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Santa Maria

Paros · regular stop

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Serving Routes

Naoussa
Start
11:30
13:50
16:15
18:15
Santa Maria
End
11:24
13:44
16:09
18:09

What's On Near Santa Maria

Nearby Points of Interest

Beach Bars

Santa Maria Beach Bar

Santa Maria Beach Bar sits at the edge of the sand on Santa Maria Beach, on the northeastern coast of Paros near the village of the same name. It operates as a combined restaurant and bar, so you can move from a midday meal to afternoon drinks without leaving your spot by the water. The venue opens daily from 11:00 AM, which makes it one of the earlier starts among Paros beach bars and a practical choice if you want to claim a good position before the beach fills up. Santa Maria Beach itself is a long, sandy stretch facing northeast toward Naxos, exposed enough to catch the afternoon meltemi wind that makes it popular with kitesurfers and windsurfers. The beach bar sits in this setting, which means the scene can shift from calm in the morning to breezy and lively later in the day. With 1,452 reviews on Google and a rating of 3.6, the bar draws a large volume of visitors — the score suggests it's a well-trafficked spot where service and consistency vary, so setting realistic expectations is worth doing before you arrive. What to Expect The beach bar runs alongside the sand, so sunbeds and the water are close by. The format is standard for this category on Greek islands: you order food and drinks, which are brought to you at a beach table or sunbed area, and you pay for the privilege of having a proper spot on the beach. The menu covers cocktails and cold drinks alongside food — based on the Instagram presence, the positioning is restaurant-quality food served in a beach setting rather than just snacks and drinks. The setting itself does a lot of work. Santa Maria Beach has soft sand and water that runs clear in calm conditions, particularly in the morning before the meltemi picks up. The beach faces northeast, so it catches morning light well and offers views across to the silhouette of Naxos on clear days. The ambient music noted by visitors fits the relaxed mid-afternoon rhythm the place aims for, though by late afternoon, when wind and crowds increase, the atmosphere shifts accordingly. Service can be stretched during peak season. July and August bring consistent crowds to Santa Maria Beach, and the bar's volume of reviews reflects that. Going early — opening time or shortly after — typically means faster service and a quieter stretch of beach. How to Get There Santa Maria Beach Bar is located at Santa Maria Beach, on the northeastern tip of Paros, roughly 9 km from Parikia and about 4 km north of Naoussa. By car, the most direct route from Naoussa is to follow the road northeast out of town toward Santa Maria — the drive takes around 10 minutes. Parking is available near the beach, though spaces fill quickly in July and August. From Parikia, the drive takes around 20 minutes via the main island road through Naoussa or across the interior. There is no direct public bus to Santa Maria Beach, so a car, scooter, or taxi is the practical way to reach it. Taxis from Naoussa are a short and inexpensive ride. Water taxis from Naoussa occasionally serve the northeastern beaches in season, which is worth checking locally. The beach itself is flat and accessible by foot from the parking area. The terrain around the bar is sandy and level. Best Time to Visit Santa Maria Beach is at its calmest in the morning, before the meltemi wind builds from the north in the afternoon. If you want flat water and a quieter atmosphere, arriving at or shortly after 11:00 AM gives you the best combination of conditions and availability. Morning light is also better for swimming visibility, as the wind hasn't yet stirred the surface. June and September offer more comfortable temperatures and noticeably fewer crowds than the peak weeks of mid-July through August. In those peak weeks, the beach and bar fill up quickly, and sunbed availability can be limited by midday. If you're visiting in August, arriving at opening time and staying through lunch is more practical than arriving mid-afternoon. The beach is less suited to calm swimming after early afternoon on most summer days due to the wind — but this is exactly when kitesurfers and windsurfers come into their own, and watching them from a bar table is a perfectly reasonable way to spend the afternoon. Tips for Visiting Arrive early. The bar opens at 11:00 AM, and Santa Maria Beach fills up fast in peak season. Getting there around opening time gives you choice of position and faster service. Check the wind conditions. Santa Maria Beach faces northeast and is directly exposed to the meltemi. Morning is usually calm; afternoons can be windy enough to make the beach less comfortable for sunbathing, though fine for water sports. Bring cash as a backup. Card acceptance is standard at most Paros beach bars, but connectivity on northeastern beaches can be inconsistent. Having some cash avoids delays. Set expectations based on the rating. With over 1,400 reviews and a 3.6 score, this is a busy venue where experience can vary. It's a solid choice for a beachside lunch or afternoon drinks, not a destination in itself. Pair it with the beach. Santa Maria Beach is worth visiting regardless of the bar. Plan your beach day around the location, and the bar becomes a convenient part of it rather than the main purpose. Consider the crowd dynamic. This beach attracts kitesurfers and windsurfers, which makes the water and shoreline lively. If you want a quieter swim, the northern end of the beach tends to be less congested. Check the Instagram account for current hours. The account (@santamariaparos_) is active and likely to post seasonal updates. Opening hours or closures in shoulder season are worth confirming before making the trip. Practical Information Santa Maria Beach Bar is located directly on Santa Maria Beach at the northeastern end of Paros, near the locality of Santa Maria (postal code 844 01). The bar opens daily from 11:00 AM. No phone number or official website is currently listed; the most up-to-date information is available through the Instagram account at @santamariaparos_. The venue combines restaurant and bar service, with food available alongside cocktails and drinks throughout the day. Sunbed areas are typically associated with the bar setup, as is standard for beach bars on Paros. Specific pricing for sunbeds or minimum spend is not confirmed — this is worth clarifying on arrival or through the Instagram account before your visit.

