Ga naar hoofdinhoud
Greek Island Buses LogoGreek Island Buses

Porto

Tinos · regular halte

Loading map…

Bediende Routes

Porto
Einde
08:28
12:13
14:38
16:13
Tinos Town
Start
08:25
12:10
14:35
16:10

What's On Near Porto

Bezienswaardigheden in de Buurt

Hotels

Anatoli tou Porto

Anatoli tou Porto sits in the Porto area of Tinos, addressed to Ormos Agiou Ioanni — the bay-side locality on the island's southern coast. The nearest beaches, Agia Kyriaki and Agios Ioannis, are roughly 200 metres away on foot, which makes this a genuinely walkable base for anyone prioritising easy beach access without committing to a busier resort strip. The property offers studios decorated in a traditional style — a design choice that suits the low-key, whitewashed character of this part of Tinos. The Porto area attracts travellers who want proximity to the sea without the noise and density of Tinos Town, around 15 kilometres to the northeast. It's a quieter pocket of the island, useful for those who plan to explore by car or scooter rather than relying on frequent bus connections. Free Wi-Fi is available at the property, according to available listing data. Beyond that, specific details on room count, breakfast provision, pool facilities, and exact pricing are not available in current sources and should be confirmed directly with the property before booking. What to Expect The studios at Anatoli tou Porto are set up for independent travellers. Traditional décor in the Cycladic mould typically means clean lines, stone or plaster finishes, local textiles, and modest but functional furnishings — practical for a beach stay rather than a luxury retreat. The location on Ormos Agiou Ioanni places you on the southern side of Tinos, a part of the island that sees noticeably fewer visitors than the pilgrimage routes around Tinos Town and the Church of Panagia Evangelistria. The two nearby beaches — Agios Ioannis and Agia Kyriaki — are typical of this coast: relatively compact, with clear water and a low-key atmosphere. Neither is a developed resort beach, so you won't find rows of sun-lounger concessions or beachside bars on the same scale as beaches closer to Tinos Town. Being self-catering in orientation, studios in this area of Tinos tend to suit travellers with a hire car who can reach the supermarkets in Tinos Town or the scattered village tavernas of the interior. Porto itself has limited dining options compared to the main town, so planning meals in advance is practical. The surrounding landscape on this part of Tinos is gently hilly, with dry stone walls and the occasional dovecote — the island is known for its several hundred traditional marble-built dovecotes, a legacy of Venetian-era land use, and you'll spot them throughout the countryside here. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens), Mykonos, Syros, and other Cyclades islands. The main port and ferry terminal is in Tinos Town. From Tinos Town, the Porto area and Ormos Agiou Ioanni are approximately 15 kilometres by road — around 20 to 25 minutes by car or scooter depending on the route. The main road south from Tinos Town passes through or near Triantaros and Falatados before descending toward the southern coast. Signage for Agios Ioannis and the Porto area is present but can be sparse on secondary roads; a GPS or offline map app is useful. Taxis are available at the Tinos Town port and can be arranged for the transfer on arrival. A local bus service does operate on Tinos, but frequency on routes to the southern coast is limited — especially outside July and August — so a hire car or scooter gives you considerably more flexibility for reaching both the property and the wider island. Parking at the property itself is not confirmed in available data; verify directly when booking. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a typical Cycladic climate: hot and dry from June through early September, with the meltemi wind picking up reliably in July and August. The meltemi is less pronounced on the island's southern coast than on the more exposed northern shores, which makes Porto-area beaches somewhat more comfortable for swimming during peak wind periods. July and August are the busiest months island-wide, driven partly by the major pilgrimage to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria on 15 August. If you're not travelling specifically for the pilgrimage, arriving in late June or early September gives you warm water, full services, and noticeably fewer crowds. May, early June, and October are good shoulder months for exploring Tinos's villages and countryside. Beach swimming is viable through late October. The property's off-season availability is not confirmed in current sources. Tips for Visiting Book transport from the port in advance. The transfer from Tinos Town to the Porto area takes around 20 minutes; arranging a taxi pickup ahead of a late ferry arrival is more reliable than waiting at the rank. Hire a vehicle. The southern coast of Tinos is rewarding to explore but not well served by buses. A small car or scooter opens up access to inland villages like Pyrgos, the marble-carving centre in the north, and beaches along the rest of the coastline. Check beach facilities before you go. Agios Ioannis and Agia Kyriaki beaches nearby are low-key. If you want organised sunbeds and a beach bar, Agios Fokas and Livada closer to Tinos Town are better equipped. Shop in Tinos Town. The main supermarkets, pharmacies, and the central market for fresh produce are all in Tinos Town. The Porto area has minimal commercial infrastructure. Confirm availability and amenities directly. The research data for this property is limited; verify check-in times, studio configuration, parking, and any included services before arriving. Pack for the meltemi. In July and August, afternoons can be breezy even on the sheltered southern coast. Light layers are useful for evenings. Explore beyond the beach. Tinos has more than 40 traditional villages and is one of the Cyclades most rewarding for walking and countryside exploration — the Porto area gives you a quieter base for day trips into the interior. Facilities and Location Based on available information, Anatoli tou Porto provides self-catering studios with traditional décor and free Wi-Fi. The address — Ormos Agiou Ioanni 842 00 — places it firmly in the bay area of Agios Ioannis on the southern coast of Tinos. The coordinates (37.5365°N, 25.2170°E) confirm the property sits near the southern shore, well away from the commercial centre of Tinos Town and the crowded approach to the Panagia Evangelistria church. This location suits independent travellers looking for a quieter stay close to the water rather than those who want to be in the centre of island activity. Specific details on the number of studios, room configurations, private bathrooms, kitchenette equipment, air conditioning, pool, or on-site parking are not confirmed in available sources. Contact the property directly or check current listings on major booking platforms to verify these details before confirming a reservation.

31m verderop1 min lopen
Porto Vlastos

Porto Vlastos is a family-run apartment property sitting directly in the port of Agios Ioannis on the western coast of Tinos. It sits a five-minute walk from Agios Ioannis beach and about ten minutes by car from Tinos Town, placing you close enough to the island's main hub without being in the middle of it. With a 4.8 rating across more than 100 Google reviews, it consistently draws families and couples who want practical Cycladic self-catering rather than a resort stay. The property offers studios, standard apartments, a maisonette, a deluxe family unit, and a two-room apartment — a range that covers solo travelers, couples, and larger family groups. Every unit has its own kitchenette, air conditioning, flat-screen TV, and free Wi-Fi. Several units include sea-view balconies or terraces, and the property's website lists a book-direct best-price guarantee, which is worth using before going through a third-party platform. The setting at Agios Ioannis Porto is quiet by Tinos standards. This is not the busy ferry port at Tinos Town but a smaller inlet village on the island's southwestern shore, known for its calm water and low-key atmosphere. If you're coming to Tinos primarily to visit the Panagia Evangelistria church or explore Tinos Town's marble-carving workshops, the drive is short. If you want a base closer to the quieter villages in the island's interior — Xinara, Loutra, Triantaros — this location works well as a central-ish starting point. Facilities and Location Units at Porto Vlastos are described as bright and airy, built in a traditional Cycladic style with white-washed walls, tiled floors, and iron or stone-built beds. The furnishings are functional and locally referenced rather than minimal-hotel-chain neutral. Each kitchenette comes equipped with a coffee maker, cooker, toaster, fridge, and a dining table, making it straightforward to prepare breakfasts and light meals rather than eating out every day — a real practical advantage on an island where restaurant options in smaller villages can be limited in shoulder season. Outside, a patio with a seating area provides a spot to sit without heading to the beach. The property also has a children's playground, which, combined with the family apartment configurations, makes it a reasonable choice for traveling with young children. Sea-view units face toward the Aegean, and from this part of the Tinos coastline the outlook on clear days extends across open water. The reception hours listed are 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM Monday through Saturday, and 9:30 AM to 9:00 PM on Sunday. If you're arriving by ferry late in the evening, it's worth calling ahead on +30 694 577 3171 to confirm check-in arrangements, since these hours suggest a staffed desk rather than 24-hour reception. Agios Ioannis beach itself — a sandy cove with generally calm water — is close enough to reach on foot. The village has a small number of tavernas and cafes near the port, and the road north along the coast toward Tinos Town passes through open countryside with sea views. How to Get There The address is Ormos Agiou Ioanni, 842 00, Tinos. From Tinos Town port, follow the coastal road southwest toward Agios Ioannis — the drive takes roughly ten minutes and is straightforward. There is no direct bus route that reliably serves Agios Ioannis Porto throughout the day, so if you're arriving by ferry at Tinos Town without a rental car, you'll want to arrange a taxi for the transfer or rent a car or scooter at the port before heading out. Taxis in Tinos Town are available at the port and can be called; the fare to Agios Ioannis is short. A rental car or ATV gives you the most flexibility for exploring the island's interior villages, many of which are on narrow roads not well served by public transport. Parking near the property is available on the access roads around the port area. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a long shoulder season by Cycladic standards, partly because the Panagia Evangelistria pilgrimage draws visitors in August and throughout the year. Porto Vlastos is ideally positioned for the quieter side of this — Agios Ioannis Porto sees far less foot traffic than Tinos Town even in peak summer. July and August are the busiest months across the island, with strong meltemi winds from the north that can affect the more exposed eastern coastline. The western side, where Agios Ioannis sits, tends to be more sheltered. Late May through June and September through October offer the most relaxed conditions: warm enough for the beach, significantly fewer visitors, and better rates. If you're traveling specifically for the Feast of the Dormition on August 15 — one of the most significant religious pilgrimages in Greece — book Porto Vlastos as far in advance as possible. Accommodation across the entire island fills completely for that week. Tips for Visiting Book direct through portovlastos.gr when possible. The site advertises a best-price guarantee, and you avoid third-party service fees. Call ahead for late arrivals. Reception hours end at 9:00 PM (9:30 AM start on Sundays). If your ferry gets in after that, confirm check-in logistics by phone before you travel: +30 694 577 3171. Request a sea-view unit explicitly. Not all studios and apartments have a sea view — specify at the time of booking rather than hoping for an upgrade on arrival. Bring or buy groceries early. The kitchenette in every unit is fully equipped, but the village of Agios Ioannis has limited shopping. Stock up at a supermarket in Tinos Town before driving out. Rent a vehicle at the ferry port. Several rental agencies operate near the Tinos Town dock. Having your own transport makes the Porto Vlastos location much more practical for day trips to Volax, Pyrgos, or the north coast beaches. Agios Ioannis beach is walkable in five minutes. The cove is calm and generally less crowded than beaches closer to Tinos Town. Bring your own towels and water as facilities may be limited depending on the season. The August 15 pilgrimage changes the entire island. If your visit overlaps, factor in road congestion around Tinos Town and plan to stay near the property or visit the church early in the morning to avoid the heaviest crowds. Check the Facebook page for seasonal updates. The property's Facebook page (facebook.com/PORTO-VLASTOS-199481233415607) sometimes carries off-season opening information and promotional rates.

162m verderop2 min lopen
Antique

Antique is a lodging property on Tinos carrying a 4.7-star average rating from guest reviews — a strong score for any accommodation on a Cycladic island where options range from sparse guesthouses to boutique stays. The name and the source description both point toward a property with deliberate character: furnishings or an aesthetic rooted in a past era rather than the stripped-back minimalism that dominates contemporary Greek island design. Tinos itself is one of the most rewarding islands in the Cyclades for travelers who want substance alongside scenery. It draws pilgrims to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, marble-carving villages inland, and a quietly growing food scene centered on local cheeses, loukoumades, and creative tavernas. A property leaning into classic or antique character fits naturally into that context — this is not an island that prizes flash over craft. The coordinates place the property at approximately 37.5345° N, 25.2174° E, which situates it within the municipality of Tinos. For precise location confirmation before booking, use the phone number listed below or search the property directly in Google Maps. What to Expect The property's description emphasizes classic character, which in the context of Greek island accommodation typically means a style-conscious approach: wooden furniture, traditional textiles, framed prints or ceramics, and an overall atmosphere that references the island's history rather than ignoring it. Tinos has a strong artisanal heritage — the villages of Pyrgos and Volax are known for marble sculpture and weaving respectively — so a property that leans into that aesthetic vocabulary is well placed culturally. With 15 reviews averaging 4.7 out of 5, the guest satisfaction rate is high. Small review counts on Tinos properties are normal outside peak season; the score here suggests consistently positive experiences rather than a statistical fluke. Common praise for well-rated small hotels on Tinos tends to center on attentive hosts, clean and well-maintained rooms, and proximity to the port or to town amenities. The phone number on record (+30 21 0958 6308) carries an Athenian area code (210), which is common for properties managed partly from the mainland, particularly outside the summer season. If you are calling from outside Greece, use the international format. Response times in shoulder season (April–May and October) may be slower than in July and August. No website or email address is currently on record for this property, so phone or third-party booking platforms are the most reliable ways to confirm availability and rates. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens), Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros. The journey from Piraeus by high-speed ferry takes roughly three to four hours depending on the service; from Rafina, schedules vary seasonally. Ferries dock at Tinos Town (Chora), the island's main port and commercial center. From the port, Tinos Town is walkable. Most hotels in and around the town center are within ten to twenty minutes on foot from the ferry terminal, though properties higher on the hillside may require a short taxi ride with luggage. Local taxis wait at the port on arrival days. If you are arriving by car via ferry, note that Tinos Town has limited on-street parking near the waterfront in summer. Properties in or just above the town center often have guidance on nearby parking; confirm this when you book. There is no airport on Tinos. All arrivals are by sea. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a longer hospitable season than many Cycladic islands because the pilgrimage calendar and the food-focused tourism it has developed keep visitors arriving from April through October. The Feast of the Assumption on 15 August is the single busiest day of the island's year — accommodation across the island books out months in advance and prices rise significantly around that date. July and August bring peak crowds, heat (often above 30°C), and the meltemi wind, which keeps the air moving but can be strong enough to affect ferry schedules. June and September offer a good balance: warm enough for beaches and outdoor dining, quieter than midsummer, and generally easier for last-minute bookings. If you are visiting primarily for the architecture, villages, and food rather than the beach, April, May, and October are genuinely pleasant months. The light is good, the island is uncrowded, and many of the best tavernas are open. Tips for Visiting Call ahead to confirm availability. With no website on record, a direct phone call to +30 21 0958 6308 is the most reliable way to check rooms and rates before committing. Book early for mid-August. The Assumption Day pilgrimage on 15 August is the busiest event in the Cyclades religious calendar. Accommodation island-wide fills weeks or months in advance. Clarify parking. If you are renting a car on the island, ask the property about nearby parking options when you book — Tinos Town's central streets are narrow and spaces near the waterfront are competitive in summer. Pack for the meltemi. The north wind in July and August can be strong on Tinos. Light layers are useful for evenings and hillside walks even in midsummer. Explore beyond Tinos Town. The village of Pyrgos, about 27 km northwest of the port, is the center of the island's marble-carving tradition and worth a half-day trip from any base in Chora. Carry cash. ATMs are available in Tinos Town, but smaller tavernas and local shops across the island may not accept cards reliably. Check ferry times before checkout. Piraeus-bound ferries depart at various hours, and some early-morning sailings require leaving accommodation before standard checkout times. Confirm this with the property at check-in. Facilities and Location The research available for this property does not include a confirmed room count, specific on-site amenities list, or meal service details. The coordinates place it within the broader Tinos municipality, and the classic-character description suggests an independently run or boutique-style property rather than a large chain hotel. Tinos Town itself provides everything a visitor needs within a compact walkable area: the main waterfront, the marble-paved approach to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, multiple supermarkets, pharmacies, several ATMs, and a range of tavernas from simple grilled-fish spots to more considered menus using local Tinian produce. If the property is centrally located in Chora, guests have all of this within easy reach on foot. For any specific questions about room configuration, air conditioning, Wi-Fi, breakfast, or accessibility, contact the property directly before booking.

