Beach clubs
Mykonos Beach Clubs 2026: Scorpios, Nammos, SantAnna & More
The real Mykonos beach-club map for 2026 — Scorpios, Nammos, SantAnna, Super Paradise. What each is actually for, what it costs, and how to book without getting burnt.
TL;DR
- Mykonos beach clubs break into four tiers: lifestyle destinations (Scorpios, SantAnna), luxury dining (Nammos, Alemagou), high-energy party (Super Paradise, Paradise Beach Club), and quieter locals' picks (Fokos, Agios Sostis).
- Peak season is late June to mid-September. July and August book out 4–6 weeks ahead for weekend daybeds; June and September are more relaxed.
- Minimum spend is the norm, not the exception. Expect €200–€1,000 per daybed with minimum spends of €500–€2,500 depending on venue and day.
- The best single day on the island, if you have one, is still Scorpios sunset — but the experience has changed and the price has doubled since 2019. This guide is honest about that.
Mykonos is the beach-club capital of the Aegean and it has been for a generation. The scene is more intense, more expensive, and more curated than anywhere else in Greece — and arguably Europe. Paris Hilton's Instagram is the clichéd version; the reality in 2026 is that the island's beach clubs deliver a particular kind of experience that genuinely has no equal, if you walk in knowing what you're paying for.
Here's the honest map.
The four tiers
| Tier | Feels like | Price per head | Key venues | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Lifestyle destination | Sunset, music, long afternoon, curated | €200–€500 | Scorpios, SantAnna | | Luxury dining | Michelin-adjacent food, beach-facing tables | €250–€800 | Nammos, Alemagou | | High-energy party | Pool parties, famous DJs, crowd 20s–30s | €150–€350 | Super Paradise, Paradise Beach Club | | Locals / quieter | Honest beach bar, cheaper, less scene | €40–€100 | Fokos Taverna, Agios Sostis |
Summer 2026 tiers and price ranges per head for a full-day visit with food and drinks.
Pick a tier for the day. The mistake visitors make is trying to do Nammos for lunch, Scorpios for sunset, and Super Paradise for night in one day. It sounds good on paper; in practice you'll spend 90 minutes in transit between ATVs, pay three minimum spends, and barely enjoy any of them.
Scorpios — the sunset destination
Scorpios is the most famous Mykonos beach club and still the best version of the "destination" model. The bay at Paraga holds it; a long low wooden structure extends out toward the sea; Balearic-leaning DJs play from mid-afternoon through sunset into the evening. The brand now runs sister venues in Tulum and Bodrum but the Paraga original is still the gold standard.
2026 programming: a strong resident roster plus international guests week-to-week. Sunset sessions are the ticket — the DJ peaks as the sun drops into the horizon, and it's genuinely one of the best 60 minutes in the Aegean.
- Entry: daybed reservations €200–€450 depending on zone and day of week.
- Minimum spend: €500–€1,500 per bed depending on location.
- Food: excellent — grilled fish, bar snacks done well, wine list depth.
- Reservations: essential, book 4+ weeks out for July/August weekends.
✓How to do Scorpios without the daybed
You don't have to book a daybed. Scorpios has a bar area and casual seating where walk-ups can drink and eat without a minimum spend. Arrive at 5 PM, grab a perch at the bar, stay for sunset. Cocktail ~€22, it's busy but workable, and the view is identical to the €500 daybed's view. This is how most locals do it.
Nammos — the food-led luxury
Nammos sits on Psarou beach and is the most photographed restaurant in Greece. It's primarily a restaurant that happens to have beachfront seating and DJ music; the food is genuinely very good, the wine list is serious, and the prices reflect both.
The Nammos experience in 2026:
- Lunch starts around 1 PM and runs well into evening.
- Tables are everything — without a booked table, you're at the bar at best.
- Music: DJ sets through afternoon into night but Nammos is not a party venue. It's atmospheric rather than dancefloor.
- Drinks €25–40, mains €45–80, sharing plates push €120+.
A Nammos lunch is a proper occasion. A lot of people budget it once per trip and build the day around it.
!The Nammos bill warning everyone gets
Bill shock at Nammos is real and it's earned, not a scam — you order a €65 bottle of rosé without checking, it turns into €200+ by the time service is added. Read the menu prices before ordering. The restaurant is transparent; you just need to read.
SantAnna — the pool club
SantAnna sits on Paranga beach (next to Scorpios' Paraga — easily confused, different spelling). The product is a pool club: a 100-metre infinity pool aligned with the sea, cabanas around it, proper DJ sets, daytime into sunset programming.
What's good:
- The pool is the selling point and it's real. The long pool by the sea is genuinely striking.
- Music curation: less Balearic than Scorpios, more open-format house and disco.
- Food is decent Mediterranean, not Nammos-level but solid.
What's less good:
- Minimum spend is high (€600–€2,500). Unless you're splitting 4+ ways, per-head is steep.
