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23 Hidden Gems and Unusual Things to do in Athens: The Cradle of Democracy

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Uncover hidden gems and unusual things to do in Athens, the home of democracy and modern heart of Greece. Here’s our inside guide.

Don’t miss: the Athens Food Guide and our packing list for Greece.

23 Unique Things to Do in Athens

Athens should be easy to love, but sometimes she isn’t.

From ancient romance to skyscrapers and edgy street art, Athens is all the better for being a city that’s hard to define.

It’s a real city, a living city, a characterful city, named after the goddess Athena. But it does require a little effort to uncover the best it has to offer. When it comes to finding hidden gems in Athens, it’s not a cliche. You can really, literally, find some actual hidden gems. But beyond that, you can also find plenty of non-touristy, unusual and unique things to do in Athens beyond the archaeological sites.

So here’s our inside guide, based on numerous trips to the city and advice from locals. locals. So whether it’s your first time or you’re back and forth for business, we have plenty of alternative things to do in Athens for you.

Disclosure – some of these activities were hosted by the places mentioned, but not all were. They were only included if I thought you’d enjoyed them! Plus, if you book through the links on this page, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you (this is known as an affiliate link.) Cheers!

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Greece - Athens - Piraeus - At Night
Enjoy the water at Piraeus

Go wave watching at Piraeus

One of Athens’ hidden gems is its seafront. Hardly anyone ever thinks to go there. Head to Piraeus, and take your time strolling along the water’s edge, watching the waves kiss the shore and local children chase their shadows. It’s a calm and beautiful spot, a world away from central Athens with only 20 minutes spent behind the wheel. You can make a day trip of it or just head here for dinner.

Dinner suggestion: Varoulko Seaside Restaurant

Ah, this lovely place. I almost don’t want to tell you about it! Tucked up right beside the waterfront, this fresh and modern restaurant has the friendliest service of all the Michelin-starred places I’ve ever visited. The menu is creative, combining syringes of olive oil with leaf-wrapped minced langoustine. But even the humble cherry tomato tastes better here than elsewhere. When it comes to unusual things to do in Athens, it’s hard to beat this unique and off the beaten path spot.

See the unusual side of Athens with a local guide in Athens
See the unusual side of Athens with a local guide in Athens

See Athens with a Local: “This is My Athens”

If you’re looking for a really unique way to discover the hidden gems of Athens, then meet up with a local. How do you do that? Well, programme This Is My Athens connects you with local  volunteers who help you to discover, well, anything you want! They’re driven by a passion for their city and for meeting other people. And, boy, do they know the places to go.

Take Plaka, for example, the area close to the Acropolis. I’d dismissed it as far too touristy but my local guide found spots that showed how wrong I was. Glistening interiors of hidden churches with ghostly stories. Handmade arts and crafts with the artists still in situ. Plus, some of the best places for coffee – and later on wine. Highly recommended.

Relax in the National Garden and Catch the Open Air Cinema

Central Athens can feel chaotic. But when the sun shines and the orange blossom flutters, then a stroll through the National Garden can revive the soul. Formerly the Royal Garden, it covers 38 acres and runs behind the Greek parliament. This being Greece, of course, it contains some ancient ruins but these botanical gardens also offers great food and an open air cinema during the summer.

  • Dine on the outdoor terrace at Aegli Zappeiou and enjoy the open air cinema afterwards.
Tasty and unusual things to do in Athens involves finding stuffed vine leaves among other things

More Hidden Gems in Athens: Unusual and Unique Places to Eat

Also, don’t miss our Athens food guide. Working out where to eat in Athens is almost as important as working out what to do. Maybe more…since Greek food forms such an important part of life in Athens Greece. We’ve included more places than you can eat at in one day, but in between day trips, if you have a few days in the city, you can try plenty.

Watch the Sun Set Over the Acropolis

One of the best things about Athens is that its hilly structure allows for lots of incredible views from rooftop bars. It’s a unique way to spend an evening and my hidden gem for this is dinner at the Electra Rooftop Garden Hotel.

Dinner suggestion: the Electra Rooftop Garden Hotel. This glorious hotel drips in cream and gold and, as the name suggests, there’s a rooftop terrace that overlooks the Acropolis. Now, plenty of places in Athens overlook the Acropolis but this one lives right up close … and it serves a delicious pomegranate sorbet!

