Amorgos still greets you in Luc Besson blue – the exact cobalt he captured for The Big Blue three decades ago – yet its raw, wind-combed shoreline remains blissfully off the main Cycladic circuit. More recent lenses have lingered here, too: the German drama Tochter (2021) and the French comedy Les Cyclades (2022) both pressed the island’s wild beauty onto film.
Those frames hint at the reality: a paradise for explorers, divers and hikers, stitched together by pocket-size bays, mountain paths and bright-white churches. Yes, fame swelled the ferry manifests, but Amorgos stays defiantly unconventional. There is nightlife, though most evenings drift from a kafeneio espresso to a taverna plate of grandmotherly stews, then onward to a final drink under a star-flooded sky – no neon scoreboard required.
By day, be ready to roam. The seabed plunges for divers, sparkling beaches wink between capes, and meandering trails cut across imposing rock faces. Follow stone-cobbled lanes through sleepy villages to white-washed courtyards and pocket chapels, or climb the vertiginous steps to monasteries clinging, improbably, to cliff edges – pure white against black rock, their God-level views thrown in for free.
Above it all, a 13th-century kastro surveys Chora. Wander downhill into the bustle: boutiques, bakeries, bars and the easy mingling of visitors and locals in twisty alleys streaked with bougainvillea.
Read more at Travel.gr/en
Ask me anything
Explore related questions