- Crowd skews younger and more Instagram-performed than Scorpios'.
- Service can be patchy on peak days.
Pick SantAnna if you want pool-club energy. Pick Scorpios if you want music-and-sunset energy. They're 400m apart and two different days out.
Super Paradise and Paradise Beach Club — party-first
If you came to Mykonos primarily to party, these are your venues. Super Paradise Beach Club is the continuous-daytime-into-night model — DJ sets from noon, crowd density ramping to peak at 6–9 PM, cranked-up mainstream house.
Paradise Beach Club (the club on Paradise beach, easy to confuse) is older, a bit rougher-edged, a bit cheaper. It's where backpackers and younger crowds mix with people who can afford Scorpios but wanted something louder.
2026 booking advice:
- Super Paradise: daybeds €150–€300 per day, minimum spends €300–€800. Saturday peaks at 4–8 PM.
- Paradise Beach Club: less premium, entry tickets €10–30, food/drink pay-as-you-go.
Both run big-name DJ bookings through summer. Follow their socials for the weekly lineups.
“Scorpios is where the people who made the money now spend it thoughtfully. Super Paradise is where the people still making the money go to celebrate. Both have a place.
”
Alemagou and the quieter luxury
Alemagou at Ftelia beach is a different pace to the south-coast party strip. It's further from Mykonos Town — a 20-minute drive north — and the product is a boho-luxe beach lunch with good food, laid-back music, and a crowd 10 years older than Scorpios'.
In 2026 it's possibly the best balance of "high-end but not exhausting" on the island. Book a bed, take a long afternoon, move on for dinner rather than staying through sunset.
The locals' and quieter beaches
A handful of Mykonos beaches don't have destination clubs and are deliberately uncommercialised:
- Fokos beach: a 20-minute drive to the north-east. One taverna (Fokos Taverna), no DJ, no sunbed franchises. Simple grilled fish lunch, clear water, maybe 50 people on the beach max.
- Agios Sostis: next-door to Fokos, similar energy. A taverna at the top of the hill, the beach is yours.
- Lia beach: one beach club (Liasti), otherwise quiet. A real Greek beach.
If you're on Mykonos for 5+ days, put a day at Fokos or Agios Sostis in the middle. It's the reset that makes the big beach-club days feel special again.
Pricing: what a realistic day costs
A typical Saturday at Scorpios for two people in August 2026:
- Daybed reservation with €800 minimum spend
- Shared starter + two mains + wine: ~€280
- Four cocktails: ~€100
- Two post-sunset cocktails: ~€44
- ATV parking (if you rode in): €5
- Total: ~€840 (close to minimum spend)
- Per head: ~€420
A Saturday at Super Paradise:
- Daybed: €200
- Minimum spend €500
- Lunch + drinks: ~€400 (hits most of the minimum)
- Evening cocktails: ~€100
- Total: ~€700
- Per head: ~€350
A day at Fokos Taverna for the same two people:
- Lunch (two fish, salad, wine): ~€75
- Beach — free (no sunbed franchise)
- Drinks all afternoon: ~€40
- Total: ~€115
- Per head: ~€58
The range tells you everything. You can do Mykonos on €60/day or €500/day, same island.
Booking in 2026
- For Scorpios and SantAnna: use their official sites, book 4+ weeks out for July/August weekends.
- For Nammos: OpenTable-style restaurant reservation, 2–3 weeks out is enough for weekday lunches; weekends in peak season, start trying 6 weeks out.
- For Super Paradise: their own site + multiple third-party aggregators. Buy direct — marketplaces mark up 15–25%.
- For Paradise Beach Club: walk-up works most days, or their own site for table bookings.
!Third-party Mykonos 'concierges'
Email concierges / "Mykonos experience" websites offering to book your Scorpios or Nammos table are often just middlemen adding 20% to the bill and taking a booking fee. The venues' own sites are straightforward. The one exception is if you want a specific hard-to-get table and genuinely can't get one direct — then a legit concierge can help, but expect to pay for that access.
What to skip
- "VIP Mykonos beach club tours" sold from Athens: these are bundled multi-venue packages marked up 40%+ over direct booking. You can plan this yourself.
- Super Paradise on a Sunday: it's fine, but Sunday is the least interesting of the week's programming. If you have one day and want Super Paradise energy, go Friday or Saturday.
- Nammos for dinner when you could do it for lunch: lunch at Nammos is the view hour. Dinner is fine but you're paying premium pricing for a view you can't see in the dark.
One last thing
The best Mykonos day I've had recently was a Tuesday in early September. Breakfast in Little Venice, ATV to Fokos, Greek salad and grilled fish lunch, a swim, nap on the beach, back to town for a cocktail at sunset at Scorpios' bar area (no bed, just a drink), dinner in Ano Mera. Five hours of "luxury" with one €22 cocktail. The island rewards restraint as much as it rewards excess.
Everything listed on this site is direct from the venues — no concierge markup, no marketplace fees.
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