Mount Zas and its Cave
Mount Zas is the high point of Naxos and the whole Cyclades, with a rough trail up to a summit around 1,003 metres and a cave tied to Zeus mythology partway up. This is not a polished attraction with handrails and timed entry. You go for the climb, the wide Aegean views, and the feeling of having earned the place.
Mount Zas earns the time if you want Naxos beyond the beaches and port-town evenings. The summit is the real payoff, but the cave and the Filoti approach still add up to a strong half-day if you would rather skip the full climb.
Worth it for
- Hikers who want the highest point in the Cyclades
- Travelers who like mythology with an actual landscape behind it
You can skip if
- You are visiting in peak summer and cannot start early
- You want an easy, shaded attraction with facilities
Tickets & tours for Mount Zas and its Cave
Which ticket should you buy?
Why It Matters
Zas is the mountain that gives Naxos its spine. Leave Filoti on foot and the island stops being a beach itinerary. It turns into dry stone walls, goats, springs, sharp limestone, and a summit that looks out across the Cyclades on a clear day.
The cave adds the myth and the archaeology. Local tradition ties it to Zeus, who was supposedly raised here, and excavations from the 1960s onward turned up material running from the Neolithic into Roman times. Inside it is dark and plain, with some stalactites and big chambers, but do not picture a lit show cave. The interest is in where it sits and what it connects to, not a production.
The Hike
Most people start from Filoti by way of Aria Spring and Zas Cave, or come up the Agia Marina side for a more direct line to the top. The full Filoti loop is the bigger day, usually clocked at around 12 to 13 km and five hours or more if you do the whole circuit.
Above the cave the path gets steep, rocky, and exposed. Painted marks and stacked cairns point the way, but it stays a mountain trail, not a paved promenade. Closed shoes, plenty of water, sun cover, and an early start matter far more than any notion of a relaxed island stroll.
The Cave
Zas Cave sits at roughly 630 metres on the mountain's flank. From Aria Spring the walk up to it is short, maybe 20 minutes, but the ground is loose and uneven in spots. A phone light barely cuts it inside, so pack a small torch if you actually want to see the chambers.
The cave is the smarter target if your time is tight or your group has mixed fitness. You still get the mountain feel without dragging everyone to the summit. The tradeoff is plain: the real views are higher up, and on its own the cave can land flat if you arrived expecting something dramatic.
How To Fit It Into Naxos
Treat Mount Zas as a morning, not something to wedge between beaches at noon. In summer the heat can take the climb from memorable to grim, and there is little shade once you pass the lower springs and the edge of the village.
Filoti is the best base on either end. Get a coffee, top up your water, and check bus times if you are not driving. Halki, Apeiranthos, Aria Spring, and the Fotodoti Monastery are good nearby add-ons, but only once you have been honest with yourself about how much you have left in the tank.
Mount Zas and its Cave: FAQs
Above Filoti in central Naxos, Greece. The cave entrance sits at roughly 37.03491, 25.49892, and the summit of Mount Zas is higher up the ridge to the southeast.
Yes. It reaches about 1,003 metres (some sources say 1,004), which makes it the highest point on Naxos and in the Cyclades.
There is normally no ticket gate for the trail or the cave. Access can still change after bad weather, maintenance, or safety work, so it is worth asking locally before you head up.
The cave walk from Aria Spring is moderate for steady walkers. Carrying on to the summit is harder, with steep, rocky, exposed stretches that suit neither small children, poor footwear, nor midday summer heat.
Yes. KTEL Naxos buses run from Naxos Town through Filoti to Apeiranthos a few times a day, and you can ask the driver to drop you at the Agia Marina stop for the Zas trail. Buy tickets at the port office before boarding, since you cannot pay the driver, and check the current timetable so you do not miss the last bus back.
Yes, if you like mythology, raw landscape, and a short walk. Skip it if you mainly want a spectacular cave interior, because this is more of a mountain and story stop than a fully developed underground site.
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