Drink Wine and Talk Philosophy

Erm. Again, this is easily done with a This is My Athens guide! Check out the burgeoning wine bars in the area around Electra for a mix of hipster cool and cosy vibes. If you are more keen on the philosophy and less so on the wine, then check out the Athens philosophy tours offered by academics. You can even visit Plato’s former academy.

Dine Among Recycled Furniture

Check out the oh-so-peppery fresh virgin olive oil at the NEW Hotel Restaurant. NEW excels at serving fresh, organic mediterranean cuisine and the sculptures made from recycled furniture make a nice twist for the eye. It’s one of those quirky things to do in Athens. Greek mezze never tasted so good.

Hustle in the Food Market of Varvakios Agora

Put on a pair of comfortable shoes and head to the Varvakios Agora to experience the raucous splendour of Athens’ major fresh food market. Walk past hawkers and hampers filled with plump prawns, jostle between the crowd to buy fresh fish and hanging entrails, and then find some slow-paced solace amid the spice mountains outside.

Abigail King at the St George Lycabettus in Athens Greece
Brunch in Lycabettus gives a skyline view of Athens

Brunch in Lycabettus with a Skyline View of Athens

I’m no stranger to a hotel with a view but the sixth floor at the St George Lycabettus somehow defies the laws of physics.

Pine so close you could touch it on the one side and a glimmering, shimmering Acropolis on the other. Plus, another side that shows the houses stacked like staggered shoeboxes on the hills and the hubbub of city life in Greece. And finally, the view of the coast and the Saronic Islands. Blissful.

Lycabettus Hill or Mount Lycabettus is one of the highest points in Athens, within Kolonaki. It’s the well-heeled part of the city, a kind of Sloane Square with sunshine. After all, Daniel Day Lewis and Juliette Binoche have both dined on the Grand Balcon (though not together, as far as I know.)

How to do it

You can walk to central Syntagma Square in 20-30 minutes depending on shoe speed and shoe comfort or, of course, ask the concierge for a taxi into town. If you don’t plan to stay at the hotel, you can still head there on Sunday for a brunch with a view. Book in advance is my suggestion.

Eat Sushi with a View of the Acropolis

If the clouds or cool rain have decided to move in, or if you’re yearning for a break from traditional Greek tastes, check out the glittering lights and sushi selection at the Galaxy Bar, Hilton Athens.

It also offers a magnificent floodlit view of the Acropolis.

Imbibe at the Oldest Distillery in Athens

Sip your drink beneath the brightly coloured glass of Brettos in Plaka. As the oldest distillery in Athens, it comes stocked with all the homemade, mysterious flavours you should be afraid of. Cherry, lemon and mastiha ouzo. You have been warned…

Take a cooking class

One of the best non-touristy things to do in Athens (or indeed anywhere) is to take a cooking class with a local. In Athens, you can arrange this through the Museum of Gastronomy.

Find unusual street art in Athens
Find unusual street art in Athens

Classic things to do in Athens

In your haste to see Athens’ hidden gems, don’t miss her unique attractions. As well as looking for alternative things to do in Athens, check out these ancient sites from ancient Athens:

THE ACROPOLIS AND PLAKA

Yes, everyone goes there, but there’s a good reason for that! These crumbling columns are the tangible memory of a civilisation that gave us more than we can sometimes comprehend: the basis of democracy, the spirit of the Olympics and even the word alphabet itself. Granted, there are other aspects we may be glad the world has forgotten (like exercising naked in the gymnasium, I’d say) but still.

Head up the hill early and seek plenty of shade.

Inside Tip: The Acropolis refers to the citadel, the Parthenon is the temple.

THE ACROPOLIS MUSEUM

Throw yourself completely into the spirit of ancient Greece by following up the Acropolis with the dazzlingly modern Acropolis Museum. This masterpiece based its architecture on the iconic Parthenon itself and uses a range of multimedia exhibits to bring the stones you see to life. (There’s even a lego exhibit: now who could want more than that?!)

Find up to date entrance fees for the Acropolis here.

