🏛️ Kolonáki in one paragraph
Kolonáki (Κολωνάκι) sits on the southern slope of Lykavittós Hill, between Plateía Sýntagma to the south-west and the hill itself. It's Athens' traditional upper-middle-class quarter — embassies, private galleries, design shops, expensive cafés, three major museums (Benaki, Cycladic Art, Byzantine), and the city's literary establishment. The name means "little column" — a small ancient column originally stood in the central square that became Plateía Kolonákiou.
📍 Geography
- Plateía Kolonákiou — central square, lined with cafés, lawyers' offices, banks. Gathering point.
- Voukourestíou street — Athens' luxury-shopping strip running south to Sýntagma.
- Skoufá + Tsakálof — main café and bar streets running parallel above the square.
- Patriárchou Ioakeím — boutique-shopping street.
- Marasli + Plutarchou — small museum + embassy belt heading uphill.
- Above: Lykavittós Hill — funicular base on Aristíppou street.
- Metro: Evangelismos (Line 3, blue) on the south-east side, Sýntagma 10-min walk south.
🛍️ The shopping
Luxury international
Voukourestíou street: Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Cartier — flagship Athens stores. Window-shopping is free; the experience is lighter than Milan or Paris flagships.
Greek designers
Zeus+Dione, Ileana Makri jewellery, Apostolos Mitropoulos boutique — internationally respected Greek fashion and jewellery. €100-€500+ price points typical.
Art galleries
Several major contemporary galleries on Skoufá and side streets: Bernier/Eliades, Eleni Koroneou Gallery, ZoumboulakisGalleries (Kolonáki Square — fine art, Greek artists).
Bookshops
Lemoni Books, Kostarakou — small literary bookshops. Politeia is on the Akadimías edge nearby.
Antique + vintage
Several antique dealers on Plutarchou + Spefsippou. Greek mid-century furniture, Cycladic-influenced pieces, occasional ancient antiquities (legitimately licensed).
Greek artisanal
Mastiha Shop (mastic from Chíos — sweets, liqueurs, cosmetics), Greek olive-oil shops, Greek-honey specialists. Quality, not cheap, real product.
🏛️ The museum cluster
Benáki Museum (main)
Greece's premier private cultural museum — neoclassical mansion, collections from prehistoric to 20th century Greek art and history. Excellent café/restaurant terrace. €12 entry. (See Benaki guide.)
Museum of Cycladic Art
Famously elegant — minimalist Cycladic figurines (3000 BCE), ancient Greek art, special exhibitions. €12 entry. World-class. (See Cycladic guide.)
Byzantine and Christian Museum
10-min walk from Kolonáki square. Largest Byzantine art collection in Greece — icons, frescoes, manuscripts. €8 entry. (See Byzantine guide.)
Theocharakis Foundation
On Vasilíssis Sofías edge of Kolonáki. Modern Greek art, music events. €6-€10 entry depending on exhibition.
☕ Café culture
Kolonáki is a café-society neighbourhood — locals genuinely sit for two hours at outdoor tables. The café strip on Skoufá and Tsakálof runs daily 09:00 to 02:00.
- Da Capo — long-standing Italian-style café-bar. Terrace seating on Tsakálof, prime people-watching. €4 espresso, €8-€12 brunch.
- Filíon — older-style coffee house, Plateía Kolonákiou. €3.50 freddo. Greek media types.
- Coffee Lab / specialty roasters — Tasco, Hellenic Atelier — modern third-wave coffee. €3.50-€4.50.
- Hotel Grande Bretagne / King George rooftop — 5 min walk on Sýntagma. View over Acropolis. €18-€25 cocktails.
🍽️ Restaurants
Mid-range Greek
Filíppou (€25-€35 per person, traditional Greek lunch), Kafenio Apo Mēxana (modern Greek mezze, €30-€45). Reservation advised.
Higher-end Greek
Capanna (€60-€90, traditional excellence), Spondi (Michelin-starred 5-min walk in Pangrati, €120-€180 tasting menu).
