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Anafi Port - Chora

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Anafi Port / Chora

Summer 2026 Daily — Anafi Port - Chora
From Chora
10:30:0010:32:0010:33:0010:40:0010:41:0010:43:0013:30:0013:32:0013:33:0013:40:0013:41:0013:43:0018:30:0018:32:0018:33:0018:40:0018:41:0018:43:00

Points of Interest Along This Route

ATMs

Piraeus Bank
Piraeus Bank

Anafi is one of the most remote islands in the Cyclades, and card payments are not always accepted at the small tavernas, ferry ticket counters, and family-run shops that make up daily life here. The Piraeus Bank ATM at Ormos Agiou Nikolaou is the practical solution: a 24-hour machine that accepts standard international cards and lets you withdraw euro cash whenever you need it. For most visitors arriving by ferry, this ATM is one of the first things worth locating on the island. Knowing where it is and that it operates around the clock removes one of the more stressful logistical uncertainties that comes with visiting a very small Greek island. Piraeus Bank is one of Greece's largest commercial banks, and its ATM network covers Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, and Cirrus cards, as well as cards on other major networks. Expect standard international withdrawal fees from your home bank on top of any machine fees — this is normal across Greek island ATMs and not specific to this location. What to Expect The ATM is a standalone Piraeus Bank EasyPay machine located at the port settlement of Ormos Agiou Nikolaou — the small harbour area where ferries dock on Anafi. This is the island's main arrival and departure point, and the surrounding area holds a handful of accommodation options, a couple of tavernas, and the basic services that visitors need in the first and last hours of their stay. The machine operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, which is genuinely useful on an island where banking services are otherwise minimal. There is no physical Piraeus Bank branch on Anafi, so this ATM is the only in-person banking infrastructure available. The interface offers Greek and English language options, as is standard across the Piraeus Bank ATM network in Greece. Withdrawal limits per transaction are set by Piraeus Bank and may also be capped by your own bank's daily limit. If you plan to cover several days of cash-only spending — accommodation deposits, ferry snacks, beach taverna meals — it is worth withdrawing a larger sum in one go rather than returning to the machine multiple times. Note that on peak summer days, when ferries bring a wave of arrivals simultaneously, there may be a short queue. The machine can also run low on notes during very busy periods in July and August, so withdrawing cash before or just after ferry arrivals is sensible. How to Get There The ATM is situated in Ormos Agiou Nikolaou, the port of Anafi, at the coordinates 36.3443°N, 25.7706°E. If you arrive by ferry, you are already in the right area — the port settlement is compact, and the machine is within easy walking distance of the ferry dock. From Chora, the island's main village perched on the hillside above the port, the road down to Ormos Agiou Nikolaou takes roughly 10–15 minutes by car or motorbike. There is no bus service on Anafi, so most visitors either hire a vehicle, take a taxi, or walk the winding road. On foot, the descent from Chora to the port takes around 25–35 minutes depending on pace and the heat. Parking at the port is informal and generally straightforward outside the peak ferry arrival windows. Best Time to Visit Because the ATM runs around the clock, there is no wrong time to use it in terms of access. Practically speaking, the quietest time to withdraw cash is mid-morning or mid-afternoon on days when no ferry is scheduled to arrive or depart. Ferry schedules to Anafi are limited — typically a few connections per week with Piraeus and other Cycladic islands — so checking the ferry timetable and timing your visit to the ATM outside those windows will help you avoid any queue. In July and August, Anafi receives the bulk of its annual visitors, and the ATM sees its highest demand during this period. If you are arriving in peak season, withdraw what you need for the first day or two as soon as you land, rather than waiting until you run short. Anafi has a hot, dry Cycladic summer climate. If you are walking down from Chora specifically to use the ATM, go early in the morning during the summer months to avoid making the journey in peak midday heat. Tips for Visiting Withdraw cash on arrival. Many businesses on Anafi — tavernas, rooms-to-let, boat tour operators — are cash-only or prefer cash. Do not assume your card will be accepted everywhere. Check your bank's international ATM fee policy before you travel. Most non-Greek bank cards will incur a foreign transaction fee and possibly a separate ATM usage fee. Withdrawing a larger single amount reduces the number of fees you pay. Decline dynamic currency conversion. If the ATM offers to charge you in your home currency rather than euros, decline. The exchange rate applied by the ATM is typically worse than your bank's rate. Note the phone number for emergencies. The Piraeus Bank contact number is +30 21 0328 8000. If your card is retained by the machine or you experience a transaction problem, this is the number to call. Bring some cash from the mainland as backup. No ATM on a remote island is infallible — machines do occasionally run out of notes or go offline for maintenance. Having a small amount of euros on hand when you arrive avoids problems. The ATM is not a branch. There is no bank counter, no currency exchange desk, and no staff at this location. It is a machine only. Top up before you leave Anafi. Ferry connections are infrequent, and if you plan to stop at another small island onward, there may not be an ATM there either. Practical Information Operator: Piraeus Bank Address: Ormos Agiou Nikolaou 840 09, Anafi, Greece Phone (Piraeus Bank customer service): +30 21 0328 8000 Website: piraeusbank.gr Hours: Open 24 hours, 7 days a week Cards accepted: Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Cirrus, and other major networks Language options: Greek and English Branch on-site: No — machine only

181m away2 min walk

Beaches

Xetrypiti
Xetrypiti

Xetrypiti is one of the most secluded beaches on Anafi, the small Cycladic island that sits southeast of Santorini and receives a fraction of its neighbour's visitors. The coordinates place it on the island's coastline away from the main settlement of Chora, which already has fewer than 300 permanent residents. Getting to Xetrypiti requires a degree of effort — and that effort is precisely what keeps it quiet. Anafi itself sets the tone for a beach like this. There are no beach clubs here, no rows of sunbeds for hire, and no beach bar playing music at volume. The island's beaches reward self-sufficiency: bring water, food, and shade if you need it. What you get in return is Aegean water in shades that run from pale turquoise near the shore to deep cobalt further out, and a stretch of coast where the main sounds are wind and waves. The name Xetrypiti is distinctly local — the kind of place-name that only exists on maps used by islanders and returning visitors who have moved beyond the handful of beaches closest to the port. That alone tells you something useful about the crowd levels you should expect. What to Expect Anafi's beaches generally fall into two shore types: fine sand and mixed pebble-and-sand. Based on the terrain visible around Xetrypiti's coordinates, the shore here is likely to include natural pebble or coarse sand rather than the groomed fine sand found at more developed Cycladic resorts. The water clarity at undeveloped Anafi beaches is consistently high — there is very little boat traffic along most of the coastline, and no run-off from large settlements, so visibility in the water tends to be excellent. Expect no infrastructure at Xetrypiti. There are no permanent facilities: no toilets, no taverna, no sunbed rental, and no fresh water. The surrounding landscape is typical of southern Anafi — dry, rocky terrain with low scrub, occasionally sheltered by low cliffs that can provide natural shade in the morning or late afternoon depending on the beach's orientation. The sea conditions on this side of the island are generally calmer than the north-facing shores, though the Cyclades are exposed to the meltemi wind that blows from the north in summer. On days when the meltemi picks up, south-facing beaches on Anafi can be considerably more sheltered than anywhere on Santorini or the northern Cyclades. Swimming here is best suited to confident swimmers who are comfortable entering the water from a natural, unimproved shoreline. The water depth is likely to increase relatively quickly from the shore, as is common on pebble beaches throughout the Cyclades. How to Get There Anafi is reached by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), with journey times ranging from roughly seven to ten hours depending on the route and vessel. There are also connections from Santorini, which takes approximately two hours. Ferry frequency is limited — typically a few times per week in summer, less in the shoulder season — so planning ahead is essential. From Anafi's port of Ag. Nikolaos and the main village of Chora above it, reaching Xetrypiti will require either a vehicle or a solid walk. Anafi has very limited public transport, and a small number of scooter and ATV rental operators in Chora serve visitors who want to explore beyond the walking trails. The island's road network is minimal, and some coastal access points require navigating unpaved tracks. Check locally on arrival — at your accommodation or in the port area — for the most current directions to Xetrypiti. Islanders and accommodation owners are the most reliable source of up-to-date access information, including whether any track has deteriorated or a route has changed season to season. Parking, if you arrive by scooter or vehicle, will be wherever the track ends. There are no formal parking areas at remote beaches on Anafi. Best Time to Visit Anafi's visitor season runs from late June through early September, with July and August being the peak months. Even at peak season, the island as a whole sees modest visitor numbers compared to the rest of the Cyclades, so a secluded beach like Xetrypiti is unlikely to feel crowded even in August. The meltemi wind is most consistent in July and August, typically building through the afternoon and dropping by early evening. South-facing beaches are generally better sheltered from this wind than north or west-facing ones. Morning visits — before the wind builds — tend to offer the calmest water and the clearest light for seeing into the sea. Shoulder months, particularly late May, June, and September, bring lighter winds, warm enough water for comfortable swimming, and even fewer people. The sea temperature around Anafi is typically around 22–24°C in July and August, cooling to around 20°C by late September. Avoiding the midday sun between roughly 12:00 and 15:00 is advisable in high summer. With no infrastructure for shade, this matters more at a beach like Xetrypiti than at a developed beach with umbrellas. Tips for Visiting Bring everything you need. There are no facilities at Xetrypiti — carry enough water for the full visit, sun protection, food, and a rubbish bag to take your waste back with you. Verify the route before you leave Chora. Ask at your accommodation or a local rental shop for current directions. Tracks on remote Anafi beaches can be unmarked and conditions change between seasons. Rent a scooter or ATV if walking distances are a concern. The small rental operators in Chora are the practical solution for reaching beaches beyond the main port area. Visit in the morning for the calmest conditions. Wind picks up through the afternoon in summer; early visits give you the best swimming conditions and a cooler walk or ride. Pack a snorkel. With no boat traffic and high water clarity, Anafi's undeveloped beaches reward underwater exploration. Rocks and pebble shorelines typically support more marine life than bare sand. Check the ferry schedule the moment you arrive. Anafi's ferry connections are infrequent and can change — knowing your departure window in advance avoids the stress of missing the only boat for two days. The beach is unsupervised. There is no lifeguard and no one nearby if conditions change. Check sea conditions before entering, especially if there is swell from the south. Respect the environment. Remote beaches on small islands like Anafi absorb the impact of visitors acutely. Leave the shore exactly as you found it. Activities and Facilities The primary activity at Xetrypiti is swimming and snorkelling in clear, undisturbed Aegean water. The absence of motor boats and permanent development means the underwater environment is relatively undisturbed, and rocky sections of the shoreline are worth exploring with a mask. Anafi more broadly offers some of the best walking in the Cyclades. The marked trail network connects Chora to the monastery of Zoodochos Pigi at the island's eastern end — a several-hour walk that passes through dramatic landscape and ends at one of the most striking monastery settings in Greece. If you're based on the island for more than a day, combining a beach visit with one of the walking routes gives you a full picture of what makes Anafi distinctive. There are no water sports operators, no kayak hire, and no organised activities at Xetrypiti itself. This is a beach for people who are content with the sea and the landscape without additional programming.

