Ga naar hoofdinhoud
Greek Island Buses LogoGreek Island Buses

Vagias

Serifos · regular halte

Loading map…

Bediende Routes

Livadi - Ganema

Serifos Beach Buses

Ganema
11:12
12:12
13:12
14:12
15:12
Livadi
14:29
15:34
16:04
17:04
18:04
18:34

What's On Near Vagias

Bezienswaardigheden in de Buurt

Hotels

Homa Villas

Homa Villas sits in the valley of Vagia, a small settlement in the southern part of Serifos, roughly 8 kilometres from the island's main port. The complex consists of three two-bedroom villas designed by Mold Studio architect Iliana Kerestetzi — a project that has won five local architecture awards and received two international nominations. The name itself comes from the Greek word χώμα (chóma), meaning earthy soil, and that concept runs through every surface and spatial decision in the build. The site places you 380 metres — about a four-minute walk — from Vagia beach, one of the more celebrated swimming spots on Serifos, while keeping you in a valley setting that reads as genuinely quiet and removed. All three villas face southwest, a deliberate orientation that captures the afternoon light and evening sunset while positioning them away from the prevailing summer meltemi wind. With a perfect 5.0 rating across 35 Google reviews, the property has earned consistent praise. Reachable at +30 693 222 2132 and bookable through the official website at homaserifos.com, the villas operate as a seasonal self-catering rental — meaning you have your own space, your own pool, and your own schedule. What to Expect Each of the three villas measures between 59 and 71 square metres of internal space and accommodates four guests across two en-suite bedrooms. The private pool for each unit measures 6.5 by 4.3 metres — a workable size for a family or two couples rather than a token plunge pool. The architectural palette responds to the landscape rather than contrasting with it. Outside, industrial-grade earthy beige flooring and sand-coloured plastered walls match the Vagia surroundings closely enough that the structures feel grown from the hillside rather than placed on it. Large natural rock formations protrude through the walls in places, kept as structural and visual features. Inside, the approach shifts to what the designers describe as elite minimalism with an earthy tint — clean lines, a restrained material palette, and nothing that fights with the view outside. All terraces face the sea and the sunset. Villas 1 and 2 are adjacent on the upper level of the complex; the third sits at a slightly different position within the site. The orientation means afternoon heat is manageable and evening hours on the terrace are the focal point of the day. This is genuinely self-catering accommodation: you cook, you set your own rhythm, and the pool terrace functions as your primary social space. It suits travellers who want a base on Serifos rather than a serviced hotel stay. How to Get There Vagia is in the south of Serifos, approximately 8 kilometres by road from Livadi, the island's port and main tourist hub. By car or scooter from the port, the drive takes around 15 to 20 minutes on roads that narrow in places — a small vehicle is more practical than a large one. Serifos has a local bus (KTEL) service connecting Livadi with Hora and a small number of other points, but Vagia is a quiet valley settlement, so having your own wheels is strongly advisable for staying here. If you're arriving by ferry, Serifos is served by Blue Star Ferries and Hellenic Seaways from Piraeus, with journey times ranging from roughly 2.5 to 4.5 hours depending on the route and vessel type. Fast ferries on certain schedules cut travel time considerably. Confirm your ferry booking in advance during July and August when crossings fill quickly. Parking at or near the villas