170m away2 min walk

Beaches

Santa Maria

Santa Maria is a wide, sandy bay on the northeast coast of Paros, roughly 6 kilometres from the fishing port of Naoussa. The beach sits inside a natural inlet that tempers the meltemi winds enough to keep the water swimmable throughout summer, yet leaves enough consistent breeze to make it one of the island's best spots for windsurfing and kitesurfing. That combination — calm enough for children, windy enough for board sports — explains why it attracts a genuinely mixed crowd. The bay faces northeast toward the channel between Paros and Naxos, and on clear days the outline of Naxos is visible across the water. The sand is fine and pale, the water colour shifts from pale turquoise at the shore to deep blue further out, and the seabed shelves gently, which makes wading in comfortable for non-swimmers and children. A small headland to the north partially encloses the bay, contributing to the sheltered character that defines the beach. Santa Maria is not a remote or undeveloped beach. Several tavernas and a beach bar operate along the shore road during the season, and sun-lounger rental is available across much of the beach. It is busy in July and August but nowhere near as crowded as Kolymbithres or Golden Beach further south. What to Expect The beach runs for roughly 400 metres, with the main stretch of organised loungers occupying the central section and a looser, less developed area to the northern end where you can lay down a towel for free. The sand stays clean and is regularly raked in high season. The water is consistently clear. The sheltered position means wave action is minimal compared to the exposed south-facing beaches on the island, and the bottom stays sandy well into the swimming area — there is little rock underfoot at the entry points. Depth increases gradually, making it practical for snorkelling close to the rocky headland on the northern side, where small fish and sea urchins are common. Water-sports operators set up on the beach each summer offering windsurfing lessons and equipment hire, along with stand-up paddleboard rental. The consistent northeast breeze channelled through the Paros–Naxos strait makes conditions reliable for intermediate windsurfers without being punishing for beginners. Kitesurfers also use the beach, though they typically launch from the wider open section toward the northern end to keep clear of swimmers. Behind the beach, the road is lined with a handful of tavernas serving grilled fish, salads, and straightforward Greek dishes. The area is low-rise and unpretentious — a few small hotels and self-catering apartments, some olive trees, and not much else. There is no village centre as such; the settlement of Santa Maria is essentially the beach and its immediate surroundings. How to Get There From Parikia, the main port, Santa Maria is about 14 kilometres by road — approximately 20 minutes by car or scooter. Take the main road north toward Naoussa, then follow signs east toward Santa Maria just before entering Naoussa itself. The road is paved the entire way. From Naoussa, the drive is about 6 kilometres and takes under 10 minutes. Taxis from Naoussa are readily available in high season, and the fare is short enough to be reasonable for a group. There is a small car park area near the beach access points, which fills up quickly on August afternoons. Arriving before 10:00 or after 16:00 solves most parking problems. Scooters and bicycles can be parked more flexibly along the roadside. There is no dedicated bus service that terminates at Santa Maria, though the Naoussa bus from Parikia runs frequently and drops passengers at the Naoussa junction, from where a taxi or a 20-minute walk covers the remaining distance. The beach itself is flat and easily accessible on foot from