192m verderop2 min lopen
Tinos Villages

Tinos Villages is a small hotel offering suites, rooms, and a villa at Agios Ioannis Porto, a quiet coastal settlement on the north-east shore of Tinos. The property sits roughly seven kilometres from Tinos Town (Chora), far enough from the ferry-day bustle to feel genuinely unhurried, close enough to reach the island's main services in under fifteen minutes by car. The accommodation is classified as an extended-stay hotel, which signals that the units are spacious and self-contained rather than standard doubles with a corridor running past them. The website confirms suites, standalone rooms, and at least one villa, all fitted with COCO-MAT sleeping systems — a Greek brand whose handmade mattresses appear in a number of the better small hotels across the Cyclades. Ratings on Google place the property at 4.8 out of 5 from 69 reviews, which is a consistent score for a small operation that relies heavily on repeat visitors and word-of-mouth. The immediate surroundings give it a context that larger resorts on the island cannot replicate. From the property you look out toward Mykonos and the small sacred islet of Delos, two of the most historically loaded silhouettes in the Aegean. Below, the sandy beach of Agios Ioannis stretches along a sheltered gulf, lined with tamarisk trees that provide shade through the afternoon. What to Expect The hotel markets itself under the banner of minimal luxury — a phrase that, in practice, tends to mean clean lines, quality materials, and an absence of clutter rather than a boutique-resort amenities list. The two-bedroom suite is described as particularly spacious, with a king-size bed, sofa, living room, and balcony. State-of-the-art furniture is mentioned specifically, and the COCO-MAT sleep systems are highlighted as a deliberate choice rather than an afterthought. The villa option suits families or small groups who want a degree of separation from other guests. Beyond that, room-count specifics and precise villa configuration are not published in the available material, so it is worth contacting the property directly before booking if you need confirmation on layout or capacity. The setting at Agios Ioannis Porto is genuinely different from the main tourist strip around Chora. This is a low-key residential and fishing hamlet that doubles as a summer retreat for Athenian families who prefer Tinos's quieter north-eastern coastline over the windier, more developed south. The beach of Agios Ioannis is sandy with clear water and tamarisk shade. Three neighbouring beaches — Agia Kyriaki, Agios Sostis, and Laouti — are within easy reach and tend to stay uncrowded even in August. The view across to Mykonos and Delos is a genuine asset. On a clear morning the two islands are close enough to look almost reachable by kayak, and the light on that stretch of water at dusk has a quality that photographers return to the island specifically to capture. Facilities and Location The property address is Ormos Agiou Ioanni 842 00, on the north-east coast of Tinos. Booking is handled directly through the hotel's own website at tinosvillages.gr, which includes an inline availability calendar for check-in, check-out, and guest count. The hotel is also active on Facebook and Instagram under the handle @tinosvillages, which can be useful for seeing current room configurations and seasonal updates before you commit. A phone number is available for direct enquiries: +30 698 788 0601. No email address is listed in the available public information, so phone or the website booking form are the two reliable contact routes. Facilities beyond the sleep systems and suite furnishings are not detailed in current public material. If specific amenities such as a pool, parking, or breakfast service are important to your stay, confirm these directly with the property before booking. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens), Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros. The main port is at Tinos Town (Chora) on the south coast. From the port, Agios Ioannis Porto lies approximately seven kilometres to the north-east along the coastal road. Renting a car or scooter at the port is the most practical approach. The drive from Chora takes around ten to fifteen minutes and the road is straightforward. Taxis are available at the port and can be arranged for arrival transfers, though supply is tighter during peak season — arranging one in advance through the hotel or a local taxi service is advisable if you are arriving with luggage on a busy summer ferry. There is no direct local bus line to Agios Ioannis Porto from the main KTEL bus station in Chora; the island's bus network focuses on connecting Chora to inland villages rather than the north-east coastal settlements. Hiring a vehicle is the easiest solution for guests who want flexibility to explore the island's traditional villages, which are the defining draw of Tinos beyond its famous pilgrimage church. Parking at the property itself is not confirmed in available information; check directly when booking. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a longer shoulder season than most Cycladic islands partly because the Panagia Evangelistria church draws religious pilgrims year-round, and partly because the island is less dependent on the beach-and-bar tourism cycle that makes some neighbours feel dead outside July and August. For a stay at Tinos Villages specifically, late May through June and September through early October offer the most comfortable combination of warm sea temperatures, manageable crowds on the nearby beaches, and pleasant temperatures for walking between villages. July and August are hot and can be windy on the north-east coast — the meltemi typically intensifies through August — but the sheltered gulf at Agios Ioannis provides more protection than the fully exposed south-facing beaches. The Feast of the Assumption on 15 August is the single busiest day on Tinos, drawing thousands of pilgrims to Chora. If your travel dates include that weekend, book well in advance and expect the main town to be exceptionally crowded, though Agios Ioannis Porto stays noticeably quieter. Winter and early spring are quiet and cool, with some local businesses closed, but the island's villages are atmospheric and accessible to those who prefer solitude over sun. Tips for Visiting Book directly through tinosvillages.gr to see real-time availability and use the property's own booking form; direct bookings often allow for clearer communication about room type and configuration. Call ahead if arriving by ferry late in the evening. +30 698 788 0601 is the contact number; confirm check-in arrangements before you travel, especially on summer Sundays when ferry schedules and local traffic can be unpredictable. Rent a vehicle at the port rather than expecting bus access. The KTEL service does not reliably cover Agios Ioannis Porto, and a scooter or small car opens up the entire north-east coast as well as the inland marble villages. Combine the stay with the Tinos village trail. The island has more than forty traditional settlements, many connected by stone-paved footpaths. Pyrgos, Kardiani, and Volax are within reasonable driving distance from Agios Ioannis Porto and represent the most architecturally distinct examples. Pack for the wind if you're visiting in August. The meltemi affects the north-east coast less severely than the southern beaches, but evenings can still be breezy; a light layer is useful even in high summer. Use the nearby beaches strategically. Agios Ioannis is the closest and most sheltered. Agia Kyriaki and Agios Sostis are a short drive away and tend to be quieter. Laouti is smaller and more local in character. Check the hotel's Instagram (@tinosvillages) before booking for the most recent images of the suites and villa. The property updates its feed seasonally, and you will get a better sense of the current aesthetic and layout than static booking-platform photos typically provide. The view toward Mykonos and Delos is clearest in the morning. If you want to photograph the two islands, early light from a balcony is more reliable than the haze that often builds by mid-afternoon in summer.

204m verderop3 min lopen
Porto Tango Hotel

Porto Tango Hotel is located in Agios Ioannis Porto, a quiet coastal area on the southern side of Tinos, and holds a 4.9-star rating across 211 Google reviews — one of the highest scores of any accommodation on the island. That kind of consistent feedback, over a substantial number of reviews, points to a property that reliably delivers on its promises rather than coasting on a handful of early five-star entries. Agios Ioannis Porto is a small settlement southeast of Tinos Town, set back from the main tourist traffic of the port and the pilgrimage church. The location suits travelers who want to be on the island without being in the middle of it — close enough to Tinos Town for a short drive, far enough to wake up without noise from the ferry terminal. The hotel's website is listed under the porto-manolis.com.es domain. If that address is unresponsive, use the direct phone line to confirm availability and current rates before making any travel arrangements. What to Expect With a 4.9 rating from 211 reviewers, Porto Tango Hotel sits at the upper end of what guests consistently praise on Tinos. Reviewers across platforms tend to single out properties in this rating bracket for cleanliness, attentive hosts, and a sense that someone actually cares about the upkeep of the place — qualities that matter on a Greek island where accommodation ranges from purpose-built resort blocks to family-run rooms above a kitchen garden. Agios Ioannis Porto itself is a coastal spot, and properties in this part of Tinos typically offer access to the sea without the density of a resort beach. The surrounding landscape is characteristically Tinian — dry hills, low stone walls, and scattered marble details on even the plainest buildings, since Tinos has been a marble-working island for centuries. The light here is sharp and clear, especially in the morning before the meltemi picks up in summer. The address — Αγ. Ιωάννης Πόρτο, Tinos 842 00 — places the hotel in the Porto area, which sits east of the road running south from Tinos Town toward Kionia and beyond. This is a calm stretch of coastline with easy water access and fewer day-trippers than the more popular beaches on the island's north coast. Room-specific details such as bed configurations, air conditioning, breakfast arrangements, and pool or terrace access are not confirmed in the available data. Contact the hotel directly for up-to-date specifics before booking. How to Get There From Tinos Town port, Agios Ioannis Porto is roughly 3–4 km by road heading southeast. The drive takes under ten minutes. There is no scheduled bus service reliably covering this particular route, so a rental car, scooter, or taxi is the practical choice. Taxis are available at the Tinos Town port and can be booked by phone or flagged at the stand near the ferry landing. If you are arriving by ferry from Piraeus, Rafina, Mykonos, or Syros, porters and taxis meet most scheduled services. Parking in the Agios Ioannis Porto area is generally informal and roadside — tight during peak July and August weeks, but manageable outside those months. Guests arriving by car should confirm with the hotel whether on-site parking is available. The hotel coordinates (37.5383447, 25.2186169) load correctly in Google Maps and can be used directly in navigation apps. Best Time to Visit Tinos receives visitors year-round, driven partly by religious pilgrims coming to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, which draws tens of thousands every August 15 for the Feast of the Dormition. That date — and the days immediately surrounding it — represents the single busiest period on the island. Accommodation books out months in advance, and Tinos Town becomes genuinely crowded. For a more relaxed stay, late May through late June and September into early October offer reliable warmth, calm seas, and noticeably fewer crowds. The meltemi (the strong Aegean north wind) blows most consistently in July and August, which can affect beach days on exposed coasts but makes the heat tolerable and the air unusually clear. Shoulder-season visits — April, early May, or late October — suit travelers interested in the island's villages, marble workshops, and dovecotes rather than primarily beach time. Tinos Town remains functional with open tavernas and shops through much of the year, though some smaller businesses close from November to March. For the Agios Ioannis Porto location specifically, the sheltered southeastern aspect means it's somewhat more protected from the meltemi than the island's northern beaches. Tips for Visiting Book directly by phone. The international number is +30 2283 025201. Given the 4.9 rating and limited room availability typical of smaller Tinos properties, call well in advance for July, August, and August 15 in particular. Verify the website before use. The listed domain (porto-manolis.com.es) may not be fully operational; the phone line is the more reliable contact method. Rent a vehicle. Agios Ioannis Porto is not within walking distance of Tinos Town's tavernas, bakeries, and shops. A car or scooter gives you access to the entire island, including the marble villages of the interior such as Pyrgos and Volax. Arrive with a full tank. Fuel stations on Tinos are concentrated near Tinos Town; there are fewer options on the southeastern road. Fill up before heading to the hotel if arriving late. Carry cash. While most accommodation accepts cards, smaller island properties sometimes prefer cash for incidentals. There are ATMs in Tinos Town at the port area. Ask about the August 15 pilgrimage. If your visit falls anywhere near that date, expect the entire island to be operating at maximum capacity. Roads into Tinos Town will be congested, and ferry schedules run additional crossings but with high demand. Check sea conditions before beach days. The Porto area has accessible coastline, but the meltemi can make the water choppy on exposed stretches. The hotel staff will know which nearby spots are sheltered on any given day. Tinos Town is worth a morning. Even if you're based outside the town, the market street, the pilgrimage church, and the harbor front are worth at least one proper visit during your stay. Facilities and Location The hotel sits within the Agios Ioannis Porto coastal zone, a small community that forms part of the broader municipality of Tinos. The immediate surroundings are low-density — this is not a resort strip — and the proximity to the water is one of the area's main draws. Specific facilities such as a pool, restaurant, bar, air conditioning units, Wi-Fi, room service, or accessibility provisions are not confirmed in the available source data. Any traveler with specific accessibility or dietary requirements should confirm those details directly with the property before booking. The hotel's high rating suggests consistent service standards, but the specifics of what is included vary by season and room type. The address in the Greek postal system is: Αγ. Ιωάννης Πόρτο, Tinos 842 00, Greece.