is available — the valley setting means there is no shortage of space, unlike the port area. No accessibility details are confirmed in the available information; contact the property directly if step-free access is a requirement. Best Time to Visit Homa Villas operates seasonally, as is standard for most self-catering villas on the smaller Cycladic islands. The property's website and booking channels are the best place to confirm the exact open season, but the core rental window aligns with the Greek summer: roughly late May through early October. July and August bring the driest, hottest conditions and the highest visitor numbers across Serifos. The meltemi — the northwest summer wind that affects most of the Cyclades — can be strong in this period, but the southwest-facing orientation of Homa's terraces is specifically designed to reduce its impact. Late June and September offer a balance of warm, settled weather with notably fewer people on the beaches and ferries. For sunset viewing from the terraces, the light is best from around late afternoon through early evening in the height of summer — the southwest aspect makes this a consistent daily event rather than a lucky coincidence. Tips for Visiting Book early for peak season. With only three villas in the complex, availability is limited. July and the first two weeks of August typically fill well in advance — check homaserifos.com or contact the property by phone as early as possible. Rent a vehicle for your stay. Vagia is not walkable from the port, and a car or scooter opens up the rest of Serifos — Hora (the hilltop capital), Psili Ammos, Livadakia, and the northern beaches are all within reasonable driving distance. Stock the kitchen before you arrive at the villa. Livadi has supermarkets and a bakery; Vagia is a small settlement without shops. Do your food shopping in the port area before heading south. Vagia beach is a four-minute walk away. The beach has been noted as one of the better swimming spots on the island — clear water and a sandy shore. Bring your own beach equipment if you prefer shade, as facilities on quieter Cycladic beaches vary. Expect genuine quiet. Vagia valley is not lively in the evenings. If you want tavernas within walking distance, you will need the car. The trade-off is privacy and silence that is hard to find anywhere in the Cyclades in August. The pool is your evening anchor. Given the southwest orientation and sunset view, plan to be on your terrace from late afternoon — it's the best feature of the property and the reason the design prioritises it. Check wind conditions for ferry crossings. The meltemi can disrupt ferry schedules to and from Serifos in August. Build flexibility into your arrival and departure dates if you can. Contact the property directly for specific villa positioning. Villas 1 and 2 share the upper level and may suit travellers who want proximity to another group; Villa 3 offers a slightly different position within the site. The team can advise on which suits your party best. Facilities and Location The three villas are each self-contained units with two en-suite bedrooms, a private pool, and a terrace with sea and sunset views. The self-catering format means a kitchen is central to each unit — the standard for this type of Cycladic villa rental. The location in Vagia valley places the complex within walking distance of the beach but away from the concentration of people and noise typical of port-adjacent accommodation. The nearest services — supermarkets, tavernas, the ferry dock — are in Livadi, about 8 kilometres north. The Instagram account (@homavillasserifos) gives the most current visual reference for the property's appearance and condition. With just 35 reviews and a 5.0 average, the sample size is small but consistent.

