Greece in July and Greece in February are different countries. Decide with the winter version: ferry schedules, hospital distance, and which Golden Visa price tier your map pin sits in. Here's the honest comparison.
Last verified: 8 July 2026| Region | Indicative prices | Golden Visa tier | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Athens & the Riviera | South suburbs ~€4,091/m², north ~€3,323/m² asking (market data) | €800,000 | The full-service option: best hospitals, direct US flights, biggest expat base — at Greece's highest prices. |
| Thessaloniki | Notably cheaper than Athens | €800,000 | A real second city with food and culture — but the same top Golden Visa tier as Athens. |
| Crete | Below Athens; Chania premium | €400,000 (islands 3,100+ pop. €800,000 — check your town) | The year-round island: real winter population, hospitals, two international airports. |
| Peloponnese | Mainland prices | €400,000 | Sea, history, and Kalamata's airport — without island logistics or island premiums. |
| Cyclades | Mykonos/Santorini far above national; Syros moderate | €800,000 on the famous ones | Gorgeous and heavily seasonal — most empty out in winter. |
| Ionian (Corfu) | Mid-range, prime spots higher | Check locally | Green, Italianate, established expat scene — check border-area status before buying, it sits near Albania. |
Asking prices are Spitogatos market data via press — not official statistics; the Bank of Greece index is the official series. Golden Visa tiers per Law 5100/2024: €800,000 in Attica, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini and islands with populations above 3,100; €400,000 elsewhere.
Walkable neighbourhoods, the country's best healthcare, an international airport with direct North American flights, and the deepest expat and social scene. The trade: Greece's highest prices — the Riviera suburbs (Glyfada, Voula) and the northern suburbs price near €3,300–4,100/m² asking — plus summer heat and city noise.
Greece's second city: serious food, universities, waterfront life, and markedly lower living costs than Athens. The trade: colder winters than the postcards admit, and property sits in the €800,000 Golden Visa zone despite the cheaper market.
Chania, Rethymno, and Heraklion have what small islands don't: real winter populations, hospitals, two international airports, and a large American, Canadian, and British retiree community. The closest thing Greece has to the Algarve playbook. The trade: it's a big island — pick your coast deliberately.
Kalamata and Nafplio offer sea, olive country, and mainland logistics — drive to Athens, no ferries, mainland prices, and the €400,000 Golden Visa tier. The trade: thinner English and fewer expat services than Crete or Athens.
Syros is the sleeper pick — the administrative capital, alive all year. Mykonos and Santorini are resort economies in the €800,000 tier that go quiet in winter. The trade everywhere: ferry-dependent living and medevac for serious healthcare.
Lusher and rainier than the Aegean, with Venetian architecture and one of Greece's oldest established expat scenes. The trade: seasonal tourism swings, and winter flight schedules thin out.
Chania, Rethymno, Heraklion, and the south coast — priced and profiled honestly.
Glyfada to Vouliagmeni: what €500,000 buys, commutes, and where the expats actually are.
Winter populations, ferry frequency, and hospital access — ranked with data, not vibes.