Inside Tip: The Acropolis Museum also has a sun and shade soaked terrace that serves super strong Greek coffee

THE ANCIENT AGORA

Once the city centre of ancient Greece, the ancient Agora can still be visited today.

Hidden Gems in Athens in the  Museum District

Like all the best cities in the world, Athens has  a museum district. Ping pong your way along Vasilissis Sofias Avenue up to Syntagma Square and around to Panepistimiou Street and the holy trinity of learning: the University of Athens, the Academy and the National Library.

Depending on your energy and enthusiasm, you may be able to fly around each of these museums by mid afternoon. Chances are, though, that it’s best to limit yourself to one or two. Particularly when you realise how many of them have fine cafes and restaurants cloistered away at the back…

These places have some of my favourite unique things to do in Athens.

Greece - Athens - Hidden Gems in Athens - Handling originals at the Benaki Museum
A tour provides access to museum exhibits

The Benaki Museum

The Benaki Museum is something of an institution in Greece, taking its exhibits and its ethos to the airport and to the beach resorts of the south. It contains a range of Greek art plus, by prior appointment, you can hold some of the exhibits in your hands. Stemming from the private fortune of the Benakis family, the museum also focuses on state-of-the-art restoration programmes and widespread education. A tour guide here is a must to bring the history alive and to let you hold the artefacts!

Greece - Athens - Museum of Cycladic Art as a hidden gem in Athens

The Museum of Cycladic Art

The Nicholas P. Goulandris Foundation Museum of Cycladic Art houses ancient art in a modern setting. Founded in 1986, the museum has one of my favourite cafes in Athens. But I suppose it would carry a little more dignity to talk about the art first.

What is cycladic art?

It hails from the Greek Islands of Cyclades in the Aegean sea and the most striking feature involves the prehistoric figures and figurines, particularly of women. Greek architect Ioannis Vikelas designed the building and it’s a quiet and contemplative place to recharge from the exterior bustle of Athens.

The Zoumboulakis Galleries

The Zoumboulakis Galleries bring private collections of contemporary art to 21st century Greece in a cool and brilliantly white, airy gallery setting. It’s often described as a multi-purpose cultural space, with themed exhibitions and events aiming to bring together a community of art lovers in Athens.

Numismatic Museum: The Real Hidden Gems in Athens

Numismatic Museum – the museum of coins! Pick up an audio guide to translate and immerse yourself in stories of power and pomp through different currencies. Now this is where the hidden gems of Athens can be found! Quite literally.

A coin collection may sound rather dull but it’s a fascinating expose of how we treat money, which when all is said and done, is only an idea. From seals to mints to jewels and hidden gems themselves. It’s one of my favourite unusual things to do in Athens.

The National Archaeological Museum of Athens

The National Archaelogical Museum of Athens contains the best collection of ancient Greek artefacts in the world. And that’s no easy claim. Visit to catch up with permanent and temporary exhibitions of this period of time on earth that left such a lasting influence.

It also includes the 3000 year old Tholos tomb of Menidi, a beehive shaped tomb built for royalty.

Inside tip for Athens

If you bring your passport with you to the National Library, you can enter the reading room and, well, read! Perfect for book lovers.

Even more unique and unusual things to do in Athens

Beyond the standard museums, don’t overlook these…

Visit Plato’s Original Academy – Outdoors!

One of the most unusual things to do in Athens, is to head back to school. From thousands of years ago in the style of the ancient Greeks.

It’s completely unique and utterly off the tourist path but without a guide, you’d easily miss it.

Back in the day, Plato and Socrates would teach outdoors. And students would often be in the nude. That’s just how things were in ancient times.

Head over here if you want to find out what it’s all about and to touch the ruins of Plato’s former academy. It’s a great place to visit if you want to know more about Greece than just her beautiful beaches. A truly unique experience.

Cat in Anafiotica Athens
Things to do in Athens- looking at the blue in Anafiotica Athens
See Athens with a Local-see the white and blue houses

Anafiotika

Technically part of Plaka, Anafiotika feels like a different world and is easily one of the best hidden gems in Athens. Clustered into the steep hills beside the iconic Acropolis, it is almost impossible to describe to you how this area can be hidden and yet so close to the country’s main attraction.

It is also eerily, spectacularly beautiful.