404m verderop5 min lopen

Kerken

Agios Konstantinos

Agios Konstantinos is a small Orthodox church on the island of Serifos, dedicated to Saint Constantine — the Roman emperor who legalized Christianity across the empire and is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox tradition. It sits along the Epar.Od. Limani Livadiou–Megalou Livadiou road, the coastal route that connects the port village of Livadi with the quieter settlement of Megalo Livadi on the island's southwest shore. With a Google rating of 4.9 out of 5 from 91 visitors, this chapel clearly leaves a strong impression despite its modest scale. Small whitewashed churches of this type are characteristic of the Cyclades, and on Serifos — an island with fewer visitors than its neighbors Milos or Sifnos — they often occupy positions of genuine scenic and spiritual weight. The chapel falls along one of Serifos's more scenic drives, making it a natural stop whether you're heading to Megalo Livadi beach or exploring the island's less-traveled southwestern reaches. What to Expect Agios Konstantinos is a typical Cycladic chapel in form: a compact whitewashed structure with blue or natural-stone accents, a low arched entrance, and an interior sized for a small congregation or a single family's private devotions. Chapels of this scale on Greek islands are frequently privately maintained — often by a local family whose patron saint matches the dedication — and their interiors typically hold an iconostasis (the wooden or stone screen bearing icons that divides the nave from the sanctuary), hanging oil lamps, a few candles, and the smell of incense from past liturgies. The exterior almost certainly features the clean geometry typical of island ecclesiastical architecture: thick lime-washed walls that reflect the Aegean light, a small bell tower or hanging bell, and a forecourt where visitors can pause. The road on which it sits traces the southwestern coastline, so the approach and immediate surroundings likely offer views toward the sea and the rocky hillside terrain that defines this part of Serifos. The interior, if accessible, will be quiet and cool — a marked contrast to the sun outside. Even if the chapel is locked, as many small island chapels are outside feast days, the exterior and its setting are worth a pause. How to Get There The chapel is located along the Epar.Od. Limani Livadiou–Megalou Livadiou road at approximately 37.1306°N, 24.4678°E. This is the main road running southwest from Livadi port toward Megalo Livadi, a route of roughly 9–10 kilometers that can be driven in under 20 minutes. By car or scooter, head west out of Livadi along the coastal road toward Megalo Livadi. The chapel will appear along the route; watch for the characteristic whitewashed walls set against the hillside or roadside. Parking on this road is informal — pull off safely on the verge. On foot, the route from Livadi is walkable but long in summer heat. A scooter or car rental from Livadi port is the practical choice for most visitors. Taxis are available in Livadi and can drop you at or near the chapel, though arranging a return pickup in advance is advisable on this quieter stretch. There is no regular bus service known to run this specific coastal road frequently, so independent transport is strongly recommended. Best Time to Visit Serifos receives its busiest traffic in July and August, though even at peak season the southwestern coastal road remains quieter than the main Livadi–Hora axis. The chapel itself is unlikely to see crowds. The feast day of Saints Constantine and Helen (Agios Konstantinos kai Agia Eleni) falls on 21 May. On this day, and possibly on the eve of 20 May, you may find the chapel open for a small liturgy and local celebration — a vespers service the evening before and a morning Divine Liturgy on the feast day itself. These occasions offer the most authentic experience of the chapel in use. For a visit outside the feast, early morning or late afternoon light is best for photography and for avoiding the midday heat. Spring (April–June) and early autumn (September–October) offer the most comfortable temperatures for exploring this stretch of coastline. Tips for Visiting Dress modestly before entering. Shoulders and knees should be covered when entering any Orthodox church. Carry a light layer or a wrap if you're dressed for the beach. The door may be locked. Many small Cycladic chapels are kept locked outside services and feast days. The exterior and setting are still worth the stop, and the high visitor rating suggests the location itself is rewarding. Combine with the Megalo Livadi drive. The road continues southwest to Megalo Livadi, a historically significant former mining settlement with a long pebble beach. The chapel makes a natural midpoint stop. Bring water. There are no facilities — cafes, shops, or water sources — on this stretch of road. Pack water before leaving Livadi. Visit on or around 21 May if possible. The feast of Saints Constantine and Helen is widely celebrated across Greece. A small island chapel bearing this dedication is likely to hold a service and may be decorated and open to visitors. Respect any ongoing service. If you arrive during a liturgy, wait near the entrance, move quietly, and do not photograph the interior without implicit permission from those present. Candles are customary. If the chapel is open and you wish to participate in the tradition, lighting a thin beeswax candle (usually available near the entrance on a small tray) is an appropriate gesture of respect. Mobile signal is variable on the southwestern coastal road. Download an offline map before leaving Livadi if you're navigating independently. About the Saint Saint Constantine — formally venerated as Equal-to-the-Apostles Constantine the Great — was Roman Emperor from 306 to 337 AD. His significance in the Orthodox world rests primarily on the Edict of Milan (313 AD), which he issued jointly with co-emperor Licinius and which extended religious tolerance throughout the empire, effectively ending the persecution of Christians. Constantine also convened the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea in 325 AD, which produced the Nicene Creed still recited in Orthodox liturgies today. He is commemorated alongside his mother, Saint Helen (Agia Eleni), who is credited with traveling to Jerusalem and discovering the True Cross. Together they are celebrated on 21 May in the Orthodox calendar under the designation Isapostolos — Equal to the Apostles — a title reserved for those deemed to have contributed as significantly to the spread of Christianity as the original Twelve. In Greece, the name Konstantinos (and its feminine form Konstantina) remains among the most common given names, and chapels dedicated to Saint Constantine are found on virtually every inhabited island in the Aegean. On Serifos, this chapel continues that tradition, serving as both a place of local devotion and a marker of the island's longstanding Orthodox heritage.

