it useful even when the island's characteristic meltemi wind picks up in mid-summer. The wind tends to arrive in July and August, and while it keeps temperatures bearable, it can make exposed north-facing beaches choppy. Agios Georgios faces west and sits behind the headland of Naxos Town, so conditions here are generally calmer.\n\nShoulder season — late May through June and September into early October — gives you warm water, fewer crowds on the beach, and easier dinner reservations in the Chora. August is peak season; book well ahead. Early mornings in summer offer the beach at its quietest before day-trippers arrive.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book room category carefully.** The difference between a standard room and an Executive sea-view double or a suite with spa facilities is significant. If the view and direct beach access matter, confirm the specific room type at booking.\n- **Contact the hotel directly.** Email ([email protected]) or phone (+30 2285 026136) for room-specific questions; direct bookings sometimes carry benefits over third-party platforms.\n- **Plan for the meltemi.** Pack a light layer for evenings in July and August; the wind drops after sunset but Cycladic evenings can feel cool by the water.\n- **Use the Chora as your base.** With the port, the Venetian kastro, the Portara, and a concentration of good restaurants all within walking distance, you don't need a car for the first day or two.\n- **Agios Georgios beach facilities.** The beach has sunbeds and water-sports rental available along its length in high season; confirm current availability with the hotel at time of stay.\n- **Taverna dining.** The on-site restaurant is worth using at least once — local sourcing in the Cyclades typically means seasonal vegetables, fresh fish, and Naxian cheeses that don't travel far to reach the kitchen.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe Portara — the freestanding Apollo Temple gateway on the islet of Palatia — is visible from the beach and a ten-minute walk from the hotel. The Venetian Kastro district of the Chora, with its medieval tower houses and the Archaeology Museum, is about fifteen minutes on foot heading north through the old town. Agios Prokopios beach, the next bay south, is a short drive or a longer beach walk for those wanting to explore further along the coast. The main KTEL bus station near the port is your jumping-off point for the island's interior villages — Halki, Filoti, and Apeiranthos — if you want a day away from the coast.

253m away3 min walk
Flisvos Naxos Beach 1

Flisvos Beach Apartments occupy a prime seafront position in the Flisvos area of Agios Georgios, the long sandy bay that stretches south of Naxos Town. The apartments sit directly beside the water, so the beach is not a short walk away — it is essentially at your door. Naxos Town port, the airport, and the main road south to Agia Anna and Plaka are all within a few minutes by car, making this a practical base for exploring the island without sacrificing a relaxed, sea-facing setting.\n\nThe property is connected to the wider Flisvos Sport Club operation, which has built a reputation on Agios Georgios for windsurfing, wingfoiling, and water-sports instruction. Guests staying at the apartments have that ecosystem nearby, but the accommodation itself is pitched at anyone who wants direct beach access and sea views rather than a purely sports-focused experience.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe apartments are described as beachfront units with sea views, and the address — Agios Georgios Flisvos — places them on the northern end of the beach, close to the promenade that connects the bay to Naxos Town. Agios Georgios is a gently shelving, sandy beach popular with families and beginners, with shallow, calm water that makes it one of the more sheltered spots on the island. The surrounding area has a low-key, local feel compared to the more resort-heavy stretches further south.\n\nThe property offers private transfers and organised tours — including island highlights, village routes, and snorkelling excursions — which is useful if you prefer not to rent a car for every outing. Reception hours run Monday to Sunday, 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**By foot from Naxos Town:** Agios Georgios beach is roughly a 10–15 minute walk south from the main port and the Portara islet. Follow the waterfront promenade from the old town and the beach comes into view just past the small harbour.\n\n**By car or scooter:** From Naxos Town, take the road toward Agios Georgios and follow signs for the beach. The Flisvos area sits toward the far end of the bay. Parking is available along the seafront road, though spaces fill up quickly in July and August.\n\n**By bus:** KTEL Naxos buses run from the central bus station near the port to Agios Georgios and onward to Agia Anna. The stop is a short walk from the apartments.\n\n**From the airport:** Naxos Airport is immediately adjacent to Agios Georgios beach — the runway runs parallel to the shore — making this one of the closest accommodation options to arrivals. A taxi or the property's own transfer service covers the distance in under five minutes.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nFlisvos and Agios Georgios are at their busiest from late June through August, when the beach fills early and the afternoon meltemi wind picks up — which is precisely why windsurfers and wingfoilers favour the spot. If you want the beach quieter and the sea still warm, early June and September are the better windows. The apartments are a seasonal property; confirm availability outside the core summer months directly with the team.\n\nFor the beach itself, mornings before 10:00 AM offer calmer water and fewer crowds. By early afternoon the meltemi typically brings a steady breeze off the sea.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early, especially for August.** The property actively promotes early-booking discounts on its website, and beachfront units at this location sell out well before peak season.\n- **Ask about the tour programme.** The snorkelling and island-village tours run through Flisvos and are a convenient add-on if you want guided outings without coordinating your own transport.\n- **Check the sport-club schedule.** If you want windsurfing or wingfoiling lessons, the adjacent Flisvos Sport Club is one of the better-regarded centres on Naxos; coordinate with the apartments team for timing.\n- **Bring or rent gear for the beach.** Agios Georgios has sunbed and umbrella hire along the main stretch, but the quieter Flisvos end can be more DIY.\n- **The airport noise factor:** The runway is close. Departures and arrivals are infrequent, but light aircraft movements happen throughout the day in summer. The tradeoff is an unbeatable proximity to the beach and town.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios beach itself is the immediate draw, but the surrounding area adds useful context. Naxos Town (Hora) is within easy walking distance and has the island's main concentration of restaurants, bars, and the Venetian Kastro. The Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo — is visible from the bay and a short walk along the seafront. Heading south by road, Agia Anna beach is about 6 km away and Plaka beach another 3 km beyond that, both reachable in under 20 minutes by car or scooter. For provisions, small supermarkets and bakeries operate on the road between Agios Georgios and Naxos Town.

