Little Venice (Mikri Venetia)
Little Venice is the waterfront corner of Chora that actually earns some of the Mykonos hype. Old sea captains' houses stand right over the Aegean, with the Kato Mili windmills in the same frame. It looks great at sunset. It is also crowded, windy, and priced for people who do not mind paying for the view.
Photos: Bernard Gagnon (CC BY-SA 3.0), dronepicr (CC BY 2.0), Julian Lupyan (CC0), via Wikimedia Commons
Little Venice is worth seeing, but it works best as a timed stop rather than your whole evening, unless you are fine paying Mykonos sunset prices. Go early to keep your sanity, or at sunset for the full visual hit.
Worth it for
- First-time visitors who want the classic Mykonos waterfront view
- Photographers who can arrive early or wait out the light
- Travelers walking Chora, the windmills, and Panagia Paraportiani in one loop
You can skip if
- You hate tight crowds and slow, clogged lanes
- You are after a beach or somewhere to swim
- You do not want to pay premium prices for a waterfront drink
Tickets & tours for Little Venice (Mikri Venetia)
Which ticket should you buy?
What You Are Seeing
Little Venice, also called Mikri Venetia, sits in the Alefkandra area on the western edge of Mykonos Town. The houses date to around the 18th century and were tied to wealthy sea captains and merchants, which is why they meet the water the way they do: balconies, doors, and old storage spaces sit almost at sea level.
This is not a monument with one entrance. It is a lived-in neighborhood that has been heavily commercialized, now full of bars, restaurants, guesthouses, galleries, and people lining up for the same photo. The draw is the setting, not anything you go inside to see.
Why It Works
The angle is simple and it lands: white walls, painted wooden balconies, waves breaking against the stone, and the row of windmills just across the water. Catch it in good light and the place looks almost unreasonably photogenic.
The problem is that everyone else has read the same memo. Near sunset the alleys jam up, the waterfront tables get pricey, and getting a clean shot turns into a bit of a scrum. Come for the scene, take it in, then move on before the crowd starts to wear on you.
How To Visit
If you are staying in Chora, just walk. The town core is pedestrianized and Little Venice sits between the Kastro area, the Old Port waterfront, and the Kato Mili windmills. From Fabrika bus station it is well under 10 minutes on foot, more if you keep stopping or lose the thread of the lanes.
Coming from the New Port at Tourlos, the easy public option is the Mykonos SeaBus across to the Old Port, then a short walk along the front (the crossing itself takes only a few minutes). From the airport, KTEL buses run to the Fabrika station in season, but timetables shift and seats are not guaranteed, so check the day before.
Best Time To Go
Sunset is the postcard moment and also the most stressful time to be standing there. If you want a drink with that view, book ahead or accept that a front-row table may come with a steep bill.
For something calmer, go early in the morning or about an hour before sunset, walk the lanes, then head up toward the windmills for the wider angle. In July and August the midday heat and the glare bouncing off all that white can be rough.
Little Venice (Mikri Venetia): FAQs
Yes. It is a public neighborhood, not a ticketed attraction. You only pay if you sit down for food or drinks, or book a guided walk or boat trip.
Travelers know it as Little Venice. Greek and local references use Mikri Venetia, and the wider area is known as Alefkandra.
About 30 to 60 minutes covers a walk, photos, and a look along the waterfront. Add time if you want a sunset drink or dinner.
For the classic view with the windmills, yes. Just know it is not a quiet sunset spot in high season. If you want room to breathe, watch from up by the Kato Mili windmills or come earlier.
No, do not treat it as a beach. The water meets stone walls and restaurant terraces, and waves can splash hard when the wind picks up. For swimming, use proper beaches like Megali Ammos, Ornos, or Agios Ioannis.
It helps if you want Mykonos Town context, since a route often ties together the windmills, Panagia Paraportiani, Kastro, and the old harbor. If all you want is the view, go on your own.
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?
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