341m verderop4 min lopen

Stranden

Vagia

Vagia is a small pebble beach on the northern coastline of Serifos, sitting inside a sheltered cove that keeps both wind and waves noticeably calmer than many of the island's more exposed stretches. The water here is clear enough to see the bottom clearly through several meters, a quality that Serifos — with its relatively low visitor numbers and absence of river runoff — maintains across most of its coastline. What distinguishes Vagia is the combination of that water clarity with a genuine sense of quiet: this is not a beach with sunbed rows, beach bars, or organised facilities, and it draws the kind of visitors who are specifically looking for that absence. Serifos itself is one of the less-touristed islands in the western Cyclades, sitting between Kythnos and Sifnos in the Aegean. It receives a fraction of the summer traffic that Mykonos or even Paros absorbs, and that lower footfall is felt on beaches like Vagia more than anywhere else on the island. The cove's sheltered orientation also means it can offer swimmable conditions on days when more open-facing beaches are choppy. The shoreline is composed of pebbles rather than sand, which is typical for the northern and eastern faces of Serifos. Pebble beaches stay cleaner in high season and the water tends to be clearer immediately at the waterline, but they require appropriate footwear if you find walking on stones uncomfortable. What to Expect Vagia's cove is compact. The beach arc is short, and the surrounding terrain is the characteristically stark Cycladic landscape — low scrub, pale granite outcrops, and a hillside that provides partial shade in the late afternoon depending on time of year. The water shelves gradually from the shore, making entry straightforward, and the pebble bed continues underwater for a short distance before giving way to sand and rock. Because there are no facilities on or immediately adjacent to the beach, you will need to bring everything with you: water, food, shade if you require it, and any snorkeling equipment. The absence of a beach bar or taverna is not a hardship if you prepare accordingly, and it is precisely what keeps the crowd light. On a busy midsummer day the beach can accommodate a modest number of visitors before it feels at capacity — which is to say, not many. The water colour in the cove shifts between pale turquoise near the shallows and a deeper blue further out, which is a consistent feature of Serifos beaches facing away from the prevailing summer meltemi wind. Snorkeling along the edges of the cove, where submerged rock formations begin, is worth the effort if you have a mask. There are no toilets, no changing facilities, and no hire equipment at Vagia. Come self-sufficient. How to Get There Vagia sits on the northern coast of Serifos, away from the main port of Livadi and the hilltop Chora. The coordinates place it at approximately 37.1289°N, 24.4624°E, which positions it in a less-trafficked part of the island road network. By car or scooter, Vagia is accessible via the island's paved road network, though the final approach to some of the northern coves on Serifos involves a rougher track. A scooter or small hire car is the standard way to reach beaches on this side of the island. Hire vehicles are available in Livadi port. Check locally whether the final stretch of track to Vagia requires a vehicle with reasonable ground clearance before setting out. There is no scheduled bus service to Vagia. The island bus runs primarily between Livadi and Chora, with limited seasonal extensions toward Mega Livadi and Koutalas on the southern coast. For northern beaches you are largely dependent on private transport or a taxi arranged from Livadi. Parking at or near the track access point is informal — vehicles are typically left at the roadside. Arrive early in peak season to secure a spot close to the descent to the beach. Walking from Livadi is a significant distance and not practical for a beach day unless you are specifically undertaking a coastal hike. Best Time to