A weekend sunbed set at Astir Beach, the most expensive stretch of coastline in Attica, now costs €210 — not including admission — as beach prices along the Athenian Riviera surge past levels that industry analysts say are pricing out middle-class families, and the peak summer season has not yet begun.
Weekday rates at Astir, located on an upscale private peninsula in Vouliagmeni, stand at €150 per set, with front-row weekend pairs hitting €210 and secondary rows running between €100 and €160.
The venue's entrance fee is charged entirely separately, meaning a full day for two can easily exceed €250 before food or drinks are ordered.
Panagiotis Retsos, a hospitality analyst, said operators are capitalizing on rigid coastal supply and strong international tourist demand, leaving local residents at a structural disadvantage. "The economics of a basic day at the beach have changed drastically," Mr. Retsos said.
He noted that further price increases are expected when the official tourist season opens in June.
Prices vary sharply by location. At Alimos' Akti tou Iliou, front-row sets run €30 to €40 in May but are projected to double to €60 by June.
Varkiza Beach offers standard sets at €25, though VIP packages carry a €100 premium.
Further east in Porto Rafti and Voula, daily rentals range from €15 to €40 — pushing a growing number of residents toward unorganized, free coastal zones where no services or lifeguards are provided.
The surge comes despite a slow start to May, which recorded the fourth-coldest May Day in Athens since 1890.
The pricing trajectory compounds pressure on Greek households already contending with elevated rents and food costs — part of a broader affordability crisis that has become one of the country's most politically charged domestic issues heading into the 2027 election cycle.
By Michalis Kassis