Somewhere along the way, a strange idea took hold: if you don’t stay in Oia, you haven’t “really done” Santorini.
Scroll most big travel sites or booking platforms and you see the pattern. Oia, Oia, Oia. Caldera suites, plunge pools, “iconic sunsets”. The message is pretty clear: this is where you’re meant to be. Everything else is presented as a compromise.
It’s not. And for a lot of travellers, staying in Oia is actually the worst possible choice.
This isn’t about bashing Oia. It’s beautiful. The views are ridiculous. It deserves the love it gets. But turning one small village into the only “valid” place to stay has warped how people see the whole island.
Let’s straighten that out.
Oia is a viewpoint, not a complete experience
Most people visit Oia for three things: the cliff, the sunset and the white-and-blue postcard photos. That’s it. It’s a spectacular viewpoint wrapped in pretty streets and expensive real estate. But that doesn’t automatically make it the best base.
If you stay there, you quickly realise something: you are in the middle of an attraction, not in the middle of everyday island life. Streets are busy for most of the day, sunset is a full event every evening, and a lot of what you’re paying for is the hype stacked on top of the view.
If that’s exactly what you want – buzzing evenings, people-watching, every amenity aimed at visitors – then staying in Oia can make sense. But if what you actually want is some quiet, a bit of space and a feeling of living “on” Santorini rather than “inside the brochure”, there are better options.
The “you’re missing out if you don’t stay there” pressure
Big travel platforms don’t help. When every front page, hero image and “where to stay” list shows the same cluster of blue domes and terraces, people start to feel pressured. You see it in forums and DMs all the time: “Are we making a mistake not staying in Oia?” or “Will we regret staying anywhere else?”
What no one says clearly enough is: you can visit Oia as many times as you like. Sunrise, sunset, dinner, a drink, a walk. Nothing is stopping you. You don’t need to sleep there to see it. In fact, for many people, it’s more enjoyable as somewhere you dip into and then leave behind.
You’re not missing out by not staying in Oia. You’re just deciding that your base doesn’t have to be the busiest, most expensive square kilometre of the island.
The trade you’re actually making
The choice is usually presented as: Oia = special, everywhere else = second best.
In reality, the trade-off is more like this:
- Stay in Oia: pay more for less space, deal with constant foot traffic, have the view right there.
- Stay elsewhere: get more space, more calm, more of a “village” feeling, and visit the view when you want it.
Neither one is wrong. But they’re different types of holidays. The problem is that most people only hear about the first one, then quietly discover, once they arrive, that it doesn’t match the kind of trip they actually needed.
A lot of guests only figure this out too late: they spend a day in a quieter village and suddenly realise, “Oh… this is the atmosphere I was looking for.”
Other villages aren’t consolation prizes
The way Oia is marketed makes everywhere else sound like a downgrade. “If you can’t afford Oia, try…” or “If Oia is full, maybe look at…” As if the rest of the island is just a plan B.
That’s nonsense.
Villages away from the cliff have their own personality. They have locals sitting in doorways, kids playing, people doing school runs, church bells that mean something. They have squares, bakeries, tiny cafés, proper streets. You feel the island’s daily rhythm in a way you simply don’t on the polished cliff edge.
You’re not getting “less Santorini” by staying inland or in a different village. You’re just getting a more lived-in version of it.
The hotel layouts no one mentions
There’s another thing the photos don’t show: how a lot of Oia’s hotels actually work in real life.
Because everything is stacked on the cliff, properties are often built like little stairway networks. Rooms, suites and mini-pools are tucked in wherever they can fit. It looks dreamy from a distance. Close up, it means one very simple, very unromantic reality: other people have to walk right past your front door – and often your little terrace or plunge pool – to get to their own room.
You don’t see this on Instagram. You feel it when you’re having a quiet drink and someone wheels their suitcase past your feet; when you’re in your robe and a stranger appears two metres away on the shared steps; when you realise the “private” outdoor space is actually part of a walkway.
In Oia, the “private” terrace you paid for is often just part of the corridor to someone else’s room.
It’s not the fault of any one hotel – it’s the geometry of the cliff and the way the village grew. But it does mean that the fantasy of being alone on your own ledge over the sea often collides with the reality of being one door in a long chain.
For some people, that’s fine. For others, it quietly kills the sense of privacy they thought they were paying for.
Noise and sleep: the things no one puts in a brochure
There’s also the practical side that rarely makes it into glossy write-ups: noise and sleep.
Oia is a busy place. It has luggage wheels on cobbles, late-night footsteps, early-morning deliveries, doors, voices, restaurants setting up or closing down. On top of that, many caldera properties share walls, terraces or stairs. You are not as alone as the photos suggest.
Meanwhile, quieter villages and non-caldera locations can offer exactly what most tired, overworked travellers secretly want: proper darkness, real quiet, and sleep that doesn’t feel fragile. That doesn’t look dramatic in a drone shot, but you feel it in your body the next morning.
Ask anyone who has actually stayed in both and they’ll usually say the same: the cliff gave them the “wow moment”; the quieter village gave them the rest.
Visiting Oia is easy. Escaping it is harder.
The funny thing is, it’s incredibly easy to visit Oia from almost anywhere on the island. A short drive, a bus, a taxi – you’re there. You can choose your time, your route, your pace. Go early when it’s empty, go late, or go once and decide that’s enough.
What’s harder is escaping it once you’ve based your entire trip there and realised it doesn’t suit you. Then every evening involves another crowded walk home, sound bleeding into your room, and the sense that you’re constantly “on” even when you want to switch off.
It’s worth thinking about that before you book.
Start with how you want to feel, not what everyone else does
The simplest way to dodge all this pressure is to ignore the word “should”. You don’t have to stay in Oia. You don’t have to stay on the caldera. You don’t have to do Santorini the way the front page of a booking site says you should.
Start with questions like:
– Do I want more buzz or more stillness?
– Do I care more about the view from my bed or the overall atmosphere where I wake up?
– Am I okay being in the busiest part of the island 24/7, or would I rather visit it on my terms?
Once you answer those honestly, the decision gets much simpler.
If you’ve always dreamt of waking up right on the cliff and you know you like lively, busy places, Oia might be perfect. If you’re craving calm, space and that feeling of being “in” the island instead of on display, another village will probably serve you much better.
Either way, you haven’t “failed” Santorini by not staying in one particular postcode. The island is bigger, richer and more interesting than that. Oia is one chapter. You’re allowed to choose another.