257m away3 min walk

Churches

Agios Nikolaos
Agios Nikolaos

Agios Nikolaos is a traditional Orthodox church on Anafi, one of the smallest and least-visited islands in the Cyclades. Dedicated to Saint Nicholas — the patron saint of sailors, fishermen, and seafarers — the church carries particular resonance on an island where the sea has always defined daily life. Its coordinates place it in the broader Anafi landscape at approximately 36.3449°N, 25.7712°E, situating it within the island's spare, whitewashed built environment. Anafi sits at the southeastern edge of the Cyclades, roughly 24 nautical miles east of Santorini. Fewer than 300 people live here year-round, and the island has no airport, no major resort infrastructure, and only one proper village — Chora — perched on a hill above the small port of Agios Nikolaos. The coincidence of that port name and this church's dedication is no accident: Saint Nicholas has been invoked along these shores for centuries, a quiet constant in a place that time has largely left to itself. Like most Cycladic chapels, Agios Nikolaos is likely a compact, cube-form whitewashed structure with a blue or terracotta dome, a small bell mounted above the entrance, and an interior that holds an iconostasis, oil lamps, and icons of the saint. Churches of this type on Anafi are typically unlocked during and around services, which follow the Greek Orthodox liturgical calendar, and may be locked at other times. What to Expect Step into almost any small Orthodox church on a Cycladic island and the experience follows a recognizable rhythm: the smell of beeswax candles and incense, the low golden light filtering through small windows, the silence broken only by the occasional distant bell or the wind outside. Agios Nikolaos on Anafi is likely no different in its essentials, though the island's extreme quietness gives it an added layer of calm. The iconostasis — the carved wooden screen separating the nave from the sanctuary — will display icons of Saint Nicholas alongside the Theotokos (Virgin Mary) and Christ. Saint Nicholas is traditionally depicted as a bishop in vestments, often with a Gospel book in one hand and the other raised in blessing. On islands with fishing communities, his icon is sometimes positioned near the door as a point of first contact for sailors seeking protection before a voyage. The exterior, like most Anafi architecture, is likely a simple geometric form with whitewashed walls that reflect the Aegean light intensely in summer. The surrounding landscape on Anafi is stark and beautiful — volcanic rock, low scrub, and open sky dominate once you move beyond Chora. If the church occupies an elevated or edge position, it may offer views toward the Kalamos rock formation or across the open sea. Because no specific interior or structural details are documented in available sources, visitors should arrive with open expectations. The church may be modest in scale, but on an island this size, every place of worship carries the weight of community history. How to Get There Anafi is accessible by ferry from Piraeus (Athens), Santorini, and several other Cycladic islands, though services are limited and schedules vary significantly by season. The crossing from Santorini takes roughly two hours on a conventional ferry. Once on the island, the port village and Chora are the two main reference points. The church's coordinates (36.3449°N, 25.7712°E) place it within reach of Chora or the port on foot. Anafi is small enough that distances between landmarks are manageable by walking, though the terrain is hilly. The island has limited road infrastructure, and a small number of taxis and rental scooters are typically available during the summer months. No parking facilities are specifically associated with the church. There is no bus service in the conventional sense, though informal transport may connect the port and Chora during peak season. Ask locally upon arrival. Best Time to Visit Anafi receives the bulk of its visitors between late June and early September. Outside these months, ferry connections become infrequent and some services on the island close entirely. The church, as a working place of worship, may be accessible year-round for residents, but visiting outside summer requires flexibility around transport. The feast day of Saint Nicholas falls on December 6th, when Orthodox churches dedicated to him hold a liturgy and, in some communities, a small celebration afterward. On a remote island like Anafi, the feast day of the local church is a genuine community event rather than a tourist occasion. If you are on the island in early December — unlikely but not impossible — attending the liturgy is a respectful way to observe the occasion. For general visits, early morning or late afternoon are the best times to approach any small Cycladic chapel. Midday summer heat is intense on Anafi, and the quality of light on whitewashed walls is better outside the bleached-out noon hours. The church may be locked during off-peak hours; if so, ask locally about the key-holder, a common arrangement in small Greek villages. Tips for Visiting Dress appropriately. Both men and women should cover their shoulders and knees before entering any Orthodox church. Carry a light layer or scarf even in summer, as the interiors are cooler than outside and the dress code applies regardless of temperature. Check for a key-holder. Small chapels on minor Cycladic islands are often locked when not in use. A nearby resident or the local priest (papas) usually holds a key. Asking at a café or shop in Chora is the standard approach. Light a candle. A small donation box near the candle stand is standard in Greek Orthodox churches. Lighting a taper and placing it in the sand tray is a normal visitor practice and is welcomed. Silence is expected. Speak quietly inside, and avoid taking photographs during any active service. Photography of the interior when the church is empty is generally tolerated but not always explicitly permitted — observe any posted signs. Time your ferry carefully. Anafi's ferry schedule is thin, especially outside July and August. Missing a connection can strand you for several days. Check Hellenic Seaways or the DANAE booking system before finalizing your itinerary. Combine with Chora. The hilltop village has a handful of tavernas, a small market, and further chapels and viewpoints. A visit to Agios Nikolaos pairs naturally with an hour or two exploring Chora on foot. Respect active use. On a permanent-population island of fewer than 300 people, this church is not a tourist attraction — it is the active parish church of a small community. Treat it accordingly. About the Saint Saint Nicholas of Myra is one of the most widely venerated saints in the Orthodox Christian tradition. He lived in the 4th century AD in Myra, a city in what is now southern Turkey, and served as its bishop. His reputation for generosity, intervention in unjust situations, and protection of those at sea made him indispensable to maritime communities across the Mediterranean. In Greece, Agios Nikolaos is among the most common church dedications on the islands, second only perhaps to the Panagia (Virgin Mary). The reason is straightforward: Greek island communities depended on the sea for survival, and Saint Nicholas was understood as the figure most likely to answer prayers from fishermen, sponge-divers, and traders caught in storms. Icons depicting him calming waves or rescuing drowning sailors are common in coastal churches. On Anafi specifically, the dedication has particular local logic. The port of the island shares his name — Agios Nikolaos port — suggesting a deep historical association between this saint and the island's maritime identity. Whether the church predates the port's name, or the naming converged over time, is not documented, but the connection is unlikely to be coincidental. Churches of this dedication in the Cyclades often date to the Byzantine or post-Byzantine period, though many have been rebuilt or substantially renovated in the centuries since.

