If you’ve ever clinked a frosty glass on a Greek island at sunset, you know how naturally beer fits the country’s easygoing rhythm. But the story behind that glass is far richer than a summer thirst-quencher. Greece’s brewery culture stretches from royal Bavarian influences in the 19th century to today’s booming microbrewery movement that’s putting places like Santorini, Paros, Mykonos, Evia, and Thessaloniki on the global beer map. This guide walks you through the history, the landmark brands, how people drink beer in Greece, and the explosion of micro breweries in Greece that travelers, foodies, and locals are chasing right now.
From kings and Kolonaki to nationwide taps: how brewing took root
Modern Greek brewing begins with Bavaria. When King Otto arrived in the 1830s, he brought a taste for lager and a cadre of Bavarian specialists. Among the early pioneers were the Fuchs family; Charles Johann Fuchs founded Fix in 1864, widely recognized as Greece’s first official brewery. From its base in Athens, Fix became a national icon and primed the palate of a wine-first country for crisp, continental-style beers.
By the postwar era, large breweries anchored the market, eventually tied to major European groups. Today, Athenian Brewery (Heineken group) and Olympic Brewery (Carlsberg group) sit alongside independent players like Hellenic Brewery of Atalanti (EZA) and Macedonian Thrace Brewery (Vergina). These four account for the lion’s share of mass-market beer, with portfolios that include names tourists instantly recognize: Heineken, Amstel, Alfa, Mythos, Fix Hellas, Mamos, Eza, and Vergina.
How Greeks actually drink beer: seaside summers, meze tables, and a draught renaissance
Beer in Greece is deeply seasonal. Summer tourism, beach culture, and island hopping make chilled lagers and pilsners ubiquitous—from kiosks (periptera) to tavernas, beach bars, and ferry cafeterias. For decades, bottled green lagers dominated, but you’ll now find more draught (varesi) options, especially in city taprooms and island brewpubs. Non-alcoholic lagers and radlers have also carved out space for daytime sipping in the heat.
Beer’s role at the table is flexible. It slips in where ouzo or wine might appear: alongside grilled sardines, fried calamari, souvlaki, and meze spreads. And in cities like Athens and Thessaloniki, the craft-beer scene has mapped itself onto neighborhood nightlife, with tap takeovers, seasonal releases, and tasting flights.
Data backs up the shift. Beer’s share of alcohol consumption has risen steadily over decades, and by 2023 Greeks consumed about 38 liters per capita, a middle-of-the-pack EU figure that continues to benefit from tourism and an expanding craft range. In 2023 there were 72 active breweries across the country—a remarkable number for a once wine-centric nation.

The “big four” and the classics travelers ask for
Visitors often learn the ropes with the big, easy-drinking labels:
Mythos: Greek-born lager with a crisp profile; widely poured in tourist hubs and islands. Part of Olympic Brewery (Carlsberg).
Fix Hellas: The historic brand revived and now brewed by Olympic Brewery; clean, bready, refreshing—great with grilled seafood.
Alfa and Amstel: Cornerstones of Athenian Brewery; Alfa remains a quintessential Greek lager, while Amstel is everywhere.
Mamos: A Patras-born classic (1876) with a cult following, revived under Athenian Brewery stewardship and expanding nationwide distribution.
Vergina: From Macedonian Thrace Brewery in Komotini, with a lineup that includes Vergina Lager, Weiss, Red, Black, and even Porfyra specialties—popular across Northern Greece.
Eza: Hellenic Brewery of Atalanti’s premium pilsner and lager line; frequently decorated in taste tests and competitions.
How the microbrewery wave began—and why it’s accelerating
Greece’s first modern craft outfit, aptly named Craft, opened in 1997 and inspired a slow-burn revolution that would flare after the financial crisis. From six microbreweries in 2009 to ~65 in 2020 and 70–75 by 2022, the country embraced local, flavor-forward brewing. By 2023, 72 active breweries were counted nationwide, a total that includes both micro and regional players. Greek law and EU rules incentivize small output (≤200,000 hl/year) with excise benefits—fueling micro-scale experimentation and island-based projects.
The result: a once concentrated market now has a vibrant network of micro breweries in Greece, many on major tourist islands. They’re producing award-winning pilsners, wits, IPAs, sours, and barrel-aged releases that travelers actively seek.
Greek craft labels tourists hunt down (and locals love)
Santorini Brewing Company (Crazy Donkey)
The boldest calling card of Greek craft. Crazy Donkey is widely cited as Greece’s first IPA, and it helped introduce hop-forward styles to the Aegean. You’ll spot it in specialty bars around the world, and visitors often put it at the top of their island wish list.
56 Isles (Paros Microbrewery)
Paros’ 56 Isles Aegean Wit and Pilsner earned top distinctions at the UK Great Taste Awards, placing Greek island beer among elite company and convincing travelers to “drink local” on Paros.
Nissos (Tinos)
Tinos’ Nissos helped establish the Cyclades as craft territory, showcasing Mediterranean ingredients and clean, food-friendly styles that draw culinary travelers. (Tip: pair with Tinos’ famed cheeses and seafood.)
Mykonos Brewing Company (Mikònu)
Mykonos didn’t just stick to cocktails—Mikònu built a taproom culture on the island. Their Fragos’ko fruit ale nabbed hardware at the Greek Beer Awards 2025; tastings are a trending Mykonos activity for visitors between beach clubs.
Voreia (Siris Craft Brewery, Serres)
Siris’ Voreia Pilsner was crowned Top Lager at Greek Beer Awards 2024, and the brewery keeps stacking medals for styles from imperial porters to Irish reds. If you see “Voreia” on tap in Thessaloniki or Athens, order confidently.