International
Italian (Da Vinci), Japanese (Sushimou nearby), Lebanese (Lebanon Restaurant). Quality reflects Kolonáki price point — €40-€80 per person.
Lunch / casual
Café-restaurants on Skoufá serve light lunches €15-€25. Good for between-museum stops.
🚠 Lykavittós Hill
The funicular up Lykavittós
The Lykavittós funicular base station is on Aristíppou street, 5 minutes uphill from Plateía Kolonákiou. The funicular climbs the hill in 2 minutes; the summit holds a small chapel of Ágios Geórgios, an open-air theatre, café, and the best 360° view of Athens.
- Funicular fare: €10 round-trip, €7 single (subject to change).
- Walking up: free, ~25-35 minutes via the path from Aristíppou. Steep but well-maintained. Take water in summer.
- Hours: ~09:00 to 02:30 typically; varies seasonally. Check This is Athens for current times.
- At the top: small Byzantine chapel (open during day), café (€5-€8 coffee), restaurant Orízontes (premium dining with view, €70-€110 per person).
- Sunset: arrive 45 min before sunset for best photographic light over the Acropolis and west toward Piraeus.
🎭 Events at Lykavittós Theatre
The open-air Lykavittós Theatre (operated by the Athens Festival) hosts major summer concerts (June-September) — international rock, jazz, Greek artists. €30-€80 typical ticket prices. Walking up just before showtime is part of the experience.
🚇 Getting there
- Metro Sýntagma (Lines 2 + 3) — walk 8-12 min uphill into Kolonáki.
- Metro Evangelismós (Line 3) — exits near Hilton, 5 min walk west into east Kolonáki.
- From Victoria: Line 1 → Sýntagma (change at Omónia) → walk. ~25 min total.
- Walking from Plaka: 15-20 min via Sýntagma.
- Walking from Exárcheia: 15 min via Akadimías and Skoufá. (See Exárcheia guide.)
💶 Pricing reality
- Coffee: €3.50-€5 (vs €2.50-€3 in Victoria/Exárcheia).
- Lunch: €15-€30 per person (vs €8-€15 in less polished neighbourhoods).
- Dinner: €30-€80 per person standard; €100+ at top tier.
- Boutique browsing: free; purchases €100-€500+ for branded.
- Museum: €8-€12 single; combined Cycladic + Benaki ticket discount available.
🎯 The "best Kolonáki day" plan
One full day in Kolonáki + Lykavittós
- 09:30 — Coffee on Skoufá. Café-watch.
- 10:30-12:30 — Museum of Cycladic Art (~2 hours).
- 12:45-14:00 — Light lunch at Kolonáki café (€15-€25).
- 14:30-16:30 — Benáki Museum (~2 hours).
- 17:00 — Window-shop Voukourestíou + Greek designer boutiques.
- 18:30 — Funicular up Lykavittós for sunset.
- 19:30 — Drinks at hilltop café watching night fall.
- 21:00 — Dinner at Filíppou or Kafenio Apo Mēxana (€35-€55).
- 23:00 — Cocktail at Da Capo or rooftop bar nearby.
🎯 FAQ
Is Kolonáki snobby?
Mildly, in places. The boutique strips have a polished bourgeois vibe; cafés are friendly. Dress neat-casual to feel comfortable; nobody rejects visitors but you'll feel under-dressed in flip-flops at fine restaurants.
Best for solo women?
Excellent. Cafés full at all hours; well-policed; embassies + business everywhere. Among Athens' safest neighbourhoods for any visitor.
Family-friendly?
Yes — museums, the funicular, restaurants accommodate families. Less playground space; older kids better than toddlers.
Wheelchair accessibility?
Mixed. Major museums accessible; some boutiques have steps; the funicular is accessible at both ends. Cafés on Skoufá vary.
Reservations needed for restaurants?
Yes for higher-end (€60+) on Friday/Saturday. Mid-range Greek often walks-in fine outside peak hours.
Can I visit Kolonáki on Sunday?
Most museums open. Most boutiques closed. Cafés and restaurants open normal Sunday hours.