Santorini is the caldera-rim Cycladic island of postcard fame, with whitewashed villages of Oia and Fira cascading down cliffs above a flooded volcanic crater. Beyond the sunset crowds, it offers black-sand beaches, ancient Akrotiri ruins, and a serious assyrtiko wine scene grown in volcanic soil.
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Quick facts
Timezone
Athens
Currency
€ EUR
Language
Greek
City transfer
~15 min
Bus / Taxi / Transfer
Best time to visit
best weatherdeals available
Don't miss
Oia sunset from the Byzantine Castle ruins: arrive at least 90 minutes early (the crowd is enormous in high season) and position yourself on the castle walls rather than the main terrace — better sightlines, less jostling. Alternatively, watch the same sunset from Imerovigli for half the crowd.
Assyrtiko wine tasting at Santo Wines or Estate Argyros: Santorini's volcanic-soil Assyrtiko is one of the world's great white wines and costs a fraction of what you'd pay in a restaurant — book a tasting session at Estate Argyros in Episkopi Gonia for a proper winemaker experience, not a tourist tasting room.
Ancient Akrotiri archaeological site: this Bronze Age Minoan city buried by the eruption is extraordinary — often called the 'Greek Pompeii'. Visit when it opens at 8am before the heat and crowds build; the on-site museum is included in the ticket (€12).
Perissa black-sand beach on the south coast: avoid the tourist-trap sun-lounger beaches near Fira and head to Perissa — the black volcanic sand is genuinely striking, the tavernas are cheaper, and you can walk to Mesa Vouno (the ancient Mesa Vouno path leads up to Ancient Thira ruins for free).
Weekend itinerary · 3 days
Day 1
Fira caldera walk to Imerovigli
The clifftop path from Fira north to Imerovigli (and eventually Oia, 10km total) is the island's most rewarding walk — start early morning before 8am for cool air and calm light. Imerovigli's Skaros Rock viewpoint is outstanding and usually crowd-free.
Museum of Prehistoric Thira, Fira
The best museum on the island — artefacts from ancient Akrotiri including the famous blue monkeys fresco. Takes 45 minutes, costs €6, closes at 3pm so plan accordingly.
Oia village exploration
Walk Oia's car-free main lane in the late afternoon — explore the blue-domed churches, the art galleries, and the naval museum before the sunset crowd takes over.
Roka, Oia
Small, family-run taverna tucked off the main path — proper Greek home cooking (stuffed tomatoes, fresh octopus) at prices that feel like another era compared to the caldera-view restaurants.
Day 2
Ancient Akrotiri archaeological site
Open from 8am — arrive right at opening for the best experience. The Bronze Age settlement under its protective roof is genuinely one of the most impressive archaeological sites in Greece. Buy tickets online to skip queues (€12).
Red Beach
A short walk from Akrotiri — the dramatic red volcanic cliffs are unlike anything else in Greece. Go before 11am before it gets crowded, and be careful on the cliff path. Swimming is good but bring your own shade.
Perissa black-sand beach afternoon
Drive or bus around to the east coast for a late afternoon swim on the black-sand beach — quieter than the caldera side, excellent beachside tavernas, and you can walk up to Ancient Thira on the ridge above.
Metaxy Mas, Exo Gonia
The best traditional taverna on the island — buried in a village inland, so locals actually eat here. The fava (yellow split-pea dip), grilled octopus, and tomato keftedes are essential. Book ahead.
Day 3
Pyrgos village morning
Drive up to the highest village on the island before 9am — walk the medieval kasteli streets, have coffee at Franco's, and look out over the entire island. Completely calm on weekday mornings.
Assyrtiko wine tasting
Book a morning tasting at Estate Argyros or Domaine Sigalas — both offer proper vineyard tours with the winemaker's story, not just a poured glass. The basket-trained vines (kouloura method) are a UNESCO candidate and worth understanding.
Megalochori village & Venetian campaniles
The most unspoiled village on Santorini — walk the lane past the 17th-century church with its three-bell campanile and find the quiet square that sees almost no tourists.
1800, Oia
Set in a restored sea captain's mansion with one of the best caldera terraces on the island — splurge on the tasting menu for a final night, the Santorini fava with caviar is the standout dish.
Travel tips
- →Watch sunset from Imerovigli or a Oia rooftop bar — not the packed Oia castle viewpoint
- →Avoid July and August: crippling crowds, peak prices, and cruise-ship day floods
- →Rent an ATV or small car to escape Fira; the south of the island is quieter and cheaper
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