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Few travel dilemmas are as quintessentially Mykonian as choosing between Alemagou and Scorpios. Both are headline beach clubs that define the island’s summer mood, both promise golden-hour magic, high-caliber DJs and serious design credentials. Yet on the ground they feel very different. If you are planning a big splurge day in Mykonos and only have the budget or time for one marquee beach club, understanding those differences will help you pick the one that truly matches your style.
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The Essentials: What Alemagou and Scorpios Actually Are
Alemagou is an all-day beach club and restaurant on Ftelia Beach, on the north coast of Mykonos. Built in rough stone, sand and timber with reed-thatched canopies, it leans into the wild, wind-brushed side of the island. By day it feels like a barefoot bohemian retreat with families, couples and groups drifting between the sea, the loungers and the long communal tables. As afternoon slides into sunset, the music deepens, the lighting softens and the vibe shifts toward a proper party without losing its relaxed edge.
Scorpios sits on the south coast between Paraga and Paranga beaches, in a sprawling complex of stone pavilions, shaded decks and a natural amphitheater-style beach. It is one of the most famous beach clubs in Europe, backed by the same group behind Soho House. The space is carefully choreographed: there is a beach area for daytime lounging, a restaurant terrace overlooking the water, and a Rituals area where big-name DJs and performers play during sunset and into the night.
Both venues operate on a reservations-first model in peak season. At Alemagou you typically reserve a beach bed or lunch table and then drift naturally into the late-afternoon party. At Scorpios you will usually choose between a beach reservation earlier in the day, a lunch or dinner seating in the restaurant, or a special “sunset beach” or “ritual” setup on nights when major acts are performing.
In practical terms, you can think of Alemagou as a boho Aegean taverna that morphs into a beach party, and Scorpios as a curated social club by the sea with a more polished and performance-driven format.
Vibe and Atmosphere: Raw Boho vs Curated Theater
What you feel in the first ten minutes often decides whether a place is “you.” Alemagou trades on a raw, elemental atmosphere. Ftelia is open to the north wind, so the sea can be choppy and there is a constant breeze rustling the thatch overhead. Sand blows underfoot, people walk around barefoot, and the architecture melts into the rocky hillside instead of standing out. In the middle of the day, you may see kids building sandcastles next to tables where friends share mezze and rosé. It feels like a sophisticated beach hangout rather than a catwalk.
Scorpios by contrast feels like entering a tiny, self-contained world. Staff guide you through stone paths and shaded courtyards; ceramic lanterns and textiles are placed just so; the line between guest and performer blurs during the sunset rituals. When a well-known DJ collective plays, the entire beach seems to move in sync and phones come out to capture the moment. It can feel almost theatrical: less about the individual conversations and more about sharing a big communal experience.
If you thrive on polished environments, people-watching and that sense of being exactly where the scene is, Scorpios has a magnetic pull. For example, on a peak August Sunday you might find a mix of international creatives, fashion people and tech founders at neighboring tables, all dressed in carefully undone linen and designer sunglasses. At Alemagou, that same Sunday could see a softer mix of Athenians weekending on the island, yacht crews on their day off and groups of friends who came primarily for the food and stayed for the sunset set.
In short, Alemagou is moodier and more organic, Scorpios is more curated and high-impact. Both are beautiful. The question is whether you want to feel like you discovered a hideout or joined the main stage.
Location, Logistics and How Your Day Actually Flows
Location will shape how easily you can weave a beach club day into the rest of your trip. Alemagou’s Ftelia Beach location is a little more remote. Driving from Mykonos Town typically takes about 15 to 20 minutes by taxi or private transfer, and the last stretch winds down to a more rugged, undeveloped bay. The upside is fewer passing crowds and no stream of beach-hoppers walking through. It is common for guests to arrive late morning, secure a pair of loungers, have a leisurely lunch around 3 pm and then slide into the sunset party without ever leaving the venue.
Scorpios on the south coast is better connected to the broader Mykonos beach circuit. It is close to popular spots like Paraga and Paradise, and you may even arrive by small boat transfer from neighboring beaches or hotels. A typical Scorpios day might start elsewhere, for instance with a swim at nearby Paraga or lunch at a more casual taverna, followed by an afternoon or evening reservation timed around a performance. Because Scorpios attracts heavy demand on key dates, guests often plan their entire day around whichever time slot they could secure.
From a logistics point of view, both venues strongly favor advance reservations in high season. At Alemagou, requesting a lunch table and adjacent sunbeds a couple of weeks ahead for July or August is usually enough, especially if you are flexible on exact positioning. At Scorpios, peak nights linked to world-famous DJs can book out weeks or months ahead, and people sometimes work with hotel concierges or dedicated island concierges to secure beach, restaurant and ritual combinations.
