
Honeymoon Suite
Cave suite with caldera-facing veranda — designed for couples and milestone trips.
View room
Beaches
Last updated: March 2026
The sea around Santorini is volcanic, deep, and clear. It also runs colder than people expect for a Greek island in summer. The Aegean is a young, cool sea, and the water near Santorini does not warm to its summer peak until late July.
The sea around Santorini is volcanic, deep, and clear. It also runs colder than people expect for a Greek island in summer. The Aegean is a young, cool sea, and the water near Santorini does not warm to its summer peak until late July. If you are coming in May expecting bath-warm water, you are going to gasp. If you are coming in September, the water is at its annual best.
This guide gives the month-by-month sea temperature for Santorini, what it actually feels like to swim in, and which beaches are warmer or cooler than the island average. It pairs with our Santorini weather guide and our swimming in Santorini guide.

Quick Answer: Santorini sea temperature ranges from 16°C in February (numbingly cold) to 25°C in August and September (warm and easy). The best swimming months are July, August, and September, when sea temps sit between 23°C and 25°C. May and October are swimmable for the hardy at 18-21°C. Winter is for the locals who know what they are doing.
| Month | Avg Sea Temp | Feels like | Swimmable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 16°C / 61°F | Painfully cold | Locals only |
| February | 15°C / 59°F | Coldest month | No |
| March | 15°C / 59°F | Cold, slowly rising | No for most |
| April | 17°C / 63°F | Bracing | Brief dips only |
| May | 19°C / 66°F | Cool but doable | Yes for the hardy |
| June | 22°C / 72°F | Comfortable after 30 seconds | Yes |
| July | 24°C / 75°F | Warm | Easy |
| August | 25°C / 77°F | Warm and easy | Peak swim month |
| September | 24°C / 75°F | Warmest accumulated warmth | Best month |
| October | 22°C / 72°F | Still warm | Yes |
| November | 20°C / 68°F | Cooling fast | Brief swims |
| December | 18°C / 64°F | Cold | No |
Source: long-term averages compiled from regional Aegean sea-surface data (NOAA, Hellenic National Meteorological Service). Day-to-day temperatures can vary by 2-3°C based on wind and currents.
The Aegean is a young, deep, well-mixed sea. Cool water from the deep gets pushed up by the Meltemi winds in summer (the strong north winds that blow from late June through August). This keeps surface temperatures lower than calmer, shallower seas like the Adriatic or the eastern Mediterranean off Cyprus.
Santorini sits in the southern Aegean, where the water is a touch warmer than the central islands. But you will still notice the difference if you have swum in the Caribbean, the Maldives, or southeast Asia. The water here is clear, slightly cool, and refreshing rather than bath-warm.
Trade-off: it is one of the cleanest, clearest seas in Europe. Visibility regularly hits 25 to 30 meters in summer.
Late July through early October is the genuine warm-water window. Sea temperatures hit their annual peak in August and stay there through September. This is because the sea takes longer to warm up than the air does. By September, the water has absorbed three solid months of summer heat. The air is starting to cool, but the sea is at its warmest.
If you are picking a single month for swimming, September wins. The water is at 24°C, the air is in the high 20s, the wind has dropped, and the crowds are thinning. We get a lot of returning guests who specifically book September for this reason. For more on shoulder season, see our best time to visit Santorini guide.
Sea temperature varies a few degrees within Santorini depending on the beach.
| Beach | Sea temp variation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Kamari | +1°C above island avg | East coast, sheltered, shallow shelf |
| Perissa | +1°C above island avg | East coast, dark volcanic sand absorbs heat |
| Perivolos | +1°C above island avg | Same coastline as Perissa |
| Vlychada | At average | South coast, exposed |
| Red Beach | At average | Sheltered cove but deeper water |
| White Beach | At average | Same area as Red Beach |
| Caldera-side swims (off boats) | -1°C below average | Deep water (200m+), no shallow shelf |
For warm swimming, head to the eastern coast. The black-sand beaches of Kamari and Perissa absorb heat through the day, the water there is shallower, and the sea runs a degree or two warmer than the caldera side.
Locals in Santorini swim year-round. There is a small but committed group that does morning swims in February at 15°C. They are not crazy. They are conditioned. If you have never done cold-water swimming, do not start in February in the Aegean.
Brief dips in November (20°C) and even March (15°C) are doable if you have done cold-water swimming before. The water is dead calm in winter, the sea is empty, and the experience is genuinely beautiful.
The volcanic hot springs inside the caldera are a different category, water there is warm even in winter (28-35°C) thanks to underwater volcanic activity.
For shoulder season (May, October, early November), bring:
For peak summer (July-September), bring:
The sea in May averages 19°C. Swimmable, but cool. You will feel the cold for the first 30 seconds, then it becomes refreshing. Most casual swimmers find it doable for short swims, not long ones. For warmer water, wait until late June.
August and September are the warmest months, both averaging 24-25°C. September often has the most consistent warm water because the sea has absorbed all of summer's heat by then. The first half of October still holds at 22-23°C.
Yes. Sea temperatures in October sit at 22°C at the start of the month and drop to about 20°C by the end. Air temperatures hold in the low 20s. It is one of our favorite months for swimming, fewer crowds, warm enough water, soft light. For full month-by-month context, see our weather guide.
Winter sea temperatures (December to March) sit between 15°C and 18°C. Locals swim year-round, but for visitors without cold-water experience, this is too cold for anything beyond a brief dip. The hot springs inside the caldera are warm year-round.
The Aegean is a young, deep, well-mixed sea. The strong Meltemi winds in summer push cool deep water to the surface, keeping temperatures lower than warmer seas like the eastern Mediterranean. The trade-off is exceptional clarity, visibility regularly hits 25-30 meters in summer.
Yes. Santorini has some of the clearest water in the Aegean, partly because of the volcanic seabed (no silt or river runoff) and partly because of the depth right off the caldera coast. Snorkeling visibility regularly exceeds 25 meters in summer.
The east coast beaches, Kamari, Perissa, and Perivolos, run about 1°C warmer than the island average. The dark volcanic sand absorbs heat through the day, and these beaches sit on a shallower shelf than the caldera coast.
This guide is part of our Santorini weather and Santorini travel guide. For full swim planning, see our swimming in Santorini guide and our Santorini beaches hub. Looking for a caldera-view base near the beaches? See our suites in Fira.
Planning a Santorini trip?
Get our insider guide
Local tips, hidden spots, and an exclusive direct booking discount delivered to your inbox.
Stay with us
Six cave-style suites on the caldera in central Fira. Direct booking includes complimentary wine on 3+ night stays and free airport transfer on 4+ nights.

Cave suite with caldera-facing veranda — designed for couples and milestone trips.
View room
70m² cave suite with year-round heated indoor jacuzzi and arched ceilings.
View room
Heated outdoor jacuzzi on a private balcony — caldera and sunset, no shared spaces.
View roomYour Stay Awaits
Experience Santorini from a cave suite perched on the caldera edge in Fira.