256m away3 min walk

ferry-terminals

Anafi
Anafi

Anafi is one of the most remote inhabited islands in the Cyclades, sitting roughly 25 nautical miles east of Santorini. The island's ferry terminal — a small working port on the island's southern coast — is the single point of entry and departure for almost everyone who visits. Unlike the busy, multi-berth ports of Mykonos or Naxos, this is a compact quay built for function rather than spectacle, handling the relatively infrequent vessels that call here on routes linking Piraeus with the southeastern Cyclades. Because Anafi sits at the far end of several ferry lines, journey times from Piraeus are long — typically in the range of eight to twelve hours depending on the route and operator, with many sailings operating overnight. Connections are more frequent in summer and can drop to just a few per week outside the main season. Neighboring Santorini (Thira) is the most common intermediate stop, making it a logical base if you plan to combine both islands. The port area itself is small and unpretentious. A handful of rooms-to-rent owners and small guesthouse representatives typically meet arriving ferries during summer, and the road up to Chora — the island's main village, set on a hill above the port — is short but steep. There is no large port authority building, no departure hall with shops, and no ATM at the quay itself, so arriving prepared matters. What to Expect The terminal is a basic concrete quay with capacity for the smaller to mid-sized ferries that serve this route. Vessels operated by lines such as SeaJets and ANEK-Hellenic Seaways have historically served Anafi on southeastern Cyclades runs, though operators and schedules change seasonally and annually — always verify the current timetable closer to your travel date. Boarding and disembarkation are straightforward: passengers walk on and off via a ramp or gangway directly from the quay. There is no covered waiting area of any significance, so if your ferry is delayed — a realistic possibility at a small island port, particularly in shoulder season when winds can be strong — you will be waiting outdoors. Bring layers in spring and autumn; the meltemi wind that blows across the Cyclades from July into September can make open quays uncomfortable even in the height of summer. Freight and supply deliveries also move through this port, which means arriving ferries can take time to unload vehicles and cargo before passengers disembark. Build some flexibility into your schedule, especially if you have an onward connection. The village of Chora is approximately two kilometers from the port by road. Local taxis and, in summer, a small bus typically meet ferries. If neither is available, the walk is manageable but involves a steady climb. How to Get There From the quay to Chora, a road winds uphill through the scrubby Anafi landscape. A local minibus or taxi usually meets ferry arrivals during the summer season, but this is not guaranteed on every sailing — check locally or with your accommodation in advance. Walking takes roughly 30 to 45 minutes depending on pace and luggage. From other islands, the most practical route is via Santorini (Thira port, Athinios), which has regular connections to Piraeus and to other Cycladic hubs. From Athens, the overnight ferry from Piraeus is the standard approach. There is no airport on Anafi, so sea is the only way in. Parking is not a consideration at the terminal itself in the way it would be on a larger island — very few visitors arrive on Anafi with their own vehicles, and the island's road network is extremely limited. Best Time to Visit Ferry frequency peaks between late June and early September, when additional summer sailings are added and the island sees the bulk of its annual visitors. Even at peak season, Anafi remains genuinely quiet by Cycladic standards — it has no large resort infrastructure and actively attracts travelers looking for the opposite of Mykonos. Shoulder season — May, June, and September into early October — is generally considered the best time to visit the island itself, with milder temperatures and fewer crowds, though ferry schedules thin out compared to July and August. Between October and April, connections can reduce to two or three sailings per week, and some may be cancelled entirely due to weather. The Aegean's winter swells regularly affect small island ports, and Anafi's exposed position makes it more susceptible than more sheltered destinations. If you are planning a trip outside of July and August, confirm your outbound ferry booking before committing to the visit — being stranded on Anafi for an extra day or two is not a hardship if you are prepared for it, but it can cause logistical problems if you have flights or other connections to meet. Tips for Visiting Book ferry tickets in advance for summer travel. Capacity on the smaller vessels that serve Anafi can fill up, particularly on Friday and Sunday sailings in July and August. Greek ferry booking platforms and the operators' own sites allow advance reservations. Carry cash when you arrive. There is no ATM at the port itself, and the island's only ATM — located in Chora — can run out of cash during busy summer weekends. Withdraw money before leaving Piraeus or Santorini. Check the live schedule close to departure. Ferry timetables in the Cyclades are adjusted seasonally, and Anafi's remote position means it is sometimes added to or dropped from specific routes depending on demand. The official Greek ferry search tools (such as openseas.gr or ferryhopper.com) are reliable for current schedules. Allow extra time for cargo offloading. Anafi's supply ferries carry significant freight, and disembarkation on arrival can be slower than at a passenger-only terminal. Arrange your accommodation transfer in advance. Contact your hotel or guesthouse before arrival to confirm whether a pickup is offered; if not, establish whether the island bus or a taxi will be available for your specific sailing. Pack for outdoor waiting. The quay has no covered terminal building to speak of. In summer, sun protection is essential; in shoulder season, a windproof layer matters more than you might expect at a Greek island port. Overnight sailings from Piraeus are the norm. Many routes arrive at Anafi in the early morning hours. Confirm your arrival time when booking so you can coordinate with your accommodation and plan for a late-night or predawn disembarkation. Return tickets and flexibility. Given the limited schedule outside peak season, consider booking your return ferry as soon as you confirm your outbound — not because the island is unpleasant to stay in longer, but because options narrow quickly when you are departing from such a small port. Activities and Facilities The port area itself has minimal facilities — this is not a marina with chandleries, cafes, and tourist shops. A small seasonal café or snack stand may operate near the quay during summer, but it is not reliable outside July and August. The real draw of arriving on Anafi is what lies beyond the port. The island is known for its exceptional beaches — Roukounas, a long sandy stretch a short walk east of the port, is among the most accessible — and for the Monastery of Zoodochos Pigi, perched on the island's eastern promontory near the ruins of a sanctuary attributed in ancient sources to Apollo. Chora itself is a quiet Cycladic village of whitewashed houses with a handful of tavernas, small shops, and a relaxed pace that is increasingly rare in the broader archipelago. If you are arriving specifically to spend time on the water, the port can also serve as a stop for private sailing itineraries through the southern Cyclades, though facilities for yachts are basic.

0m away1 min walk

Hotels

Iliovasilema
4.5
Iliovasilema

Iliovasilema is a hotel on Anafi, one of the quietest and least-visited islands in the Cyclades, sitting at coordinates that place it within the island's settled core near the main village of Anafi Chora. The name translates loosely from Greek as "sunset" — a detail mirrored in the property's website address, sunsetanafi.com — and the hotel is oriented toward the views that define this small, rugged island. Anafi itself receives a fraction of the visitors that reach Santorini, its volcanic neighbor to the west, and accommodation options here are genuinely limited. Iliovasilema holds a 4.5 out of 5 rating across 62 Google reviews, which for an island of Anafi's scale represents a meaningful sample of visitor feedback. That rating places it among the better-regarded lodging options the island has to offer. For travelers who want the Cyclades without the crowds, Anafi and a property like Iliovasilema represent a deliberate, considered choice rather than a fallback option. What to Expect Anafi is a small, hilly island with a dramatic interior dominated by the Kalamos rock formation — at around 460 meters, one of the largest monolithic rocks in the Mediterranean. The landscape visible from much of the island's accommodation, including from the area where Iliovasilema sits, includes this striking geological feature as well as the Aegean stretching toward Santorini on clear days. The island has no airport and is served by ferry from Piraeus, Santorini, and occasionally other Cycladic ports. The pace is slow and the infrastructure is deliberately low-key: there is one main village (the Chora), a handful of beaches reachable by dirt track or on foot, and a small selection of tavernas and cafes. Iliovasilema fits within this context — a hotel that exists in harmony with an island that has not sought mass tourism. The website at sunsetanafi.com is the primary booking and information channel. Specific room counts, room types, amenity lists, and pricing are best confirmed directly with the property, either through the website or by phone, as these details are not available in publicly verified form. What the rating and review volume do confirm is that guests leave satisfied. For a remote island hotel, sustaining a 4.5-star average across more than 60 reviews reflects consistent quality in hospitality, cleanliness, and the overall guest experience. How to Get There Reaching Anafi requires a ferry. The most common route is from Piraeus (Athens port), with a journey time of roughly nine to ten hours on overnight ferries. Shorter connections run from Santorini (Thira port), typically taking around two hours depending on the vessel and route. Ferry schedules are seasonal and reduce significantly outside of summer, so booking in advance and checking current timetables via Greek ferry operators is essential. On the island, Iliovasilema is located at coordinates 36.3491375, 25.7662843, within the main inhabited area of Anafi. The Chora sits on a hill above the port (Agios Nikolaos), reachable by a road of a few kilometers. A bus connects the port to the Chora during summer, and taxis or pre-arranged transfers may also be available. Confirm transfer options directly with the hotel when booking, as the island's transport network is small and schedules vary. There is no car rental industry on Anafi at the scale found on larger Cycladic islands, though ATVs and scooters are sometimes available. Most guests who stay for several days find that the island's walkable scale makes a vehicle optional for day-to-day movement. Best Time to Visit Anafi's high season runs from late June through early September, when ferry connections are most frequent, beaches are swimmable, and most local businesses operate. This is also when Iliovasilema is likely to be at its busiest and when advance booking is most important. May, early June, and September offer quieter conditions: fewer visitors, cooler midday temperatures, and a more local character to the island's daily life. The light in late afternoon and early evening during these shoulder months is particularly clear, which matters on an island where the view toward the caldera silhouette of Santorini is one of the draws. Wind is a consistent factor in the Cyclades. Anafi sits at the southeastern edge of the island group and can receive strong meltemi winds in July and August. These can affect ferry schedules and swimming conditions at exposed beaches, though they also keep temperatures manageable during the hottest weeks. Winter travel to Anafi is genuinely remote: ferry connections drop to one or two per week, and most accommodation and dining options close. The island has a small year-round community, but it is not configured for tourist visits outside the warmer months. Tips for Visiting Book early for summer. Anafi has a small total accommodation capacity, and well-rated properties like Iliovasilema fill up during July and August. Contact the hotel directly via sunsetanafi.com or by phone well before your intended dates. Confirm ferry bookings independently. Greek ferry schedules change seasonally and occasionally due to weather or operator changes. Use a reputable booking platform or check directly with ferry operators for current timetables between Piraeus, Santorini, and Anafi. Call ahead for arrival logistics. The property's phone number is +30 697 650 4739. If you're arriving on a late ferry, it's worth coordinating your arrival time directly with the hotel so they can plan accordingly. Pack for self-sufficiency. Anafi has a small supermarket and a handful of tavernas, but the range of goods and restaurant hours is limited compared to larger islands. Bring any specific medications, dietary items, or equipment you know you'll need. The Kalamos rock is worth a dedicated half-day. The hike to the monastery of Panagia Kalamiotissa at the base of the Kalamos formation is one of the island's signature experiences. Start early in summer to avoid the heat on the ascent. Sunsets face west toward Santorini. The hotel's name is not incidental — positioning yourself with a clear westward view in the evening is one of Anafi's distinctive pleasures, and the hotel's location is suited to it. Cash is advisable. ATM availability on small Cycladic islands like Anafi is limited and machines can run out of cash during peak summer weeks. Arrive with sufficient euros for your stay. Allow buffer days around your travel. Ferry connections to Anafi can be delayed or cancelled in strong winds. Building a day of flexibility into your itinerary — particularly for your departure — is practical rather than overcautious. Facilities and Location Iliovasilema's official website is sunsetanafi.com, which serves as the central point for room information, availability, and reservations. The property is registered at the address Ανάφη Κυκλάδες, Anafi 840 09, Greece, placing it within the main inhabited zone of the island near the Chora. Specific on-site facilities — whether the property includes a pool, breakfast service, communal terrace, air conditioning, or Wi-Fi — are not confirmed in available public data and should be verified directly with the hotel before booking. What is confirmed is the phone contact (+30 697 650 4739) and the sustained 4.5-star rating across 62 reviews, both of which are practical indicators when evaluating a small-island accommodation. For travelers building a broader Anafi itinerary, the main beach at Klisidi is a short walk from the port, while more remote beaches such as Roukounas and the beaches beyond it require a longer walk or transport along the island's southern track.