266m verderop3 min lopen
{orto Calma

La Priva Calma is a small apartment complex built into a hillside at Pachia Ammos on the southeastern coast of Tinos. The property sits elevated above the shoreline, and its position gives each unit an unobstructed line of sight across the Aegean — something you notice immediately from the private veranda that comes with every room. The name is a play on words — "la priva" gestures toward privacy, and "calma" toward calm — and the setting delivers on both. Pachia Ammos is a quiet area away from the bustle of Tinos Town (Chora), which sits roughly 10 kilometres to the northwest. The hillside location keeps the complex out of the main tourist flow while still giving you straightforward access to the rest of the island. The property's website, laprivacalma.gr, describes the complex as offering fully equipped apartments, including at least one category listed as a Deluxe Double Room (Calma 1). The emphasis throughout is on self-sufficient stays: units are set up for independent living rather than resort-style service, making it a practical base whether you're on Tinos for a few days or a longer stretch. What to Expect La Priva Calma operates as a small-scale, apartment-style property rather than a conventional hotel. Units are described as fully equipped, which typically means a kitchenette or kitchen area, sleeping space, and private bathroom — though you should confirm the exact configuration of your chosen room directly with the property before booking. The defining feature of the complex is its view. Built on a slope, the apartments are arranged to face the sea, and each private veranda gives you a wide sweep of the Aegean throughout the day. Cycladic sunsets from this vantage point — with the sea catching light to the west — are a recurring detail in the property's own description of the place. The surrounding area of Pachia Ammos is low-key. You won't find a large strip of bars or restaurants directly outside the door, which suits guests who prefer a quieter environment. The beach at Pachia Ammos is a short distance from the property, offering a pebbly-to-sandy shore typical of this part of Tinos. Nearby Agios Ioannis is referenced in the property's description as a complementary local point — a small community with rocky outcrops, green hillsides, and a handful of places to eat. The property has a small number of Google reviews at the time of writing, all at the maximum rating, suggesting a consistently attentive host experience rather than the anonymity of a large operation. How to Get There Pachia Ammos sits on the southeastern side of Tinos, below and southeast of Agios Ioannis. The coordinates for La Priva Calma (37.5339, 25.2186) place it on the hillside above the Pachia Ammos coastline. By car or scooter, the drive from Tinos Town (the port and main settlement) takes roughly 15–20 minutes via the central road through the island's interior. Having your own transport is strongly recommended — Pachia Ammos is not on a main bus route and the hillside location makes walking from the port impractical for most guests. If you're arriving by ferry, Tinos Town port is the landing point for most connections from Piraeus, Mykonos, Rafina, and other Cycladic islands. Car rentals and scooter hire are available in Tinos Town near the port. It's worth arranging transport before you arrive in peak season, particularly in July and August when demand is high. Parking at or near the property is standard for this type of hillside complex in the Cyclades; confirm availability directly with the host when booking. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a long viable season for visitors. The shoulder months of May, June, and September offer the most comfortable conditions: temperatures in the mid-20s Celsius, fewer crowds, and lower accommodation rates than July and August. The island's famous meltemi wind — a dry northerly that sweeps the Cyclades in summer — can be pronounced in July and August, though at Pachia Ammos, on the southeastern side of the island, the terrain offers some natural shelter compared to the more exposed northern shores. August is the peak of the Greek domestic season on Tinos, largely because of the Feast of the Dormition on 15 August, one of the most significant religious pilgrimages in Greece. Accommodation across the island books out weeks in advance for this period; if you plan to visit in mid-August, reservations well ahead are essential. For a relaxed hillside stay with easy access to quieter beaches, late May through June or the first half of September are the most straightforward periods. Tips for Visiting Book directly or confirm early. With a small number of units, La Priva Calma has limited availability. Contact the property at [email protected] or by phone (+30 697 426 1151) to check room types and confirm what each unit includes before committing. Arrange transport in advance. The hillside location and distance from Tinos Town make a rental car or scooter close to essential. Book ahead in high season; options can be thin by the time you reach the port. Pack for self-catering. Fully equipped apartments are designed for independent stays. Bring or shop for basics early — the nearest well-stocked supermarket options are in Tinos Town. Use the veranda time wisely. The view across the Aegean shifts substantially through the day. Early morning light is clean and flat; late afternoon into sunset is when the sea takes on deeper colour. Explore beyond the beach. Tinos is one of the most architecturally varied islands in the Cyclades, with over 40 distinct villages and a marble-carving tradition linked to sculptors such as Giannoulis Chalepas. The complex makes a reasonable base for day trips inland. Visit the Panagia Evangelistria in Chora. The Church of the Virgin Mary in Tinos Town is one of the most important Orthodox pilgrimage sites in Greece. It's a 15–20 minute drive from Pachia Ammos and worth the trip regardless of your religious background. Check the ferry schedule. If you're island-hopping, Tinos has frequent connections to Mykonos (a short crossing), Syros, and Piraeus. The schedule changes seasonally; check at the port or online before planning onward travel. Facilities and Location La Priva Calma describes itself as a complex of apartments (studios and rooms), with the Calma 1 Deluxe Double Room noted as one available unit type. All units are stated to be fully equipped. The property's Instagram account (@laprivacalma) shows the visual character of the complex more clearly than the website text alone. The address is listed as Pachia Ammos, Cyclades 842 00 — the postal code covering this part of Tinos. The exact hillside setting means that sea-view orientation and elevation are consistent features of the property rather than premium add-ons available only to certain rooms. There is no large on-site resort infrastructure described — no mention of a pool, restaurant, or spa in the available information. The appeal is the location itself: a quiet hillside site with direct views, fully equipped self-catering units, and straightforward access to one of the Cyclades' least over-touristed islands.

284m verderop4 min lopen
Nostos Resort Tinos

Nostos Resort Tinos is a resort hotel on Tinos, the Cycladic island in the northern Aegean known for its pilgrimage church, distinctive marble craftsmanship, and quieter pace compared to its busier neighbors Mykonos and Santorini. The property sits at coordinates that place it in the southwestern coastal zone of the island, roughly in the area between Tinos Town and the hillside villages that climb toward the interior. The name "Nostos" is the Greek word for homecoming or return — a fitting reference for a destination island that draws both devout pilgrims and repeat leisure travelers. As a resort category property, it is designed to offer more than a basic room booking: guests typically expect on-site facilities, outdoor space, and a degree of self-contained comfort that suits those who want to use the hotel as a base between day trips rather than simply a place to sleep. Tinos is not a party island, and accommodation here tends to reflect that. The overall atmosphere on the island rewards unhurried travelers — people who want to walk marble-paved village lanes, eat well in small tavernas, and reach a relatively uncrowded beach without a two-hour journey. A resort hotel in this context functions as a practical anchor point for that kind of trip. Facilities and Location The coordinates for Nostos Resort Tinos place it at approximately 37.5336° N, 25.2181° E, which situates the property in the broader Tinos Town area on the southwestern tip of the island. Tinos Town — also called Chora — is the island's port and commercial center, where the ferry docks, the main shops and restaurants operate, and the famous Panagia Evangelistria church stands at the top of the marble-flagged street that runs from the waterfront uphill. Being positioned near or within reach of Tinos Town gives guests straightforward access to ferry connections, the island's main concentration of restaurants and cafes, and the church itself, which draws visitors year-round and reaches significant crowds around the Feast of the Assumption on 15 August. As a resort property, the hotel likely offers private or shared outdoor spaces suited to the Cycladic climate — terraces, a pool area, or garden grounds that take advantage of the Aegean light and the surrounding landscape. Tinos has a distinctive visual character: low drystone walls, dovecotes (peristereones) dotting the hillsides, and a palette of whitewash, grey schist, and the warm stone typical of Cycladic building. Guests considering this property as a base for island exploration should note that Tinos has a reasonably functional bus network connecting Tinos Town to the main villages and beaches, and car and scooter rental is available at the port. Many of the island's most rewarding destinations — the marble-carving village of Pyrgos in the north, the beach at Kolymbithra, the hillside Venetian fortress site at Xobourgo — require independent transport or at minimum a planned bus journey. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry services from Piraeus (the port of Athens), Rafina, and the neighboring islands of Mykonos and Syros. The crossing from Rafina takes roughly three to four hours on a conventional ferry and considerably less on a high-speed service. From Mykonos, the crossing is short — often under an hour on a fast catamaran. Upon arriving at Tinos Town port, the hotel's position near the Chora area means it is likely reachable on foot from the ferry dock or by a short taxi ride. Tinos Town is compact and walkable at its core, though luggage and summer heat make a taxi sensible if the property is uphill from the waterfront. Taxis wait at the port on ferry arrivals. If driving on the island, the main road network radiates from Tinos Town and is adequate for a standard vehicle, though some routes to remote villages are narrow. Parking near the town center can be tight in August. Best Time to Visit Tinos receives visitors across a long season, from April through October, with July and August being the peak months. The island has a significant religious tourism dimension: the Feast of the Assumption on 15 August is the most important religious event in Greece after Easter, and Tinos Town becomes extremely crowded in the days surrounding it. Room availability around that date requires booking well in advance — months ahead for any property near the town. For leisure travelers without a specific pilgrimage purpose, late May through June and September through early October offer the most comfortable conditions: warm, dry weather, calmer seas for beach use, and fewer crowds at restaurants and sites. July is reliably hot and can be windy — Tinos sits in a zone that channels the Meltemi, the dry northerly Aegean summer wind, which keeps temperatures manageable but makes exposed coastal locations breezy. Spring arrivals in April and May find the island green from winter rain and largely uncrowded, though some smaller businesses may not yet be fully operational. Tips for Visiting Book early for August. Accommodation on Tinos — particularly around Tinos Town — fills up for the August 15 feast period faster than almost anywhere else in the Cyclades. If your travel dates include the second week of August, book as early as possible and confirm directly. Arrange airport or ferry transfers in advance. Tinos does not have its own airport; all arrivals come by ferry. Knowing which ferry you are on and communicating your arrival time to the hotel helps avoid delays at the port, where taxis can be in high demand after large ferries dock. Rent a vehicle for inland exploration. The island's interior villages — particularly Pyrgos, Kardiani, and Volax — are genuinely worth the trip, and the bus schedule, while functional, does not always align with flexible traveler timing. A small car or scooter covers the island comfortably in a day. Carry cash. While cards are increasingly accepted in Tinos Town, smaller tavernas, village bakeries, and some beach facilities operate on a cash-preferred basis. There are ATMs in Tinos Town near the port. Dress modestly for the church. If visiting Panagia Evangelistria, shoulders and knees should be covered. This applies regardless of how hot the day is. Appropriate cover-ups are sometimes available at the entrance. The wind is real. The Meltemi can be strong enough to affect beach plans on the northern and eastern coasts in July and August. The south-facing beaches and coves around Tinos Town tend to be more sheltered. Tinos marble and ceramics make worthwhile purchases. The village of Pyrgos has working marble-carving workshops and a small museum dedicated to the craft. If you plan to visit for shopping, go on a weekday morning when workshops are more likely to be open. Nearby beaches are accessible from Tinos Town. Agios Fokas and Kionia are among the closest beaches to town and reachable without a car — useful if you want a straightforward beach morning without committing to a full-island drive.

307m verderop4 min lopen
Aigaion

Aigaion (also listed as Aigaio Studios) is a small studio-style property in Tinos Town, positioned to take advantage of the Aegean views that give it its name. With a 4.6-star rating across 97 Google reviews, it sits well above the average for the island's accommodation scene, and the self-catering format makes it a practical base for travellers who want flexibility during a longer stay. All units are compact 25 m² sea view studios, each sleeping up to two guests and equipped with a kitchenette and mini-fridge — enough to prepare a light breakfast or store provisions picked up from Tinos Town's nearby market. The property runs year-round and operates with 24-hour availability, which means late ferry arrivals, a common occurrence on Tinos given its role as a major Cycladic port, are not a logistical problem. The studios carry individual island-themed names — Amorgos, Paros, Naxos, Santorini, and Sifnos — with the second-floor Santorini and Sifnos units described as having panoramic sea views rather than standard sea views. If an elevated outlook over the water matters to you, these are the rooms to request when you enquire. Facilities and Location Every studio at Aigaion includes private bathroom facilities, air conditioning, free Wi-Fi, and the kitchenette with mini-fridge mentioned above. The setup is designed for self-sufficiency without the full infrastructure of a larger hotel: there is no restaurant on-site, but Tinos Town's main dining strip, bakeries, and supermarkets are within easy walking distance of the waterfront address. The property coordinates place it on or very close to the Tinos Town seafront, within the 842 00 postal zone that covers the island's main settlement. Tinos Town is both the island's commercial hub and its spiritual centre, home to the Church of Panagia Evangelistria — the most significant Marian pilgrimage site in Greece — which sits a short uphill walk from the port. Guests staying at Aigaion are therefore well-placed not only for ferry connections but for the full range of Tinos Town's restaurants, shops, and cultural sites. For guests arriving by ferry, the port is the central reference point in Tinos Town; the property's seafront location means transfers from the boat are straightforward without a taxi. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens) and from neighbouring Cycladic islands including Mykonos, Syros, and Rafina. Ferries dock at Tinos Town port, and Aigaion's address in the town centre means the walk from the quay is manageable with a suitcase. If you are arriving from another Cycladic island by fast ferry, journey times are short — Mykonos to Tinos takes under 20 minutes on most high-speed routes. From Piraeus, conventional ferries take roughly 4–5 hours; high-speed services cut this to approximately 3 hours depending on the route. Once you reach Tinos Town, local buses depart from the port square to villages across the island, including Pyrgos, Panormos, and Falatados, making Aigaion a workable base for day trips without renting a car. Car and motorbike hire is available at the port if you prefer to explore independently. Parking in central Tinos Town is limited in peak summer months; if you plan to hire a vehicle for part of your stay, confirm parking options directly with the property when you book. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a longer shoulder season than many Cycladic islands, partly because of the year-round religious pilgrimage to Panagia Evangelistria. Aigaion itself is open all year, with separate contact numbers listed for summer and winter months. July and August are the busiest weeks, coinciding with peak Greek summer travel and the major pilgrimage dates of 25 March (Annunciation) and 15 August (Dormition of the Virgin). The 15 August celebration draws enormous crowds to Tinos Town, and accommodation books out months in advance for that specific weekend. If your visit is not tied to a pilgrimage date, late May through June and September through early October offer settled weather, warm sea temperatures, and noticeably lower visitor numbers. Tinos is known for its winds — it occupies an exposed position in the central Cyclades — so even in summer, evenings can be breezy. The meltemi wind is strongest in July and August, which affects beach conditions on the north coast more than Tinos Town itself. Tips for Visiting Book directly when possible. The website (aigaio.com.gr) invites availability enquiries directly, and a Facebook page and Instagram account are also active, which can be useful for quick questions. Request a second-floor studio if panoramic sea views are a priority. The Santorini and Sifnos studios sit on the upper floor and are specifically described as having panoramic outlooks. Plan around 15 August carefully. If your dates overlap with the Dormition of the Virgin pilgrimage, book well ahead; if crowds are not your aim, consider shifting your dates by a week in either direction. Use the kitchenette. Tinos Town has excellent food shopping, including a lively market area. Picking up local cheese — Tinos produces its own graviera and other dairy products — and breakfast items can save money and makes the sea view terrace or room more useful. Check summer versus winter contact numbers. The property lists different phone numbers for summer (+30 2283 025265) and winter (+30 2283 025064) seasons, plus a mobile (+30 6973 709824). Use the appropriate one for your time of travel. For ferry connections, the Tinos port timetable changes seasonally. SeaJets, Minoan Lines (Hellenic Seaways), and Blue Star Ferries all serve the route; check schedules a few weeks before travel as the timetable updates frequently. Tinos Town is walkable. The main marble-paved street leading to Panagia Evangelistria church, the port square, restaurants, and the bus station are all within a short walk of the seafront address, so you do not need a vehicle for the town itself.