the car park. Visitors with limited mobility will find the sandy surface manageable close to the water's edge. Best Time to Visit The beach is open and swimmable from late May through October. June and early September offer the best balance of warm water, manageable crowds, and stable weather. In July and August the beach is at its busiest between 11:00 and 16:00, and sun loungers in the central section can fill by mid-morning. The meltemi, the strong north wind that blows across the Aegean in summer, is channelled through the strait between Paros and Naxos and affects this beach more than the west-coast beaches around Parikia. On high-wind days — typically mid-July through mid-August — the water can get choppy enough to limit comfortable swimming, though it remains excellent for windsurfing. Check local wind forecasts if swimming is the priority; a westerly or calm day transforms the bay completely. Early mornings in peak season are quiet and the light on the water is at its best. Late afternoon, once the families with children have left, is also calm. In shoulder season the beach sees almost no crowds, tavernas are still open through September, and the water temperature remains above 24°C well into October. Tips for Visiting Arrive before 10:00 in August if you want a choice of lounger positions in the central section, or head to the northern free area and bring your own towel and shade. Bring a windbreak or umbrella on forecast meltemi days. The breeze is pleasant for the first hour but can blow sand across towels and belongings persistently by midday. The rocky headland to the north is worth a short snorkel. Even basic snorkelling gear reveals sea urchins, small wrasse, and the occasional octopus in the crevices. Windsurfing lessons are available for complete beginners. The shallow, protected water and light-to-moderate winds make conditions genuinely forgiving for first-timers compared to more exposed spots like Golden Beach. Eat at the beach tavernas for lunch rather than dinner. They serve simple, reliable fish and salads at reasonable prices during the day; in the evening many visitors return to Naoussa's harbour restaurants. Naoussa is only 10 minutes away by car. The town has ATMs, pharmacies, supermarkets, and a wide range of restaurants, so you don't need to carry everything for the day. Water shoes are not essential but useful if you plan to explore around the northern rocks, where sea urchins are present. Parking is free at the informal car park near the beach, unlike some more organised beaches on the island that charge in peak season. Activities and Facilities Water sports are the main organised activity at Santa Maria. Windsurfing and kitesurfing are the headline draw, with hire and tuition available from operators who set up each season. Stand-up paddleboarding is offered as well, and the calm inner section of the bay is useful for learning without fighting strong currents. Snorkelling along the rocky edges of the bay requires no booking or equipment rental from the beach, though shops in Naoussa sell basic gear cheaply if you haven't brought your own. The sandy seabed and clear water make casual underwater observation easy even without fins. Sun-bed and umbrella hire is available across the organised section of the beach. Basic changing facilities are present near the main access point, though they are simple. The beach tavernas provide restroom access for customers. There are no large resort amenities — no waterslide, no jet skis, no banana boats — which suits the quieter character of the bay. For families, the gently shelving entry and calm water are the main draw. The absence of boat traffic in the swimming area, which is common on some of the more commercialised beaches, makes it a comfortable choice for children learning to swim.