Septem (Evia)
A pioneer of modern craft in Greece, Septem is prolific and decorated. Its 8th Day IPA was named Top Ale in 2024, and the brand has racked up 50+ international awards over the years, including “Best Brewer of Europe” (2015, International Beer Challenge). Evia-bound travelers often plan a stop.
Corfu Beer (Ionian Islands)
One of Greece’s earliest microbreweries, Corfu Beer now collects international medals (including at the 2025 London Beer Competition). Their Ionian Pilsner and Special Red Ale are beach-town staples on the island.
Strange Brew (Athens, Peristeri)
Experimenting with new techniques and ingredients, such us the propagation of numerous liquid & dry yeast strains, mixed fermentation techniques and the development of an exciting barrel aging program, Strange Brew sets the tone for the emerging Greek craft beer scene! Strange Brew opened it's gates on February 2025, at the brand new facilities in Peristeri.
Chios Beer (Chios)
Chios’ portfolio screams “local,” including a Wheat with mastic—the island’s famed aromatic resin. Brewery tours are popular for travelers intrigued by terroir-driven beer.
Volkan & Santorini labels
Beyond Crazy Donkey, look for Volkan—another Santorini-born brand with a clean, citrus-led profile ideal for seafood and sunsets.
And don’t sleep on mainland craft: Standard Microbrewery of Thessaloniki (Sknipa) keeps winning medals (and hearts) up north; its imperial stout has cult status among Greek beer fans.
Why micro breweries in Greece are thriving now
1) Tourism meets terroir
Millions of visitors want a taste of place—a Santorini beer with volcanic seafood, a Mykonos beer at a taproom, or a Paros pilsner brewed with local barley. Breweries answer that demand with island-branded stories and patio-perfect styles. Awards like the Greek Beer Awards amplify visibility for travelers planning their routes.
2) Friendly rules for small producers
EU rules (and Greek practice) recognize small, independent breweries (≤200,000 hl/year), enabling tax relief and encouraging small-batch experimentation. That’s key oxygen for the microbrewery ecosystem.
3) A maturing beer palate at home
While the “big four” still dominate, Greek consumers and expats living in Greece have embraced hoppier, darker, and seasonal styles. Competitions report rising entries and a broader style mix.
4) Strong island and regional identities
Brands like 56 Isles, Nissos, Mikònu, Corfu Beer, Chios, and Volkan trade on local ingredients and place-based narratives, turning beer into a souvenir-worthy cultural product. Awards and export placements help them show up on travel lists and bar menus beyond Greece.
Athens & Thessaloniki: where taproom culture took off
Athens’ craft scene matured in the last decade, with neighborhood bars and taprooms popping up across Gazi, Petralona, Koukaki, and beyond. A milestone was Noctua, the capital’s first microbrewery (est. 2016)—a tiny urban operation that helped shift locals from “green-bottle” lagers to fresh, unpasteurized beers and snagged early international medals. Check their tankside spot near Pireos Avenue if you’re in town.
Thessaloniki, with its student energy and food obsession, embraced craft early. Today, the city’s bars carry a rotating cast of Greek microbrews, with Sknipa/Standard Microbrewery of Thessaloniki flying the local flag and racking up Greek Beer Awards distinctions.
Beer-and-Greece pairing: how and where to drink
On the islands: Seek brewery taprooms and island collaborations. Many offer tastings or tours (Mykonos Brewing Company runs bookable sessions), and summer festivals often feature local taps.
In Athens: Start with Noctua’s home base or a curated craft bar and branch into Greek-only flights; look for seasonal releases tied to Greek ingredients (thyme honey, citrus peels, local wheats).
With food:
Lagers/pilsners with grilled octopus, fried anchovies, and Greek salads
Wheats with feta, olives, and herb-forward meze
IPAs with spicy souvlaki, charred lamb, and hard cheeses
Dark ales/stouts with stews, aged cheeses, or bougatsa desserts (trust us)
Behind the bar: competition, quality, and a healthier market
As craft grew, Greece’s beer market became more contested. A 2024/25 Dutch court ruling found Heineken liable for historic competition violations involving its Greek unit, highlighting the stakes in this once highly concentrated sector. While that case concerns the past, the present looks far more diverse—with 72+ breweries and award circuits that reward quality over size. (Financial Times, The Brewers of Europe)
Competitions like the Greek Beer Awards now crown Top Ale and Top Lager annually—recently naming Septem’s 8th Day and Voreia Pilsner—and regularly recognize island breweries, keeping a spotlight on regional trends tourists love to chase.
Planning your own “micro brewery in Greece” trail
Athens & Thessaloniki are your best hubs for variety by the glass. Build a night around Greek-only lists, then follow your favorite labels back to their home islands or towns. On the Cyclades, combine Mykonos (Mikònu), Paros (56 Isles), Tinos (Nissos), and Santorini (Crazy Donkey/Volkan). In the Ionian, Corfu Beer pairs with sandy coves and Venetian lanes. On Chios, tour the brewery and try the famed mastic wheat. Many producers run visitor programs or taproom hours—always check before you go.
Final sip: a toast to Greek brewing’s next chapter
In a country famous for wine and spirits, beer has crafted its own identity—rooted in Bavarian technique, shaped by Mediterranean flavors, and energized by a new wave of microbreweries. Whether you’re flicking sand from your toes on Naxos, bar-hopping in Athens, or counting monasteries on Meteora, there’s a Greek beer story to match the moment.
Yamas—to the next pour!!