334m verderop4 min lopen
ARK Tinos

ARK Tinos is a family-run property in the Laouti area of Tinos, within walking distance of Laouti Beach and about ten minutes by car from Chora, the island's port town. The property offers six self-catering units ranging from double rooms to two-bedroom sea-view studios, making it a practical base for couples, small families, and anyone planning to spend a week or more exploring the island at their own pace. With a Google rating of 4.9 from 14 reviews, ARK positions itself around a clear philosophy: quiet, uncomplicated stays with enough comfort and visual care to feel deliberate rather than merely functional. The location in Laouti puts guests close to a cluster of the island's well-regarded villages, where local restaurants, small bars, and artisan shops are within a short drive. Tinos itself rewards this kind of base. It is an island that takes time to understand — its 50-plus marble-decorated villages, the pilgrimage church of Panagia Evangelistria in Chora, the dovecote-studded hillsides, and the strong tradition of local cuisine all require more than a day trip to appreciate. A self-catering apartment with room to settle in makes the difference between skimming the surface and actually getting to know the place. What to Expect ARK Tinos runs six accommodation units, each designed to reflect a restrained Cycladic aesthetic — whitewashed surfaces, clean lines, and natural light — without tipping into a staged look. The room categories cover a practical spread: Double Room — for two guests, the most compact option Standard Studio — two guests, open-plan layout with self-catering facilities Garden View Studio — two guests, outlook over the property's garden Studio Plus — accommodates up to three guests Two Bedroom Studio — for up to four guests, with separate sleeping areas Two Bedroom Sea View Studio — the largest unit, sleeping up to five, with a sea outlook All studio units include self-catering facilities, meaning guests can shop at local markets, cook their own meals, and operate more like a temporary resident than a hotel guest. This is genuinely useful on Tinos, where the local markets in the villages near Laouti stock island-produced cheeses, sausages, artichoke products, and fresh produce worth cooking with. The property's proximity to Laouti Beach means a morning swim before breakfast is a realistic option rather than a logistical exercise. The beach itself is one of several along the southern and western coasts of Tinos accessible without a long drive. How to Get There Tinos is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens) or Rafina, with frequent connections during summer — the crossing from Rafina takes roughly 2.5 hours on a conventional ferry, or under two hours on faster services. High-speed catamarans also connect Tinos to Mykonos, Syros, and other Cycladic islands. From Tinos Town port (Chora), ARK Tinos is approximately ten minutes by car. Renting a car or scooter on arrival is the most practical approach for guests staying outside Chora — the island's bus network covers major routes but schedules are limited outside peak hours. Taxis are available at the port. For navigation, the property is registered at Laouti 842 00, and the coordinates (37.5339623, 25.2146528) can be used directly in Google Maps. There is no parking note in the available information, but properties in this part of Tinos typically have space for vehicles given the rural setting — confirm directly with the property before arrival. Best Time to Visit Tinos has a longer shoulder season than many Cycladic islands, partly because of year-round pilgrimage activity at the church in Chora and partly because the island's villages attract visitors interested in traditional architecture and local craft rather than beach tourism alone. Late May to mid-June and September offer the best balance of warm weather, manageable crowds, and full restaurant and shop availability. August is the busiest month — the Feast of the Assumption on 15 August draws thousands of pilgrims to Chora, and accommodation across the island books out well in advance. If you plan to visit in August, book ARK Tinos as early as possible. July is hot and can be windy — the Aegean meltemi wind picks up reliably in July and August, which cools things down but can make some exposed beaches choppy. The Laouti area, depending on orientation, can offer some shelter from the prevailing north wind. Spring visits (April–May) suit those interested in the island's countryside, villages, and walking routes, when wildflowers are out and the hills are green. October is quiet but most accommodation and restaurants remain open into mid-month. Tips for Visiting Book early for August. The 15 August pilgrimage is one of the largest religious gatherings in Greece. Accommodation across Tinos fills months in advance for this period. Rent a vehicle on arrival. A car or scooter unlocks the island. The villages of Pyrgos, Volax, and Xinara are all within 20–30 minutes of the Laouti area and repay the short drive. Use the self-catering facilities. Tinos has excellent local produce — sun-dried tomatoes, graviera cheese, loukoumades, and the island's famed artichokes. The market in Chora and village shops near ARK stock them. Contact the property directly. ARK Tinos has its own booking system at arktinos.com and can be reached at +30 693 685 4958 or [email protected] . Booking direct may give you access to current availability and unit-specific questions. Plan for the drive times. Ten minutes to Chora is accurate by car, but factor in time for parking in Chora, especially in peak season when the port area gets congested. Ask about the sea view studio early. The Two Bedroom Sea View Studio is the largest and most in-demand unit. If it suits your group, inquire about it specifically — it is likely the first to book up. Bring or buy supplies for the first evening. Arriving late by ferry and finding a supermarket open in a rural area can be hit or miss. A quick stop in Chora before heading to Laouti is straightforward on arrival. Follow ARK on Instagram. The property's account (@ark_tinos) gives a realistic visual impression of the units and surroundings, which is useful when choosing between room types. Facilities and Location ARK Tinos is a small, family-operated property — six units means personal attention rather than the anonymity of a large hotel. The Laouti address places it in a quieter, more residential part of Tinos's coast, away from the concentrated tourism of Chora while still connected to it by a short drive. Laouti Beach is within walking distance, and the cluster of villages nearby — referred to on the property's website as a destination in their own right for restaurants and local shops — suggests guests have practical dining options without always needing to drive to Chora. The village of Tripotamos, Kardiani, and Isternia are all within a reasonable distance of the Laouti area, each with tavernas serving local cooking. The property's website (arktinos.com) handles direct bookings with a check-in/check-out search and guest count input, covering adults, children aged 2–14, and infants separately — a useful detail for families traveling with young children.

338m verderop4 min lopen
Alexander

Alexander is a hotel in Tinos Town, situated on Nikolaou Kornárou street — a quiet address within easy reach of the island's busy port and the famous Church of Panagia Evangelistria. With a 4.7-star rating across 150 Google reviews, it consistently earns strong marks from guests, which for a moderately sized property in a competitive pilgrimage-and-holiday destination like Tinos is a meaningful signal. Tinos Town is the island's main hub: ferry connections, the majority of restaurants and shops, and the steep marble-paved approach to the revered church all converge here. Staying centrally means you can walk to the waterfront for an early coffee, catch a morning ferry to Mykonos or Syros, and still be back at the church before the midday crowds thicken. The Alexander's address on Nikolaou Kornárou places it within that walkable core. The hotel can be reached directly by phone at +30 697 375 4505, and the official website is alextinos.gr. No email address is publicly listed, so a phone call or the website contact form are the most reliable ways to check availability and rates. What to Expect The research available on Alexander is deliberately concise — the property does not appear to market itself through a large-scale booking platform profile, which is common for independently run Greek island hotels that rely on repeat guests and word-of-mouth. What the review count and rating do confirm is that guests leave satisfied at a notably high rate. Tinos Town hotels in this category typically offer clean, simply furnished rooms with air conditioning, private bathrooms, and either a balcony or a street-facing window. The island's strong Cycladic light means even modestly sized rooms feel open in the mornings. Because the address is in the town center rather than on a beach, the immediate environment is urban-village in character: tiled streets, the sound of the port, and the general movement of a Greek island town through the day. The location on Nikolaou Kornárou is not on the main waterfront esplanade itself, which means lower ambient noise from the evening dining and bar scene while still being close enough to reach it on foot in minutes. For pilgrims visiting the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, this is a practical base: the church is uphill from the port, and the Alexander's central position cuts the walking distance considerably compared with staying at the edge of town. Guests traveling with a car will find Tinos Town manageable for short-stay parking, though the narrow lanes near the center require patience. The port area has more open parking if you arrive early. How to Get There Tinos is served by regular ferry connections from Piraeus (Athens), Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros. The port is at the base of Tinos Town, and the Alexander Hotel is a short walk from the ferry landing — under ten minutes on foot carrying luggage, following the main street uphill from the waterfront then bearing toward Nikolaou Kornárou street. Taxis are available at the port and in the town square. If you are arriving with heavy luggage or late at night, calling ahead to the hotel (+30 697 375 4505) is the most efficient way to arrange a pickup or confirm directions. There is no airport on Tinos; all arrivals are by sea. In summer, high-speed catamarans from Piraeus cut travel time to under three hours. Slower conventional ferries from Piraeus take four to five hours but cost less and are good for overnight crossings. Best Time to Visit Tinos has two distinct visitor patterns. The 15th of August, the Feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, is the most important religious pilgrimage day in Greece — tens of thousands of visitors descend on the island, accommodation books out months in advance, and the town's streets are impassable for much of the day. If your visit aligns with this date, confirm your reservation well ahead and expect a profoundly different atmosphere from a standard summer stay. July and August are peak summer months: warm, reliably dry, busy, and expensive. June and September offer a better balance of good weather and manageable crowds. Tinos is also a year-round destination for domestic religious tourism, so shoulder and winter months see lower prices and a quieter, more local atmosphere, though some restaurants and shops reduce hours or close entirely after October. The island's position in the central Cyclades means it catches the strong summer meltemi winds from the north, which makes July and August afternoons breezy and pleasantly cooler than many Aegean islands — relevant for anyone planning beach days during a stay here. Tips for Visiting Book early for any stay around August 15. The Feast of the Assumption fills every room on the island, and prices spike significantly in that window. Call the hotel directly at +30 697 375 4505 to confirm room availability, rates, and any current facilities — the website at alextinos.gr is the best starting point for general information. The Church of Panagia Evangelistria is a ten-to-fifteen minute walk uphill from the port area; the Alexander's central location reduces that walk noticeably. If you are traveling with a car rented on the island, ask the hotel about nearby parking options before you arrive — Tinos Town's center is compact and navigable on foot, so parking once and walking is the practical approach. Tinos Town has a genuine local food scene distinct from the more tourist-oriented Cycladic islands. The covered market and the lanes behind the waterfront hold small tavernas and cafes used by islanders year-round. Pack a layer for evenings in June and September, and for afternoons on the water in July and August — the meltemi is reliable and can be strong. The ferry schedule changes seasonally. Check current timetables from Piraeus, Rafina, or connecting islands before booking arrival and departure dates, especially if traveling outside peak summer. Tinos is known for its Venetian-era dovecotes scattered across the interior villages. If time allows, renting a car or scooter for a day to explore Pyrgos (marble-carving village) and the northern villages adds significant depth to a stay. Facilities and Location The Alexander is located at Nikolaou Kornárou 1, Tinos Town 842 00, at coordinates 37.5334°N, 25.2142°E — within the built center of Tinos Town and roughly equidistant between the port waterfront and the hillside approach to the church. The surrounding streets contain a mix of small hotels, guesthouses, and local businesses serving both pilgrims and leisure travelers. The official website (alextinos.gr) is the primary channel for current room information, pricing, and availability. The property also has a presence on Instagram (@alexandertino12) and TikTok (@alexander.tino53), which may provide a more current visual sense of the property and its immediate surroundings. Given the strong aggregate rating of 4.7 from 150 reviews, the Alexander sits in the upper tier of Tinos Town accommodation by guest satisfaction. For travelers who prioritize a central location, walkable access to the port and church, and a track record of positive guest experiences, it is a practical choice for Tinos stays of any length.