362m away5 min walk

monuments

Pesontes yper patridos
Pesontes yper patridos

The phrase "Pesontes Yper Patridos" — those who fell for the homeland — appears on war memorials across Greece, and Anafi has its own. This modest monument stands as the island's formal acknowledgment of residents who died in military service, most likely across the conflicts that shaped modern Greece: the Balkan Wars, the First and Second World Wars, and the Greek Civil War. Anafi is one of the smallest and most remote islands in the Cyclades, with a permanent population that has rarely exceeded a few hundred people. That makes a memorial like this unusually intimate. The names carved into it are not abstractions — they belong to families whose descendants may still live on the island today. Visiting it is a quiet, grounding counterpoint to the volcanic landscape and postcard-blue waters that draw most travelers here. The coordinates place the memorial within the area of Anafi's main settlement, Chora, a compact hillside village of whitewashed houses and narrow lanes roughly in the center of the island. You are unlikely to stumble across it by accident, but it is worth a deliberate short detour if you are already walking through the village. What to Expect War memorials in small Greek island villages typically take the form of a stone or marble stele, a wall plaque, or a small sculpted figure, set in a public space — often a plateia (village square), outside a church, or along a main pedestrian lane. The inscription "Πεσόντες Υπέρ Πατρίδος" (Pesontes Yper Patridos) is a standard honorific phrase in Greek, translating closely to "fallen in service of the homeland." Beneath it, or alongside it, you would expect to find a list of names and possibly the conflicts in which those islanders died. Given Anafi's small population, the list of names is likely to be short — but no less significant for that. On small Cycladic islands, nearly every family contributed someone to the conflicts of the 20th century, and a short list of names can represent a substantial proportion of the male population of a generation. The setting in Chora adds context. The village retains the traditional Cycladic character of its architecture — blue-domed churches, narrow stone-paved alleys, and views down toward the sea. The memorial sits within that lived environment rather than in a formal or ceremonial plaza, which gives it a different register than the grand monuments found in larger Greek towns. There is no entrance fee, no ticketing, and no formal visiting procedure. The monument is accessible as part of an ordinary walk through the village. How to Get There Anafi is reached by ferry from Piraeus or from neighboring Cycladic islands including Santorini, Ios, and Folegandros, though services are infrequent and seasonal. The island has a single main port, Agios Nikolaos, at the base of the hill below Chora. From the port, Chora is a 10–15 minute walk uphill along a well-worn path, or a short drive or taxi ride on the paved road. The village is compact and best explored on foot — most of it is inaccessible to vehicles. Once in Chora, the memorial is navigable on foot; the coordinates (36.3501, 25.7660) place it within the village's walkable core. There is no formal parking at the monument itself, but vehicles can be left at the edge of Chora where the road ends or at the port. The walk up from the port is straightforward, though the final section involves steps and inclines that may be challenging for visitors with mobility difficulties. Best Time to Visit The memorial can be visited at any time of year and at any time of day — it is an outdoor public monument with no operating hours. Anafi's tourist season runs roughly from late May through early September, when ferry connections are more reliable and accommodation is open. If you want to visit with minimal foot traffic and in reflective quiet, early morning is ideal. The Cyclades heat up quickly in July and August, so morning visits to Chora in general are more comfortable in midsummer. Spring (April–May) and early autumn (September–October) offer mild temperatures and a slower pace across the island. The Greek national commemorative days — March 25 (Independence Day) and October 28 (Ohi Day) — are observed across all Greek islands and may occasion a small ceremony or wreath-laying at the memorial if local tradition supports it. Tips for Visiting Combine the memorial with a walk through Chora as a whole. The village is small enough that you can see most of it in an hour, and the memorial fits naturally into that circuit. If you have a particular interest in Greek military history or genealogy connected to Anafi, speaking with locals — at the kafeneio or the small shops in Chora — may yield more context than the inscription itself. Dress modestly if you are visiting nearby churches on the same walk; several chapels are clustered in and around Chora. Bring water. Chora has a small number of cafes and tavernas, but in shoulder season or early morning some may not be open. The path up from the port is mostly shaded in the early morning and late afternoon but exposed at midday. Factor this into your timing in summer. Anafi's ferry schedule is limited — check current timetables carefully before planning your trip, as connections can be weather-dependent in spring and autumn. Do not expect signage directing you specifically to the memorial; navigation in Chora is largely intuitive. The coordinates in a maps app will get you close. Photographs should be taken with discretion. This is an active place of local remembrance, not a tourist installation. History and Context Greece's 20th century was defined by a sequence of conflicts that touched virtually every community in the country. The Balkan Wars of 1912–1913 brought Thessaloniki and much of northern Greece into the modern Greek state. The First World War divided Greek political loyalty sharply between royalist and Venizelist factions. The Second World War brought Axis occupation from 1941 to 1944, a period marked by famine, resistance, and reprisals. The Greek Civil War of 1946–1949 followed almost immediately and was, in many communities, the most traumatic of all — pitting neighbors and family members against each other. Remote Cycladic islands like Anafi were not battlefields in the conventional sense, but they were not untouched. Men from these islands served in the national army, died in campaigns on the mainland and in North Africa, and were caught up in the political violence of the Civil War period. Some islands also served as places of political exile during the Metaxas dictatorship (1936–1941) and again under the military junta (1967–1974), adding another layer of political memory to the landscape. A memorial of this type — bearing the traditional honorific phrase and a list of names — is the standard form of public remembrance found in Greek villages from the largest city neighborhood to the smallest island Chora. On Anafi, where the community is tight-knit and the population small, it carries the specific weight of a place where everyone who died was likely known personally to those who survived.

285m away4 min walk

Restaurants

Liotrivi
4.6
Liotrivi

Liotrivi is a family-owned taverna operating out of one of Anafi's oldest olive press buildings in Chora, the island's hilltop main village. Established in 2004, it has accumulated a rating of 4.6 across more than 400 reviews — a meaningful number for an island with a permanent population of only a few hundred people and a ferry connection that runs a handful of times per week. That kind of word-of-mouth reputation, built slowly on a remote Cycladic island, says more than any marketing copy could. Anafi sits at the far southeastern edge of the Cyclades, beyond Santorini and largely off the beaten path. It has no airport, limited accommodation, and a single main settlement. Liotrivi occupies a central role in village life precisely because it is not trying to be anything other than what it is: a place to eat honest food in the evening, in a building that has its own history on the island. The taverna opens every day at 6:00 PM and stays open until midnight, which fits comfortably with the Greek rhythm of dining late and staying longer. There is no lunch service, so plan your afternoon accordingly. What to Expect The setting is a converted olive press — a liotrivi in Greek — which gives the restaurant its name. Olive presses were once central to island economies across the Cyclades, and repurposing the stone structure rather than demolishing it keeps a piece of Anafi's agricultural past in daily use. The architecture is accordingly robust: thick walls, low ceilings in parts, the kind of space that feels cool on a hot August evening. The menu follows the logic of a traditional Greek taverna: dishes built from local and seasonal ingredients, cooked without excessive elaboration. On an island as small as Anafi, the supply chain is short and the cooking tends to reflect what is available rather than what a printed menu promised six months earlier. Expect grilled fish when boats have been out, slow-cooked meat dishes, horta (wild greens), legume-based starters, and the kind of salads that depend on ripe tomatoes rather than decoration. The atmosphere is relaxed in the specific way that small-island restaurants tend to be: tables fill gradually from around 7:30 PM onward, conversations carry across the room, and no one is rushed. Visitors and the handful of locals who are in the village during summer tend to share the same space without the self-conscious separation you get in more tourist-heavy destinations. Service is attentive by the standards of a family operation where the same people cook and serve. Do not expect fast food logistics. Expect to be looked after. How to Get There Liotrivi is in Chora, the main village of Anafi, situated on a ridge roughly 150 meters above sea level. From the port of Agios Nikolaos, there is a road that winds up to Chora — the distance is about 1.5 kilometers by road but the path is steep. In high season, a small local bus connects the port to Chora, timed loosely around ferry arrivals and departures. Taxis operate on the island in limited numbers; asking at your accommodation about current transport options is the most reliable approach. Once in Chora, Liotrivi is not difficult to find in a village this size. The olive press building is a recognizable structure. The address is Χώρα Ανάφης, Anafi 840 09. If you are navigating by phone, the coordinates are 36.3517, 25.7689. Parking is available in Chora for those with a rental vehicle, though on an island this compact, most visitors are on foot by the time they reach the village. Best Time to Visit Liotrivi operates year-round in terms of its daily hours (6 PM to midnight every day), but Anafi's visitor season is concentrated between late June and early September. Outside that window, the island sees very few tourists, and some services operate on reduced schedules. The taverna's consistent hours suggest it remains open regardless of season, but if you are visiting in shoulder season — May, early June, or October — calling ahead on +30 2286 061209 to confirm is a sensible precaution. Within the summer season, earlier in the week tends to be quieter than weekends, when day-trippers from Santorini and ferry passengers passing through add to the crowd. Arriving at 7:00 PM rather than 8:30 PM gives you a better chance of a table without a wait, though the taverna is small enough that the difference between a full house and a quiet one is not dramatic. The evenings in Chora are genuinely pleasant in July and August: the ridge catches whatever breeze is moving, temperatures drop from the afternoon heat, and the village takes on the unhurried quality that draws people to small Cycladic islands in the first place. Tips for Visiting Call ahead if visiting outside peak season. The phone number is +30 2286 061209. Anafi's low-season population is small and business hours can shift accordingly. Arrive at opening time if you want a table without waiting. The taverna fills steadily from around 7:30 PM in summer, and the space is not large. Ask what arrived fresh that day. On an island with no daily freight, the fish and produce situation changes. The staff will know what is worth ordering. Bring cash. Card payment infrastructure on Anafi is less reliable than on larger Cycladic islands. It is worth checking, but having euros on you removes the risk. Pace yourself. A full Greek taverna meal here — starters, mains, perhaps a carafe of local wine — is an evening activity, not a quick stop. The kitchen works at its own rhythm. The building itself is worth a look. The structure retains features of the original olive press. Ask about it if you are curious; taverna owners on small islands tend to know the history of the building they work in. Factor in the walk back. If you have accommodation at the port rather than in Chora, the road down at midnight is unlit in places. A torch or a phone light is useful. Transport back to the port. If you are relying on the local bus, confirm its last departure time before you sit down to eat. The schedule is not always aligned with a midnight closing time. What to Order Without a current menu available, specific dish recommendations have to stay within the reliable logic of a traditional Greek taverna on a small Aegean island. The broad patterns hold: grilled octopus when available, fresh fish by weight, slow-cooked lamb or goat, fava (yellow split pea purée, a Cycladic staple with a particularly good reputation in this part of the archipelago given Santorini's nearby fava production), tzatziki, taramosalata, and spanakopita if they are making it that day. Fava is worth ordering specifically in this region of the Cyclades. The volcanic soil around Santorini produces a fava bean with a distinct flavour, and proximity means the ingredient can turn up in neighbouring island kitchens at its best. Horta — whatever wild greens are in season, dressed with olive oil and lemon — is rarely wrong as a side dish. For main courses, if fresh fish is available, it will likely be the most direct expression of what Anafi's waters produce on a given day. For wine, a carafe of local or regional white is the default pairing with most of what a taverna like this serves. Greek island whites, particularly Assyrtiko from the wider Cyclades, work well with grilled seafood and lighter starters. History and Context The word liotrivi (λιοτρίβι) refers to an olive press — specifically the stone mill used to grind olives before extraction. Across the Greek islands, these structures were community infrastructure: they were expensive to build, shared among farmers, and operated seasonally when the olive harvest came in. On an island as small as Anafi, a functioning olive press would have been a significant piece of communal property. The building that now houses the taverna is described as one of the island's oldest olive presses, which places it within a tradition of agricultural architecture that predates the modern tourist economy by centuries. The Cyclades were largely self-sufficient economies until the mid-twentieth century, and olive oil was both a food source and a trade good. Repurposing the press as a restaurant preserves the structure while shifting its function from production to hospitality — a common transition in Greek island villages where agricultural buildings have outlasted their original purpose. Anafi itself has a longer history than its current obscurity might suggest. The island has archaeological remains connected to ancient settlement, and a prominent monastery — Panagia Kalamiotissa — sits at the island's eastern end atop a dramatic rock formation. The village of Chora, where Liotrivi operates, developed in the medieval period as islanders moved inland and uphill for protection from sea-based raids, a pattern repeated across the Cyclades.