If you care about a chill, uninterrupted flow where you are not checking your watch, Alemagou’s single-venue arc from beach to late-afternoon party is ideal. If you like building a day with several stops and finishing with a “big moment” at sunset, Scorpios fits that story better.
Price, Spend and What You Actually Get for Your Money
Both Alemagou and Scorpios sit in the mid-premium tier of Mykonos beach clubs, meaning you will spend significantly more than at a simple local taverna but usually less than the ultra-bling clubs at Psarou. Recent 2026 price guides put Scorpios and Alemagou in a similar bracket, with Scorpios typically a notch more expensive overall.
At Scorpios, a pair of front-row sunbeds on a busy day can easily cost into the low hundreds of euros, with per-person minimum spends that often push a couple’s total daytime bill into the 350 to 500 euro range once cocktails, lunch and a bottle of wine are factored in. On special program days, sunset beach and ritual setups frequently come with bottle commitments rather than a simple sunbed fee, so you might find that even a small group is expected to order at least one bottle of wine or spirits to secure the spot.
Alemagou’s pricing is still premium, but per-person totals tend to be slightly more forgiving on a typical day. Expect that a couple sharing a pair of loungers, ordering a round of cocktails, starters to share and two mains might land somewhere in the 200 to 300 euro range depending on exact choices. Many diners report that the food quality in particular helps the bill feel more justified, since you are not only paying for the scene but for a carefully executed Aegean-inspired menu.
For budget planning, it is realistic to assume that a headline afternoon at either club will be one of the most expensive days of your Mykonos trip. If you are comparing the two strictly on price, Alemagou often represents better value for travelers who truly use the full day, while Scorpios can feel more expensive per hour since the key hours are concentrated around sunset and night.
Music, Parties and the Type of Crowd Each Attracts
Both clubs take music seriously, but they do so with a different philosophy. Alemagou leans into a deep house and organic electronic sound that intensifies toward sunset. During high season, the program often includes respected European DJs and collectives known for melodic, sand-between-the-toes sets that fit the raw setting of Ftelia. The beach itself becomes the dance floor, and you will see people moving casually between tables, bar and water as the sun drops.
Scorpios has built an international reputation for its music and ritual programming. Its sunset rituals can feature globally known artists, and some nights feel more like a small festival than a typical beach party. The crowd arranges itself on terraces and around a central performance space, with many guests focused as much on the musical journey as on socializing. On these nights Scorpios attracts fans who plan entire trips around specific acts.
Crowd-wise, Alemagou tends to attract a slightly looser, less image-driven mix. You will certainly see stylish resort wear and the occasional celebrity or influencer, but you are just as likely to sit next to a low-key group of Greeks celebrating a birthday as to a group of visiting friends from London. Scorpios pulls a more consistently international, high-fashion audience. Think destination-wedding groups, creative industry types and people who follow the brand’s outposts in other countries.
If you want a party that feels like a spontaneous extension of the beach day, Alemagou delivers. If your ideal night out in Mykonos is anchored by a specific DJ set or the shared climax of a sunset ritual, Scorpios is hard to beat.
Food, Service and Overall Comfort
One of the clearest differences travelers notice is the food culture. Alemagou functions as a serious restaurant in its own right. The kitchen focuses on modern Greek and Aegean fusion cooking, leaning on fresh seafood and produce. You might start with crisp calamari or a shared plate of tomatoes with local cheese and herbs, then move on to whole grilled fish or slow-cooked lamb served for the table. Many guests plan their visit around a proper lunch, then linger over digestifs as the music warms up.
Scorpios also takes food seriously, with a Mediterranean, vegetable-forward menu designed to be shared. Here the meal is often one act in a longer performance. Guests might order a spread of small plates and a chilled bottle of rosé around 6 or 7 pm, strategically timed so they are finishing just as the sun sinks and the ritual begins. While reviews of the food are generally positive, some travelers report that on very busy nights the kitchen and service can stretch thin, which may matter if you are there for a special celebration.
On the comfort front, Alemagou’s fewer crowds and slightly softer pacing can translate to more attentive service, especially earlier in the day. Loungers are spaced at a comfortable distance and there is a sense that you can stay as long as you like once you have settled in. At Scorpios, time slots can be more rigid. Beach areas sometimes have defined arrival windows, and restaurant tables may be turned to accommodate multiple seatings. This is not inherently negative, but it does make the experience feel more structured.