405m verderop5 min lopen
Kyklades

Kyklades Studios & Apartments sits in Agios Ioannis Porto on the southern coast of Tinos, a quiet bay area that draws visitors looking for self-contained accommodation away from the bustle of Tinos Town. With a 4.9 rating across 108 Google reviews, it consistently ranks among the most positively reviewed places to stay on the island — a meaningful signal on an island that sees both pilgrimage tourism and leisure travellers throughout the summer season. The property offers studios and apartments, making it suited to couples, solo travellers, and families who prefer the flexibility of self-catering over hotel-style service. The address places it directly in the Agios Ioannis Porto area (postal code 842 00), a coastal settlement on the southwestern side of Tinos roughly 8 kilometres from Tinos Town by road. The official registration number listed on the property's own website — MHTE 1178K122K0920900 — confirms it operates as a licensed Greek tourism accommodation, which is worth noting when booking smaller island properties. What to Expect Kyklades Studios & Apartments is a self-catering property in the studio and apartment format common to the Cyclades. Studios typically accommodate one or two guests, with a sleeping area and a kitchenette, while apartments provide more space and are practical for small families or groups who intend to prepare some of their own meals. Agios Ioannis Porto itself is a low-key coastal area, calmer and less trafficked than Tinos Town or the main port. The bay offers access to the sea without the concentration of day-trippers that can crowd the more central beaches in July and August. The coordinates place Kyklades at 37.537°N, 25.222°E — on the southwestern fringe of Tinos, with the sea effectively at the doorstep. The property's Facebook page (KykladesStudios) suggests an active operation with a direct line of communication for prospective guests. The email address [email protected] and the phone number +30 2283 025342 provide two straightforward ways to make direct enquiries or bookings, which can be useful on smaller Cycladic properties where direct booking sometimes yields better rates or availability clarity than third-party platforms. The high review rating across a meaningful volume of reviews indicates consistent quality in cleanliness, hospitality, and location. On Greek island accommodation, ratings above 4.8 at 100-plus reviews tend to reflect properties where owners are personally invested in the guest experience. How to Get There Tinos is served by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Rafina, Mykonos, and Syros, among other connections. The main port is Tinos Town on the northern coast. From the port, Agios Ioannis Porto is approximately 8 kilometres south by road — a 15–20 minute drive. Renting a car or scooter is the most practical option for staying in Agios Ioannis Porto, both for reaching the property from the port on arrival and for exploring the rest of the island during your stay. Taxis are available from Tinos Town port; the fare to Agios Ioannis Porto is manageable for a one-off transfer with luggage, though relying on taxis for daily movement around this part of the island is less convenient. There is limited but generally available roadside parking in the Agios Ioannis Porto area. Guests arriving by car — whether rented locally or driven to the ferry from the mainland — should find parking near the property accessible. Bus service from Tinos Town covers some villages and coastal areas; check the local KTEL schedule on arrival for the current Agios Ioannis Porto route, as timetables vary seasonally. Best Time to Visit Tinos is a year-round destination for Greek pilgrims visiting the Church of Panagia Evangelistria in Tinos Town, but accommodation demand peaks in August, particularly around the 15th of August (Dormition of the Virgin), when the island hosts one of the most significant religious events in Greece. Booking well in advance for any dates between late July and mid-August is essential. For a quieter stay at Kyklades Studios, June and September offer warm sea temperatures, lighter crowds, and lower prices than peak summer. The Aegean sea around Tinos is typically swimmable from late May through October. The southwestern coast around Agios Ioannis Porto can be more sheltered from the meltemi — the strong northerly wind that affects the Cyclades through July and August — than the northern and eastern sides of the island. This can make beach time more comfortable on days when wind elsewhere on Tinos is disruptive. Spring (April–May) and autumn (October) are good seasons for walkers and those interested in Tinos's villages and marble-working tradition, though some accommodation and restaurants outside Tinos Town operate reduced hours or close entirely before June and after October. Tips for Visiting Book directly when possible. Contact the property by phone (+30 2283 025342) or email ( [email protected] ) to ask about availability and direct rates, especially for stays of a week or more. Rent transport on arrival. A car or scooter is effectively necessary for staying in Agios Ioannis Porto with any freedom of movement. Scooter and car rental is available in Tinos Town port. Confirm your unit type before booking. Studios and apartments vary in capacity and layout; clarify whether a kitchenette is included in a studio unit if self-catering is important to your stay. Arrive with cash as well as cards. While card payments are increasingly standard, smaller island properties sometimes operate primarily in cash for incidentals; an ATM is available in Tinos Town. Plan the August 15th period carefully. If your dates include the Dormition of the Virgin (August 15th), book months in advance and expect the island — including roads and the port — to be significantly busier than usual. Use the bay for swimming. Agios Ioannis Porto's coastal location means you are close to the water; ask the property owners for their recommendation on the nearest accessible beach or swimming spot, as local knowledge is more reliable than maps for small Tinos coves. Check the ferry schedule before finalising dates. Ferry frequency to and from Tinos varies by season; high-speed services from Piraeus via Rafina are most frequent in summer. Book return crossings early in August. The property's website (kyklades-tinos.com) lists offers periodically. Check it alongside third-party platforms before committing to a booking rate. Facilities and Location Kyklades Studios & Apartments operates as a licensed Greek tourism accommodation (MHTE 1178K122K0920900). The property offers studio and apartment units, with the self-catering format being a core feature. Agios Ioannis Porto is a coastal settlement rather than a resort complex, so guests are part of a small local community rather than an isolated hotel compound. The property's website provides a video tour of the facilities — useful for assessing room layout and outdoor spaces before booking. The Facebook page (facebook.com/KykladesStudios) is active and can be a practical channel for pre-arrival questions, particularly for guests who prefer messaging to phone calls. Tinos Town, 8 kilometres north, offers the full range of island services: the Church of Panagia Evangelistria, supermarkets, restaurants, banks, pharmacies, the main bus terminal, and the ferry port. Day trips from Kyklades to the town are easy by car and cover the island's principal sight in half a day, leaving the afternoon free for the coastal area around the property. The wider Porto area also provides access to some of Tinos's less-crowded southern beaches, which tend to attract fewer visitors than the beaches closest to Tinos Town.

414m verderop5 min lopen
Carlo Bungalows

Carlo Bungalows occupies a hillside position above Agios Ioannis-Porto beach on Tinos's southeast coast, roughly ten minutes by car from the island's port. The property's 26 units — studios, suites, and standalone bungalows — are arranged amphitheatrically so that the terraces and the pool face out over the Aegean toward Delos and Mykonos. That orientation is the defining feature of the place: you can watch the silhouettes of those two islands shift from pale blue to orange without leaving your sun lounger. With a 4.8 rating across 206 Google reviews, Carlo Bungalows sits among the most consistently well-reviewed accommodation options on Tinos. The classification as an extended-stay property reflects its self-contained setup — each unit is equipped for guests who want more than a standard hotel room — though it also suits short breaks perfectly well. Booking directly through carlo.gr comes with a best-price guarantee and the property advertises exclusive benefits for direct reservations. What to Expect The architecture follows the Cycladic model: whitewashed walls, beamed ceilings, marble floors that stay cool through the afternoon heat, and built-in sofas or beds that keep the rooms feeling uncluttered. Wooden furnishings add warmth without competing with the exterior views. Every one of the 26 units has a private terrace — generous enough for a table, chairs, and a morning coffee or an evening glass of wine — and each terrace is angled toward the sea. The units differ slightly from one another in layout, size, and furnishing details, so it's worth specifying your preferences when booking. All share the same standard of bathroom: modern, spacious, and well-equipped. The studios are the entry-level option; the bungalow units offer more separation from neighbouring rooms and a more independent feel. The suites sit between those two in terms of space and configuration. The communal pool faces the sea and is positioned to capture the view of Delos and Mykonos that the property's elevated site makes possible. The pool area functions as the social centre of the complex — a spot for reading, sunbathing, or taking in the panorama without needing to leave the property. The website references a light poolside food and drink offering, though specific menu details should be confirmed directly with the property. The reception desk operates from 7:00 AM to 1:00 AM daily, which means late arrivals — including guests coming off evening ferries from Piraeus — can be accommodated. Facilities and Location Carlo Bungalows is in the Agios Ioannis-Porto area on Tinos's southeastern shore. The beach at Agios Ioannis is directly below the property, putting a sandy shoreline within easy walking distance. Porto beach, part of the same bay, is equally accessible. This corner of Tinos is quieter than the northern beaches around Panormos or the busy seafront at Tinos Town, and the landscape here is characteristically Cycladic — dry hillsides, low stone walls, and long views across open water. For guests who want to explore the island's villages — Pyrgos with its marble-carving tradition, Volax with its famous granite boulders, or the hilltop settlement of Arnados — a hire car or scooter makes the most sense. The property is around a ten-minute drive from Tinos Town, so the port, the Panagia Evangelistria church, and the main waterfront restaurants are all reachable without a long journey. There are no regular bus services to Agios Ioannis-Porto that match the flexibility of your own transport, so arriving by taxi or rental vehicle is practical. Contact the property by phone at +30 2283 024159 or by email at [email protected] . The website at carlo.gr handles direct bookings. How to Get There Tinos is served by frequent ferry connections from Piraeus (roughly 4–5 hours on a conventional ferry, around 2–3 hours on a high-speed service) and has seasonal links to Rafina. From Thessaloniki and other Cycladic islands, services run via Blue Star Ferries, SeaJets, and Golden Star Ferries. From the port at Tinos Town, Carlo Bungalows is approximately 10 kilometres southeast. The drive follows the coast road southward through Kionia and then continues along the southeastern shore toward the Porto area. A taxi from the port takes around 10–15 minutes depending on traffic, and the fare is modest by Greek island standards. The property's address — Agios Ioannis Porto, Tinos 842 00 — can be entered directly into Google Maps or any navigation app. Parking is available at the property for guests arriving by hire car. If you are travelling with heavy luggage or arriving on an evening ferry, arranging a taxi in advance is the most straightforward option — call the property on arrival day and they can advise on local taxi contacts. Best Time to Visit Tinos is a year-round destination in the sense that the island is never entirely closed, but Carlo Bungalows's season aligns with the main Aegean summer: late May through early October. July and August bring the peak of Greek island summer — hot, dry, and busy, with ferries and accommodation filling up around the Assumption of Mary pilgrimage on 15 August, one of the most significant religious events in Greece. Tinos Town in particular becomes very crowded during that weekend, though the Agios Ioannis-Porto area, being a few kilometres from town, absorbs the influx more quietly. June and September are generally the most comfortable months for a stay here. Sea temperatures are warm from mid-June onward, the meltemi wind (the strong northerly that defines Aegean summers) is typically less severe in June than in August, and the hillside terraces at Carlo Bungalows catch whatever breeze is moving across the bay. Late September sees the crowds thin, the sea stays warm from accumulated summer heat, and the light takes on the amber quality that makes the views toward Delos and Mykonos especially striking in the late afternoon. Guests visiting primarily for the pilgrimage to the Panagia Evangelistria should book months in advance if they are targeting mid-August. Tips for Visiting Book directly through carlo.gr. The property advertises a best-price guarantee for direct bookings along with additional flexible-policy benefits that may not apply through third-party platforms. Request a sea-view unit explicitly. The property's position means most units have good views, but the orientation and degree of sea exposure can vary — clarify this when booking rather than assuming. Bring or hire a vehicle. Agios Ioannis-Porto has no regular bus service convenient for day trips around the island. A small hire car or scooter lets you reach Pyrgos, Volax, Panormos, and Tinos Town without depending on taxis. Plan ferry timing around reception hours. The desk operates until 1:00 AM, so late-evening ferry arrivals from Piraeus are manageable, but very early morning arrivals may need a different arrangement — confirm with the property beforehand. The 15 August pilgrimage changes the whole island. If your visit overlaps with the Feast of the Assumption, expect significantly heavier traffic, fully booked restaurants in town, and a more festive but crowded atmosphere. Book accommodation well in advance for that period. Pack reef shoes if you plan to use rocky entry points. The wider Porto bay area has a mix of sandy and rocky sections along the shore, and reef shoes are useful for navigating the rockier parts. Use the pool in the early morning or late afternoon. At peak summer the midday sun at this latitude is intense. The morning hours and the golden-hour window before sunset are the most pleasant times to be at the poolside, and the light on the Aegean at those times is notably different from the flat midday glare. Contact the property about seasonal opening dates. The Tinos accommodation season typically runs from late spring to early autumn; confirm that the property is open for your specific travel dates if you are visiting outside the June–September window.

457m verderop6 min lopen

Kerken

Agios Ioannis

Agios Ioannis is a small traditional Orthodox chapel dedicated to Saint John the Baptist (or Saint John the Theologian — both are widely venerated under this name across the Cyclades). It sits in the open Tinian countryside at coordinates 37.5356° N, 25.2205° E, in the quieter inland or coastal-edge terrain that characterizes much of Tinos beyond the main port town. Like hundreds of similar whitewashed chapels scattered across the island, it was built and is maintained by a local family or village community as an act of faith and devotion. Tinos is arguably the most deeply religious island in the Aegean. It is home to the Panagia Evangelistria, one of the most important pilgrimage churches in Orthodox Christianity, and the tradition of building small private or communal chapels on private land, hilltops, or field boundaries is stronger here than almost anywhere else in Greece. Agios Ioannis is one of many such chapels — modest in scale, significant in meaning to those who care for it. For visitors traveling across Tinos by motorcycle, bicycle, or car, these rural chapels are a recurring feature of the landscape. They are rarely open except on the feast day of their patron saint, but their exteriors — typically cube-shaped whitewash with a terracotta or blue dome and a small iron bell — are always worth a pause. What to Expect The chapel is small, as the source description confirms, and in keeping with the vernacular architecture of Tinos: likely whitewashed stone construction, a single nave, and a modest bell arch or small bell tower. The interior, when accessible, would follow standard Orthodox arrangement — an iconostasis separating the nave from the sanctuary, oil lamps, and icons of Saint John alongside other venerated saints. The setting is rural Tinian landscape, which on this island means one of several things: terraced hillside with low stone walls (known locally as xirolythies ), open scrubland with views toward the sea or toward the marble-veined ridgeline, or a quiet agricultural flat between villages. The area around coordinates 37.5356° N, 25.2205° E places the chapel in a part of Tinos away from the busiest tourist corridors, so you are unlikely to encounter other visitors. The chapel's exterior will typically be well maintained — Tinians take pride in their chapels regardless of how remote they are. A small paved forecourt or a few stone steps, a candle holder by the door, and possibly a shade tree nearby are common features. Do not expect signage, parking infrastructure, or any commercial facilities in the immediate vicinity. If you arrive on the feast day of Saint John — June 24 for the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist, or May 8 for Saint John the Theologian — you may find the chapel open, candles lit, and local worshippers present. These small celebrations are intimate and genuinely local. How to Get There The chapel's coordinates (37.5356° N, 25.2205° E) place it in the central or western part of Tinos island. The most practical way to reach it is by rental car, scooter, or motorcycle, which are widely available in Tinos Town (the port). Enter the coordinates directly into Google Maps or another navigation app before you set out, as rural chapels rarely appear by name in map databases. Tinos Town is roughly 10–15 kilometers from the interior of the island depending on the specific road taken. Many roads between villages on Tinos are narrow and partially unpaved, so a scooter or small car is preferable to a large vehicle. Local buses (KTEL Tinos) serve major villages on the island, but stops near isolated rural chapels are unlikely — check current KTEL schedules at the bus station near the port in Tinos Town. Parking near small chapels is informal: pull off the road on a flat, wide section and ensure you are not blocking agricultural vehicle access. There are no formal parking areas. Best Time to Visit The chapel can be visited at any point during the main tourist season, from late April through early October. The landscape around it will be at its greenest in spring (April–May), when wildflowers and terraced fields are active, and driest and most golden in August and September. For the interior, aim to visit on or around the feast day of Saint John — most commonly June 24. Arriving in the morning on a feast day gives the best chance of finding the chapel unlocked and lit. Outside of feast days, the chapel is likely to be locked, as is standard practice for small Orthodox chapels across Greece. Mid-morning visits avoid the worst heat of July and August. The area around this chapel, being inland or away from the main coast, will be warmer and less breezy than the exposed hilltop chapels, so carry water if walking any distance to reach it. Tinos can be windy, particularly along the north-facing slopes — this is characteristic of the island's geography in the Cyclades. Spring and autumn visits offer the most comfortable walking conditions. Tips for Visiting Dress respectfully. Bare shoulders and short skirts or shorts are inappropriate inside any Orthodox chapel. Carry a light layer or a sarong if you are exploring the island by beach and chapel in the same day. Do not enter if a service is in progress without being invited. Small feast-day services at rural chapels are family or community affairs. Observe quietly from outside if you are not a worshipper, or wait for an appropriate moment to ask permission. Bring your own candles if you wish to participate in the Orthodox custom of lighting a candle for the departed or for a prayer. Chapels this small may not stock candles outside of feast days. Photograph the exterior freely , but ask before photographing inside — and never photograph worshippers without permission. Combine the visit with nearby villages. Tinos has dozens of distinctive marble-carved villages within a few kilometers of any inland point. Check the map for the closest named settlement and plan a stop there before or after. Do not expect facilities. There are no toilets, cafes, water taps, or visitor services at or near isolated rural chapels. Stock up in the nearest village. Cross-reference coordinates carefully before setting off. Tinos has many chapels named Agios Ioannis — the name is one of the most common in Greek Orthodox tradition. Confirm you have the right set of coordinates loaded. Check road conditions locally if visiting after winter or heavy rain. Unpaved tracks to rural chapels can be rutted or washed out in early spring. History and Context Saint John holds a prominent place in the Orthodox calendar and in Greek popular devotion. The two most commonly venerated figures under this name are Saint John the Baptist, whose feast of the Nativity falls on June 24, and Saint John the Theologian (the Evangelist), commemorated on May 8. Both are widely celebrated across the Cyclades, and chapels dedicated to either are found on nearly every island. The tradition of building small private chapels on Tinos is centuries old and deeply intertwined with the island's identity as a place of faith. Tinos became the center of Greek Orthodox pilgrimage in 1823, when the icon of the Panagia Evangelistria — the Virgin Mary — was discovered following a vision by the nun Pelagia. Since then, the island has sustained an unusual density of religious practice, and the maintenance of family chapels is considered both a spiritual obligation and a point of local pride. Many of these chapels were built as tama (votive offerings): a family member survived an illness or a shipwreck, and a chapel was erected in thanks. Others were built on the boundaries of inherited land as a blessing on the property. Agios Ioannis on Tinos almost certainly fits within one of these traditions. The chapel's exact age is not documented in available records, but the architectural style — whitewashed rubble stone, modest scale — is consistent with construction anywhere from the 18th century to the early 20th century. The marble craft tradition of Tinos, which produced some of Greece's finest ecclesiastical sculptors and decorators, means that even a modest rural chapel may display finely worked marble details on the door surround or bell arch. Look closely at the stonework before you leave.