72m away1 min walk
To Steki
4.5
To Steki

To Steki is one of the most consistently rated eating spots on Anafi, a small Cycladic island southeast of Santorini that sees a fraction of the tourist traffic its neighbours do. With 239 Google reviews averaging 4.5 stars, it has earned a loyal following among the island's repeat visitors — no small feat on an island where the entire permanent population numbers in the hundreds. The name itself, steki , is an everyday Greek word for a regular haunt or meeting place, and the taverna lives up to that casual, come-as-you-are identity. The kitchen focuses on traditional Greek island cooking — the kind built around seasonal produce, olive oil, and whatever comes off local boats or out of family gardens. There are no elaborate tasting menus here, and that is precisely the point. Anafi has long attracted travellers who value simplicity, and To Steki feeds them accordingly. The address places it in the main settlement on the island, the hilltop Chora at 840 09 Anafi, a whitewashed village of narrow lanes and blue-domed churches perched above the port. If you are staying on the island for more than a day, you will almost certainly find yourself walking past it more than once. What to Expect To Steki operates as an informal taverna in the traditional Cycladic mould. Expect checked tablecloths or bare wooden tables in a compact indoor space, likely spilling onto a terrace or into the lane outside when the weather allows — which on Anafi, a very sunny and dry island, is most of the summer season. The menu follows the rhythm of home-style Greek cooking: slow-cooked dishes like stifado or giouvetsi, grilled meats, fresh salads built around ripe tomatoes and good feta, and whatever the day's catch dictates. The Facebook description names it explicitly as a place serving Elliniki paradosiaki nisiiotiki kouzina — traditional Greek island cuisine — which in practice means dishes made from scratch with local and seasonal ingredients rather than imported convenience products. Portions tend to be generous at this style of taverna. Bread arrives with the meal, the house wine is usually a carafe of local or regional table wine, and the pace of service matches the pace of the island: unhurried. If you are arriving hungry from a beach walk or a hike toward the Monastery of Zoodochos Pigi on the island's eastern end, the kitchen's hours — opening at 10am every day and running until midnight or later — mean you are rarely without an option. The price range, noted in the snippet data as in the higher bracket ($$), should be read in the context of a small remote island where supply logistics add to costs, rather than as a sign of fine-dining pretension. Most traditional tavernas on lesser-visited Cycladic islands price accordingly. How to Get There Anafi's Chora sits on a hill roughly two kilometres from the ferry port at Agios Nikolaos. On arriving by ferry — Anafi is served by connections from Santorini, Piraeus, and other Cycladic ports — you can reach the Chora either on foot up the stepped path (around 30 to 40 minutes at an easy pace) or by the island's local bus, which typically meets ferry arrivals. Once in the Chora, the village is compact enough to navigate on foot within a few minutes. To Steki sits at coordinates 36.3513°N, 25.7684°E — in the central part of the settlement. Ask any local and you will be pointed in the right direction quickly; the Chora has few streets. There is no dedicated parking infrastructure in the Chora itself, but if you are travelling by scooter or ATV — the standard way to explore Anafi's few roads — you can leave vehicles at the edge of the village before the pedestrianised lanes begin. Accessibility: the narrow, stepped lanes of an old Cycladic Chora are generally not wheelchair-friendly. If mobility is a concern, it is worth calling ahead to ask about the specific entrance and seating layout. Best Time to Visit Anafi's tourist season runs from late June through early September, with July and August bringing the highest footfall — though even at peak season, the island feels quiet compared to Santorini or Paros. To Steki is open year-round based on the listed hours, but services on Anafi contract significantly outside the main summer months, and it is always sensible to call ahead if visiting in spring or autumn. For the meal itself, evenings from around 8pm to 10pm are when most island tavernas are at their liveliest and when the kitchen is typically firing on all cylinders. Lunchtime service, starting from 10am, is more relaxed and suited to a slower midday meal between beach trips. The Meltemi wind that sweeps the Cyclades from mid-July through August can make alfresco dining on exposed terraces breezy, so if you prefer a calmer setting, aim for a table under cover or visit in June or September when the wind is less insistent. Tips for Visiting Call ahead during shoulder season. Outside July and August, hours can shift and kitchens sometimes close for the evening earlier than listed. The number is +30 2286 061380. Arrive with patience. Service on a small, low-staffed island taverna moves at its own pace. This is not a flaw; it is part of how Anafi works. Order drinks, eat bread, watch the lane. Ask what came in fresh that day. Whatever the cook recommends as the daily special on a small island taverna is usually the best thing on the menu — it reflects what was available at the market or off a boat that morning. Bring cash. Card payment infrastructure on remote Cycladic islands can be unreliable or absent. Check before you sit down, but do not count on paying by card. Try the local wine. Anafi has a tradition of small-scale viticulture, and some tavernas on the island serve wine from nearby islands or local producers. Ask what's available by the carafe. Note the late closing on weekends. Thursday and Saturday close at 12:30am, Sunday at 1:00am — unusually late for a small-island taverna, which suggests a lively local crowd on those evenings. Combine with a Chora evening walk. The Chora is at its best after 7pm when the heat drops and locals emerge. Eating at To Steki fits naturally into a long, slow evening stroll through the village. Reserve a table for groups. The taverna's capacity is unlikely to be large. If you are arriving with a group of more than four, a phone call in advance is a sensible precaution during high season. What to Order The menu at To Steki follows the principles of traditional Cycladic cooking, which means simplicity and quality ingredients over complexity. Without a current menu available, the following represents the category of dishes you should expect and ask about. Starters and salads will typically include horiatiki (village salad), tzatziki, taramasalata, and possibly local cheese — Anafi and the surrounding islands have a tradition of producing hard cheeses from sheep and goat milk. A pikilia (mixed mezze plate) is worth asking about if you want to try several things. Main courses at a traditional island taverna lean toward grilled fish and meat, slow-cooked lamb, and oven-baked dishes. On an island with access to fresh fish, whatever is listed as the daily catch — often sea bream (tsipoura), sea bass (lavraki), or smaller fish like red mullet (barbounia) — is the obvious choice. Grilled octopus, if available, is a Cycladic staple. Meat dishes might include lamb chops (paidakia), chicken, or the slow-braised options common in Greek village cooking. Vegetarians will find sustenance in the starter and salad range, plus any seasonal vegetable dishes (lathera) the kitchen prepares. Dessert at this style of taverna is often simple — fresh fruit, yoghurt with honey, or a small sweet offered complimentarily at the end of the meal, as is customary at many family-run Greek establishments.