296m away4 min walk
Astir Hotel Naxos

Astir Hotel Naxos sits at the northern end of Agios Georgios beach, the long sandy bay that curves south from the port of Naxos Town. The hotel is a short walk — about 500 metres along the waterfront promenade — from the Chora's main square, which means you get the quieter, residential feel of the beachside without sacrificing access to the tavernas, bakeries, and ferry connections of the town centre.\n\nThe property is family-run and built around Cycladic whitewashed architecture: courtyard gardens with bougainvillea, a pool, and a relaxed communal living area. It rates 4.5 out of 5 across 250 reviews, a score that reflects consistency rather than accident.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nThe room categories cover a practical range for different group sizes and budgets:\n\n- **Double Rooms** (15–18 m²) accommodate two adults and look out over the garden, mountain, or pool.\n- **Triple Rooms** (18–20 m²) sleep three guests and offer garden, partial sea, mountain, or pool views.\n- **Honeymoon Room** (20 m²) is designed for couples and features garden, pool, or sea views.\n- **Family Room / Triple with extra bed** (22–24 m²) fits three adults plus a child, or a family of four, with garden, partial sea, mountain, or pool views.\n- **The Suite** (46 m²) is the largest option, sleeping up to four adults or a family of four, with panoramic views across the pool and Naxos Town.\n\nThe hotel is open 24 hours, year-round. Facilities include the pool and courtyard garden; the beach at Agios Georgios is a short walk away, so the property functions well for guests who want a base rather than an all-inclusive resort.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**From the port:** Agios Georgios beach begins roughly 800 metres south of the Naxos ferry dock. Walk south along the seafront road — the promenade is flat and straightforward — and the hotel is signposted along Saint George Beach road.\n\n**By bus:** KTEL Naxos operates services from the main bus station adjacent to the port. The Agios Georgios stop is the first or second stop on several routes; confirm the stop with the driver.\n\n**By car or taxi:** From the port, follow the coast road south toward Agios Georgios. Street parking is available along the beach road, though it fills quickly in July and August. The hotel address is Saint-George-Beach, Naxos 843 00.\n\n**By foot from Naxos Town centre:** The seaside path between the Chora and Agios Georgios takes around 8–10 minutes on foot.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos has one of the longer tourist seasons in the Cyclades, running reliably from late April through October. Agios Georgios beach is one of the most sheltered bays on the island — it faces west-southwest and is partially protected from the meltemi, the strong north wind that can make exposed beaches uncomfortable in July and August. This makes the hotel's location particularly practical in midsummer when other beaches become windy.\n\nFor the quietest experience, late May, June, and September offer warm water, full services, and noticeably smaller crowds. August is the peak of the Greek domestic holiday season and Naxos Town fills quickly.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book the suite early** if you're travelling as a group of four — at 46 m² it's significantly more spacious than the family room, and it goes fast in summer.\n- **Walk the promenade at dusk.** The 500-metre path into Naxos Town follows the waterfront and is one of the more pleasant evening walks in the Chora.\n- **Agios Georgios beach is sandy and shallow** — well-suited for families with young children who need calm, easy-entry water.\n- **The Portara** (the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo on the islet of Palatia) is visible from the seafront path and roughly 15 minutes on foot from the hotel — worth timing for sunset.\n- **Scooter or ATV rental** offices operate near the beach road and give you access to the inland villages of Naxos, Halki, Filoti, and Apeiranthos within 20–40 minutes.\n- **Confirm room view preference** at booking — pool-view and sea-view rooms fill first, and the difference in outlook between categories is meaningful.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nAgios Georgios beach has its own strip of sunbeds, water-sports rental, and beachfront cafes. Walking north along the promenade brings you into the Chora, where the Old Market Street (behind the seafront) holds produce shops, delis, and restaurants serving Naxian cheese, local potatoes, and kitron liqueur made from the island's citron trees. The Kastro, the Venetian-era hilltop fortress district, is about 20 minutes on foot. For longer excursions, the bus station near the port connects to the beaches of Plaka, Agia Anna, and the mountain villages of the interior.