299m verderop4 min lopen
Agia Kyriaki

Agia Kyriaki is a small Orthodox chapel on Tinos dedicated to Saint Kyriaki, one of the many quietly placed places of worship that dot the island's hills, valleys, and rural paths. Tinos is home to hundreds of such chapels — whitewashed structures maintained by local families or village communities — and this one sits in the open landscape in the western-central part of the island, at approximately 37.533°N, 25.219°E. Tinos is already one of Greece's most important destinations for Orthodox Christian pilgrimage, known above all for the Panagia Evangelistria church in Tinos Town. Smaller chapels like Agia Kyriaki occupy a quieter place in that devotional landscape — they are not tourist destinations in the conventional sense, but places of genuine local religious life, opened on feast days and tended by the communities around them. If you are traveling through the countryside of Tinos and come across this chapel, you may find it locked outside of its name day and feast day observances, as is standard for small rural Orthodox churches across the Cyclades. Approaching it respectfully, even from the outside, gives a clear sense of the understated religious architecture that defines the island's interior. What to Expect Agia Kyriaki follows the typical form of a small Cycladic Orthodox chapel: a single-nave whitewashed structure, modest in scale, with a low-pitched roof and a small bell housing or bell arch above the entrance facade. The interior, when accessible, would follow Orthodox convention — an iconostasis separating the nave from the sanctuary, oil lamps, candle stands, and icons of the dedicatory saint and the Virgin Mary. The surrounding landscape of Tinos in this part of the island is characteristic of the Cyclades: dry-stone walls, terraced hillsides, scrubby vegetation of thyme and sage, and long views across rolling terrain. The chapel is not attached to a larger monastery complex or a functioning parish village church in the same way that larger Tinos churches are, so the atmosphere here is one of solitude and simplicity. Saint Kyriaki's feast day falls on 7 July in the Orthodox calendar. On or around that date, a small liturgy may be held, and the chapel would be open, lit with candles, and attended by local worshippers. Outside of that period, the building is likely to be closed to entry, though the exterior is always accessible. There are no facilities on site — no parking area, no signage, no café or service point nearby. This is a working rural chapel, not a managed heritage attraction. How to Get There The chapel's coordinates (37.5329°N, 25.2189°E) place it in the countryside of Tinos, away from the main road network. The most practical way to reach it is by car or scooter, both of which can be rented in Tinos Town. Rural Tinos roads can be narrow and occasionally unpaved near smaller sites, so a degree of care is needed on approach. From Tinos Town, the drive into the island's interior takes you through or near villages such as Ktikados, Tarabados, and Triantaros, depending on the exact route. If you are navigating by GPS, entering the coordinates directly into Google Maps or a mapping app will give you the most reliable routing. There is no dedicated public bus route to this specific chapel. Parking, if available at all, would be informal — on the verge of a track or a wider point in a rural lane. On foot, the terrain around this part of Tinos is walkable if you are comfortable with unpaved paths and open hillside, and the island has a tradition of hiking routes that link chapels, villages, and viewpoints across the interior. Best Time to Visit The most meaningful time to visit Agia Kyriaki is around 7 July, the feast day of Saint Kyriaki, when the chapel is most likely to be open and active with local observance. Arriving in the morning on or just before the feast day gives the best chance of finding the church lit and accessible. For those visiting simply to see the chapel as part of a broader exploration of Tinos's landscape and religious heritage, spring (April to early June) and early autumn (September to October) offer the most pleasant conditions. Temperatures are moderate, the light is clear, and the countryside is either green with spring growth or golden after the summer. July and August bring heat and strong northern winds — the meltemi — which can make rural walking uncomfortable but do not affect a brief car stop. Mid-afternoon in summer is the least appealing time for any outdoor site on Tinos; mornings before 10:00 and late afternoons after 17:00 are significantly more comfortable. Tips for Visiting Dress appropriately for any Orthodox church visit. Shoulders and knees should be covered before entering, as a matter of respect. This applies even to small, unmanned chapels when they are open. Do not expect the chapel to be open outside its feast day. Small rural chapels in the Cyclades are routinely locked. Arriving and finding it closed is normal, not an oversight on anyone's part. Bring water. There are no shops, cafés, or water sources near a rural chapel of this type. If you are combining a visit with any walking, carry more than you think you need, especially from June through September. Use coordinates, not a place name search, for navigation. Agia Kyriaki is a common chapel name across Greek islands; searching by name alone in a mapping app may return the wrong location. Enter 37.5329, 25.2189 directly. Combine with other nearby chapels or villages. Tinos has an extraordinary density of small chapels and marble-carved dovecotes in its interior. A morning drive through the central villages can take in several of these sites without planning a specific itinerary. Respect any ongoing services. If you arrive during a liturgy or a private religious observance, wait quietly outside or return another time. Photography inside during active services is not appropriate without clear implicit or explicit permission. Leave the site as you find it. Do not remove any objects, flowers, or offerings from the chapel precinct. Small rural chapels are maintained by local families who care for them personally. About the Saint Saint Kyriaki — whose name derives from the Greek word for Sunday ( Kyriaki ) — is venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church as a Christian martyr. According to hagiographic tradition, she was born on a Sunday, which gave her her name, and suffered martyrdom during the Roman persecutions of Christians, most commonly associated with the reign of Diocletian in the late 3rd century AD. Her feast day is celebrated on 7 July. She is considered a patron saint of Sundays, and her name is widely given to girls born on that day of the week in Greek Orthodox families. Chapels dedicated to Agia Kyriaki are found across Greece and the Greek islands, typically small and rural, maintained as acts of personal or community devotion rather than as major pilgrimage sites. On Tinos, the context of any chapel dedicated to a female saint carries additional resonance given the island's deep association with the Virgin Mary and the Panagia Evangelistria. The island's tradition of Marian pilgrimage — drawing thousands of visitors each year, especially on 15 August — has long made Tinos a place where the female saints of Orthodoxy are especially present in the landscape and the local imagination.

400m verderop5 min lopen

Restaurants

Taverna Antonis

Taverna Antonis occupies a spot at Ορμος Αγίου Ιωάννη — the bay of Agios Ioannis on Tinos — where the shoreline curves quietly away from the island's busier port and village traffic. With over 365 Google reviews averaging 4.1 out of 5, it draws a consistent crowd of locals and returning visitors rather than the passing tourist trade that cycles through faster-turnover spots closer to Tinos Town. The taverna operates squarely in the tradition of family-run Greek eateries: a limited menu built around what's fresh and what's cooked in-house, served without theatrical presentation. That straightforwardness is the appeal. Agios Ioannis itself is a low-key coastal area on Tinos, and Antonis fits the mood — you're not here for a culinary event, you're here for an honest plate of food by the water. The Facebook page lists the address as Agios Ioannis Porto, Tinos 842 00, and an associated website at antonistavern.gr has been linked from that profile, though the site was not available for review at the time of writing. Reservations or current hours are best confirmed by calling +30 2283 022431 before making the trip. What to Expect Taverna Antonis fits the archetype of a Greek seaside taverna without apology. Expect plastic or laminate tables, paper tablecloths, and a relaxed pace of service — this is not a place that rushes courses. The kitchen leans on Greek home cooking: dishes that require time, olive oil, and familiarity with the recipes rather than elaborate technique. At a taverna in this category on a Cycladic island, the menu typically covers mezedes such as taramosalata, tzatziki, and grilled or marinated vegetables; grilled fish priced by weight depending on the day's catch; lamb or pork chops; and a rotation of oven-cooked dishes like moussaka or pastitsio. The specific dishes at Antonis are not confirmed in the source data, so treat those categories as general orientation rather than a guarantee — call ahead or check Facebook for current offerings. Portions at Greek tavernas of this type tend to be generous and meant for sharing. A table of two ordering two or three mezedes plus a main each is a reasonable rhythm. The bay setting at Agios Ioannis means the atmosphere is unhurried, and lingering over a carafe of house wine is part of the experience rather than an imposition on the next booking. The 4.1 rating across a meaningful sample of 365 reviews suggests consistent quality rather than occasional excellence — the kind of reliable local taverna that earns repeat visits rather than single-occasion hype. How to Get There Agios Ioannis is located on the southwestern coast of Tinos, positioned between Tinos Town (Chora) and the quieter western villages. The coordinates place Taverna Antonis at approximately 37.5348° N, 25.2169° E, which puts it southwest of the main port. By car or scooter from Tinos Town, the drive along the coastal road toward Agios Ioannis takes roughly 10 to 15 minutes depending on traffic and the exact route. Parking near the bay is generally informal and available on the road margin — arrive early in summer to secure a spot close to the water. No direct KTEL bus route to Agios Ioannis Porto is confirmed in the source data; check the Tinos KTEL schedule at the port bus station for current summer services to the western bays, as routes expand during the main season. Taxi from Tinos Town is a practical alternative if you plan to order wine. The taverna sits at bay level, though specific accessibility information is not available — if mobility is a concern, call +30 2283 022431 to confirm the layout before visiting. Best Time to Visit Tinos operates on a strong seasonal rhythm. The island is at its busiest from late June through August, when the Cyclades draw the bulk of their annual visitors. During that window, Taverna Antonis will be at peak demand, and arriving without a reservation — or at least a phone call — risks a wait or a full house on weekend evenings. For a more relaxed meal, aim for lunch on a weekday, or visit in late May, early June, or September, when the weather is warm, the ferries run regularly, and the bays of the western coast are significantly quieter. The Aegean at this latitude can be windy — Tinos sits in the path of the meltemi — so an inland-facing or sheltered table position at a bay taverna is worth requesting on gusty afternoons. The Feast of the Assumption on 15 August is the single busiest day on Tinos annually, drawing pilgrims and visitors island-wide. Eating out anywhere near the port or popular bays that day requires either very early planning or considerable patience. Evening service, particularly in summer, offers the cooler temperatures and the quality of light that makes a long Greek dinner worth the timing. Sunset at Agios Ioannis, facing roughly southwest, can be observed from the bay area. Tips for Visiting Call ahead to confirm hours before visiting. No opening hours are listed in the available data, and summer schedules on Greek islands can vary or shift mid-season. The number is +30 2283 022431. Check the Facebook page for current updates. The taverna maintains a presence at facebook.com/antonistavern, where hours, seasonal closures, or menu changes may be posted. Order the fish by asking what came in that day. At a bay taverna in the Cyclades, the freshest option is usually whatever the kitchen volunteers rather than whatever is printed. Share mezedes before committing to mains. Greek taverna portions are scaled for sharing; ordering several small dishes first gives you a better sense of pace and appetite before the larger plates arrive. Bring cash as a backup. Card acceptance at small Greek tavernas is common but not universal; smaller family operations occasionally have intermittent card terminal issues, particularly on busy summer nights. Park early if driving in high season. The bay road at Agios Ioannis has limited pull-off space and can fill by mid-evening in July and August. Allow time for the drive back if drinking wine. Tinos roads outside the main town are narrow, winding, and unlit in sections; a taxi arranged in advance is sensible if the evening is likely to be a long one. The bay is worth exploring before or after the meal. Agios Ioannis is a quiet coastal area, and arriving 20 to 30 minutes before your intended table time lets you take in the waterfront without rushing. What to Order No specific menu is confirmed for Taverna Antonis in the available source data, so the following reflects what a traditional Greek taverna in a Cycladic bay setting reliably offers rather than a confirmed dish list. Grilled fish — sea bream, sea bass, or whatever was landed locally — is the anchor order at a waterfront taverna of this type, priced by the kilo and worth asking about before sitting down. Grilled octopus, when available, is another Cycladic staple worth ordering as a shared starter. Among mezedes, expect the standard range: taramosalata, tzatziki, fava (yellow split pea purée), and a village salad built around local tomatoes and Tinos' well-regarded local produce. Tinos is known for its artichokes — they're grown in the island's interior and appear on menus across the island through spring and into early summer. If you're visiting during that window, any artichoke preparation on the menu is worth trying. The island also produces good local cheeses, and a taverna serving home-style dishes is likely to incorporate them into salads or starter plates. For drinks, house wine by the carafe or jug is the practical choice; ask whether it's local or mainland. Tinos has a modest local wine tradition, though it's not as developed as some other Cycladic islands.

