Agios Prokopios Beach
Agios Prokopios is the easy answer when you want Naxos at its most polished: clear water, thick pale sand, tavernas close by, and frequent buses from Chora about 5 km away. It is popular for good reasons, which also means July and August bring crowded sunbed rows, busy roads, and almost no chance of having the place to yourself.
Photos: Jules Verne Times Two (CC BY-SA 4.0), ambabheg (CC BY 2.0), Manfred Werner (Tsui) (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Agios Prokopios is well worth it if you want a good looking, low effort beach day on Naxos. It is not the island at its wildest or most peaceful, but for clear water and easy logistics this close to Chora, little else competes.
Worth it for
- Travelers without a car who want clear water, food, shade rentals, and an easy bus ride
- Families, first time Naxos visitors, and anyone who prefers a serviced beach over a remote one
You can skip if
- You want isolation, quiet, or an undeveloped shoreline in high season
- You dislike paying for shade and would rather skip the beach bars, sunbed rows, and summer traffic
Tickets & tours for Agios Prokopios Beach
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What Makes It Special
The beach sits on the west coast of Naxos near the village of Agios Prokopios, roughly 5 km from Chora and a short walk from Agia Anna. The water is usually the main event: clear, easy to wade into, with a sandy bottom instead of sharp rocks.
The sand is coarser than the powder you get on some Cycladic beaches, which is actually handy in the wind because it does not stick to everything the way fine sand does. The organized stretch has umbrellas, sunbeds, cafes, tavernas, mini markets, and water sports nearby, so you can do a full beach day without hauling half your room down with you.
The Crowd Tradeoff
This is not the beach to pick if you want quiet in peak season. The southern and eastern parts fill first because they sit closest to the restaurants, beach bars, bus stops, and accommodation, and the feel there leans more resort strip than sleepy island shore.
The payoff is convenience. You can swim, eat, rent shade, grab sunscreen, book an activity, and get back to Naxos Town without a car. For plenty of travelers that is worth sharing the sand. For others, Plaka or a less developed beach will sit better.
Where To Settle
For the simplest day, head to the main organized section near the village and the beach road. That is where the food, shade, and transport are easiest to reach, and also where you will compete hardest for a front row sunbed.
For more room, walk toward the quieter end of the beach away from the busiest cluster. It is still Agios Prokopios, so do not expect an empty shoreline in August, but you get more space and a better read on the coastline.
How To Fit It Into Naxos
Treat Agios Prokopios as a relaxed half day or full day rather than a quick photo stop. Come in the morning, swim before the heat builds, eat nearby, then decide whether to walk south toward Agia Anna or push on along the coast toward Plaka.
At the northern end of the beach you will find an old saltpan, now a small marsh that locals call Kokkini Limni, the Red Lake. It is not a polished sight, but the migrating birds that stop there give a beach day that otherwise revolves around swimming and sunbeds a different texture.
Agios Prokopios Beach: FAQs
Yes. Getting onto the beach itself costs nothing. Sunbeds, umbrellas, water sports, food, drinks, and other services cost extra, and prices vary by operator and time of year.
Take the public KTEL bus from the Naxos Town terminal near the port toward Agios Prokopios, Agia Anna, and Plaka (the line that serves these beaches). In summer it runs often, but schedules shift by season, so check the current KTEL Naxos timetable before you go.
Yes, it is one of the easier Naxos beaches with kids: the entry is gentle, the bottom is sandy, and food and shops are close. The catch is crowding in peak summer, so mornings are much calmer with children.
Very little. Plan on renting an umbrella or bringing serious sun protection. The Cycladic sun is brutal from late morning through mid afternoon.
Yes. This is one of the better Naxos beaches for car free travelers thanks to the regular bus from Chora in the main season. Taxis work too, but they can be hard to grab at busy times.
Agios Prokopios is the most convenient and most developed of the three. Agia Anna feels smaller and more compact, while Plaka gives you more space and a looser day if you do not mind traveling a bit farther.
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