Mykonos Greece

Mykonos Travel Guide: Beaches, Windmills & the Sacred Island of Delos

Mykonos is more than its reputation — windmills, Cycladic architecture, and the extraordinary archaeology of Delos sit alongside the beach clubs and late nights. Here's how to experience both sides of the island.

Mykonos has a reputation that precedes it — windmills, white walls, and parties that end at dawn. That reputation is earned, but it tells only part of the story. The island is also the jumping-off point for Delos, one of the most important archaeological sites in the ancient world, and home to a calmer shoulder season that reveals Cycladic architecture at its purest, fishing boats in a tiny harbour, and some of the finest beaches in Greece. There are two Mykonoses: know which one you’re going to.

Island

Mykonos, Cyclades, Greece

Currency

Euro (€)

Language

Greek

Timezone

EET — UTC+2 (EEST UTC+3 in summer)

Best Season

May–Jun, Sep

Visa

90 days visa-free (Schengen — Canadian passport)


Mykonos for Every Travel Style

Mykonos by Day

The island’s whitewashed Cycladic architecture, windmill-topped hill, and Little Venice waterfront are among the most photographed scenes in Greece — and genuinely as beautiful as the images suggest.

  • Chora’s lanes at dawn before anyone else is up — cool light and no crowds.
  • Little Venice for coffee at sunrise, watching fishing boats come in.
  • Delos by ferry — a 30-minute crossing to one of the ancient world’s most important sites.
  • The windmills at Kato Myli for the classic Mykonos panorama.
  • Ano Mera village and the Panagia Tourliani monastery — inland, quiet, very local.

Mykonos After Dark

Mykonos invented the Greek island party scene and has been perfecting it for fifty years. The sequence runs: beach bar at sunset, dinner at 10pm, clubs from 1am, breakfast at 7am.

  • Sunset cocktails at Little Venice — the bars hang directly over the water.
  • Scorpios beach club at dusk — the transition from beach to party, done beautifully.
  • Dinner at Kastro’s or Kikis Tavern — book well ahead in July/August.
  • Nammos and Cavo Paradiso for the proper late-night club experience.
  • Psarou Beach for the upscale beach club scene the next morning.

The Undiscovered Side of Mykonos

Beneath the party island is a Cycladic village with a long fishing tradition, exceptional local food, and an ancient neighbour that most visitors to Mykonos never visit. This is the side worth seeking.

  • Delos — a 30-minute ferry from the old port to an uninhabited sacred island of extraordinary ruins.
  • Kikis Tavern at Agios Sostis beach — no phone, cash only, no music. Possibly the best meal on the island.
  • Ano Mera village for Sunday lunch when locals come out — very un-Mykonos.
  • Elia Beach for a quieter, less commercial beach atmosphere.
  • The Lena’s House folk museum in Chora — a 19th-century Mykonian home preserved exactly as it was.

When to Go

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Great time to visitGoodAvoid

Spring

Apr – May

  • April is quiet — many businesses just reopening, some still closed. Beautiful and uncrowded.
  • May is the sweet spot before high season: warm days (22–26°C), the sea still cool but swimmable.
  • Best time to see the island as a place rather than a party — locals outnumber tourists.
  • Prices are significantly lower than summer; flights and accommodation easy to find.

Summer

Jun – Aug

  • This is peak Mykonos — the beaches are at full capacity, the parties run until sunrise.
  • June is the most balanced month: warm, buzzing, and not yet at capacity.
  • July and August are extreme — beautiful but expensive, crowded, and the meltemi wind can be fierce.
  • Book everything months in advance: flights, ferries, accommodation, and restaurants.

Autumn

Sep – Oct

  • September is arguably the best month — the sea is at peak temperature, crowds thin after Labour Day.
  • October is quieter still; some clubs and beach bars begin to close mid-month.
  • Prices drop noticeably after the first week of September.
  • Delos day trips are significantly less crowded in autumn — the archaeology is more enjoyable.

Winter

Nov – Mar

  • Mykonos in winter is largely closed — many hotels, restaurants, and beach bars shut entirely.
  • The island is beautiful in its emptiness but visitor infrastructure is minimal.
  • Ferries from Piraeus run less frequently; the journey is longer and rougher in winter.
  • A handful of local restaurants and a few hotels stay open year-round for those who seek it out.

Top Experiences

Chora & the Windmills

Chora & the Windmills

Why Go?

Mykonos Town (Chora) is what every Greek island town aspires to be — a labyrinth of narrow whitewashed lanes designed specifically to disorient would-be pirates, which now disorients tourists just as effectively. The windmills on the Kato Myli hill above Little Venice are the island’s defining image, and they’re exactly as good as the photographs suggest at sunset.