86m away1 min walk
To Sokaki
4.2
To Sokaki

To Sokaki is one of the few places on Anafi where you can walk in after dark and leave with something to eat. Open every day from 6 PM through to 2 AM, it fills a practical gap on an island that has very limited dining infrastructure compared to its more developed Cycladic neighbors. The address puts it on the Epar.Od. Anafis road, the main artery connecting the port area with Chora, Anafi's hilltop village. Anafi itself sees far fewer visitors than Santorini, which sits just 47 kilometers to the west, and the trade-off is an island where opening hours are sparse and options after sundown can be limited. To Sokaki's consistent evening-to-early-morning schedule makes it a reliable fallback whether you've just arrived on a late ferry or you're heading back from a long hike to the Monastery of Panagia Kalamiotissa. With a 4.2 rating from 50 Google reviews, it holds its own for what it is: a no-fuss spot focused on quick, casual food in an unpretentious environment. What to Expect To Sokaki describes itself as a fast food and casual spot, and the experience matches that framing. This is not a sit-down taverna with grilled fish and a wine list — it's the kind of place that suits a quick meal between a beach afternoon and an evening walk up to Chora, or a late snack before the ferry back to Piraeus. The setting is relaxed and informal, consistent with Anafi's overall low-key character. The island draws travelers specifically because it hasn't been commercialized to the degree of Ios or Mykonos, and To Sokaki fits that ethos — straightforward food without the staged atmosphere of tourist-facing restaurants. Because no menu details are publicly available, it's worth calling ahead (+30 2286 061358) if you have specific dietary requirements or want to know what's on before making the walk or drive. The hours — 6 PM to 2 AM every day of the week — are notably consistent, which is more than can be said for many small-island establishments that adjust based on season and foot traffic. The location on the main island road means it's accessible from both the port (Agios Nikolaos) and from Chora without needing to navigate narrower village lanes. How to Get There To Sokaki sits on the Epar.Od. Anafis road, the primary paved route on the island. From the port at Agios Nikolaos, the road heads inland and uphill toward Chora — To Sokaki is accessible along this route. The drive from the port takes roughly five to ten minutes; on foot it's a steeper and longer proposition, so most visitors arriving by ferry will want a vehicle or a taxi. Anafi has very limited public transport. There is a bus service that connects the port to Chora, though the schedule is infrequent and tied primarily to ferry arrivals. If you're staying in Chora, the walk down to the main road is manageable in the cooler evening hours. Parking on Anafi is not the logistical challenge it is on busier Cycladic islands — pulling over on the roadside near the spot is generally straightforward. If you're renting a scooter or quad (the most common way to explore Anafi), this is an easy stop on any route around the island's main road. Best Time to Visit To Sokaki operates exclusively in the evening, so the timing question is less about finding the right window and more about planning your day around an evening stop. The 6 PM opening aligns well with the tail end of an afternoon beach session — Roukounas, the island's most accessible sandy beach, is a short distance from the main road — or the descent from Chora after watching the sunset. Anafi's high season runs from July through August, when the island's small population of under 300 residents is supplemented by Greek and international visitors seeking a quieter alternative to the Cyclades' busier spots. During this period, even a small establishment can get lively later in the evening. In shoulder season — June and September — crowds thin considerably, and some island businesses reduce hours or close entirely, making To Sokaki's consistent schedule more valuable. The island gets strong meltemi winds in summer, particularly in the afternoons, which can make beach time less appealing by late afternoon and nudge people toward indoor options. An early evening stop at To Sokaki fits naturally into that rhythm. Tips for Visiting Call before you go if you have dietary needs. With no published menu, a quick call to +30 2286 061358 will save you a wasted trip if you're looking for something specific. Factor in ferry timing. Anafi's ferry connections to Piraeus and Santorini often arrive or depart late at night. To Sokaki's 2 AM closing time makes it one of the few places you can eat after a late arrival. Pair it with a Chora visit. The main village of Chora sits above the main road and is worth the climb for its whitewashed lanes and views toward Santorini. Coming down in the evening, a stop at To Sokaki makes a natural endpoint. Don't expect a full taverna experience. If you're after a leisurely grilled fish dinner with local wine, To Sokaki is not that — Anafi has sit-down tavernas better suited to a long evening meal. This spot serves a different need. Carry cash. On small Cycladic islands, card acceptance at casual food spots is not guaranteed. Bring euros to avoid any issues. Check seasonal operation. Although listed hours show year-round consistency, Anafi's off-season (October through May) sees many businesses close or reduce operations. If visiting outside peak season, confirm the spot is open. Use it as a base-of-island reference point. The Epar.Od. Anafis address puts To Sokaki on the main road, which serves as a useful orientation landmark when navigating between the port, beaches, and Chora. Practical Information To Sokaki is located on the main island road, Epar.Od. Anafis, in the 840 09 postal area of Anafi. It operates seven days a week, 6:00 PM to 2:00 AM. The phone number is +30 2286 061358. There is no website or social media presence linked to this location. Google Maps lists it under the coordinates 36.3511636, 25.7679492, which places it on the lower stretch of the main road between the port and Chora.

97m away1 min walk
Tholos
4.6
Tholos

Tholos is a traditional café-restaurant in Anafi's Chora, the island's only village, sitting high on the hillside above the port. It runs from breakfast through to the small hours — opening at 8:30 AM and closing at 2:00 AM every day of the week — which makes it one of the few places on this quiet Cycladic island where you can reliably find coffee in the morning and a drink late at night. With 228 Google reviews averaging 4.6 stars, Tholos has earned its place as a focal point of daily life in Chora. On an island with a permanent population that can be counted in the dozens, a rating like that reflects repeat custom from locals and returning visitors, not just passing tourist volume. The place describes itself as a "traditional café-restaurant," and that combination — coffee and light refreshments through the afternoon, food and drinks in the evening — is exactly what a small, self-contained island like Anafi actually needs. Anafi sits at the far eastern edge of the Cyclades, roughly an hour and a half by ferry from Santorini. Fewer than a handful of restaurants and cafés serve the whole island, so wherever you stay — whether that's Chora itself, down at Agios Nikolaos port, or near the beaches to the east — you'll pass through Tholos's orbit at some point during your stay. What to Expect Tholos occupies a position in Chora that lets it function as both a morning coffee spot and an evening gathering place. In the daytime session, running until 4:00 PM, expect the kind of Greek café staples that carry you through a warm Cycladic morning: freddo espresso, Greek coffee, cold drinks, and light snacks. The afternoon break is a common pattern for Greek island businesses, and Tholos follows it cleanly — closing for a few hours before reopening at 7:00 PM for the evening shift. The evening session is where the café-restaurant side comes into its own. From 7:00 PM onward, the kitchen and bar take over, and the place stays open until 2:00 AM, well past the point when most establishments on a small island have wound down. On an island like Anafi, where the night sky is genuinely dark and the Chora's lanes empty out early, having a lit terrace or interior to return to matters. The setting is in keeping with the village: whitewashed Cycladic architecture, a pace that doesn't rush you, and the kind of atmosphere that comes from a place that serves the same community day after day. Anafi's Chora is small enough that the café's regular clientele — fishing families, hikers coming back from the Monastery of Panagia Kalamiotissa, sailors anchoring overnight at the port — all tend to end up in the same few spots. The source description notes drinks and light refreshments, but the Instagram profile positions it more fully as a café-restaurant with food service. Expect the offering to lean toward straightforward Greek dishes and mezze-style plates in the evening rather than an elaborate menu. How to Get There Tholos is in Chora, Anafi's main village, at the coordinates 36.3511°N, 25.7683°E. Chora sits roughly 2.5 kilometres from Agios Nikolaos, the island's main port where ferries dock. The road between port and village climbs steadily; it's walkable in around 30–40 minutes but steep in places and exposed in summer heat. A small local taxi or occasional bus service connects the port to Chora, particularly around ferry arrival times. If you're staying in Chora itself, Tholos is easy to reach on foot within the village. Parking in Chora is limited to the small area at the village entrance — the lanes themselves are pedestrian. The address is Χώρα Ανάφης, Anafi 840 09. Anafi has no airport. All arrivals are by ferry, primarily through the Piraeus–Cyclades routes that serve the smaller eastern islands. Santorini is the closest major hub with onward ferry connections. Best Time to Visit Anafi's main season runs from late June through early September. Outside those months, ferry connections become infrequent and many island businesses reduce hours or close entirely. Tholos's current hours reflect an active-season schedule; if you're travelling in shoulder season — May, early June, or late September — it's worth confirming hours via the Facebook page before assuming the full daily schedule applies. Within the day, the morning session suits coffee and a slow start before hiking or beach time. The early evening opening at 7:00 PM catches the cooler part of the day when Chora comes back to life after the afternoon heat. Anafi sits in the southern Cyclades and temperatures in July and August frequently exceed 30°C, with strong meltemi winds providing some relief but also making exposed outdoor seating brisk in the afternoon. For those wanting to eat without competing with peak summer crowds, late evening — from 9:00 PM onward — tends to be when Greek island restaurants reach their natural rhythm. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in shoulder season. The phone number is +30 2286 061354. On a small island, hours can shift outside peak summer without the website being updated. Use the afternoon break for hiking. The gap between 4:00 PM and 7:00 PM aligns roughly with the hottest part of the day. It's a natural prompt to rest before the evening session begins. Arrive early for breakfast if hiking. The 8:30 AM opening suits hikers heading toward the Monastery of Panagia Kalamiotissa, about 8–9 kilometres along the island's spine. Coffee and something to eat before the trail is a practical reason to start here. Follow on Instagram for current updates. The account @tholos_anafi has over 3,000 followers and posts updates; it's the most reliable source for seasonal closures or changes to the evening menu. Don't expect a long menu. Anafi is not an island with large-scale supply chains. The offering at Tholos will reflect what's available locally and seasonally, which is not a shortcoming — it's the reality of eating on a genuinely small, remote island. Evening seating fills up on ferry nights. When a ferry arrives, Chora gets a brief influx of new arrivals and day-trippers. If you want a quiet table, either eat before 7:30 PM or later after 9:30 PM. Combine with a Chora walk. Tholos is a natural start or end point for a walk through Chora's lanes, which take in the kastro ruins, the church of Panagia, and the windmills above the village. What to Order The bundle and Instagram bio describe Tholos as a traditional café-restaurant. For the morning and afternoon session, the core café order on a Greek island is freddo espresso (iced espresso, not blended) or Greek coffee, alongside a pastry or light bite. If you want something cold and non-caffeinated, freshly squeezed orange juice is a standard café offering across the Cyclades. For the evening session, traditional Greek café-restaurants typically offer mezze plates, grilled dishes, and local cheeses alongside wine, beer, and spirits. Anafi's own food culture draws on the broader Cycladic tradition: dried fish, local capers, island cheese, and simple grilled meat or vegetables. What Tholos serves specifically in terms of dishes isn't confirmed in the available information, so it's worth asking what's on that day — the answer will be more reliable than any printed menu on a small island where supply depends on ferry schedules. For drinks in the evening, the standard Greek options — local beer, house wine, ouzo, and tsipouro — are a reasonable expectation in any traditional Cycladic establishment.

