Mykonos Folklore Museum
The Mykonos Folklore Museum is the small, old-school counterweight to the island's beach clubs and sunset queues. It sits in Kastro, a short walk from Panagia Paraportiani, inside an 18th-century captain's house full of domestic objects, ship models, textiles, icons, maps, and the kind of local evidence that makes Mykonos feel like a lived-in island again.
Photos: dronepicr (CC BY 2.0), Warren LeMay from Chicago, IL, United States (CC BY-SA 2.0), Roberto Faccenda (CC BY-SA 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Worth it if you want a real cultural breather in Mykonos Town and can confirm it is open. It is small, sometimes awkward to plan around, and not essential for a first-time beach-heavy trip.
Worth it for
- Travelers who want local history beyond nightlife and shopping
- Visitors already walking around Kastro, Paraportiani, and Little Venice
You can skip if
- You only want major archaeological museums or polished exhibits
- You cannot confirm opening status before your visit
Tickets & tours for Mykonos Folklore Museum
Which ticket should you buy?
Why Go
This is not a glossy museum with big screens and dramatic staging. Its value is quieter: rooms of furniture, lamps, keys, weights, ceramics, needlework, prints, and nautical material that show how Mykonians lived before tourism became the island's main industry.
Go if you want a short cultural stop in Chora that gives context to the whitewashed lanes outside. Skip it if you only have one hour in Mykonos and want the postcard circuit of Paraportiani, Little Venice, and the windmills.
What You See
The main Kastro house holds the core of the Folklore Collection of Mykonos, founded in 1958 by Professor Vasilis Kyriazopoulos. Expect a dense, personal collection rather than a sparse modern gallery: household rooms, old island furnishings, local textiles, Byzantine icons, folk ceramics, historical prints, and maritime objects.
The strongest material is tied to Mykonos as a seafaring place. Ship models, maps, manuscripts, photographs, and old tools make the museum more interesting than its modest scale suggests.
The Setting
The location does a lot of the work. Kastro is the oldest part of Mykonos Town, and the museum is only a short walk from Panagia Paraportiani and the waterfront edge of Little Venice.
That also means narrow lanes, uneven surfaces, summer heat, and crowd choke points near sunset. If the museum is open, use it as a pause before the evening crush rather than trying to squeeze it in during the busiest photo hour.
How To Plan It
Local listings have marked the main Kastro building as under renovation, with reopening expected in summer 2026, so check the official site (mykonosfolkloremuseum.gr) or call before you go. Older seasonal hours floating around online conflict with each other, which is common for small island museums.
When it was last running on a normal schedule, it opened in two blocks (roughly late morning and again in the evening, closed Sunday, April to October), but treat that as a rough guide and confirm. Plan about 30 to 45 minutes inside. Pair it with Paraportiani, Little Venice, the Old Port waterfront, or Lena's House and Boni's Windmill, which belong to the same folklore collection but are separate sites.
Mykonos Folklore Museum: FAQs
Check before you go. Local listings have marked the main Kastro building as under renovation, with reopening expected in summer 2026, while older listings still show seasonal hours. Confirm on the official site or by phone.
No. Lena's House is an annex of the Mykonos Folklore Museum collection, but it is a separate 19th-century house museum in Chora, named after its last resident, Lena Skrivanou.
About 30 to 45 minutes is enough for most visitors. Add more time only if you like folk objects, old maps, ship models, and local archives.
Only for children who handle small museums well. It is short and concrete, but it is not a hands-on children's museum.
Accessibility may be difficult, since the main site is an old captain's house in Kastro reached through narrow pedestrian lanes. Ask the museum directly before planning a visit with mobility needs.
Yes, that is the best way to do it. Combine it with Panagia Paraportiani, Little Venice, the Old Port, and the windmills rather than making a separate trip across the island.
Explore more in Mykonos
Plan your trip
- Best time to visit Mykonos
- Day trips from Mykonos
- One Day in Mykonos: Chora, the Windmills, and One Honest Beach Break
- Two Days in Mykonos: Town, Delos, and One Proper Swim
- 3 Days in Mykonos: Chora, Delos, Ano Mera, and the Beaches That Are Actually Worth Your Time
- Mykonos With Kids: Beaches First, Party Island Second
- Mykonos at Night: Chora, Sunsets, and Whether You Actually Want the Beach Clubs
- Mykonos When It Rains: Museums, Churches, and Long Lunches in Chora
- Delos vs Little Venice: which Mykonos classic to pick
- Mykonos Town vs the Beaches: where to stay
Where to next?
One short email, twice a month: handpicked experiences, hidden-gem cities, and the best windows to book them.