The jumble of tiny white houses, seemingly melting out from the mountain in mesmerising white and blue owes its appearance to its residents. Drafted in to help build in Athens, workers from the Greek islands like Santorini and beyond set up their homes in a similar style here in Athens.

Agios Nikolaos Ragavas Church

Find a little piece of the 11th century alive and well in the heart of Athens. This still-functioning church from the byzantine era shimmers its gold through the gloom. If you have no time (nor inclination) to visit other religious buildings in Athens, then pay this one a visit. It’s easy to access in Plaka and a beautiful hidden gem in Athens.

Monastiraki Flea Market

Get over any distaste of the name and hunt for bargains at this thrift store that takes place every Sunday morning in Monastiraki Square. Look out for Greek souvenirs, vintage jewellery, quirky treasures relating to Greek mythology and more.

Your Travel Guide for Visiting Athens

When is the best time to visit Athens?

The best time to visit Athens is during the spring (March to May) and autumn or fall (September to November) months when the weather is mild and pleasant.

During spring, temperatures range from 15°C to 25°C (59°F to 77°F), making it ideal for sightseeing without the summer crowds.

In the fall, temperatures are similarly comfortable, ranging from 18°C to 28°C (64°F to 82°F).

These periods offer the perfect balance of warm weather and fewer tourists, allowing for a more enjoyable exploration of the city’s historical sites and vibrant neighbourhoods.

What to pack for Athens

Whatever you do, pack comfortable walking shoes for the city’s uneven streets and archaeological sites. Bring a water bottle with you to help you stay hydrated, and learn a few words of Greek to make a good impression. Download your free packing checklist for Greece here.

Did you enjoy this article on hidden gems in Athens? Bookmark these unique and unusual things to do in Athens for your trip to Greece. The Greek capital is waiting.

Unusual things to do in Athens - Unique and Hidden Gems in Athens cover image
Hidden gems and unique things to do in Athens

More Travel Guides on Athens

See our ultimate guide to food in Athens and check out the philosophy tour of Athens: why do we pursue happiness?

Peloponnese Map and Driving Itinerary for a Road Trip in Greece

More on Travel in Greece

Start with our collection of beautiful and unusual things to do in Greece and then delve deeper into the Greek archives.

In particular, look for the Peloponnese road trip itinerary and guide to things to do in Kalamata. Plus, decide between Mykonos or Santorini with our guide to both Greek islands.

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14 thoughts on “23 Hidden Gems and Unusual Things to do in Athens: The Cradle of Democracy”

  1. Athens can be so much more too! Check out the roof top bar / restaurant at Athens Gate Hotel and view both the Temple of Zeus and the Acropolis lit up at night time (Day time entrance to Temple of Zeus is free if you still have your ticket from the Acropolis). O & B Athens Boutique Hotel and its restaurant are amazing! As is Sushi at the Metropolitan Hotel, The Spa and suites at both Divani Caravel and Royal Olympic Hotel will certainly impress you and if you want somewhere extra special (boutique) to stay then Ava Hotel is perfection and the rooftop pool at Melia Athens is wonderful. Afternoon tea (after viewing the guards at the parliament in Syntagma) then make your way to Grande Bretagne Hotel. Designer shops are a must in Kolonaki then a trip up to Lycabettus Hill (easier by funicular train) then the views are certainly worthwhile. In the summer there is the Dora Stratou traditional dance & light show as well as shows / performances at the Acropolis amphitheatre Herodes. Take the metro and visit Glyfada – the Athenian Riviera or the port of Piraeus. Don’t forget to sample Greek souvlaki & pitta and / or a traditional meze with ouzo at least once and in winter try the national dish – Fassolada Soup! Everywhere you go you can be assured of Greek Hospitality.

  2. Hi Abi, great list of activities. Never visited Athens before, but next year we might go. Did you stayed only in Athens, or traveled also around? If yes, which places you still recommened to visit around? Thank you for great tips. have a lovely day, Csilla

  3. I couldn’t agree with you more! Athens ís quite unusual and it came as a surprise to me that there was so much more to explore than just the archaeological sights. I especially liked the Psirri neighbourhood with all its street art!

    • Ah, then you must check out Becki’s work at Borders of Adventure. She also fell in love with the street art there – and wrote reams about it!

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