100m away1 min walk
Akrogiali
4.3
Akrogiali

Akrogiali sits right on the water at Ormos Agiou Nikolaou — Anafi's small port bay — where tables are close enough to the sea that you can hear it while you eat. It is one of the few proper sit-down tavernas on an island with a total permanent population counted in the dozens, which makes it a practical anchor point for almost any visitor arriving by ferry or staying in the port area. With a rating of 4.3 out of 5 based on 86 reviews, Akrogiali earns consistent approval from the trickle of independent travelers who choose Anafi specifically because it has resisted the development that swept over its Cycladic neighbours. The kitchen leans on the classics: grilled and fried seafood, mezedes, and slow-cooked meat dishes that match the unhurried pace of the island itself. Anafi is one of the quietest inhabited islands in the Cyclades, receiving far fewer tourists than Santorini or Ios, and the dining options here reflect that reality. Eating at Akrogiali is not about a curated experience — it is about sitting at a table by the Aegean and eating whatever came in fresh that day. What to Expect The setting is the first thing you notice: a waterfront position in Ormos Agiou Nikolaou, the bay that serves as Anafi's port, with an open aspect toward the sea. Tables are arranged so that most seats have a direct water view, and the atmosphere is relaxed rather than formal — plastic chairs, checked tablecloths, and the ambient noise of boats are entirely in keeping with a genuine island taverna. The menu follows the Greek seaside template reliably. Expect grilled octopus, fresh fish priced by weight, fried zucchini, tzatziki, and a rotating selection of mezedes. Keftedes — pan-fried herb meatballs — appear on the menu alongside cos lettuce salads and whatever shellfish is available locally. Grilled meats are also on offer for those who prefer to skip the seafood. Portions tend toward the generous side, as is typical of family-run tavernas in the smaller Cyclades. Drinks follow the standard Greek taverna approach: house wine served by the carafe, cold beer, soft drinks, and Greek coffee to finish. There is no cocktail program here, and that is appropriate to the setting. Service reflects island pace: things move slowly, and that is part of what Anafi visitors are generally seeking. On busy summer evenings, when the island's few guesthouses fill up, the taverna can be the social center of the port area. On quieter nights in shoulder season, you may have the terrace almost to yourself. The phone number on record is +30 2286 061218, which is worth saving if you want to check whether the kitchen is open on any given evening, particularly outside peak July–August weeks. How to Get There Akrogiali is located in Ormos Agiou Nikolaou, Anafi's port settlement, at coordinates approximately 36.3441° N, 25.7705° E. If you arrive by ferry — the standard way to reach Anafi — you will disembark almost directly in front of the port area. The taverna is within a short walk of the ferry dock along the waterfront road. Anafi's main village, Chora, sits up on the hill roughly 10–15 minutes from the port by the island's shuttle bus, which usually meets ferries. If you are based in Chora, you can take the bus down or walk the road that descends to the port — the walk takes around 25–35 minutes on foot. Taxis exist on Anafi in limited numbers; the island is small enough that most visitors rely on the bus, rented scooters or ATVs, or walking. Parking near the port is informal; there is no defined car park, but space is generally available given the island's low traffic volumes. There are no particular accessibility barriers documented, though the terrain in the port area is typical of a small Greek island harbour — some uneven paving. Best Time to Visit Akrogiali operates seasonally, as almost all Anafi businesses do. The reliable open window is July through August, when the island receives its highest visitor numbers and ferry connections from Piraeus and Santorini run more frequently. September is worth considering: crowds drop, temperatures remain warm enough for comfortable outdoor dining, and the pace slows further. For the taverna specifically, evening is the natural time to visit — the light on the water during the hour before and after sunset is the best the Aegean offers, and the heat of a Cycladic afternoon has typically eased by then. Lunch is also served, and a midday meal here on a clear day, looking out across the bay, has its own straightforward appeal. Anafi is exposed to the Meltemi, the strong northerly wind that blows through the Cyclades from mid-July into August. On windy days the waterfront can be breezy; some travelers find this a bonus in the heat. The port bay provides partial shelter compared to the open north coasts of the island. Avoid assuming the taverna is open if you arrive in spring before late May or in October — confirm by phone before planning an evening meal outside the core summer months. Tips for Visiting Call ahead in shoulder season. Outside July and August, call +30 2286 061218 to confirm opening before making the trip down from Chora. Arrive with cash. Anafi's infrastructure is limited; do not assume card payment is available. Bring euro cash from the ATM in Chora before heading to the port. Ask what's fresh. Fish on Greek island menus is often priced by weight and availability changes daily. Ask the server what came in that morning rather than ordering purely from the written menu. Order a shared spread rather than individual plates. A selection of mezedes — tzatziki, fried zucchini, grilled octopus, salad — shared across two or three people tends to give a better meal than individual main courses and reflects how Greek taverna food is designed to be eaten. The ferry schedule affects the kitchen. On nights when the ferry from Piraeus arrives late, the taverna may be busier than usual with newly arrived passengers. If you want a quieter table, time your visit accordingly. Bring a light layer for evening. The Meltemi drops at night, but the waterfront can still turn cool after dark, especially in late August and September. Don't rush. Anafi runs on its own tempo, and Akrogiali reflects that. If you need the bill, ask for it explicitly — it will not arrive uninvited. Pair a meal here with an evening at the port. Ormos Agiou Nikolaou is a natural gathering point on the island once the day-heat drops. Eating at Akrogiali and then sitting with a glass of wine watching the ferries and fishing boats is a complete Anafi evening. What to Order The standout dishes across visitor accounts are grilled octopus, which benefits from the Cycladic tradition of slow-drying on lines before cooking, and fried zucchini topped with grated hard cheese — a simple but well-executed meze that pairs well with cold beer or a carafe of house white. Keftedes, the pan-fried meatballs seasoned with herbs, are a consistent presence on the menu and worth ordering if you want something off the seafood track. Tzatziki here follows the standard Greek preparation — thick strained yogurt, cucumber, garlic, and olive oil — and functions well as part of a shared spread of starters. Fresh fish, when available, is priced by weight as is customary in Greek tavernas. The server will usually bring the catch to the table to show you before you commit, along with the price. Grilled whole fish over charcoal is the preparation to choose if quality is high; fried options are also available for smaller fish. For dessert, Greek coffee and seasonal fruit are the most reliable options. The sweet ending at a place like this is less about the dessert menu and more about a slow second carafe and watching the port settle into the evening.

