The first hotel opened last year without much fanfare, above Kamari in Santorini. It marked the first Greek presence of Sandblu Santorini under LXR, Hilton’s luxury collection.
This year, in early May, a new hotel in Elounda became the first five-star INNSiDE ever created by Meliá across its entire global portfolio. Just a few days earlier, in Pefki, Rhodes, Marriott held the soft opening of Amoh, its first Luxury Collection property anywhere on the island.
Three new hotels, in less than a month and a half, on three different islands. In the coming weeks, two more are expected to open. On 27 June, Fouquet’s Mykonos will open on Paraga beach in Mykonos – the fifth Fouquet’s worldwide after Paris, New York, Courchevel and Saint-Barthélemy, and the first Greek presence of the French Barrière group.
A few weeks later, in Kampos, Paros, bookings will open for Parian Chronicle, Hyatt’s first Greek property through Destination by Hyatt. Five top international brands, five distinct Greek debuts, within a short period of time.
What makes this more interesting, however, is not the number, but the composition. Two of the five – Hilton LXR and Meliá INNSiDE – are opening their first resorts in Greece, with Meliá also staging the global debut of the five-star INNSiDE in Elounda.
Until recently, the Barrière group viewed Greece as a secondary market compared with Italy or the French Riviera. Hyatt, for years, had kept its distance from the Greek island project. Yet this year, without any visible coordination, they all ultimately chose the same moment to enter.

Greece in the Mediterranean’s top tier
Behind this synchronised wave of openings lies a less glamorous, but more revealing picture. Greece is now firmly positioned among the highest-quality luxury markets in the Mediterranean, competing with Italy and southern France in room rates and in the top segment.
Greek premium resorts such as Costa Navarino, Amanzoe and Domes have proved that visitors are willing to pay four-figure nightly rates for Greece without hesitation.
For the guest, the difference is not only in the logo. At Amoh in Rhodes, a daily Olive Grove Experience is offered, with tastings of six infused olive oil varieties, incorporated into the programme as a structural element rather than as a photo opportunity.
At Fouquet’s Mykonos, the rock spa is being designed by Dr Barbara Sturm, with hyperbaric oxygen, an ice bath and a flotation tank, while the main restaurant will bear the signature of the renowned Japanese brand Roka.

Quality chooses specific names – and those names are beginning to speak to one another.
This entry is not neutral for the rest of the market. It raises the benchmark for every independent hotelier operating on the same islands, brings trained staff into labour markets that needed it, and sends a signal to the next wave of brands still hesitating.
The year 2026 is not the peak. It is the starting point.

Anyone visiting one of these five leading resorts in 2026 will see more than a new hotel. They will see a market that has moved into its prime stage – and five corporate boards that made the same move in the same year.
Source: Newmoney
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