Mykonos Beach Clubs & Nightlife 2026: Scorpios, Cavo Paradiso & More

Last updated: May 29, 2026
We have spent many seasons on Mykonos for Discover Cyclades, and every year the same question arrives in our inbox: which beach clubs and nightlife spots are actually worth the hype -- and the spend? Mykonos nightlife has a reputation that precedes itself, but the reality is more nuanced than the Instagram feed suggests. Some venues have earned their fame, others coast on it. This guide cuts through the noise and gives you the honest picture across Scorpios mykonos, Nammos, Cavo Paradiso, and the rest of the south-coast beach scene, so you can plan a trip that matches your style and budget.
For the full island picture, start with our Mykonos travel guide, which covers beaches, villages, and transport alongside the party scene.
The Quick Answer
| What You Want | Best Venue |
|---|---|
| Best sunset ritual | Scorpios (Paraga Beach) |
| Biggest club night | Cavo Paradiso (clifftop superclub) |
| Most glamorous beach lunch | Nammos (Psarou Beach) |
| Wildest beach party | Paradise and Super Paradise |
| Best cocktails with a view | 180 Sunset Bar (Little Venice) |
Scorpios -- The Boho Sunset Ritual
Scorpios sits at the southern end of Paraga Beach and has, since its 2015 opening, become the single most-referenced beach club in Mykonos. The design aesthetic is deliberately raw: weathered timber platforms, driftwood sculptures, terracotta pots spilling with herbs, and a colour palette pulled from the Aegean earth. The guiding philosophy is what the team calls a "music, movement and community" ritual, and in practice that means a curated sequence of ambient and world-music sets that builds from midday into a full sunset ceremony.
Day beds here are tiered across the terraces and you need to reserve them in advance -- often weeks ahead in July and August. Minimum spends attach to each position and range from around 100 euros for a terrace seat to 300 euros or more for the prime platform beds facing the water. The food menu leans Mediterranean and plant-forward: mezze, grilled octopus, good salads, and a dessert section that punches above its weight.
The sunset moment -- roughly 8 pm in July, later in August -- is when Scorpios becomes unmistakably itself. The DJ lifts the tempo, percussion builds, and the crowd on the platform turns toward the horizon. It is theatrical, yes, but it is also genuinely moving if you let it be. We recommend arriving no later than 5 pm to settle in before the energy shifts.
If you are staying close to the action, our luxury villas near Mykonos beach clubs put you minutes from Paraga and the south-coast strip. Having your own villa also means you can pre-arrange a driver for the night without the taxi scramble.
Nammos -- Maximum Glamour at Psarou
Psarou Beach was always the address of choice for the yacht crowd, and Nammos has cemented that status since it opened in 2002. The club and restaurant occupy the entire bay, with sun beds arranged in neat rows down to crystal-clear water that turns an almost absurd shade of blue on a clear morning.
The vibe here is unapologetically luxurious. Superyachts anchor offshore, bottles of Cristal arrive on silver trays, and the clientele includes enough famous faces to keep the celebrity-spotting crowd entertained. Lunch at the Nammos restaurant -- whole grilled fish, lobster pasta, sashimi platters -- runs to significant sums, but the quality is very high and the setting is hard to fault.
Nammos is not really a nightlife destination; it wraps up in the early evening. Think of it as a full-day beach-and-lunch experience rather than a place to see the sunrise. Reserve your restaurant table three to four weeks ahead for peak season weekends, and expect beach-bed minimum spends of 200 to 500 euros per person in August. Dress smartly: swimwear is fine on the sand, but a kaftan or cover-up is expected at the restaurant tables.
Cavo Paradiso -- The Clifftop Superclub
Cavo Paradiso occupies one of the most dramatic positions on the island: a clifftop site above Paradise Beach, with the main dancefloor cantilevered over the Aegean and sunrise views that have become part of Greek nightlife mythology. Since 1993 it has hosted virtually every significant DJ name in electronic music, and the booking policy remains as serious as any Ibiza venue.
This is a full-night -- often a full-dawn -- commitment. Doors open around midnight, the headline set typically runs from 3 am to 7 am, and the club winds down after sunrise. The sound system is exceptional and the open-air setting means the acoustics feel immersive rather than punishing. Entry fees run roughly 25 to 60 euros depending on the artist, with drinks priced at club rates -- budget 15 to 20 euros per cocktail.
Getting to and from Cavo Paradiso is where many visitors come unstuck. The taxi situation in Mykonos at 4 am is grim. We strongly recommend hiring a car for your stay: our car rental partner in Mykonos makes pick-up and drop-off simple, and having your own wheels on this island is genuinely transformative. The alternative is a pre-booked transfer, or the party buses that run between Mykonos Town and Paradise Beach in season.
For a deep dive into which DJs are playing Cavo Paradiso and the town clubs this season, see our Mykonos DJ scene 2026 guide.
Paradise and Super Paradise -- The Original Party Beaches
Paradise Beach and Super Paradise (Plintri) are where Mykonos nightlife began decades ago, and they remain the most frenetic stretch of the south coast. The format is beach-bar-turned-club: music starts around noon, builds through the afternoon, and by early evening the dance floors -- which are effectively the beach itself -- are in full swing.
