Overview
Ancient History
Greek Cuisine
Art & Museums
Island Gateway
Nightlife & Music
Day Trips
History
Culture
Practical Info
Athens rewards visitors who look beyond the postcard. Yes, the Acropolis is magnificent—the Parthenon, Erechtheion, and Temple of Athena Nike perched on their limestone plateau remain one of humanity's most affecting sights, especially at golden hour when the marble turns honey-colored against the Attic sky. The new Acropolis Museum at the hill's base is a masterpiece of modern architecture housing the surviving sculptures in natural light with views up to the monuments they once adorned. But Athens' magic lies equally in the collision of ancient and anarchic. In the Plaka's neoclassical lanes you'll find Byzantine churches tucked between tavernas; in Monastiraki's flea market, vintage dealers and street musicians crowd the square below the floodlit Acropolis; in Exarchia, the alternative quarter pulses with street art, independent bookshops, and some of the city's most inventive cooking. Psyrri and Gazi have evolved from derelict warehouse districts into nightlife capitals with rooftop cocktail bars and converted-factory clubs. The National Archaeological Museum holds the world's richest collection of ancient Greek art—the Mask of Agamemnon, the Antikythera Mechanism, and bronze statues recovered from the sea. Food in Athens has undergone a revolution: traditional tavernas serving slow-cooked meats, fresh fish, and meze share the scene with a new generation of chefs reinventing Greek cuisine with seasonal, regional ingredients. The Varvakios Central Market is a sensory overload of fish, meat, spices, and olives. Athens also functions as Greece's transport hub and the natural gateway to the Saronic, Cycladic, and Dodecanese islands—Piraeus port connects to hundreds of island destinations, and the new Athens Riviera along the southern coast brings beaches within metro distance of the Acropolis.
Discover Athens
5 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.