Akti Iliou Alimos: Top 100 Club on the Sand
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Akti Iliou, Alimos: One of the World’s Top 100 Clubs Operates Directly on This Beach
Greece | Alimos | Athens Riviera, Attica
I hadn’t expected, walking up to Akti tou Iliou, to find one name covering several different beach bars, each with its own branding and its own personality, all charging the same entrance fee under a shared umbrella. Bolivar, Macaw, and Akanthus (also operating as Nalu) each occupy a section of the same long stretch of sand, and the most prominent of the three, Bolivar, is listed among the world’s Top 100 Clubs, hosting genuinely significant international DJs through the summer season — the kind of booking calendar that would not look out of place at a much larger festival.
The beach itself sits on Poseidonos Avenue in Alimos, white sand mixed with gravel, palm trees and shaded green space giving the whole stretch the tropical aesthetic its branding leans into heavily. Entrance fees run modestly during the week and rise at weekends — I found figures ranging from five to ten euros depending on which source and which day, with sunbeds charged separately on top, wooden loungers costing more than the basic aluminium ones. Children under five generally enter free, with reduced rates for older children and seniors.
I should mention, since more than one independent account raises it directly, that value for money here is genuinely disputed. One visitor described prices as having become “outrageous” compared to previous years, citing VAT added to refreshments only at the point of payment rather than disclosed upfront, and a sense that the venue increasingly targets tourists rather than the Athenian locals who used to make up its regular clientele. Other accounts describe the same beach as one of the more reasonably priced organised stretches in the city. I would treat both as plausible, depending on the year, the day of the week, and which section of the beach a visitor settles into.
Getting There: Tram T6 to Kalamaki, or a Taxi in Fifteen to Twenty Minutes
Akti Iliou sits directly beside Kalamaki Beach Alimos Athens Greece, the free Blue Flag stretch I covered earlier in this series, and the two share the same tram stop. Line T6 from Syntagma Square toward Asklipieio Voulas stops at Kalamaki, putting the entrance to Bolivar a few steps from the platform. The A2 bus, running between Academia and Voula, stops at 4th Kalamakiou, also within easy walking distance.
A taxi from central Athens runs roughly twelve to fifteen euros and takes fifteen to twenty minutes. By car, the drive covers about nine kilometres along Poseidonos Avenue, with parking available nearby though not unlimited in peak season.
The Beach: Sand and Gravel, Palm Trees, Watersports, and a Genuine Fish-Biting Hazard
The shore is fine white sand mixed with gravel, the water shallow enough close to shore that I waded out a fair distance before it deepened meaningfully — a quality that several families specifically praised in their own accounts. A water park with floating inflatables operates in season, alongside canoe and pedal boat rental, and courts for beach volleyball and racket sports sit just off the sand.
One detail I found both alarming and oddly endearing: small fish in the shallows occasionally nibble at swimmers, and at least one account describes a bite serious enough to draw blood, with the lifeguard providing first aid and advice on whether it was safe to return to the water. It is the kind of thing that sounds worse described than it apparently is in practice, and not something that seems to deter regular visitors.
Changing rooms, showers, lockers, and a fully equipped infirmary are all present, alongside the restaurants and beach bars that range from straightforward Mediterranean dining to the more elaborate, internationally influenced menus at venues like Bolivar itself.
Akti Iliou, on Poseidonos Avenue in Alimos, is an organised beach split into several branded sections, the most prominent being Bolivar, ranked among the world’s Top 100 Clubs and hosting serious international DJ bookings through summer. White sand mixed with gravel, palm trees, a water park, watersports rentals, and entrance fees that draw genuinely mixed reviews on value depending on the year and the day. A small but real hazard from fish that occasionally bite in the shallows. The beach sits directly beside Kalamaki, sharing the same Tram T6 stop, roughly nine kilometres and fifteen to twenty minutes from central Athens.
Take the tram to the Kalamaki stop. Check the entrance fee and sunbed pricing before settling in. Keep half an eye on your ankles in the shallows.
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