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The neighbourhood

Where to Stay in Athens: A Local's Neighbourhood Guide

By Sissi & Galinos7/13/2026

An honest, first-hand rundown of the best central Athens neighbourhoods and who each one suits, from your resident hosts in Kolonaki. Plaka, Koukaki, Syntagma, Monastiraki and Kolonaki compared.

The Acropolis and Mount Lycabettus above the Athens skyline, seen from Philopappos Hill

The Acropolis with Mount Lycabettus behind it, above the Athens skyline.

Short answer: for a first trip built around the ancient sights, stay in Plaka or Koukaki for walkability to the Acropolis, or Syntagma if easy transport is your priority. If you would rather swap the crowds for calm, cafe-lined streets while staying genuinely central, stay in Kolonaki, an 8 to 12 minute flat walk to Syntagma and the metro. Central Athens is compact, so almost any of these central neighbourhoods keeps you within a short walk or one metro stop of the highlights. The real choice is about the atmosphere you want to come home to at the end of the day.

We are Sissi and Galinos, and we have lived in Kolonaki for over a decade. We host two renovated apartments here, so we will disclose our bias up front. But this is an honest guide, written for people asking the question we get asked most: where should we actually base ourselves in Athens? Below is how we send friends, family and guests to the right neighbourhood, with the honest pros and cons of each. Last updated July 2026.

Athens neighbourhoods at a glance

Central Athens is smaller than most first-timers expect. The classic sightseeing core, Plaka, Monastiraki and the Acropolis, sits within a walkable triangle, and the metro links everything else in minutes. Here is the quick comparison we reach for.

  • Plaka. Vibe: Picturesque old-town lanes, the most touristy. Best for: First-timers who want the Acropolis on their doorstep. Walk to the Acropolis: At the foot of it, a few minutes.
  • Koukaki. Vibe: Relaxed, residential, cafe-forward. Best for: First-timers who want the sights plus real neighbourhood life. Walk to the Acropolis: Short walk, just south of the Acropolis.
  • Syntagma. Vibe: Busy central square, transport hub. Best for: Travellers who prioritise easy transfers and metro links. Walk to the Acropolis: Roughly 10 to 15 minute walk.
  • Monastiraki. Vibe: Lively, market energy, nightlife nearby. Best for: Younger travellers and night owls who want to be in the thick of it. Walk to the Acropolis: A few minutes.
  • Kolonaki. Vibe: Calm, upscale, residential, cafe culture. Best for: Travellers who want quiet, safe, grown-up central Athens. Walk to the Acropolis: Short metro hop or roughly a 20 minute walk.
  • Psyrri. Vibe: Buzzy, bars and street art, gritty-chic. Best for: Nightlife and a younger crowd. Walk to the Acropolis: Short walk.
  • Exarchia. Vibe: Alternative, student energy, edgier. Best for: Independent travellers who like character over polish. Walk to the Acropolis: Short walk to the centre.

A note on the walking times above: Athens is hilly and pedestrian routes wind, so treat these as honest approximations rather than stopwatch figures. What matters is that from any of these bases the Acropolis and Syntagma are close.

Plaka: the postcard, and the crowds

A quiet stone-paved corner of Plaka with an olive tree and neoclassical houses, Athens

A quiet, stone-paved corner of Plaka, the old town of neoclassical houses and lanes below the Acropolis.

Plaka is the oldest quarter of Athens, a tangle of neoclassical lanes and bougainvillea right under the Acropolis. It is genuinely lovely and it is the reason a lot of people fall for the city. It is also the most touristy pocket in Athens, which means busier streets, higher prices on the main drags and a slightly staged feel in high season.

Stay in Plaka if: it is your first trip, you want to walk out of the door and be among the ruins in minutes, and you do not mind trading local life for convenience and atmosphere.

Skip it if: you value quiet evenings and a neighbourhood that still belongs to the people who live in it.

Koukaki: the relaxed all-rounder

The leafy Dionysiou Areopagitou pedestrian promenade below the Acropolis near Koukaki, Athens

The leafy Dionysiou Areopagitou promenade below the Acropolis, on the edge of Koukaki.

Koukaki sits just south of the Acropolis and has become the sensible first-timer favourite. It keeps you a short walk from the sights and the Acropolis Museum, but it is a real residential neighbourhood with a good, unpretentious cafe and taverna scene. It is calmer than Plaka without giving up walkability.

Stay in Koukaki if: you want the ancient sights close by but would rather sleep somewhere that feels lived-in. Alongside Kolonaki, it is one of the two calm, central bases we most often recommend.

Syntagma: the transport hub

Evzones, the ceremonial guard, at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by Parliament on Syntagma Square, Athens

The Evzones, the ceremonial guard, at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in front of Parliament on Syntagma Square.

Syntagma is the central square and the beating heart of the city's transport. The metro here links directly to the airport on Line 3, and buses fan out everywhere. If your trip involves a lot of moving around, day trips, or an early flight, the convenience is hard to beat. The trade-off is that it is busy, central-city busy, rather than a place with much neighbourhood soul.

Stay in Syntagma if: frictionless transfers and being dead-central matter more to you than atmosphere.

Monastiraki and Psyrri: energy and nightlife

Monastiraki Square with the Acropolis in the distance, Athens

Monastiraki Square, with the Acropolis rising in the distance.

Monastiraki is all market stalls, rooftop bars with Acropolis views and constant movement. Psyrri, just next door, has become the go-to for bars, street art and a younger night-out crowd. Both put you steps from the sights and squarely in the action.