161m verderop2 min lopen
Lala Louza

Lala Louza sits on the southern coast of Tinos at Agios Ioannis Porto, one of the island's calmer bays away from the bustle of Tinos Town. With over 960 Google reviews and a solid 4.1 rating, it draws a steady crowd of both locals and summer visitors looking for cold drinks and somewhere to settle in beside the water. The vibe here is deliberately low-key. This is not a slick cocktail lounge — it's a beach bar where the playlist matters and the pace is slow. Based on what visitors consistently report, you come here to linger: a drink stretches into two, the afternoon turns into early evening, and nobody rushes you along. The TikTok presence at @lalalouza_tinos gives a reasonable preview of the atmosphere — sun, sand, music, and an easygoing crowd. Agios Ioannis Porto as a location rewards the choice. The bay sits on Tinos's less-frequented southern shore, which means the water is generally calm and the scene quieter than the more developed beaches nearer Tinos Town. Having a bar like Lala Louza anchoring the spot gives it a destination quality that a beach without a gathering point would lack. What to Expect Lala Louza operates as a beach bar, which on Tinos means a spot where the boundary between bar and beach is porous by design. Drinks — cold beers, spirits, standard cocktails, and non-alcoholic options — are the core offering. The web snippets suggest music is part of the experience, with references to live music and summer beach vibes appearing across social content tied to the venue. The outdoor setting means the space changes character depending on time of day. Midday it functions as a drinks stop for people at the beach. As the sun drops and the temperature eases, it shifts toward a social bar atmosphere with more people arriving specifically to drink and talk rather than to swim. That dual function is common for beach bars across the Cyclades, and Lala Louza appears to lean into it. The 4.1 rating from nearly a thousand reviews is a meaningful signal for a bar in a relatively small coastal settlement. It suggests consistent enough service and atmosphere to keep visitors satisfied across a broad range of expectations. No single crowd type appears to dominate — families, couples, and groups of friends all seem to use the space across different parts of the day. Note that the source description references a casual bar atmosphere rather than a full kitchen, so arrive having eaten if you're planning an evening session rather than a quick stop. How to Get There Agios Ioannis Porto is on the southern coast of Tinos, roughly 10–12 kilometres from Tinos Town by road. The coordinates place Lala Louza at 37.5353° N, 25.2199° E, which puts it right on the bay. By car or scooter from Tinos Town, follow the main road south through the interior. Car rental is widely available in Tinos Town, and the drive takes around 15–20 minutes depending on traffic. Parking at or near the beach is typically informal and easy outside peak August weekends. No scheduled bus service reliably serves Agios Ioannis Porto with the frequency that beach bars tend to require, so a rental vehicle or taxi is the practical option. Taxis from Tinos Town are available; confirm with the driver beforehand that they'll return for you or arrange a pickup time if you're not driving. There is no ferry access directly to Agios Ioannis Porto — the main port for the island is Tinos Town. Best Time to Visit Lala Louza operates seasonally, in line with most beach bars on Tinos. The season typically runs from late May or early June through to September, with July and August representing peak activity. If you're visiting outside that window, confirm it's open before making the trip down from Tinos Town. For the beach bar experience in full, late afternoon arrivals — around 4 to 6pm — hit the sweet spot. The heat of the day has passed, the beach crowd starts thinning, and the bar crowd arrives. Sunsets over the southern Cyclades from this part of Tinos's coast are worth timing for. Midday visits in July and August can be busy, particularly on weekends when Athenians and island-hoppers swell the numbers. If you prefer a quieter version of the same place, weekday mornings or early afternoons in June or September give you the setting without the crowd density. Tips for Visiting Bring cash as backup. Card payment is increasingly standard on Tinos, but smaller beach bars in outlying bays sometimes have connectivity issues with card readers. Carrying some cash avoids any awkwardness. Arrive by scooter or car. There is no practical public transport to Agios Ioannis Porto, so arranging your own transport before you go is essential rather than optional. Check the Facebook page before visiting. Lala Louza's Facebook at facebook.com/lalalouzatinos is the most reliable channel for confirming seasonal opening and any special events. The TikTok at @lalalouza_tinos gives a feel for current atmosphere. Call ahead if you're coming in a group. The phone number is +30 694 764 3319. For larger groups wanting to secure a good spot, a quick call to check capacity and timing is worth the effort. Don't come hungry expecting a full meal. The venue is described as a bar, not a restaurant. Eat before you arrive if you're planning more than a quick drinks stop. Stay for the transition from afternoon to evening. The shift in atmosphere as the sun drops is reportedly one of the better aspects of the venue — the crowd, the music, and the light all change together. Combine with the beach. Agios Ioannis Porto is a beach settlement, so factor in time for a swim before settling at the bar. The calm southern waters make it a pleasant combination. Dress lightly. There's no formality here. Beachwear covered by a light layer is standard even into the evening. Practical Information Lala Louza is located at Agios Ioannis Porto, Tinos 842 00, Greece. The phone number is +30 694 764 3319. The Facebook page at facebook.com/lalalouzatinos and TikTok at @lalalouza_tinos are the active social channels. No email address is publicly listed. Opening hours are not confirmed in available sources — the venue operates seasonally and hours may vary by month within the season, so checking the Facebook page or calling before visiting is advisable.

256m verderop3 min lopen
Fyki

Fyki sits at Ormos Agiou Ioannis, a quiet bay on the southwestern coast of Tinos, and operates as a beach bar and café rather than a full-service restaurant. With a 4.7-star rating across 235 Google reviews, it holds a reputation that outpaces most spots on the island — impressive for somewhere that keeps things deliberately low-key. The Facebook page identifies it plainly as Fyki Beach Bar, and that label is accurate. This is a place oriented around the water, with drinks as the main draw and light food as the supporting act. If you're spending a day at or near Agiou Ioannis beach and want somewhere to sit, eat something simple, and order a cold drink without ceremony, Fyki fits that role well. Ormos Agiou Ioannis is not one of Tinos's busiest spots, which is precisely its appeal. The bay has a calm, unhurried character that matches the style of a place like Fyki — no pretension, no performance, just a functional and well-regarded stop on a stretch of coastline that rewards those who make the effort to reach it. What to Expect Fyki operates in the beach bar and café category, so the experience centers on drinks — coffee, cold beverages, and likely alcoholic options — alongside light bites that work as a snack or a modest meal between swims. The source description points to a relaxed setting, and given the location at a bay rather than in Tinos Town, the atmosphere will be quieter and more local in character than spots near the port or Chora. The physical setting at Ormos Agiou Ioannis gives Fyki a natural advantage. The bay itself is sheltered and relatively undisturbed compared to better-known beaches on the island. Sitting at a beach bar with that kind of backdrop, where the water is close and the crowd is manageable, is a different experience from a café on a busy street in town. The high rating across a meaningful number of reviews suggests consistent quality and service. For a casual spot in a less-trafficked location on Tinos, 235 reviews and a 4.7 average indicates that visitors who do find it tend to leave satisfied. Expect a stripped-back menu, a relaxed pace, and staff who are accustomed to guests who have specifically sought the place out. Given the beach bar classification and the lack of a formal restaurant menu in the research data, plan for drinks and lighter fare rather than a multi-course meal. It's a good place to anchor part of an afternoon rather than a destination dinner. How to Get There Ormos Agiou Ioannis is located on the southwestern coast of Tinos, away from the main tourist corridor around Tinos Town and the port. The coordinates (37.5336°N, 25.2187°E) place it in a coastal zone that requires a car, scooter, or taxi to reach comfortably from Chora. From Tinos Town (Chora), the drive to Ormos Agiou Ioannis takes roughly 15–20 minutes depending on the route. The road signs for Agiou Ioannis will direct you toward the bay. The address is listed on an unnamed road, which is typical for smaller coastal spots on Greek islands — follow navigation to the coordinates rather than relying on a street name. Parking near beach bars at smaller bays on Tinos is generally informal, with space along the roadside or in a small area near the water's edge. There is no public bus service that connects Tinos Town to this specific bay with any regularity, so having your own transport is the practical approach. Taxis from Chora are available but represent a one-way trip unless you arrange a return pickup. Best Time to Visit As a beach bar, Fyki is a warm-season operation. The natural window is late May through early October, with peak activity in July and August when Tinos sees its highest visitor numbers. The island draws both Greek summer tourists and international visitors, and quieter bays like Ormos Agiou Ioannis tend to get busier than expected during August. For the calmest experience, visit in June or September. The water is warm, the crowds are lighter, and the pace at a spot like Fyki will be more relaxed. Arriving mid-morning gives you time to settle before the midday heat peaks, or come in the late afternoon when the sun is lower and the bay takes on better light. Tinos is one of the windier islands in the Cyclades — the meltemi wind blows consistently from the north in July and August. Ormos Agiou Ioannis faces southwest, which can offer some natural shelter from northerly winds, making it a useful destination on days when more exposed beaches are choppy. Tips for Visiting Call ahead before making the trip. No confirmed opening hours are available in any public source. Reach Fyki directly at +30 694 907 3830 to confirm they're open, especially outside peak season. Bring cash. Small beach bars at quieter bays on Greek islands often have limited card payment infrastructure. Having euros on hand avoids any friction at the counter. Combine with the beach. Ormos Agiou Ioannis is worth a swim, not just a stop for coffee. Build the visit around time at the water and use Fyki as the anchor point for the afternoon. Check the Facebook page before visiting. The official Facebook page at facebook.com/FikiBeachBarTinos is the most current source for operating status and any seasonal closures. Pair with other southwestern Tinos stops. If you have a car, the drive through Tinos's interior villages — Kardiani, Isternia, Pyrgos — makes a natural circuit that can start or end at Ormos Agiou Ioannis. Expect limited menu scope. This is a beach bar, not a taverna. Come for a drink, a snack, or a light bite — not a full meal. Adjust expectations accordingly and the experience will deliver. Wind conditions vary. On high-wind days when the meltemi is blowing hard from the north, the southwestern bay location may actually be calmer than alternatives. Check wind conditions when planning your route around the island. Practical Information Fyki does not have a standalone website. The primary online presence is the Facebook page: facebook.com/FikiBeachBarTinos . For real-time updates on hours or seasonal operation, that page is the best contact point alongside the phone number. Phone: +30 694 907 3830 Address: Ormos Agiou Ioannis, 842 00, Tinos, Greece Google rating: 4.7 / 5 (235 reviews) Category: Beach bar and café No confirmed opening hours are published in any verified source. Operating hours at beach bars in the Cyclades typically follow the summer season and daily weather patterns rather than fixed schedules. Confirm directly before visiting, particularly in shoulder months (May, October).

325m verderop4 min lopen

Stranden

Agios Ioannis Porto

Agios Ioannis Porto sits on the southern coast of Tinos, tucked into a bay that cuts inland enough to break the meltemi winds that can make the island's more exposed shores choppy through July and August. The result is water that stays genuinely flat on days when other beaches are white-capped — a meaningful advantage on an island that faces the full force of the Aegean in summer. The beach takes its name from the small chapel of Agios Ioannis that overlooks the bay, a modest whitewashed structure that follows the same logic as dozens of other coastal chapels on Tinos: landmark, waypoint, and gathering point for the feast day. The shoreline itself is quiet relative to the better-known beaches further west around Agios Fokas or south near Porto, drawing a mix of Greek families who know the island well and visitors who've done enough research to seek it out. Because the research data available for this beach is limited — no facilities, operators, or seasonal services have been independently confirmed — the sections below are based on verified island geography, general Tinos beach conditions, and what is reliably known about this part of the coast. What to Expect The bay at Agios Ioannis Porto is compact and naturally enclosed, which is what keeps the water calm. The sea here tends toward the clear, pale blue typical of the southern Tinos coastline, with visibility that rewards snorkeling even without a boat. The bottom transitions gradually from sand to small smooth pebbles in places, so water shoes are worth packing if you're particular about your footing at the water's edge. The setting is low-key: no beach bars have been confirmed at this location, and the surrounding landscape is the dry, scrubby terrain characteristic of Tinos at this latitude — terraced hillsides, scattered granite boulders, and the occasional windmill silhouette on a ridge. You won't find sunbed rows or a DJ set; if those things matter, head toward Agios Fokas or the Porto beach complex further along the coast. If you want to spread a towel, read a book, and get in the water without negotiating a crowd, Agios Ioannis Porto is the right call. The chapel itself is small and simple — typical of the hundreds of Cycladic chapels that punctuate every hillside and shore on Tinos — and worth a moment's look if you're curious about the carved lintel work or the interior icons, though it may not be unlocked outside of feast days. Bring your own water, shade, and food. The beach has no confirmed services. Activities and Facilities Snorkeling is the activity most suited to this bay — the calm, clear water and rock formations at the edges of the sandy stretch make for easy exploration without current or surge to manage. A basic snorkel set is enough; you don't need to rent a boat to reach the interesting parts. Swimming is straightforward here, and the sheltered bay makes it safer for children and less confident swimmers than the windward beaches on the island's north coast. There are no confirmed water sports rentals, beach umbrellas, or sunbed operators at this location. Fishing from the rocks is common at similar bays on Tinos, and the quiet character of Agios Ioannis Porto makes it the kind of spot where locals come in the evening to drop a line. Photography is worthwhile in early morning when the light comes over the eastern ridge and catches the water before any wind disturbs the surface. How to Get There Agios Ioannis Porto lies on the southern coast of Tinos at approximately 37.534°N, 25.220°E. From Tinos Town (Chora), the drive south and east along the coastal road takes roughly 15 to 20 minutes depending on which route you take through the interior. A car or scooter is the most practical option — public bus service to this part of the coast is limited, and the beach is not within walking distance of any major village. Parking is informal in this area; you'll likely find a roadside spot near the track leading down to the shore. The final approach may be unpaved, so note that if you're driving a low-clearance rental. Taxis from Tinos Town are available but confirm in advance that the driver knows the specific bay, as the name Agios Ioannis appears in multiple places on the island. There is no ferry or water taxi service confirmed for this beach. Best Time to Visit Late June through early July is the sweet spot for Agios Ioannis Porto. The Aegean is warm enough for long swims, the meltemi hasn't yet reached its peak intensity, and the beach hasn't accumulated the August crowd that reaches even the quieter southern bays on Tinos. August is still worthwhile — the sheltered position makes this beach more usable on high-wind days than many alternatives — but you'll have more company. September is genuinely excellent on Tinos: the sea retains its warmth from the summer, the light shifts to a lower, more golden angle, and the island's tourism infrastructure is still functional without the peak-season pressure. October is possible on warm years but variable. Within a given day, morning arrivals get the calmest water and the best light for photography. By early afternoon, even in a sheltered bay, a light onshore breeze typically develops. Midday in August is hot with very little shade unless you bring your own. Tips for Visiting Bring everything you need. No facilities are confirmed at this beach — no kiosk, no beach bar, no sunbed rental. Pack water, food, a beach umbrella if you need shade, and a first-aid kit for the day. Water shoes are useful. The transition zone between sand and the rocky edges of the bay can be irregular. Lightweight water shoes or sandals make entering and exiting more comfortable. Snorkel gear is worth bringing. The calm, clear water in this enclosed bay makes for good underwater visibility. A basic mask and fins from a Tinos Town sports shop will do. Confirm your route before leaving. The name Agios Ioannis appears on multiple chapels and bays across Tinos. Make sure your GPS is pointed at coordinates 37.5344, 25.2197 and not a different Agios Ioannis bay on the north coast. The chapel may be locked. If you want to see the interior, ask locally about the feast day of St. John (Agios Ioannis) in late August, when chapels of this name are typically open and in use. Come during the week if possible. Greek families from Tinos Town and the surrounding villages know this beach. Weekend afternoons in August will be busier than the surrounding season suggests. Check wind forecasts. Even though the bay is sheltered from the prevailing northwest meltemi, check a local weather service (Windy or Poseidon) before committing to a full day at any Tinos beach in summer. Wind direction shifts can change conditions quickly. Combine with the southern coast drive. The road along the southern coast of Tinos passes through scenery that rewards slow driving — old dovecotes, granite villages, and sea views. Agios Ioannis Porto fits naturally into a half-day loop from Tinos Town. History and Context The naming pattern of Agios Ioannis Porto follows a tradition deeply embedded in Cycladic coastal geography: a chapel built near a natural harbor or landing point served as both a spiritual marker and a navigational aid for fishing boats. Porto — from the Italian word for harbor — appears in place names across the Cyclades wherever Venetian or Genoese influence left its mark on local nomenclature, and Tinos spent considerable time under Venetian rule before the Ottoman period. The island's Venetian-era fortifications and the legacy of its Catholic community (Tinos has an unusually large Catholic population for a Greek island, a direct consequence of Venetian administration) are visible throughout the island's villages and architecture. The chapel of Agios Ioannis at this bay is almost certainly modest and relatively recent in its current form — small coastal chapels on Tinos are routinely rebuilt or restored by local families who maintain them as private dedications — but the naming of the site suggests use as a landing point going back at least to the early modern period when the southern coast was more actively used by small fishing and trading vessels. Tinos as a whole is defined by its religious significance: the Panagia Evangelistria church in Tinos Town holds one of the most venerated icons in the Orthodox world, and the island draws tens of thousands of pilgrims every August 15 for the Dormition of the Virgin. That religious culture extends to the landscape, where no coastal bay is complete without its chapel, and Agios Ioannis Porto is a quiet, secular-feeling expression of the same impulse.

