Hotels in Kolonaki Athens

Design, culture and a more considered side of Athens.

Kolonaki is the part of Athens where culture becomes part of daily life. A morning might begin at the Museum of Cycladic Art, continue through a gallery or bookshop and end over dinner a few streets away. Beneath Lycabettus Hill, elegant apartment buildings, independent boutiques and some of the city’s best restaurants create a neighbourhood that feels distinctly Athenian without relying on its ancient past. The best hotels in Kolonaki Athens reflect that same sensibility, thoughtful, well-designed and shaped by the neighbourhood around them.

Best For:

• Design-conscious city breaks
• Galleries, museums and culture
• Great restaurants and wine bars
• A more refined side of Athens

Skip if:

• You want Athens at its most energetic
• Markets and street life matter most
• Staying beside the Acropolis is a priority
• You prefer a more alternative atmosphere

Nearby Alternative:

Koukaki
Contemporary Athens and neighbourhood life

Monastiraki
Food, wine bars and city energy

Cool Hotels in Athens
Hotels with a stronger point of view

Why Stay in Kolonaki?

Kolonaki has long been associated with Athens’ cultural life. Museums, galleries, bookshops and some of the city’s best restaurants sit within a compact, walkable neighbourhood beneath Lycabettus Hill. While the area is often described as elegant, what stands out more is the concentration of things worth doing. You can spend an afternoon moving between exhibitions, cafés and independent boutiques without ever needing to cross the city. For travellers who enjoy design, culture and good food as much as major landmarks, few neighbourhoods make a stronger case.

The Best Hotels in Kolonaki Athens

These are the hotels in Kolonaki Athens we would book first, each chosen for the way they reflect one of the city’s most cultured and design-conscious neighbourhoods.

Shila

A collector’s house, creative salon and boutique stay hidden behind a quiet Kolonaki street.

Why stay here

Shila occupies a late-1920s neoclassical residence that feels less like a hotel and more like the home of someone endlessly curious. Original terrazzo floors, vintage furnishings, books, artwork and objects gathered over years of collecting create interiors that feel personal rather than designed. With just six suites, the atmosphere remains intimate throughout, helped by reading rooms, a rooftop garden and communal spaces that encourage lingering. The fictional muse behind the hotel may not exist, but her presence is felt everywhere. A stay built around character, conversation and beautiful things.

Best For

Design-conscious travellers, creative city breaks and guests who prefer hotels with a strong personality.

Monsieur Didot

A restored neoclassical residence shaped by the meeting point of Kolonaki and Exarchia.

Why stay here

Monsieur Didot occupies a beautifully restored early twentieth-century townhouse where original ceilings, hidden passages and period details remain central to the experience. The interiors balance that history with contemporary artwork, custom furniture and carefully curated objects that give each room its own character. What makes the hotel particularly interesting is its location. Positioned between elegant Kolonaki and creative Exarchia, it draws something from both neighbourhoods, combining cultural curiosity with a quieter sense of refinement. A hotel that feels as interested in ideas as aesthetics.

Best For

Book lovers, design-conscious travellers and guests drawn to Athens beyond its obvious landmarks.

The Modernist

A former embassy reimagined as one of Athens’ most confident contemporary hotels.

Why stay here

The Modernist occupies the former Canadian Embassy, a building that lends itself naturally to the hotel’s clean, considered approach. Rooms feel more like thoughtfully designed city apartments than traditional hotel accommodation, with custom furniture, warm materials and a strong sense of order throughout. What sets the hotel apart is its connection to modern Athens. The neighbourhood sits at the centre of the city’s gallery, museum and restaurant scene, while the hotel regularly hosts talks, vinyl sessions and events that bring guests into that world. A contemporary hotel that feels engaged with the city around it rather than separate from it.

Best For

Design-conscious city breaks, first visits to Athens and travellers who like to stay connected to local culture.

Open kitchen and busy dining room at Pharaoh, one of the most popular restaurants in Athens

Where to Eat Nearby

Pharaoh

Pharaoh has become one of the defining dining rooms in Athens, drawing a crowd that comes as much for the atmosphere as the food. Bold Greek cooking, thoughtful wines and spinning vinyl give the space its rhythm, while the open kitchen keeps the energy high throughout the evening. The kind of place where one bottle often becomes two.

Kolonaki or Monastiraki?

Kolonaki and Monastiraki offer two very different experiences of Athens. Monastiraki is shaped by markets, rooftop bars, restaurants and the constant movement of people through the city. Kolonaki feels more considered, built around galleries, museums, good restaurants and some of Athens’ most elegant streets. Both are highly walkable and well connected to the city’s major sights. If you want energy and activity on your doorstep, choose Monastiraki. If design, culture and good restaurants appeal more, Kolonaki makes the stronger case.

Stay Elsewhere in Athens

Monastiraki
Food, wine bars and city energy

Koukaki
Contemporary Athens and neighbourhood life

Cool Hotels in Athens
Hotels with a stronger point of view

Explore

Our perspective

Where you stay shapes how a place is experienced. Not through spectacle, but through atmosphere, detail, and the rhythm of daily life. Places that sit naturally within their surroundings, connected to food, people, and the way a day unfolds, where it feels easy to settle in and experience what is actually there.