29
Wed, Oct

Greek Winter Tourism Climbs Higher After Festive Boost

Greek Winter Tourism Climbs Higher After Festive Boost

Hellenic Shipping News

With the festive season approaching, Greece’s mountain and semi-mountain hoteliers are

With the festive season approaching, Greece’s mountain and semi-mountain hoteliers are taking stock after a highly successful ‘Ohi Day’ October 28 long weekend. The holiday provided a much-needed boost for winter accommodations, with occupancy rates soaring above 90% in many destinations — 100% in mountainous Nafpaktia, 92% in Karpenisi, 90% in Dimitsana, 86% in Kalavryta, and 71% in Nafplio. As in previous years, destinations near major cities saw the strongest demand.

Eyes on the Holiday Season

Attention now turns to the Christmas and New Year period — from December 25–28 and January 1–6 (Epiphany) — when hoteliers anticipate another surge in bookings. Clean Monday (February 23) and Easter 2026, which falls early on April 12, are also expected to sustain winter tourism momentum.

A Short but Vital Season

Greece’s mountain regions host around 1,500 hotels, mostly small, family-run units of up to 20 rooms, rated three stars or higher. Roughly 30% are located in northern Greece and operate mainly from late October to April. “A hotel cannot survive if it performs well for only 30 or 40 days a year,” hoteliers stress, noting that mid-season occupancy often drops below 30%.

Rethinking the Winter Tourism Model

Local stakeholders argue that

Content Original Link:

Read Full article form Original Source OIKONOMIKOS TAXYDROMOS

" target="_blank">

Read Full article form Original Source OIKONOMIKOS TAXYDROMOS

SILVER ADVERTISERS

BRONZE ADVERTISERS

Infomarine banners

Advertise in Maritime Directory

Publishers

Publishers