301m verderop4 min lopen
Agia Kyriaki

Agia Kyriaki is a small, undeveloped beach on the southwestern coast of Tinos, sitting at coordinates that place it well away from the island's main tourist corridors. The water here is clear and calm, sheltered enough to make it a reliable swimming spot, and there is no beach bar, no sunbed rental, and no crowd to navigate — just the shore as it is. Tinos has no shortage of beaches, but most of the well-known ones — Agios Fokas, Tinos Town beach, Kionia — are easily accessible by road and attract a steady flow of visitors through July and August. Agia Kyriaki sits in contrast to those. It draws travelers who are willing to make a small effort to reach a place that hasn't been packaged for tourism. The name follows the Cycladic naming tradition of small coastal chapels: Agia Kyriaki refers to Saint Kyriaki, a 4th-century Christian martyr whose feast day falls on 7 July. Chapels bearing her name appear across the Greek islands, often near the sea, and it is common for a small white-washed chapel to stand at or near a cove that carries her name. What to Expect Agia Kyriaki is a genuinely low-infrastructure beach. You will not find umbrellas for hire, a snack kiosk, or showers. What you will find is a cove with clear Aegean water and a quiet shoreline that rewards self-sufficiency. The seabed and shore composition at Agia Kyriaki are consistent with many smaller Tinos coves: a mix of sand and fine pebble, with the water transitioning quickly from shallow to swimmable depth. The clarity of the water is a function of both the low footfall and the natural circulation of the bay. On a calm day, the surface is still enough to show the seabed clearly. Because there are no facilities, you should bring everything you need: water, food, sunscreen, and something to lie on. Shade from natural vegetation or rock may exist depending on the time of day and the orientation of the cove, but it cannot be counted on during midday in summer. The surrounding landscape is typical of the interior-coastal transition on Tinos — dry scrub, granite outcrops, and the kind of silence that is noticeably absent from busier beaches. If you are traveling as a couple or a small group and want a few hours of uninterrupted swimming and quiet, Agia Kyriaki is suited to exactly that. How to Get There Agia Kyriaki lies on the southwestern side of Tinos, at approximately 37.533°N, 25.216°E. The most practical way to reach it is by car or scooter, both of which are widely available for hire in Tinos Town. The road network on the southwestern coast of Tinos includes smaller rural tracks that lead down to coves; some of the final approach roads to less-developed beaches on this coast are unpaved and narrow, so a compact car or scooter is easier to manage than a large vehicle. There is no scheduled bus service to Agia Kyriaki. The KTEL bus network on Tinos connects Tinos Town with the larger villages — Pyrgos, Panormos, Falatados — but does not serve individual small beaches on the southwestern coast. Parking, where the road terminates near the shore, is informal and limited. Arriving early in the day means you will have no difficulty finding a spot. There is no formal accessibility infrastructure at the beach. If you are staying in Tinos Town, the drive to the southwestern coast takes roughly 20–30 minutes depending on the specific road conditions and your route. A taxi from Tinos Town is an option; the local taxi operators can advise on whether they are familiar with the access track. Best Time to Visit The Cyclades swim season runs from late May through early October, with July and August being the hottest and most visited months. For a beach like Agia Kyriaki, which has no infrastructure to manage crowds, the shoulder months — late May, June, and September — are the most comfortable. The water is warm from June onward and remains pleasant into October. The meltemi, the strong northerly wind that dominates the Aegean from mid-July through August, can affect swimming conditions on exposed beaches across the Cyclades. Tinos is particularly affected by the meltemi given its position in the northern Cyclades. Southwestern-facing coves can offer some protection from a northerly wind, but conditions vary by exact orientation and strength of the wind on any given day. If the meltemi is strong, check conditions before committing to a remote beach with no shelter infrastructure. Time of day matters on any beach without natural or built shade. Arriving before 10:30 or after 16:00 avoids the most intense midday sun and makes the experience more comfortable, particularly in July and August. Tips for Visiting Bring all your own supplies. There is no kiosk, bar, or shop near Agia Kyriaki. Pack water, food, sunscreen, and a beach mat or towel. A small cooler bag is worth the effort on a hot day. Confirm the access road before you go. The approach to smaller coves on Tinos's southwestern coast sometimes involves unpaved tracks. Ask your rental car or scooter provider about road conditions, or check with your accommodation. Go early or late to avoid peak sun. Arriving before 10:30 gives you the cooler part of the morning; arriving after 16:00 gives you softer light and lower temperatures. Check wind conditions. The meltemi can arrive suddenly and strongly in mid-summer. The Greek national weather service (EMY) and Windy are both reliable tools for checking sea and wind conditions before heading to a remote beach. Wear water shoes if you prefer a smooth entry. Pebbly or mixed-shore beaches in the Cyclades can be uncomfortable underfoot; a pair of lightweight water shoes makes entry and exit easier. Respect the absence of infrastructure. Pack out everything you bring. There are no bins at undeveloped beaches on Tinos, and the low footfall is part of what keeps them clean. Combine with nearby sites. Tinos's southwestern interior has small villages with traditional architecture and the island's characteristic dovecotes (peristeriones). A half-day that includes a morning swim at Agia Kyriaki and a drive through the villages inland is a well-rounded itinerary. Snorkeling is worth doing. Clear, low-traffic water with a rocky or mixed seabed is reliable snorkeling territory. A basic mask and snorkel are easy to pack and will reward the effort. Activities and Facilities Swimming is the primary activity at Agia Kyriaki, and the clear water makes it straightforward. The mixed sand-and-pebble bottom typical of coves on this coast gives way to open water without the seagrass beds that can make entry awkward at some Tinos beaches. Snorkeling along the rocky margins of the cove is a natural extension of a swim. Rocky outcrops at either end of a small bay tend to hold sea urchins, small fish, and occasionally octopus — the same fauna found at comparable undeveloped Cycladic coves. Beyond swimming and snorkeling, Agia Kyriaki offers nothing structured. There are no water sports operators, no pedal boats, no organized activities. The value here is the absence of those things. For travelers who want to combine a beach day with other activities, Tinos Town is within a 20–30 minute drive and offers the full range of island amenities: tavernas, cafes, the famous Church of Panagia Evangelistria, the Archaeological Museum, and the harbor waterfront. The village of Pyrgos in the north of the island, known for its marble-carving tradition, is a worthwhile detour on the way back from the southwestern coast.

373m verderop5 min lopen
Agios Sostis

Agios Sostis is a small, undeveloped beach on the southern coastline of Tinos, sitting at coordinates that place it well away from the ferry port and the pilgrimage crowds of Tinos Town. The shore here hasn't been packaged for mass tourism — no sun-bed rental operation, no beach bar pumping music — which is precisely why visitors who know the island seek it out. The beach takes its name from the small chapel of Agios Sostis that typically marks such coves on Greek islands, a pattern repeated across the Cyclades where a whitewashed chapel and a sheltered bay share a saint's name. On Tinos specifically, the interior road network means that reaching quieter southern and western beaches requires a little navigation, and that natural friction keeps crowds thin even in August. Tinos itself is not primarily marketed as a beach destination — the island is better known for the Panagia Evangelistria pilgrimage church, its marble-carving tradition, and the distinctive dovecote towers scattered across its hills. That reputation means the beaches carry less foot traffic than comparable coves on Mykonos or Paros, and Agios Sostis benefits directly from that dynamic. What to Expect The water at Agios Sostis is clear and generally calm, characteristic of south-facing Cycladic coves that are shielded from the prevailing northerly meltemi wind. The seabed shelves gradually in most such bays, making entry straightforward. Expect a mix of sand and fine pebble underfoot rather than a uniform sandy floor — again typical of smaller Tinos coves. There are no permanent beach facilities at Agios Sostis. No sunbeds, no umbrellas for hire, no kiosk selling cold drinks. You arrive self-sufficient: bring water, food, shade of your own, and everything you'll need for a full afternoon. The absence of infrastructure is the point. The shoreline is compact, which means it can feel intimate with as few as a dozen people present, but it can also feel crowded if a group arrives at the same time on a peak-summer weekend. The surrounding landscape is dry and rocky, as expected on Tinos's more exposed southern flank, with low scrub vegetation and the kind of stark Cycladic light that makes the water colour particularly striking in midday sun. Snorkelling along the rocky edges of the bay is worthwhile — the water clarity and absence of motorised water traffic make for decent visibility. The overall atmosphere is unhurried and self-directed. Visitors tend to be families, couples, or independent travellers who came specifically for the quiet. You won't find organised activities here. How to Get There Agios Sostis sits on Tinos's southern coast at roughly 37.5318°N, 25.2114°E. From Tinos Town (Chora), the drive follows the main island road south and west; the journey takes approximately 15–20 minutes by car or scooter depending on the exact route and road conditions. Renting a car or scooter is by far the most practical way to reach this beach. Several rental operators are based in Tinos Town near the port. The road network on Tinos is generally navigable but can involve narrow stretches and unsigned junctions on the approach to smaller coves, so a GPS or downloaded offline map is useful. There is no scheduled bus service that stops at or near Agios Sostis. KTEL buses on Tinos serve the main villages — Panormos, Pyrgos, Isternia, Kardiani — but do not cover every beach access track. Parking is informal and roadside near the beach access point, as is the case with most small Tinos beaches. Arrive early in summer to secure a spot close to the water. Taxis from Tinos Town are available but not always immediately on call; arrange a return pickup time when you book the outbound journey. Best Time to Visit The swimming season on Tinos runs from late May through early October. Sea temperatures are most comfortable from late June onwards, reaching their warmest in August and remaining pleasant through September. For Agios Sostis specifically, the south-facing orientation provides a degree of shelter from the meltemi, the strong northerly that blows across the Aegean from mid-July through August. On days when the meltemi is at full strength, north-facing beaches on Tinos become choppy and uncomfortable, but sheltered southern coves remain swimmable. This makes Agios Sostis a useful fallback on windy summer days. The quietest periods are May to mid-June and September to early October. Greek public holidays — particularly the Dormition of the Virgin on 15 August, which draws enormous pilgrimage crowds to Tinos Town — bring a surge of visitors island-wide, though most pilgrims are focused on the church rather than the beaches. For the best light and least heat, arrive by 9–10am or return in the late afternoon after 5pm. Midday in July and August is harsh on an exposed coastline without shade. Tips for Visiting Bring everything you need. There are no facilities at the beach — no food, no drink sales, no rental equipment, no toilets. Pack water, snacks, sun protection, and a towel before you leave Tinos Town. Wear water shoes if you prefer sand underfoot. The seabed at many Tinos coves mixes sand with pebble or rock, and entry points can be uneven. Lightweight swim shoes make wading in more comfortable. Download offline maps before you leave. Mobile signal is patchy on parts of Tinos's rural road network, and small beach approach tracks are not always signed. Google Maps or Maps.me with an offline Tinos map will save time. Use the meltemi logic. If the northern beaches look rough and choppy, drive south. Agios Sostis and other south-facing coves tend to be far calmer on high-wind days. Go early or late in August. The beach is small, and a single large group can fill it. An early arrival before 10am or a late afternoon session gives you the best chance of having the cove largely to yourself. Combine with the Tinos interior. The drive to or from Agios Sostis passes close enough to villages like Triantaros or Falatados that a stop adds value to the day without significant extra distance. Snorkel along the rocky edges. Open water at the bay's margins typically supports sea urchins, small fish, and interesting rock formations. Keep an eye on underwater rocks and avoid touching sea urchins with bare feet. Respect the site. No facilities means no waste collection. Carry all rubbish back to Tinos Town. The beach's appeal depends entirely on visitors maintaining it. Activities and Facilities Swimming is the primary activity, and the clear, generally calm water makes it straightforward for all ages. The gradual entry suits children and less confident swimmers, though you should check conditions on arrival — even sheltered bays can have unexpected current on certain days. Snorkelling along the rocky outcrops at either end of the bay is the most rewarding water activity available. Bring your own mask and snorkel; there is nowhere nearby to rent equipment. Photography of the bay and surrounding Cycladic landscape is popular, particularly in the golden hour before sunset when the dry hillsides take on warm colour and the water turns deep blue-green. There are no water sports operators, no diving facilities, and no motorised rentals at Agios Sostis. The beach is purely for swimming and relaxing. Visitors who want organised watersports should head to the more developed beaches near Tinos Town. The nearest fuel, food, and services are in Tinos Town, roughly 15–20 minutes away by car. There is no village directly adjacent to the beach.

706m verderop9 min lopen