404m away5 min walk
Fikas Hotel

Fikas Hotel sits on Andrea Papandreou street in Naxos Town, close enough to the waterfront that the beach is a short walk away and far enough from the port to stay quiet at night. It's a 16-room family-run property — the kind where the owner knows your name and has already sorted out your sunbed by the time you reach the pool.\n\nThe hotel's strong 4.7 rating across 149 reviews reflects something consistent: guests repeatedly mention the personal attention and the practical convenience of the location, which puts both the Chora's alleys and the Blue Flag sands of St. George's Beach within easy reach on foot.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nFikas Hotel has 16 rooms, every one of them with a balcony. Depending on which room you book, the outlook is onto the garden, the swimming pool, Naxos Town, or the sea. That range matters when you're booking — a sea-view balcony here looks toward the Aegean and, on clear days, toward neighboring islands.\n\nThe hotel's pool area is genuinely spacious for a property this size. Free sunbeds, umbrellas, and towels are available, and the Wi-Fi extends to the poolside. The pool runs from 8am to 8pm, with use outside those hours possible on request. Locker rooms are available for guests departing on afternoon ferries who want to spend a final few hours at the pool or beach without hauling luggage.\n\nChildren are welcome but must be accompanied in the pool area.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nFikas Hotel is on Andrea Papandreou, one of the main roads connecting Naxos Town's port area to the St. George's Beach strip. From the port, it's a walkable distance — roughly 10 to 15 minutes on foot heading south along the waterfront and then inland slightly.\n\nBy car or taxi from Naxos Town center, the drive takes only a few minutes. If you're arriving by ferry, taxis wait outside the terminal; give the driver the street address or simply say "St. George's area." There is parking available in the surrounding streets typical of the Agios Georgios neighborhood.\n\nThe KTEL bus service on Naxos runs routes from the port toward the southern beaches, and stops along or near Andrea Papandreou road serve guests traveling without a vehicle.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nNaxos Town and the St. George's area stay busy from late June through August. Fikas Hotel, with only 16 rooms, fills up quickly in peak season — book well in advance if you're traveling in July or August.\n\nShoulder season — May, June, and September — offers calmer beaches, shorter waits at restaurants, and the same hotel quality at generally better rates. The Cyclades weather in September is reliably warm and the sea temperature stays high from the summer months.\n\nFor the pool and beach, mornings are cooler and the light is better for the sea views from the balconies. Afternoons on the west-facing side of Naxos get direct sun late into the evening.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book early for sea-view balconies.** There are only 16 rooms and the sea-facing ones go first in high season.\n- **Use the locker rooms on departure day.** If your ferry leaves in the afternoon, store your bags and spend the morning at the pool or on St. George's Beach rather than sitting in the lobby.\n- **Walk to the Chora.** The old town of Naxos, with its Venetian kastro and market streets, is walkable from the hotel — no taxi needed for an evening out.\n- **St. George's Beach is organized.** Sun loungers and parasols are available for hire directly on the beach, so you don't need to lug much from the hotel.\n- **Ask the owner about the island.** Family-run hotels on Naxos are often the best source of advice on where to eat, which beaches to target on which days, and how to avoid the worst of the crowds.\n- **Check ferry times before booking the pool late.** The Naxos ferry schedule can shift, and afternoon departures are common — the locker room is there precisely for this.\n\n## About St. George's Beach\n\nSt. George's (Agios Georgios) is the closest organized beach to Naxos Town and holds a Blue Flag certification, meaning the water quality and facilities are independently verified each season. The beach is sandy, gently shelving, and calm enough for children. It's lined with tavernas and cafes, so a full day there is easy without any planning. The Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo — is visible from the northern end of the bay, which gives the beach one of the better backdrops on the island.