151m away2 min walk
Langeri Beach

Langeri Beach sits on the northeast coast of Paros, a short distance beyond Santa Maria along a road that eventually gives way to a rocky footpath. The beach is defined by a genuine dune system — an unusual landform for the Cyclades — where low ridges of pale sand are anchored by dense tamarisk trees whose shade extends almost to the waterline. The water is shallow, transparent, and lightens to near-white over the sandy bed close to shore. This part of the Paros coastline faces northeast toward the Aegean, which means the meltemi summer wind hits it directly. On calm mornings the sea is glassy. By afternoon on windy days there is chop and spray in the shallows — a pattern that suits certain visitors and deters others. The walk-in approach keeps the crowd smaller than at beaches with roadside parking, and the dunes give the place a looser, more open feel than the compact coves further south. What to Expect The shore at Langeri is a mix of fine to medium sand, extending for several hundred metres along a gently curved bay. The dunes behind the beach are low but distinctive, held together by tamarisk scrub and a few other salt-tolerant plants. The tamarisks also provide natural shade, which matters on a beach that, unlike many in the Cyclades, has limited commercial infrastructure. The water entry is gradual and sandy-bottomed, making it comfortable for swimmers of all levels. Colour ranges from pale turquoise in the shallows to a deeper blue-green further out. Visibility is high on calm days. The northeast exposure means you see the open Aegean rather than the enclosed bay views typical of the island's west coast. Organization is minimal by Paros standards. Do not arrive expecting beach bars, lounger rows, or facilities — the beach's appeal is precisely its relative undevelopment. Bring water, food, and any sun protection you need. The rating of 4.6 from over 530 reviews on Google suggests the beach consistently meets the expectations of visitors who know what they are coming for. The rocky trail from the end of the road is short but uneven underfoot. Sandals or shoes are more practical than bare feet for the approach walk, particularly in summer when the stones retain heat. How to Get There From Naoussa, head northeast on the road toward Santa Maria — a well-signed route that takes roughly ten minutes by car. Continue past Santa Maria following the road as far as it goes; signage for Langeri is present along this stretch. The road ends at an informal parking area, from which a short rocky track leads down to the beach. The walk is around five to ten minutes on uneven ground. By bus, Naoussa is served by regular KTEL connections from Parikia, the island's main port. From Naoussa you would need a taxi or rental vehicle to cover the remaining distance to the beach; there is no direct bus service to Langeri itself. By rental car or scooter, Langeri is accessible from both Parikia and Naoussa. From Parikia the drive is approximately 25 minutes via the main road north. From Naoussa it is closer to 10 minutes. Parking at the end of the road is informal and unpaved; spaces fill early on summer mornings. There is no boat service directly to Langeri. The nearest ferry port is Naoussa harbour, which receives day-trip boats from Parikia and a handful of other islands. Accessibility is limited by the unpaved parking area and rocky approach path, which is not suitable for wheelchairs or pushchairs. Best Time to Visit July and August bring the strongest meltemi winds to the northeast coast, and Langeri faces directly into them. On calm days — typically in early morning and occasionally in the evenings — the water at Langeri is at its clearest and most inviting. By midday on windy days, conditions can be breezy enough to scatter sand and make reading or relaxing less comfortable. Windsurfers and kitesurfers sometimes use the area, though the main spots for those activities on this coast are closer to Santa Maria. June and September offer more reliably calm conditions and significantly smaller crowds. The dunes and tamarisks look their best in spring, when plant cover is green rather than bleached. October is quieter still and the sea retains warmth well into autumn. Arrive before 10:00 if you want space on a summer weekend. The parking area is small and fills early in peak season; arriving late means a longer walk from wherever you leave your vehicle. Tips for Visiting Bring everything you need. There is no beach bar or kiosk at Langeri. Water, snacks, sunscreen, and shade equipment must all come with you. Wear shoes for the approach. The rocky path from the car park to the beach is short but rough underfoot and very hot in afternoon sun. Go early on summer weekends. The parking area at the end of the road is small, and once it fills, later arrivals park further back along the track. Watch the wind pattern. Mornings are typically calmer on this northeast-facing coast. If you want flat water for swimming, aim to arrive before noon in July and August. The dunes are fragile. Walk through them on established paths rather than trampling across the vegetation; the tamarisk roots are what hold the dune structure in place. Combine with Santa Maria. Santa Maria Beach is five minutes back along the same road and has beach bars, sunbeds, and food if you want to start or end the day with facilities. Bring snorkelling gear. The clear, shallow water over a sandy bottom makes for easy snorkelling without strong currents close to shore. Check conditions before going. On days when the meltemi is blowing hard across the island, Langeri can be uncomfortable. South-facing beaches like Aliki or Golden Beach on the opposite coast will be calmer on those days. Activities and Facilities Swimming is the primary draw. The shallow entry, sandy bottom, and clear water make Langeri well-suited to families with children who can wade in gradually, and to anyone who values an uncluttered shoreline over organized facilities. The wind exposure and open water also attract occasional windsurfers and kitesurfers, though Santa Maria — a short distance to the south — is the more established spot for those sports and has proper launch areas and rental equipment. The dune and tamarisk landscape behind the beach is interesting in its own right and worth a short walk to appreciate a landform that is genuinely uncommon in the Cyclades. The tamarisks provide real shade rather than the umbrella shade you pay for at organized beaches. There are no sunbeds, umbrellas for hire, water sports rentals, showers, changing rooms, or toilets at Langeri. This is a natural beach in the fullest sense.