Visit Serifos has a standard Cycladic summer pattern: hot and dry from June through September, with the meltemi wind picking up in July and August. Vagia's sheltered cove orientation offers some protection from the meltemi, which typically blows from the north-northwest. On days when the wind is strong and more exposed beaches are uncomfortable, the cove at Vagia can remain relatively calm — this is one of its practical advantages over flatter, more open stretches. The most comfortable swimming months are June, early July, and September. Late July and August are hotter and busier across the island, though Vagia will still see far fewer visitors than the main beaches at Livadi and Psili Ammos. Early morning visits in August give you the beach almost to yourself and the coolest swimming conditions before midday heat builds. May and October are viable for those happy with cooler water — the Aegean around Serifos reaches its warmest (around 24–25°C) in August and September. Spring visits offer dramatic landscape colour and empty beaches but the sea will be cold. Midday in July and August is genuinely hot on a pebble beach with no shade structures. If you are sensitive to sun exposure, time your visit for mid-morning or late afternoon. Tips for Visiting Bring water shoes. Pebble beaches in the Cyclades are almost always more comfortable with water shoes or reef sandals. The stones at Vagia are rounded but still awkward underfoot for bare feet over any distance. Pack everything in. There is no food or drink service at Vagia. A cooler bag with water, snacks, and lunch makes a full day viable without needing to drive back to Livadi. Arrive before 10am in peak season. Parking spots near the track access are limited. Earlier arrivals also get calmer water before any afternoon wind picks up. Bring a snorkel and mask. The rock edges of the cove shelter small fish and the water clarity rewards the effort. You do not need dive experience — shallow-water snorkeling along the cove walls is accessible to anyone comfortable in the sea. Check your hire vehicle's capability. If the access track is rough, confirm with the hire shop in Livadi that your scooter or car is suitable. This is a quick conversation that can save a puncture or a stuck vehicle. Plan for shade. The beach has no natural overhead shade for most of the day. A beach umbrella, a large hat, and reef-safe sunscreen are all practical necessities for a long summer visit. Combine with other northern beaches. If you are driving to this part of the island, the northern coastline has several small coves in reasonable proximity. A morning circuit can take in two or three beaches without significant extra driving. Respect the environment. Vagia stays clean because traffic is low and visitors who seek out quiet beaches tend to pack out their rubbish. There are no bins on site — take everything back with you. Activities and Facilities Vagia is primarily a swimming and snorkeling beach. The sheltered cove makes it suitable for calm-water swimming regardless of experience level, and the underwater rock formations along the cove edges provide enough variety for snorkelers to spend a worthwhile hour in the water. There are no water sports operators at Vagia. For kayak hire, paddleboard rental, or organised boat trips, Livadi port is the operational base for most of Serifos's water-based activities. Livadi also has the island's main concentration of tavernas, cafes, and shops. Beach volleyball, sunbed hire, and beach bars are all absent here — the beach's appeal is precisely the opposite of organised. Swimming, snorkeling, reading, and doing very little are the activities on offer. If you are interested in hiking, Serifos has a network of old Cycladic kalderimia (stone footpaths) connecting villages and coastline. Some of these paths pass through the northern part of the island, and reaching Vagia on foot via a coastal or hillside trail is possible if you research the current condition of paths before setting out — some sections require local knowledge or a detailed hiking map.

