Agia Anna and the Hozoviotissa coast
This is the best-known sea image of Amorgos, but it works best as part of a Chora and monastery day rather than as a standalone beach mission. The cliff scenery is the real anchor here.
Amorgos does not work as one simple beach island. Its swimming rhythm changes with where you sleep, how much road time you accept and whether the day belongs to the monastery coast, Katapola, Aegiali or the southern edge.
This is the best-known sea image of Amorgos, but it works best as part of a Chora and monastery day rather than as a standalone beach mission. The cliff scenery is the real anchor here.
Around Katapola, the island gives easier sea access that fits naturally into arrival or port days. These swims are practical when you want water without committing to a long cross-island transfer.
The north has the broadest sandy logic on the island. Aegiali works for a simple base swim, while Levrossos and Psili Ammos make more sense when the whole day belongs to the northern villages and coast.
Mouros is one of the strongest swims in Amorgos because it fits the island's rougher side. It belongs to a southern road day, not to a rushed add-on after Chora or Aegiali.
Kalotaritissa gives a softer, more open beach ending, especially if you are already exploring Kato Meria. It is the kind of place that rewards a whole southern route, not a quick detour.
This page is based on stable geography, settlement structure, coastline logic, local landmarks and cultural context, cross-checked against public destination references and map-based orientation.
Live ferry schedules, sea conditions, seasonal services and business details can change, so verify those separately before you travel.
Once the island is read through bases, villages and distance, the beach plan becomes much more coherent.
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