664m away8 min walk

Hotels

Sand Key Villas

Sand Key Villas occupies a quiet plot in Santa Maria, one of the more exclusive corners of northern Paros, roughly 500 meters from the main Santa Maria beach. The property comprises three separate rental units: two standalone villas — one with seven bedrooms, one with five — plus a one-bedroom luxury apartment. Each villa unit has its own en-suite bathroom for every bedroom, and all three properties share a set of well-maintained communal facilities including a large pool. The location places you close to both the beach and the social energy of Naousa, Paros's most lively harbour town, without being in the middle of either. That balance suits groups or families who want a self-contained base rather than a hotel corridor. Two additional beaches beyond Santa Maria are within a two-to-five minute drive, and Naousa itself — known for its seafront tavernas, boutiques, and bar scene — is approximately eight minutes by car. Contact is available by phone at +30 694 255 1381 or by email at [email protected] , and the property maintains an active presence on both Facebook and Instagram under the name Sand Key Villas. Facilities and Location The seven-bedroom villa and the five-bedroom villa each function as independent rental properties — suitable for large groups, extended families, or multi-household bookings. Every bedroom has a private en-suite bathroom, which removes the friction that comes with shared facilities in large-party accommodation. The communal pool is large enough for a full group and comes with sunbeds and umbrellas included. Pool towels are provided, and cleaning of each villa takes place every third day, with linen, towels, and bathroom amenities refreshed on that schedule. Connectivity and convenience amenities are thorough: high-speed Wi-Fi reaches both indoors and the outdoor areas, and the property offers free access to Netflix, Prime Video, Disney+, and Apple TV+. A dedicated Sand Key Villas app functions as an in-stay guide for smartphones and tablets. On-site parking is free and located directly at the villas, and there is an EV charging station on the premises. A 24/7 concierge service is available to arrange excursions, ferry or boat trips, restaurant reservations, and general local advice — a useful feature given how much northern Paros rewards exploration by water or on foot. The one-bedroom apartment, listed as Sand Key Villa 3, is a separate luxury unit within the same property, suited to couples or solo travellers who want the amenities of the larger complex at a smaller scale. How to Get There Santa Maria sits on the northeastern coast of Paros, north of the main Paros Town–Naousa road. From Paros Town (Parikia), the drive takes roughly 20–25 minutes via the main island road heading toward Naousa, then continuing north on the coastal road toward Santa Maria. From Naousa, it is approximately eight minutes by car. There is a local KTEL bus service on Paros that connects Parikia with Naousa; from Naousa, a taxi or rental vehicle covers the remaining distance to Santa Maria easily. Renting a car or scooter in Parikia is the most flexible option for guests staying in this part of the island, as public transport frequency drops after the high season peak. For arrivals by ferry, Paros Town port is the main entry point. Taxis are available at the port and can take you directly to Santa Maria. The coordinates for Sand Key Villas are 37.1374°N, 25.2782°E. Free on-site parking means driving is no inconvenience once you arrive, and the EV charging station is a practical detail for anyone traveling with an electric vehicle on the island. Best Time to Visit Paros has a long warm season running from late April through October. July and August are the busiest months across the island, and the Santa Maria area in particular attracts kitesurfers and windsurfers due to the reliable meltemi winds that funnel through the northern Cyclades. If your group prefers a quieter stay, June and September offer warm water, full sun, and significantly fewer visitors. Santa Maria beach itself tends to get crowded from mid-July onward, but the villa's pool provides an easy alternative on peak days. Spring arrivals in May or early June often find the landscape greener and the island roads less congested, though some restaurants and boat tour operators may not yet be at full capacity. For families travelling in school holiday windows, late June and the first half of July balance good weather with slightly lower accommodation pressure than the August peak. Tips for Visiting Book well in advance for July and August. Large-group accommodation in northern Paros fills early, particularly villas that accommodate seven or more people. Decide early which unit fits your group. The seven-bedroom villa suits parties of up to 14 people if bedrooms are shared by couples; the five-bedroom works for smaller groups. The one-bedroom apartment is a separate listing. Use the 24/7 concierge proactively. Arranging boat trips to Antiparos, reservations at busy Naousa restaurants, or private transfers is easier when done at the start of your stay rather than the day before. Bring or rent a car. Santa Maria has limited walking infrastructure beyond the beach. A vehicle opens up Naousa, Paros Town, Kolymbithres beach, and the island's interior villages easily. Check EV charging compatibility before arrival. The on-site charging station is a genuine convenience, but confirm the connector type with the property if you're driving an electric vehicle. The pool cleaning schedule aligns with the villa cleaning schedule — every third day. Factor this in if you're planning a pool-heavy day. Santa Maria beach is 500 meters away on foot. The walk is manageable in the morning before heat builds, but the two additional beaches mentioned — a two-to-five minute drive — are worth exploring for variety. Naousa is your best option for evening dining. The harbour there has a dense concentration of seafood restaurants and bars, and the eight-minute drive makes it realistic for a relaxed dinner out.