Best For

Photographers, architecture enthusiasts, and anyone who wants to feel the pure aesthetic achievement of Cycladic design.

Don’t Miss

Walking Chora’s lanes before 8am when the light is softest and the streets are empty — a completely different island to the one that appears after noon.

Delos: The Sacred Island

Delos: The Sacred Island

Why Go?

Thirty minutes by ferry from Mykonos’ old port lies Delos — an uninhabited island that was, in the ancient world, one of the most important religious and commercial centres in the Mediterranean. The birthplace of Apollo and Artemis, it’s now an extraordinary open-air archaeological site: intact mosaics, a terrace of marble lions, and ruins of a city that once held 30,000 people, all entirely car-free and almost unknown to the average Mykonos visitor.

Best For

History lovers, archaeology enthusiasts, and travellers wanting something completely unlike the beach bar next door.

Don’t Miss

The Terrace of the Lions — nine original marble lions guarding the Sacred Lake, dating to 600 BC. One of the finest sculptural ensembles in Greece.

The South Coast Beaches

The South Coast Beaches

Why Go?

Mykonos’ south coast faces the prevailing winds, which keeps the water crystal-clear and creates the conditions that made the island famous. Paradise and Super Paradise are the legendary party beaches; Elia is longer, calmer, and more mixed; Psarou is the upscale option. None of them is wrong — they’re just different answers to the same question of where to spend a perfect afternoon.

Best For

Everyone — with a different beach for every preference from all-night dancing to peaceful snorkelling.

Don’t Miss

Arriving at Psarou or Ornos Beach by water taxi from the old port — cheaper than a taxi, scenic, and you arrive directly on the sand.


Food & Drink

Mykonos food has two registers: the extraordinary and the extremely overpriced. The island produces some unique Cycladic ingredients — kopanisti cheese, louza cured pork, exceptional fresh fish — that appear on menus ranging from beachfront shacks to Michelin-listed restaurants. The trick is knowing which is which.

  • Kopanisti: A sharp, spicy, fermented cheese unique to Mykonos — spreadable, pungent, and unlike anything on the mainland. Order it as a meze with ouzo or tsipouro.
  • Louza: Cured pork loin seasoned with allspice and pepper — a Mykonian specialty you won’t find in Athens. Served thinly sliced as a meze.
  • Astakomakaronada: Lobster pasta — rich, expensive, and at its best at the waterfront restaurants in Chora. A Mykonos signature dish worth the splurge once.
  • Fresh grilled fish: Caught daily by the island’s still-active fishing fleet. Order from the old port tavernas for the most direct route from sea to plate.
  • Greek salad with barrel feta: Every island makes it; Mykonos versions use exceptional local tomatoes. Only order this from a proper taverna, never a beach club restaurant.

Know the Neighbourhoods

Chora (Mykonos Town)

Whitewashed Cycladic perfection — windmills, boutiques, Little Venice

Best for: Everything: shopping, dining, nightlife, photography, the windmills

  • Little Venice — bars and restaurants built directly over the water at the harbour’s edge.
  • The windmills at Kato Myli — best viewed from below at sunset.
  • Matoyianni Street for high-end boutiques; wander the adjacent lanes for independent shops.

Ano Mera

Inland village — traditional, local, very un-Mykonos

Best for: Those wanting to escape the tourist circuit and see everyday island life

  • Panagia Tourliani Monastery — 16th-century, with extraordinary carved marble entrance.
  • Sunday village square for coffee and people-watching with locals.
  • Several excellent traditional tavernas that never appear on tourist lists.

Paradise Beach

Party strip — beach clubs, DJs, the Mykonos of legend

Best for: Young travellers, nightlife seekers, the full beach-party experience

  • Cavo Paradiso — the outdoor club that has hosted every major DJ since the 1990s.
  • Paradise Beach Club for daytime beach-bar atmosphere.
  • Water sports and boat rental along the full beach stretch.

Elia Beach

Calmer south coast — quieter, longer beach, mixed crowd

Best for: Those wanting beach without the party, families, longer stretches of sand

  • The longest beach on the island — enough space to always find a quiet spot.
  • Excellent snorkelling at the rocky northern end.
  • More relaxed beach club atmosphere than Paradise — same clear water, less noise.

