
Agios Georgios Argyradon Beach
Nine kilometres of golden sand, wild dunes, and nesting turtles





About
Agios Georgios Argyrades stretches an almost unbelievable 9 km along the south-west coast of Corfu, a near-unbroken ribbon of golden sand backed by one of the most significant dune systems in the Ionian. The blue water is open and wide, the vibe is genuinely wild — no promenade, no beach bars every fifty metres, just sand, wind, and sky. Behind the dunes, the protected Korission Lagoon adds a second world entirely: flamingos, herons, and migratory birds in a brackish mirror that feels a continent away from the typical Greek resort. From June to August, sections of the beach are cordoned off to protect loggerhead sea turtle nests, a reminder that this coastline belongs to more than just summer visitors. It's one of the longest and least developed beaches in Greece, and that's exactly the point.
How to get there
From Corfu Town it's roughly a 50-minute drive south — the most practical way to reach the beach. Free informal parking is available at multiple access points along the 9 km stretch; tracks leading to the sand are unpaved, so a car with reasonable clearance helps. Ferry connections also serve the area, with journey times ranging from 20 to 90 minutes depending on the route. There is no entry fee.
Who it's for
For couples
The sheer length and quiet character of the beach means you can genuinely find your own stretch of golden sand with no one nearby — a rare thing in the Ionian in summer. An evening walk along the dunes with the Korission Lagoon glowing behind you is as close to solitude as Corfu gets.
For families
The beach is long and the swimming is safe, giving children plenty of room to roam without the pressure of a busy resort setup. Just brief the kids clearly about the turtle nesting markers before they run off — the cordoned zones must be respected, and it's actually a brilliant wildlife lesson in the field.
Our take
Feet in the sand, eyes on the screen
Agios Georgios Argyrades is the kind of beach that makes you recalibrate what a Greek beach can be. Nine kilometres of golden sand with no resort strip attached, a living dune system, a flamingo lagoon fifty metres from the waterline, and loggerhead turtles nesting in the same sand you're walking on — that combination is rare anywhere in Europe. The swimming is safe, the access is easy, and the quiet is real. Come in June or September if you want the best of it without the peak-summer heat. Respect the turtle zones without exception — they are not a suggestion. This is one of the most ecologically significant beaches in the Ionian, and the wildness is the whole reason to be here.
What to do
The Korission Lagoon, just 0.5 km from the beach, is a protected nature reserve where flamingos and herons are regular sightings — worth an early-morning visit when the light is low and the birds are active. Three kilometres north, the Issos Beach Dune system rises up to 8 metres, the most significant dune field in the Ionian and genuinely striking to walk through. Further along at 5.8 km, Halikounas Beach sits at the lagoon mouth and offers another chance to spot flamingos in spring. Kite-surfing is a real draw here too, with the exposed coast and reliable winds making this a recognised spot for the sport.
The Issos dunes at 3 km north are the standout frame — climb to the crest at golden hour and shoot back toward the sea with the lagoon visible behind.
The turtle nesting stakes in June–August create an unexpectedly powerful foreground against the wide golden beach and blue water beyond. For scale, a single long shot down the 9 km beach with no buildings in sight says everything about why this place is different.
Where to eat
Just outside the village, Il Mare (0.2 km) covers Italian options, while Sea Gulls (0.3 km) serves Greek food a short walk further. The Seaside Restaurant Cafe and Panorama are both within 0.4 km if you want something with a view, and Alex (0.4 km) handles pizza.
Where to stay
Hotel Golden Sands (0.5 km) is the closest hotel option by name, with Anastasia Apartments, Flora's Apartments, and Elena Pool all sitting within 0.4 km of the beach. Sportclub Paradise at 0.5 km rounds out the immediate options — a small cluster that keeps things low-key rather than resort-scale.
Photography
Shoot the dune system at Issos in the early morning when raking light carves shadows across the sand ridges and the lagoon surface is still. The long perspective shot looking north or south along the full golden beach — with the blue water on one side and the dune-backed lagoon on the other — works best in the hour after sunrise before the wind picks up.
Good to know
Between June and August, turtle nesting zones are marked with stakes — do not cross the cordons, do not disturb the marked areas, and keep noise low near them. Kite-surfers use sections of this beach actively, so if you're swimming, identify the launch zones first and stay well clear. No vehicles are permitted on the sand itself. The access tracks are unpaved and there are no dedicated facilities on the beach, so bring water, sun protection, and anything else you need.
Map
Nearby places
Il Mare
Sea Gulls
Seaside Restaurant Cafe
Panorama
Alex
Anastasia apartments
Flora's Apartments
Elena Pool
Hotel Golden Sands
Sportclub Paradise
Things to see around Argyrades
Korission Lagoon
Protected lagoon with flamingos, herons and migratory birds, separated from the sea by dunes.
Issos Beach Dunes
8 m sand dunes at the northern tip of the beach system, the most significant dune field in the Ionian.
Halikounas Beach
Remote lagoon-mouth beach with flamingo sightings in spring.
Frequently asked
The information on this page is provided for guidance only and may evolve. Access conditions, safety and infrastructure can change without notice. Always check official sources before traveling.
Nearest beaches
Other wild beaches in Greece
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Photo credits
Sources and licenses for the photos shown above.
- Photo 1 — LemonCrumpet · source · CC0
- Photo 2 — zogopl · source · CC BY-SA 3.0
- Photo 3 — Predrag Stojadinović · source · CC BY 2.0
- Photo 4 — Predrag Stojadinović · source · CC BY 2.0
- Photo 5 — Dli555 · source · CC BY-SA 4.0