408m away5 min walk

Restaurants

Flisvos Beach Cafe

Flisvos Beach Cafe sits directly on the seafront in Naxos Town, a short walk from the main port along Aristidi Protopapadaki — the coastal road that hugs the town beach. It's the kind of place where you drop in after a swim for a cold drink, stay longer than planned, and end up watching the light shift over the Aegean.\n\nWith a rating of 4.6 from nearly 100 reviews, it punches above the typical beachside-snack-bar standard. The vibe is relaxed and unpretentious, aimed at beachgoers who want something better than a vending machine without committing to a full sit-down meal.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nFlisvos keeps things simple. The menu leans toward drinks — coffee, cold beverages, fresh juices, and presumably local beers and spirits — alongside light snacks that fit the beach-day rhythm. Think the kind of food you want with wet hair and sandy feet: nothing that demands a fork and knife, everything that pairs with a view of the sea.\n\nThe setting is the main draw. The cafe is positioned steps from the water on Naxos Town's main beach stretch, which is a sandy, gently shelving shore with clear, calm water — calm enough for families and swimmers who prefer the convenience of being close to town amenities. Sun loungers are typically available on this stretch of beach, so you can move between the water and a shaded seat with a drink in hand.\n\nThe Facebook presence shows over 1,200 check-ins, which for a small local cafe indicates consistent foot traffic from both residents and visitors.\n\n## How to Get There\n\nFlisvos Beach Cafe is on Aristidi Protopapadaki, the seafront road running south from Naxos Town port. If you're arriving by ferry, walk off the dock and turn left — the town beach and the cafe are within a 5–10 minute walk along the waterfront promenade.\n\nIf you're driving from inland Naxos, follow signs toward Naxos Town (Chora) and head for the port area. Parking along the seafront can be tight in summer, particularly in July and August, so arriving early or using the broader parking areas near the port is advisable. On foot from the Portara islet, the cafe is a short stroll south along the water.\n\nThere is no direct bus that drops at the cafe itself, but the main KTEL Naxos bus stop in Naxos Town is close, and buses serving the southern beaches (Agios Georgios, Agios Prokopios) pass through town.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nThe cafe is a natural midday and afternoon destination — the point in a beach day when the sun is high and you want shade, hydration, or a light bite before deciding whether to swim again or head back to your accommodation. Late afternoon, as the heat softens, is also a good window.\n\nPeak season runs from late June through August, when Naxos Town beach gets busy with both tourists and Athenians. Arriving before noon or after 17:00 keeps you ahead of the densest crowds. The cafe's position on the town beach means it benefits from the gentle meltemi wind that blows across the Cyclades in summer — welcome relief on the hottest days.\n\nShoulder season (May, June, September, early October) offers quieter conditions and cooler temperatures for sitting outside.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- Call ahead on +30 2285 025123 to confirm current opening hours, as seasonal schedules vary and none were available at time of writing.\n- The town beach in front is sandy with calm, shallow water — suitable if you have children or want a gentler swim before settling in for drinks.\n- Naxos Town has ATMs and a supermarket within a few minutes' walk if you need cash or supplies for a longer beach day.\n- Pair a stop here with a walk to the Portara — the marble gateway of the unfinished Temple of Apollo sits on the islet at the northern end of the port and takes about 20 minutes to explore.\n- Aristidi Protopapadaki becomes a busy promenade in the evenings; if you're visiting after sunset, expect more foot traffic and a livelier atmosphere around the waterfront.\n\n## What's Nearby\n\nThe Portara and its islet of Palatia are the most significant landmark within walking distance — the ancient marble doorway is visible from the beach itself. Naxos Town's main commercial street (the market road through the Chora) is a few minutes' walk inland and worth exploring for local produce, ceramics, and Naxian products.\n\nAgios Georgios Beach, the long sandy stretch immediately south of town, is a natural extension of the same waterfront and one of the most accessible beaches on the island. For a fuller meal, Naxos Town has restaurants ranging from simple grills to tavernas serving fresh seafood, most within a short walk of the seafront.