Tropicana at Paradise Beach is the longest-running venue here. It has the largest dancefloor, hosts live performers and themed events, and serves the kind of frozen drinks and buckets that sustain an all-day session. The crowd skews young and international, the atmosphere is high-energy, and personal space is not a concept that gets much respect in peak season.
Super Paradise next door is slightly less frantic and historically had a more mixed and LGBTQ-friendly crowd, a character it has retained. The beach itself is more sheltered and the water a little calmer.
For a broader look at the beaches beyond the party zone, including quieter bays and shallow-water spots, see our Mykonos best beaches guide.
SantAnna -- The All-Day Club Option
SantAnna sits between Paraga and Paradise Beach and occupies a useful middle ground: more accessible than Scorpios in price and attitude, more polished than Tropicana. It opens at breakfast, runs a good brunch menu, and transitions through lunch and afternoon cocktails into a proper evening party with DJ sets and dancing on multiple terraces. Sun beds are available on a minimum-spend basis at mid-tier rates -- typically 30 to 60 euros per person -- making it one of the more approachable entry points on the south coast.
Tropicana -- High-Energy Beach Party
Tropicana deserves its own paragraph because the experience is distinctive. This is the venue that introduced the concept of dancing on the sand to Mykonos in the 1980s, and the energy has not diminished. If you want to understand why Mykonos became a global party destination, an afternoon at Tropicana -- with the bass hitting, the sea right there, and a few hundred people all moving together -- explains it better than any article can.
180 Sunset Bar -- Little Venice Cocktails
Not every Mykonos evening needs to involve a beach club. Little Venice, the cluster of 17th-century sea-captains' houses whose ground floors overhang the water in Mykonos Town, produces its own version of the sunset ritual. The 180 Sunset Bar is perched at the windmill end of the neighbourhood with arguably the best sightline for the Aegean sunset outside of Oia. Cocktails are well-made, priced at town-bar rates (12 to 18 euros), and the crowd is a pleasant mix of couples, older travellers, and locals who have arrived on foot from the Kastro quarter.
This is also the natural end-of-day option if you are based in a Mykonos hotel in or near the town centre rather than out on the beach clubs.
Practical Tips
Reservations. Book Scorpios and Nammos day beds weeks ahead in July and August. Cavo Paradiso and Tropicana are walk-in, though Cavo Paradiso sells out for major nights -- buy tickets online as soon as the lineup drops. SantAnna and 180 Sunset Bar are generally walk-in.
Dress code. Mykonos is relatively relaxed by club standards. Smart casual -- good sandals, a linen shirt or sundress -- is appropriate almost everywhere. Nammos restaurant expects slightly more polish. Cavo Paradiso, being a late-night club, is anything from fashion-forward to festival casual.
Costs. Budget at the lower end of the scale (Tropicana, SantAnna) runs to 60 to 120 euros per person for a full afternoon including drinks. Mid-tier (Scorpios day bed, SantAnna restaurant) comes to 150 to 350 euros. Top-end (Nammos, Scorpios prime beds) can run to 500 euros or more per person very easily. Cavo Paradiso entry plus drinks for a night is typically 80 to 150 euros.
Getting there. The south-coast beach clubs are 5 to 8 km from Mykonos Town. In daytime, the bus from Fabrika square runs to Paradise Beach regularly in season. But for nighttime movement -- especially getting home from Cavo Paradiso at 7 am -- nothing beats having your own car. Our vetted Mykonos car rental service is reliable and easy to book in advance.
Getting back at night. Taxis are scarce at peak hours. Pre-book a transfer for your return if you are doing Cavo Paradiso or an all-night session. The party buses between Mykonos Town and Paradise Beach run until about 4 am in season. After that, a pre-arranged car service is your safest bet. This is not a minor logistical point -- being stranded on a Mykonos clifftop at 5 am without a ride home is a rite of passage most visitors are happy to skip.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most famous beach club in Mykonos?
Scorpios at Paraga Beach is the most globally recognised, known for its boho aesthetic and sunset ritual. Nammos at Psarou is the most glamorous for a beach lunch experience with a celebrity crowd.
Do you need a reservation for Scorpios or Nammos?
Yes -- both require advance booking for sun beds and restaurant tables. In July and August, Scorpios day beds can fill weeks ahead. Nammos restaurant should be reserved two to four weeks in advance for peak-season weekends.
How much does a Mykonos beach club cost?
Entry-level beach clubs like Tropicana cost 30 to 60 euros per person with a minimum drink spend. Mid-tier options like Scorpios run 100 to 300 euros minimum spend per bed. Nammos minimum spends in peak season can reach 200 to 500 euros per person.
What time does Cavo Paradiso start?
Doors open around midnight. The headline DJ sets run from roughly 3 am to 7 or 9 am. The sunrise over the Aegean during the final sets is part of what makes Cavo Paradiso worth the late start.
How do you get back from the clubs at night in Mykonos?
Taxis are scarce after midnight. The best options are a pre-booked transfer, a hire car arranged through a service like Superise Mykonos, or the seasonal party buses that run between Mykonos Town and the south-coast beaches until around 4 am. Always plan your return before you go out.