581m away7 min walk

Restaurants

Nava Lounge

Nava Lounge is a Greek restaurant sitting directly at Santa Maria Beach on the northern coast of Paros, operating as part of the broader Nava Beach development that upgraded the facilities at this popular stretch of coastline. It is one of the few sit-down dining options that puts you within steps of the water on this side of the island, with a menu that draws from Greek culinary tradition and a setting geared toward unhurried meals. Santa Maria is a well-known beach on the northeast tip of Paros, roughly 8 kilometres from Parikia and about 3 kilometres from Naoussa. The beach itself is sheltered by a small headland and attracts both families and windsurfers, which gives the surrounding area a lively but not overwhelming daytime energy. Nava Lounge sits within that environment, positioned to serve both people coming off the beach and those making a specific trip for a meal. The venue falls into what the locals and regular visitors describe as a lounge-restaurant format — table service, a structured menu, and an atmosphere that invites you to stay longer than a quick snack stop. Based on available information, the kitchen leans on Greek dishes, and the pricing sits in the higher bracket for Paros, which broadly reflects the beachfront location and the style of service. What to Expect Nava Lounge positions itself as the dining anchor of the Nava Beach development at Santa Maria. The lounge-restaurant format means you are getting full table service rather than a self-service beach bar situation — there is a distinction worth noting before you arrive. The menu follows Greek restaurant conventions: expect dishes built around fresh fish and seafood given the coastal location, alongside Greek salads, grilled meats, and mezze-style plates that work well for sharing. The kitchen is not described as a taverna, so the experience skews slightly more polished than a traditional village grill, though the setting is still casual enough for swimwear at lunch. The outdoor seating, facing or adjacent to the beach, is the main draw. Santa Maria Beach has clear, shallow water and a mix of sand and fine pebble, and the view from the restaurant captures that stretch of coastline. In peak summer the area draws crowds — Santa Maria is well-established on the Paros beach circuit — so the restaurant operates in a busy environment from July through August. Pricing, based on the four-dollar sign categorisation in available sources, is toward the upper end for Paros. This is consistent with a beachfront lounge-restaurant at one of the island's more popular beaches. How to Get There Santa Maria Beach is on the northeastern coast of Paros, reachable by two main routes from the island's main centres. From Naoussa , the distance is approximately 3 kilometres heading northeast. You can drive or take a taxi; the road from Naoussa toward Santa Maria is straightforward and well-signed. Some water taxis and small boats also run between Naoussa harbour and Santa Maria during the summer season, which is worth checking locally. From Parikia , the main port town, the drive is around 8 kilometres. Follow the main road northeast toward Naoussa and continue past the town to the Santa Maria turnoff. Parking is available in the Santa Maria Beach area, though in July and August the spots fill early in the morning. If you are driving during peak season, arriving before 10:00 is advisable if you also plan to use the beach. There is no direct public bus to Santa Maria Beach from KTEL's standard Paros network at the time of writing — verify current routes at the Parikia bus station before relying on this option. Taxis from both Naoussa and Parikia are readily available and the fare is modest given the short distances. Best Time to Visit Nava Lounge operates within the summer tourist season on Paros. Like most beach-adjacent restaurants