155m away2 min walk
Astrachan
4.3
Astrachan

Astrachan is one of the few full-service tavernas on Anafi, a small Cycladic island with no airport, one main settlement, and a ferry connection that keeps things deliberately low-key. On an island this size, a restaurant rated 4.3 out of 5 across 35 reviews is not a number to dismiss — it reflects a consistent local operation that repeat visitors and curious first-timers alike tend to return to. The taverna sits along the Epar.Od. Anafis road, the main artery that threads through the island and connects the port area to Anafi Town (also known as Chora) further up the hillside. With fewer than a handful of restaurants on the whole island, Astrachan occupies a straightforward position: it is one of the places where you actually eat on Anafi, and by most accounts it does that job well. Anafi itself draws travelers who have already been everywhere else — people who want genuine quiet, cliff-top monasteries, and a harbor where fishing boats still outnumber tourist yachts. Eating at a place like Astrachan is part of that experience: no elaborate menus, no fusion, just Greek taverna cooking in a setting that makes sense for where you are. What to Expect Astrachan operates as a traditional Greek taverna, which in practice means a menu built around the fundamentals of Greek home cooking — grilled fish and meat, seasonal vegetables, salads dressed with local olive oil, and dishes that vary depending on what came in fresh that day or that week. On an island as small as Anafi, supply lines are limited and the kitchen works with what's available, which generally means fresher ingredients and fewer options than a tourist-facing restaurant on a larger island. The setting is relaxed and unfussy. Anafi's entire social pace is slow, and a meal at Astrachan reflects that. There is no pressure to turn tables quickly; the island doesn't have the tourist volume that demands it. You can expect to sit, order at a calm pace, and finish a meal without being rushed. With 35 Google reviews and a 4.3 rating, the taverna has built its reputation gradually and honestly. On an island that sees limited visitor numbers, that review count reflects genuine repeat engagement rather than passing tourist traffic. Portions at traditional Greek tavernas of this type tend to be generous, and sharing plates is the norm — ordering a spread of starters and a main between two people is a practical approach. Drinks will follow standard Greek taverna patterns: local wine served in carafes, cold beer, soft drinks, and likely the house option of raki or ouzo to close a meal. Prices on Anafi are generally moderate given the limited competition and the cost of supplying a remote island, though no specific pricing information is available for Astrachan at the time of writing. How to Get There Astrachan is located on the Epar.Od. Anafis road on Anafi, with coordinates placing it at approximately 36.3505°N, 25.7673°E. On an island this small, navigation is straightforward: there is essentially one main road, and most of the island's services sit along it or just off it between the port and Chora. If you're staying in Anafi Town (Chora), the walk down toward the port area and along the main road is manageable on foot in reasonable footwear. If you're arriving by ferry, the port sits at the northern edge of the island, and the road leading inland will pass or connect to most of the island's restaurants and services. Anafi has no public bus service in the traditional sense, though a small vehicle sometimes runs between the port and Chora, particularly during ferry arrivals. A rental scooter or ATV — available from a small number of operators on the island — makes getting around easier if you're planning to explore beyond the immediate port and Chora area. There is no need for car navigation apps on Anafi; the road network is simple enough to follow on foot or by reference to a printed map. Parking is not a meaningful concern on an island of this size. Best Time to Visit Anafi's tourist season runs from late June through early September, with August being the peak month when ferry connections from Santorini and other Cycladic islands bring the largest number of visitors. Even at peak season, Anafi remains one of the quieter Cycladic islands — it actively resists the infrastructure of mass tourism — so Astrachan is unlikely to be overwhelmed in the way a popular taverna on Mykonos or Ios might be. For dining specifically, the standard Greek island timing applies: lunch from roughly 1pm to 3pm, and dinner from 7:30pm onward, with the main dinner sitting typically happening between 8pm and 10pm. Arriving early for dinner avoids any wait for tables, though Anafi's pace rarely creates the kind of queues seen on larger islands. Shoulder season — June and September — offers the most pleasant eating conditions: warm evenings without August's peak heat, and a quieter atmosphere overall. Outside of those months, Anafi has very limited visitor services, and it is worth confirming whether Astrachan is open before planning a visit in spring or autumn. No specific seasonal hours are available for the restaurant. What to Order As a traditional Greek taverna, Astrachan's menu will follow the patterns common across the Cyclades. A reliable approach is to start with a selection of mezedes — small plates that might include tzatziki, taramosalata, grilled bread, stuffed vine leaves, or whatever the kitchen is preparing that day. For mains, grilled fish is the obvious choice on a Cycladic island: fresh catch will typically include whatever the local boats brought in, often lavraki (sea bass) or tsipoura (sea bream) sold by weight. Grilled lamb or pork chops are a dependable alternative, as is a slow-cooked meat stew if the kitchen is running one. Greek salad with Cycladic cheese — often a local variant of white cheese rather than the standard feta found elsewhere — is worth ordering as a side. Ask the staff what came in fresh that day or what the kitchen is particularly focused on; in a small taverna on a remote island, that question often produces the best result. Tips for Visiting Confirm opening hours before you go. Anafi's restaurants sometimes keep irregular hours based on the season, ferry arrivals, and how many guests are on the island that week. No posted hours are available online; ask at your accommodation or check locally. Arrive with cash. Card payment infrastructure on Anafi is limited, and a small taverna on a remote island may not reliably accept cards. Having euros on hand avoids any awkward situations. Don't expect a printed English menu. Smaller tavernas on islands like Anafi often run a daily menu or communicate dishes verbally. Basic Greek food vocabulary — or a willingness to ask and point — goes a long way. Order at the pace the island moves. A meal at Astrachan is not a quick stop. Build in time for a relaxed lunch or dinner; rushing through a meal is the wrong approach for Anafi in general. Ask about local catch. The freshest fish will be whatever came off the boats most recently. On a small island, the kitchen usually knows exactly where the fish came from. Plan dinner around the sunset. Anafi's west-facing views make early evening light striking. Timing a meal to start after sunset means you can watch the light change from wherever you are and then sit down to eat without feeling you've missed anything. Book ahead in August if you can. While Anafi stays quiet by Cycladic standards, August does bring a meaningful increase in visitors, and a small restaurant with limited seating can fill up. Contact through your accommodation host or ask in person earlier in the day.

182m away2 min walk
Floarans cafe
4.7
Floarans cafe

Floarans Cafe sits at the port of Agios Nikolaos — the small harbour that serves as Anafi's main arrival and departure point. Whether you've just stepped off the ferry at an awkward early hour or you're killing time before a late-night sailing, this is the most consistently reliable spot on the island for a coffee or a drink. With a 4.7 rating across 112 Google reviews, the cafe has earned genuine loyalty from both islanders and the steady trickle of travellers who make it to one of the Cyclades' more remote outposts. Anafi sees a fraction of the traffic that Santorini, visible on a clear day to the west, absorbs — so a place that works this well and stays open around the clock is more valuable here than it would be anywhere else in the archipelago. The place types listed for Floarans suggest it covers more ground than a standard Greek kafeneion: coffee shop, bar, snack restaurant, and food store all feature. In practice, that means you can start the morning with a freddo espresso, return mid-afternoon for something cold, and end the evening with a beer or a glass of wine at the same waterfront table. What to Expect Floarans is firmly in the casual, all-day category. The setting is the port of Agios Nikolaos, which means you're looking directly out over the small harbour — fishing boats, the occasional catamaran, and on ferry days the Blue Star or Seajets vessel that briefly turns Anafi into somewhere slightly busier than usual. The menu covers the ground you'd expect from a Greek island cafe-bar hybrid: Greek coffee, filter coffee, freddo cappuccino and espresso, cold frappes, fresh juices, soft drinks, beer, and spirits. The food offer leans toward lighter fare — snacks, small bites — though the Google place types include pizza restaurant, suggesting at least some cooked food is available. Because no menu details are published, confirm specifics when you arrive or by calling ahead. The interior is compact and relaxed; most people gravitate toward the outdoor seating that looks onto the port. The pace is slow by design. Anafi is not an island that rushes anything, and Floarans fits that rhythm exactly. Staff are accustomed to visitors who arrive on the ferry with no accommodation booked and no particular plan — it's that kind of place. The 24-hour listing is unusual and worth noting. On an island this size, round-the-clock opening suggests the cafe also functions as a practical hub: the place to be when the ferry arrives at 2 a.m., or when nothing else on the island is showing any sign of life. How to Get There Floarans Cafe is at the port of Agios Nikolaos, which sits on Anafi's northern coast. If you've arrived by ferry, you're already within a short walk — the harbour is small enough that the cafe is visible from the dock area. The road from Anafi's main village (Chora) runs down to the port; it's roughly a 2–3 km drive or a longer walk along the main island road (Epar.Od. Anafis). Taxis and transfer vehicles typically meet ferries at Agios Nikolaos. If you're staying in Chora and want to come down to the port, the easiest option is to arrange transport or rent a scooter — the descent is manageable but the return uphill is steep on foot in summer heat. Parking at the port is informal; there's no dedicated car park, but the road widens near the harbour and vehicles park along the verge. Accessibility to the cafe itself depends on the exact layout of the port terrace — worth checking if mobility is a concern, as Greek island port paths can include uneven stone surfaces. Best Time to Visit Anafi is a summer island. The ferry service from Piraeus and from Santorini becomes more frequent between June and September, and most of the island's cafes, tavernas, and rooms-to-let operate only during this window. Floarans, with its 24-hour listing, appears to run year-round or at least through a longer season than most. For the most atmospheric visit, arrive in the early morning when fishing boats are returning to port, or in the late afternoon when the light softens and the heat of the day breaks. Ferry arrival times — which on Greek island routes often fall in the middle of the night or at dawn — create a natural burst of activity at the port, and Floarans is the obvious place to decompress after a sea crossing. July and August bring the most visitors to Anafi, though the island never approaches the density of Ios or Mykonos. Even at peak season, you should find a seat. Spring (May–June) and early autumn (September) offer calmer conditions and a more local crowd. Tips for Visiting Call ahead if you need food: The number on file is +30 2286 061201. Given the island's limited restaurant options, it's worth confirming what's available, especially outside high season. Treat it as a base for the port area: If you're waiting for a ferry, Floarans is the practical answer. Most Anafi departures and arrivals pass through Agios Nikolaos, and there are few alternatives open at odd hours. Bring cash: Anafi has very limited ATM infrastructure. While many island businesses have adapted to card payments, small cafes in remote Cyclades ports still sometimes prefer cash, particularly for small orders. Check the Instagram account: The handle florans_anafi is active and is a reliable way to get a current feel for the menu, any seasonal offerings, and whether the kitchen side of the operation is running during your visit. Pair the stop with a walk along the port: Agios Nikolaos has a small beach and a harbour walkway. A coffee at Floarans and a slow circuit of the waterfront accounts for an easy hour in the morning or evening. Don't arrive expecting a full restaurant experience: The core offer is coffee, drinks, and snacks. If you want a sit-down meal with grilled fish and a bottle of wine, you'll need one of Anafi's dedicated tavernas, most of which are in or near Chora. High-season ferry days are the busiest: When the ferry from Santorini or Piraeus is due, the port comes alive briefly. If you prefer quiet, time your visit for mid-morning on a non-ferry day. What to Order Coffee is the anchor. In Greece that means a range of options: a short, strong Greek coffee made in a briki, a frothy freddo espresso over ice, a freddo cappuccino, or a long frappe — the whipped instant-coffee drink that remains the everyday choice for many Greeks on hot days. All of these should be on offer. Beyond coffee, the bar side of the operation covers the standard Greek island range: cold beers (typically Mythos or Fix on tap or in bottles), local spirits, wine, and soft drinks. The food offer — snacks, light bites, and apparently some pizza — is better confirmed by phone or on arrival rather than assumed from the category tags. If you're heading to the island for the first time and arrive on an early ferry, a Greek coffee and a koulouri (sesame bread ring) or a small cheese pie is the logical first stop before finding your accommodation and working out the rest of the day.

251m away3 min walk

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Route Path

1
Chora
2
Kleisidi
3
Anafi Port

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single
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