Getting There & Around

Getting There

  • Main airport: Mykonos Airport (JMK) — 3km from Mykonos Town. Direct flights from major European cities May–October; fewer winter connections.
  • By ferry from Athens: High-speed ferry from Piraeus takes 2 hours 20 minutes; conventional ferry takes 5 hours. Book ahead for July/August — they sell out.
  • From the airport: Taxis are limited and queue times can be long in peak season. KTEL bus runs to the town; water taxis from the port are scenic. Pre-arrange if arriving late.

Getting Around

  • KTEL buses: Run from the South Bus Station in Chora to the main beaches — cheap and reliable but crowded in peak season. Cash payment on board.
  • Water taxis: Connect the old port to south coast beaches — scenic, practical, and worth doing at least once. Priced per route, not metered.
  • Scooter or ATV rental: The most flexible way to explore. Roads are manageable; the island is small enough to circumnavigate in a day. Book early in peak season.

Respect the Culture, Fit Right In

LGBTQ+ Friendliness

  • Mykonos is one of the most LGBTQ+-friendly destinations in Europe — public displays of affection are entirely normal and welcomed.
  • Pride events and LGBTQ+-specific venues are well established, particularly in Chora.
  • The island has been a destination for the LGBTQ+ community since the 1970s — this is part of its identity, not an afterthought.
  • Super Paradise Beach has traditionally been a focal point for the LGBTQ+ crowd.
  • As with everywhere, read the room — small village squares and monasteries call for discretion.

At Restaurants & Bars

  • Mykonos is expensive — budget roughly double what you’d spend anywhere else in Greece.
  • Book restaurants well in advance for July and August; the best places fill weeks ahead.
  • Waterfront dining in Little Venice carries a premium; worth it once for the view.
  • Tipping 10% in cash is appreciated and expected at sit-down restaurants.
  • Service can be slow at beach clubs — it’s part of the pace. Don’t rush it.

Beach & Nightlife

  • Sun loungers at organised beaches require payment — expect €20–40 per pair in peak season.
  • Clubs open at 1am and peak between 3–5am — plan your dinner accordingly.
  • Water can be rough on the north coast when the meltemi wind blows; swim on the south coast instead.
  • Most venues are cash-only for drinks; bring enough before heading out.
  • The infamous Mykonos nightlife is genuinely intense in July/August — earplugs if you need sleep.

General Etiquette

  • The labyrinthine lanes of Chora were designed to disorient — getting lost is inevitable and part of the experience.
  • Monasteries and churches require covered shoulders and knees, even in high summer.
  • Mykonos cats are beloved locals — feel free to greet them, but don’t disturb them outside restaurants.
  • Noise levels in Chora late at night are significant — choose accommodation accordingly if you need early sleep.
  • Bargaining is not part of the culture here; prices in shops and restaurants are fixed.

Travel Tips

  • Best Time to Visit: May–June for the ideal balance: warm enough for beaches, the island fully open, and prices and crowds before the July/August peak. September is equally excellent.
  • Getting Around: KTEL buses are cheap for the main beaches; water taxis are scenic. Rent a scooter for the interior and north coast. Taxis are limited — don’t rely on them.
  • Currency & Payments: Mykonos is expensive — budget significantly more than other Greek islands. Cards work at most venues; bring cash for buses, smaller tavernas, and clubs.
  • Food & Drink: Book restaurants ahead for July/August. Kikis Tavern (Agios Sostis beach, cash only, no reservations) is worth the queue — arguably the best meal on the island.
  • Good to Know: Ferries to Delos run from the old port daily (weather permitting). Get there early — the afternoon boats get crowded and the midday heat on the unshaded site is intense.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the best time to visit Mykonos?
Jun – Aug and Sep – Oct are the best months to visit Mykonos. This is peak Mykonos — the beaches are at full capacity, the parties run until sunrise.
Do Canadians need a visa to visit Mykonos?
90 days visa-free (Schengen — Canadian passport)
What currency is used in Mykonos?
The currency is Euro (€). Cards are widely accepted at hotels and larger restaurants, though local cash is useful for markets, street food, and smaller vendors.
What is the easiest way to get around Mykonos?
KTEL buses: Run from the South Bus Station in Chora to the main beaches — cheap and reliable but crowded in peak season. Cash payment on board.
What cultural customs should visitors know before going to Mykonos?
Mykonos is one of the most LGBTQ+-friendly destinations in Europe — public displays of affection are entirely normal and welcomed. Pride events and LGBTQ+-specific venues are well established, particularly in Chora.

Ready to plan your Mykonos escape?

Mykonos rewards those who know when to go and what to look for beyond the beach clubs. The right timing, the right accommodation, and the right tavernas make all the difference. At Fly Away Travel Co., we know which Mykonos suits you. Contact us and let’s start planning.