Stay here if: you want to be out late and in the middle of everything.

Skip it if: you are a light sleeper or travelling with children, because the noise carries well into the night.

Kolonaki: calm, safe and genuinely central

A leafy Kolonaki street sloping downhill in the upscale central Athens district

A leafy Kolonaki street sloping downhill, in the upscale district below Lycabettus Hill.

This is home for us, so read the honest bias. Kolonaki sits at the foot of Lycabettus Hill, the highest hill in central Athens, and it is the city's upscale residential neighbourhood: cafes, boutiques, museums like the Benaki and the Museum of Cycladic Art, and quiet streets that stay quiet at night. It is the calm, grown-up alternative to Plaka, and it is still an 8 to 12 minute flat walk to Syntagma and the metro, which puts the whole city within easy reach.

What Kolonaki gives you that the sightseeing core cannot is real neighbourhood life. This is where Athenians actually get their morning coffee. You can walk up to the Lycabettus funicular, ride to the Chapel of St George at the summit and catch the sunset over the whole city, then be back down among the cafes for dinner. It feels safe and refined without being sterile.

Stay in Kolonaki if: you want a calm, secure base with the best cafe culture in the city, you like being central without the tourist crush, and you are happy to walk a little more or take one metro stop to reach the ancient sights. It suits couples, solo and business travellers, and families who want quiet at the end of the day.

The honest trade-off: you are not on the Acropolis doorstep the way you would be in Plaka. For us that is a feature, not a bug, but it is the real difference. If you are weighing it up, we wrote a fuller side-by-side in our Kolonaki vs Plaka vs Koukaki comparison, and a deeper neighbourhood portrait in our complete guide to Kolonaki.

For where we actually eat and drink locally: Me Kolonaki (map) for our morning coffee and breakfast. And for a relaxed dinner: Filippou (map) for an old school Greek lunch, or Le Rose (map) for a relaxed dinner.

A quick word on Exarchia, and on safety

A street covered in graffiti and street art in Exarchia, Athens

A street in Exarchia, the neighbourhood known for its graffiti and street art.

Exarchia is the city's alternative, student-heavy quarter, full of character, bookshops and political street art. Some travellers love its energy; others find it edgier than they want their base to be. It is a short walk from the centre and perfectly interesting to visit.

On safety more broadly: most of the historic centre of Athens is comfortable by day, and central Athens is, in our first-hand experience, a very walkable city. Some travellers find parts of Omonia less comfortable late at night, so if that is a concern, a calm residential pocket like Kolonaki or Koukaki sidesteps it while keeping you central. We go into this properly, honestly, in our guide on whether Athens is safe.

So, where should you stay in Athens?

Here is how we would decide it in one line each:

  • First trip, sights first: Plaka or Koukaki.
  • Easy transfers and a central base: Syntagma.
  • Nightlife and buzz: Monastiraki or Psyrri.
  • Calm, safe, upscale, still central: Kolonaki.

There is no single best area to stay in Athens, only the best area for the trip you are taking. If the calm, central, grown-up version of the city sounds like yours, that is exactly what we offer.

Stay with us in Kolonaki

We host two renovated, owner-managed apartments here: a one-bedroom near the Lycabettus funicular and a two-bedroom beside Evangelismos metro. We live in the neighbourhood and are never more than five minutes away, in English and Greek, throughout your stay. You can see both on our apartments page, and if you like the look of them, booking direct with us means the lowest rate, no platform fees and the local knowledge to match. Central Athens at its most grown-up, with the people who actually live here.

Verified July 2026 by Sissi and Galinos, resident hosts in Kolonaki.

Photos: George E. Koronaios / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0; northernsky7007 / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0; macrolepis / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0; Stolbovsky / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0.

Frequently asked questions

Which area is the best to stay in Athens?
There is no single best area, only the best one for your trip. For first-timers chasing the ancient sights, Plaka and Koukaki are the classic picks and Syntagma is best for transport. For a calm, safe, upscale base that is still an 8 to 12 minute walk to Syntagma and the metro, we would point you to Kolonaki. Central Athens at its most grown-up.
Where should I stay in Athens for the first time?
First-timers usually want walkability to the Acropolis, so Plaka or Koukaki. If you would rather swap the crowds for quiet, cafe-lined streets while staying genuinely central, Kolonaki is a short, flat walk to Syntagma and the sights without the tourist crush.
Is it better to stay in Plaka or somewhere quieter?
Plaka is the most picturesque and the most touristy. If you value calm evenings, real neighbourhood life and the best cafe culture in the city, Kolonaki is the quieter, more residential alternative. It is still just a few minutes from the centre.
Which areas of central Athens should I avoid?
Most of the historic centre is fine by day; some travellers find parts of Omonia less comfortable at night. Staying in a calm, residential pocket like Kolonaki or Koukaki sidesteps that while keeping you central.
Is Kolonaki a good place to stay in Athens?
We host here, so take the disclosure, but yes for the right traveller. Kolonaki is the calm, safe, upscale residential neighbourhood at the foot of Lycabettus Hill, with the best cafe culture in the city and an 8 to 12 minute flat walk to Syntagma and the metro. It suits couples, solo and business travellers, and families who want quiet evenings. The honest trade-off is that you are not on the Acropolis doorstep the way you would be in Plaka, so you walk a little more or take one metro stop to the ancient sights.
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