Travelers who prioritize relaxed, conversation-friendly meals often gravitate toward Alemagou. Those who prioritize being in the heart of the action usually accept Scorpios’ more choreographed approach as part of the package.
Which Beach Club Fits Which Traveler Profile?
If you are still undecided, it helps to map each club onto traveler archetypes. Alemagou is ideal for couples who love long, lazy lunches and natural settings, groups of friends who value good food and a barefoot dance more than high-profile people-watching, and seasoned Mykonos visitors who have already done the most famous venues and want something that feels a little more elemental.
Imagine a pair of travelers in their early 30s who spend most vacations seeking out wine bars and small galleries and who prefer linen shorts to logo swimwear. They might arrive at Alemagou around noon, swim between courses, chat with neighboring tables over a bottle of Greek white wine, then suddenly find themselves dancing in the sand as a DJ lifts the energy at sunset. For them the magic lies in how naturally the day evolves.
Scorpios is a better match for travelers who get energy from being around a big international crowd and who see Mykonos as a place to dress up and lean into the island’s glamorous side. It suits special occasions like milestone birthdays, honeymoons where one big splurge night is on the cards, or trips built around specific DJs or creative collaborations. A typical Scorpios guest may have booked weeks ahead, arrived in a carefully planned outfit and plotted the timing of dinner to hit the exact moment of sunset.
In other words, Alemagou feels like a day that happens to turn into a night out. Scorpios feels like a night out that happens to be by the sea.
The Takeaway
Choosing between Alemagou and Scorpios in Mykonos is less about which beach club is “better” and more about which one speaks your language. Both offer high-quality food, serious music programs and evocative design. Yet Alemagou wraps those elements in a wind-swept, laid-back setting where the focus falls on the sea, the sand and the shared table. Scorpios frames them as part of a larger, ritualized show where the crowd, the architecture and the performance combine into a single spectacle.
If your perfect Mykonos memory involves dancing barefoot at the water’s edge after a long, relaxed lunch, surrounded by a crowd that feels bohemian rather than branded, Alemagou is likely to feel like home. If instead you picture yourself under sculpted wooden canopies among an international crowd as the sun drops behind the headland and the DJ climbs toward a crescendo, Scorpios is the experience you will talk about for years.
Given the cost and planning involved, many travelers sensibly choose one marquee day and then balance it with simpler beach tavernas elsewhere on the island. Whichever club you choose, booking ahead, arriving with realistic budget expectations and leaning into the specific character of the place will do more to shape your experience than any ranking ever could.
FAQ
Q1. Is Alemagou cheaper than Scorpios?
Alemagou is usually slightly easier on the wallet, especially for a full day with loungers and lunch, though both are firmly in the premium category by Greek island standards.
Q2. Do I really need a reservation for Alemagou or Scorpios?
In July and August you should assume yes for both, particularly for sunbeds and sunset hours. Walk ins are more feasible in shoulder season or earlier in the day.
Q3. Which beach club is better for a relaxed long lunch?
Alemagou tends to be the better choice for an unhurried, food-focused lunch that naturally drifts into a sunset party, with a slightly calmer atmosphere overall.
Q4. Which is best if I care most about the DJ or music lineup?
Scorpios wins if your priority is seeing specific high profile DJs or experiencing their signature sunset rituals, though Alemagou also hosts strong electronic acts in season.
Q5. Is either beach club suitable for families?
Both can welcome families earlier in the day, but Alemagou’s raw beach setting and more relaxed midday pace often feel more comfortable for parents with children.
Q6. What should I wear to Alemagou or Scorpios?
Think elevated beachwear: swimwear with linen cover ups or resort dresses by day, and smart casual in natural fabrics for sunset and dinner. Avoid overly formal outfits.
Q7. Can I just go for drinks without booking sunbeds?
Often yes, especially if you reserve a bar or restaurant spot instead of beds, but on very busy event nights Scorpios in particular may prioritize guests with full reservations.
Q8. How far are the clubs from Mykonos Town?
By taxi or transfer, expect roughly 15 to 20 minutes to Alemagou on the north coast and a similar or slightly shorter ride to Scorpios on the south coast, depending on traffic.
Q9. Which club is better for solo travelers?
Both can work, but solo travelers who enjoy organic conversations and a less image conscious crowd often find it easier to connect with people at Alemagou.
Q10. If I can only choose one, which should I book?
If you want barefoot boho energy and a strong focus on food, choose Alemagou. If you want a big statement night built around sunset and music, choose Scorpios.