on the island, it is open during the warmer months, with peak activity from late June through early September. For dining, lunch at Santa Maria is a reliable choice when the wind picks up in the afternoon — Paros is famously windy, particularly on the northern and eastern coasts, and Santa Maria gets the meltemi in summer. A mid-afternoon meal at the restaurant can be a sensible move if the sea conditions make swimming less appealing. Evening meals work well from late June onward when the days are long and temperatures stay pleasant after sunset. The kitchen is noted as open until 11:30 PM, which gives you flexibility for a later dinner after a full day on the beach. Should you want a quieter experience, early June and mid-September offer noticeably fewer crowds at Santa Maria while the weather remains warm enough for swimming. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in peak season. The phone number listed for Nava Lounge is +30 2284 028861. During July and August, reserving a table — particularly for dinner — is worth doing, especially for groups. Confirm current opening hours directly. Available data shows the restaurant open until 11:30 PM, but seasonal hours can shift at the start and end of the season. A quick call or check of their Facebook page before visiting avoids disappointment. Arrive early for beachfront seating. The tables closest to the water are the most in demand. If you want that specific experience, aim for lunch when you can anchor a table and stay through the afternoon. Factor in the wind. The northern coast of Paros receives the meltemi most directly. Afternoons in July and August can be quite breezy at Santa Maria, which is excellent for windsurfers but can make open-air dining feel exposed. Check the sheltered sections of the terrace when you are seated. Combine with the beach. Santa Maria has sun loungers and water sports facilities nearby. A morning on the beach followed by lunch at Nava Lounge is the natural sequence most visitors follow. Budget accordingly. The four-dollar-sign price point signals that this is not a budget taverna. Mains and fresh fish dishes at this category of beachfront restaurant in Paros typically sit at the higher end of what you would pay elsewhere on the island. Check Facebook for updates. Without a listed website, the most current information — seasonal closure dates, special events, menu updates — tends to appear on the Nava Lounge Facebook page at facebook.com/NavaParos. What to Order Nava Lounge is categorised as a Greek restaurant, which in a beachfront coastal setting on Paros typically means the menu builds outward from fresh seafood and traditional Greek plates. At a restaurant of this type and price bracket at Santa Maria, you would typically find whole grilled fish priced by the kilogram — sea bream, sea bass, and whatever is fresh from the day's catch. Grilled octopus is a reliable order at any Greek seafood-forward restaurant, and Santa Maria's proximity to local fishing activity makes fresh catch a reasonable expectation. Greek salad (horiatiki) and tzatziki are standard starters. Sharing mezze-style plates — fried saganaki, dolmades, taramosalata — tends to work well at lounge restaurants where the pace of the meal is unhurried. For meat eaters, grilled lamb chops (paidakia) and souvlaki-style plates are common fixtures. For drinks, Greek white wines — particularly from the Cyclades, where the assyrtiko grape thrives in the volcanic and windswept terrain — pair well with seafood. Locally produced spirits and standard cocktail menus are typical at lounge venues. Chilled rosé is the default summer choice for many visitors at this type of setting. Because no specific menu is available in the research data, treat these as reasonable expectations rather than confirmed dishes. The current menu is best verified directly with the restaurant.

210m away3 min walk