Psaraliki Beach Antiparos: Two Shores, Paros Across
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Psaraliki Beach (I and II), Antiparos: The Island’s Most Popular Shore 10 Minutes From Town, Where Psaraliki I Is for Windsurfers and Families and Psaraliki II Is for Nudists and Anyone Who Wants Fewer People
Greece | Psaraliki | Antiparos, Cyclades
The Paros–Antiparos ferry crossing from Pounta takes 7 minutes and costs €2. This is the specific information that the beach at Psaraliki makes relevant: the view from the sand looks directly at Paros across the channel, and the crossing that separates the two islands is so short and cheap that visiting Antiparos from a Paros base is a straightforward day trip rather than a commitment. The shallow, narrow channel between the islands is also the specific geographical reason the water at Psaraliki stays calm — there is not enough space between the two islands for waves to build before reaching the shore. The wind blows across from the land, but the sea stays flat.
Psaraliki is two beaches — Psaraliki I and Psaraliki II — one the natural continuation of the other, separated by the Fanari Beach Club with its pool and music. Psaraliki I is the bigger and more tourist-facing section: windsurfers on the water, pedal boats for hire, banana boats, beach tennis, a beach bar, sunbeds and umbrellas in organised rows, tamarisk trees providing natural shade at the back. Psaraliki II is 2 minutes’ walk further south — quieter, slightly less organised, and the section that nudists use. Both face east toward Paros and both share the same fundamental qualities: golden sand, shallow calm water, and easy walking distance from Antiparos Town.
These are the most convenient beaches on the island — the first choice for visitors who arrive on the ferry without a hire car, for families who want to be close to the town’s pharmacies and supermarkets, and for anyone who values the specific freedom of walking to the beach rather than driving to it.
Getting There: 10-Minute Walk South From Antiparos Town, Coastal Path or Main Road, Free Parking, €2 Ferry From Paros Pounta
From the centre of Antiparos Town, walk south along the coastal path or the main road for approximately 10 minutes. The coastal path is more scenic; the main road is faster. Both reach Psaraliki I first, with Psaraliki II a 2-minute additional walk beyond.
By bicycle, the flat coastal road makes the ride effortless. By car, parking is available alongside the road between the two beaches.
From Paros: the car ferry from Pounta (south Paros, 5km from Parikia) to Antiparos Town runs every 30 minutes in summer and takes 7 minutes. The cost is €2 per person, plus a small vehicle charge. From the Antiparos ferry landing, Psaraliki is 10 minutes’ walk.
Psaraliki I: The Bigger, Busier Section — Windsurfing, Pedal Boats, Beach Tennis, Beach Bar
Psaraliki I is the primary beach for active visitors. The wind that comes across from the land gives it the specific conditions that make beginning and intermediate windsurfing work well — consistent wind over flat water is the combination that windsurf schools target. Pedal boats, banana boats, and water sports equipment hire operate from the beach. Beach tennis is the specific land sport: the flat sand and the relative open space make it the natural beach game here.
The beach bar on Psaraliki I is described as possibly the only beach bar on Antiparos with proper amenities — a Tripadvisor reviewer specifically notes it as the “maybe only one beach bar of the island.” Sunbeds are available at reasonable prices by Cycladic resort standards. Tamarisk trees run along the back of the beach providing natural shade.
The view from the water or the sunbeds looks directly at Paros — the island is visible clearly across the narrow channel, a continuous presence that distinguishes this beach from any other in the Cyclades where such proximity to a larger island creates this specific visual relationship.
Fanari Beach Club: Between the Two Psaraliki Beaches, Pool, Food, Music
Fanari Beach Club sits between Psaraliki I and Psaraliki II — the name appears in some sources as a third beach name for this stretch, though the beach itself is a single continuous shore. The club has a swimming pool, food service, cocktail bar, sunbeds, and music. It is the commercial entertainment-focused alternative to the more open beach sections on either side. Visitors who want the beach bar experience of the kind available on the more developed Cycladic islands use Fanari; visitors who prefer the tamarisk shade and the open beach without the music choose the sections beyond it.
Psaraliki II: 2 Minutes South, Quieter, Nudist-Friendly, Still Good Shade
Psaraliki II receives fewer visitors than Psaraliki I primarily because it is 2 minutes further away from the town. The nudist tradition here is established and informal rather than signed or fenced — it is the section where nudists use the beach, but non-nudist visitors are present throughout and the beach is not exclusively for either group. The tamarisk trees provide the same shade as on Psaraliki I. The water conditions are identical — same shallow, calm channel geometry.
The Other Antiparos Beaches: Camping Beach, Sifneiko, Faneromeni, Agios Georgios
Antiparos has a full spectrum of beaches beyond Psaraliki. The Camping Beach is 1km north of Antiparos Town — sandy, shallow, wind-sheltered, with the official nudist section and the view to the uninhabited islet of Diplo (wadeable when the sea is calm). Sifneiko beach is on the west side of the island with sunset views toward Sifnos and tavernas directly above. Faneromeni Beach Antiparos Greece at the southern tip is the wild unorganised cove described in the series already — the local debate about whether it or Agios Sostis is the most beautiful on the island. Agios Georgios is the small beach with views to Despotiko and the ongoing Apollo sanctuary excavation.
The island’s 57-kilometre coastline covers more options than most visitors with a few days can cover. Psaraliki is the base; the rest requires a hire car.
The Cave of Antiparos: 82 Metres Deep, Lord Byron, 8km From Town
The Cave of Antiparos — the island’s most famous attraction — is 8 kilometres from Antiparos Town in the island interior. Stalactites and stalagmites, signatures of Lord Byron and various European royalty over four centuries, a midnight Christmas mass for 480 people in 1673, and the specific atmospheric darkness of an 82-metre natural limestone cave. The combination of a morning at Psaraliki and an afternoon bus trip to the cave covers the two most important reasons to spend more than a single day on Antiparos.
Psaraliki Beach (I and II) on Antiparos is the island’s most popular shore — two adjacent beaches 10 minutes’ walk south of Antiparos Town, Psaraliki I the bigger and busier (windsurfing, pedal boats, beach tennis, beach bar), Psaraliki II 2 minutes further south (quieter, nudist-friendly), Fanari Beach Club between them (pool, food, music), tamarisk shade throughout, shallow calm channel water (view of Paros directly across, €2 ferry from Pounta on Paros in 7 minutes), and the rest of the island’s beaches accessible by hire car for those who want the wild southern alternatives.
Take the Pounta ferry. Walk 10 minutes south. Choose the beach by the wind.
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