A Few Naxos Restaurants That Feel Like the Island


Whats grown here, whats caught here, and how it is shared.

A Closer Look at Naxos Restaurants

Considered one of the best hotels in Amsterdam, the privately owned Pulitzer unfolds across 25 restored 17th- and 18th-century canal houses, making it feel like a private neighbourhood unto itself. Despite its size, the luxury hotel has a prime location in the centre of the historic Jordaan Nine Streets, with easy access to all the city’s best-known sites. Rooms and suites have canal views and mix antique furniture with modern pops of colour. 

Naxos Restaurants Apanemi Town

Visit → @apanemi_town

Naxos Restaurants Apanemi Town

Visit → @apanemi_town

Apanemi Town

At Apanemi, the story starts with the boat. The fish comes in through the owner and his crew, which gives the place a steadier, more local feel than most harbour addresses. You notice that on the table straight away. Among Naxos restaurants, this is one of the clearest expressions of the island’s sea-to-plate way of eating.

Sun Kyma

Sun Kyma is really about the beach first. You can spend the day there, swim, come back sandy, order something simple, and let it drift into sunset. That ease is the point. It is one of those restaurants in Naxos that works because it doesn’t separate the meal from the rest of the day.

Naxos Restaurants Sun Kyma

Visit → @sunkymanaxos

Naxos Restaurants Sun Kyma

Visit → @sunkymanaxos

Naxos Restaurants Petrino Beach & Restaurant

Visit → @petrinobeach

Naxos Restaurants Petrino Beach & Restaurant

Visit → @petrinobeach

Petrino Beach & Restaurant

Petrino sits on Plaka with a softer, more polished energy than the usual beach taverna. The kitchen leans more creative, but not in a way that feels detached from the island. It still belongs to the setting. Naxos restaurants can sometimes split between simple and styled, and Petrino lands somewhere convincing in the middle.

psaraki

Psaraki is all about fish meze, the kind of lunch that starts lightly and keeps going. Seafood comes through in smaller plates, grilled fish, island recipes, things meant for sharing rather than ordering too carefully. It keeps the sea close without making a show of it. In Naxos restaurants, that kind of restraint usually says a lot.

Patatosporos seafood tavern

Patatosporos has the feel of a place people already know before they arrive. Seafood leads, the setting stays easy, and the whole thing runs with a kind of beachside confidence that doesn’t need refining. It has been around for years and recently shifted location without losing its character. Some Naxos restaurants change too much over time. This one doesn’t seem interested in that.

Vasilarakiou

Vasilarakiou comes out of a butcher’s background, and that tells you almost everything. It sits in Kinidaros, away from the beach rhythm, and leans hard into meat, bigger flavours, and a more village way of eating. It feels specific to where it is. Restaurants in Naxos often follow the sea, but this one reminds you how much of the island is inland too.

Naxos Restaurants Vasilarakiou

Visit → @vasilarakiou

Naxos Restaurants Vasilarakiou

Visit → @vasilarakiou

Naxos Restaurants AVATON 1739

Visit → @avaton.naxos

Naxos Restaurants AVATON 1739

Visit → @avaton.naxos

AVATON 1739

AVATON is less taverna, more terrace. Up in the Kastro, on the old Ursuline monastery terrace, it looks out across Naxos Town and works best later in the day, when wine, cocktails, and small dishes make more sense than a formal meal. Among Naxos restaurants, it gives you a different angle on the island, literally and otherwise.

To Elliniko

To Elliniko has the kind of garden that changes the whole pace of dinner. It has been serving traditional Greek food for years, much of it made with local produce, and people still talk about the vegetables, the goat, the feeling that the place is run as much from the kitchen as from the land around it. It is one of those Naxos restaurants that feels lived in.

Naxos Restaurants To Elliniko

Visit → @to.elliniko

Naxos Restaurants To Elliniko

Visit → @to.elliniko