183m verderop2 min lopen
Ganema

Ganema sits on the southeastern coast of Serifos, a small Cycladic island that sees a fraction of the crowds drawn to Mykonos or Santorini. The beach is one of the quieter options on an already quiet island — no sunbed concessions, no beach bar soundtrack, just a curved pebble-and-sand shoreline open to a stretch of deep-blue Aegean. The coordinates place it at roughly 37.14°N, 24.46°E, tucked into a bay that the surrounding hills shelter from the prevailing summer meltemi wind. Serifos as a whole rewards travelers who are willing to look beyond the most obvious stops. Ganema fits that pattern. It's not the island's longest beach, and it doesn't have facilities, but that absence is precisely what makes it worth the detour for swimmers who want clear, undisturbed water and some quiet on the shore. The waters here have the translucency typical of the southeastern Cyclades — pale turquoise at the edges, deepening quickly to cobalt. Given the lack of tourist infrastructure in the immediate area, the seabed is clean and largely undisturbed. What to Expect Ganema is an unorganised beach, which in practical terms means no rented umbrellas, no loungers, and no food or drink service on site. You'll need to bring everything you want for the day: water, snacks, shade in the form of your own umbrella or a beach tent, and sun protection. The shoreline is a mix of coarse sand and small pebbles, and the sea floor transitions from smooth stone to sand as you wade in deeper. The bay's orientation and the surrounding hillside topography provide some natural shelter, which tends to keep the water calmer than more exposed beaches on the island's western or northern faces. This makes Ganema a reasonable choice when the meltemi picks up elsewhere on Serifos, though the wind's behavior can vary from season to season and from one end of the island to the other. There are no facilities at the beach itself — no toilets, no freshwater rinse, no shade structures. The natural landscape around the cove is typical Cycladic scrubland: low dry-stone terracing, a few hardy bushes, and the occasional fig tree. Swimming is the main draw, and for snorkelers, the rocky edges of the cove can be worth exploring for sea urchins and small fish. The water clarity makes mask-and-fins swimming rewarding even at relatively shallow depths. Expect solitude on most days outside August. Even during peak summer, Ganema tends to attract a limited number of visitors, partly because reaching it requires some effort. How to Get There Serifos has one main port town, Livadi, and one hilltop capital, Chora. From Livadi, reaching Ganema requires either a car or scooter, or a walk along the coastal paths if you're comfortable with rough terrain and significant heat in summer. By car or scooter, head south from Livadi along the coast road and follow the tracks toward the southeastern bays. The road surface deteriorates significantly on the approach to remote beaches like Ganema — a high-clearance vehicle or scooter with good tyres is preferable to a small rental car. Car and scooter rentals are available in Livadi port. Some visitors reach the more remote beaches of Serifos by sea taxi or small hired boat from Livadi. This is worth asking about at the port if you'd rather avoid the rough track. There are no scheduled water buses to Ganema specifically, but private boat hire is common on small Cycladic islands in high season. Parking, if you arrive by vehicle, is informal — pull off the track where it widens near the cove. There is no formal car park. Accessibility for people with limited mobility is poor: the approach track is uneven, and the shoreline itself involves some scrambling over stones. Best Time to Visit The Cycladic season runs roughly from late April through October, with July and August being the warmest and busiest months across the archipelago. Serifos is quieter than many of its neighbors throughout the season, and Ganema specifically sees very light traffic even in August. For the calmest water and the most reliable shelter from the wind, mid-morning visits before the meltemi typically builds in the early afternoon are ideal. The north-northwest meltemi can make the island's more exposed beaches choppy from midday onward, particularly in July and August, though Ganema's southeastern orientation gives it some protection. September and early October are worth considering: the sea remains warm from months of summer heating, crowds across Serifos drop sharply, and the light is less harsh than in high summer. Spring visitors (May and June) will find cool but swimmable water and the surrounding landscape at its greenest before the summer sun burns it back to golden. Midday sun on an unshaded beach in July and August can be intense. Arriving before 10:30 or after 16:00 reduces both UV exposure and the heat radiating off the pebbles. Tips for Visiting Bring all supplies. There is no beach bar or kiosk at Ganema. Pack drinking water for the full day, sunscreen, a beach umbrella or tent for shade, and food. The nearest shops are in Livadi. Check your vehicle before heading out. The track to the beach is rough. Check tyre pressure and fuel before leaving Livadi — there are no services on the approach road. Bring snorkeling gear. The rocky edges of the cove hold marine life worth seeing, and the water clarity rewards anyone with a mask. Rent or buy gear in Livadi if you haven't brought your own. Go early or late in peak season. Midday heat on an unshaded pebble beach in August is significant. The water is most glassy in the morning before the wind builds. Wear water shoes. The entry into the water involves pebbles and some rocks. Reef shoes or aqua shoes make wading in far more comfortable. Consider a boat from Livadi. If the track looks daunting or your rental vehicle is a small city car, ask at Livadi port about sea-taxi options to the southeastern bays. It's often more comfortable and the approach by sea gives you a read on conditions before you commit. Leave no trace. Ganema's appeal is entirely in its natural, undisturbed state. Pack out everything you bring in — there are no bins at the beach. Combine with nearby beaches. If you're making the drive to the southeastern coast, look at whether other small coves in the area are accessible on the same trip to make the journey worthwhile. Activities and Facilities Swimming is the primary activity at Ganema, and the clear, sheltered water is the beach's main asset. Snorkeling along the cove's rocky perimeter is productive — sea urchins, wrasse, and occasional octopus are common in Cycladic waters of this type. The depth increases at a moderate rate from the shore, making the beach suitable for confident swimmers and for children once past the initial stony entry. There are no water sports operations or equipment hire at Ganema itself. For organized water sports — paddleboarding, kayaking, windsurfing — Livadi beach and its near neighbors are better equipped. Some visitors bring inflatable kayaks or paddleboards strapped to their rental vehicles, which work well in the calm waters of a sheltered cove like this. Facilities at the beach are non-existent: no toilets, no showers, no changing areas, no food, no umbrellas for hire. Plan accordingly.

787m verderop10 min lopen