311m away4 min walk

water-sports

Flisvos surf center

Flisvos Sport Club has been one of the most recognizable names in water sports on Naxos for good reason. Operating across two distinct locations — a lagoon-side windsurfing and wingfoil center at St. George Bay and a dedicated kite center at Mikri Vigla — it covers the full range of wind- and wave-powered disciplines in one organization. Whether you are picking up a board for the first time or looking to refine a foiling technique, the setup is built to handle both.\n\nThe registered address on the Naxos–Chalkeio provincial road places the main Flisvos base in the St. George Bay area, just south of Naxos Town. Mikri Vigla, the kite-specific site, is roughly 18 km further south along the west coast — a stretch of beach that draws consistent meltemi winds through summer and is considered one of the better kitesurfing spots in the Cyclades.\n\n## What to Expect\n\nAt the St. George Bay Laguna center, the focus is windsurfing, wing surfing, wingfoiling, and stand-up paddleboarding. The sheltered, shallow bay makes it well-suited for beginners learning to balance and steer without open-water chop. Equipment rental and structured lessons are both available, and the center accommodates all skill levels.\n\nAt the Mikri Vigla kite center, the same organization runs kitesurfing sessions targeting riders who want reliable wind and a long, open beach to work with. The meltemi — the prevailing northerly summer wind in the Cyclades — channels through that part of the coast with enough force and consistency to make sessions productive most afternoons from late June through August.\n\nBeyond the water, Flisvos also operates seaside studios, suites, apartments, and a farmhouse, so it is possible to stay on-site and walk to your session each morning. The surf shop on the premises stocks gear and accessories for watersports enthusiasts.\n\n## How to Get There\n\n**To St. George Bay (main center):** From Naxos Town, head south along the coastal road past the Agios Georgios beach. The drive takes around five minutes by car or scooter. The beach is also walkable from the southern end of Naxos Town in about 20–25 minutes. Local buses connect the port area with Agios Georgios during peak season.\n\n**To Mikri Vigla (kite center):** Continue south on the main west-coast road past Agios Prokopios and Agia Anna. Mikri Vigla is approximately 18 km from Naxos Town. A car or scooter is the practical choice; taxis are available but the return trip should be arranged in advance. There is parking at the beach.\n\n## Best Time to Visit\n\nThe center operates seasonally, aligned with the Aegean summer. The meltemi typically arrives in force from late June and blows consistently through August — ideal for windsurfing and kitesurfing. July and August offer the strongest, most predictable winds, though the beaches and access roads are also at their busiest. May, June, and September tend to have lighter crowds and still-workable wind, making them good months for intermediate and advanced riders who want more space.\n\nBased on the listed hours, Sunday is a rest day. Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday have split shifts (morning and an evening session 5:00–9:00 PM); Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday run mornings only (10:00 AM–3:00 PM). Plan accordingly if you want an afternoon slot.\n\n## Tips for Visiting\n\n- **Book ahead in July and August.** Equipment and instructor time fill up quickly during peak season; contact the center by email ([email protected]) or phone (+30 693 992 5728) before you arrive.\n- **Check the wind forecast.** The center's website includes webcams and weather data — use them the evening before to gauge conditions at each site.\n- **Match the location to your discipline.** Go to St. George Bay for windsurfing, wingfoiling, and SUP; go to Mikri Vigla for kitesurfing. They are not interchangeable drop-in points.\n- **Wear reef-safe sunscreen.** Extended time on the water in the Aegean sun is intense; reapply frequently and bring a rash guard.\n- **Factor in the split-shift schedule.** If you prefer an afternoon session, Tuesday, Thursday, or Friday are your only options — sessions restart at 5:00 PM on those days.\n- **Consider staying on-site.** The in-house accommodation means zero commute to the water and easier rebooking if the wind drops for a day.\n\n## Activities and Disciplines Offered\n\n| Discipline | Location | Suitable For |\n|---|---|---|\n| Windsurfing | St. George Bay | All levels |\n| Wingfoiling / Wing surfing | St. George Bay | Intermediate+ |\n| Stand-up paddleboarding | St. George Bay | All levels |\n| Kitesurfing | Mikri Vigla | All levels |\n\nThe presence of both a sheltered lagoon and an open exposed beach within the same operation is a practical advantage: beginners can progress at St. George Bay before attempting the more demanding conditions at Mikri Vigla, and the same organization manages both.

86m away1 min walk