Santorini
Greece

Santorini

Volcanic beauty

By Elena Marchetti/ Senior Travel Editor

Why Santorini, and why now.

Santorini is stunning and crowded in equal measure, and the luxury here is buying back the space. Wake at seven in a cliffside cave suite and the caldera is yours, arrive at the Oia sunset with the day-trippers and you are one of thousands. Where and when you stay decides which Santorini you get.

The island is small, but the villages could not be more different. Oia is the famous, busy beauty, Imerovigli is the quieter rim the repeat visitors keep, Pyrgos and the interior hold the food and the calm the cruise crowds never find. Pick your village before your hotel.

Top neighbourhoods

Oia

The famous one, blue domes, the sunset, and the crowds by mid-morning. Stay here only with a private terrace and plunge pool, so you can retreat when the lanes fill.

Imerovigli

The highest, quietest point on the caldera rim, the same drama as Oia with a fraction of the foot traffic. Where people who have been before choose to stay.

Fira

The lively capital, bars, buses, and easy walking to restaurants. Practical and social, not romantic. Best for a first night or a younger trip.

Pyrgos

Inland and medieval, hilltop views that rival the caldera, better food at lower prices, and almost no crowds. The insider's base, if you will rent a car.

Best time to visit Santorini

Late May, June, and September are the sweet spot: warm enough to swim, long golden evenings, and the cruise calendar not yet at its peak. Avoid late July and early August, when the heat, the crowds, and the prices are all at their worst. April, early May, and October are quieter and cheaper, though some hotels and restaurants are still opening or already closing for the season. For the best balance of weather and value, aim for the second half of September.

Best luxury hotels in Santorini