Santorini Luxury Roses | Travel Guide
The island before the crowds arrive. Wildflowers on the caldera rim, the sea beginning to warm, Easter candlelight in the villages, and mornings that belong entirely to you.
April sits at one of Santorini's most quietly special turning points. The winter quiet has lifted, restaurants and hotels are reopening, and the island has not yet been consumed by the July and August crowds. You walk the caldera path between Fira and Oia and it actually feels like a walk rather than a procession.
The light in April is particular. It has a softness that summer loses when the sky bleaches white with heat. The wildflowers are still out, the hillsides carry a greenness that will be gone by June, and in the evenings the stone still holds the chill of winter, which makes the warmth of a taverna feel like something earned rather than expected.
Whether you are planning a proposal on the caldera edge, a romantic surprise, an anniversary celebration, or simply want to understand what April here actually feels like before you book, this guide covers everything. For a full picture of how April compares to every other month, our Santorini weather guide by season has every number and every nuance.
April is a shoulder season month with genuinely pleasant weather, significantly more sunshine than March, and only occasional short-lived rain.
Average highs sit around 19°C with lows of 13°C overnight. Daytime temperatures are comfortable for walking, sightseeing, and outdoor dining without the heat of the high season making everything feel like an effort. You will want a light jacket for the mornings and evenings.
Rainfall for the month averages 30mm spread across roughly 3 days, which means April is already much drier than March. When it does rain, it tends to be short and sharp, usually clearing within a few hours. Sunshine averages 8.5 hours per day, which gives you plenty of light for the caldera walk, photography, and long afternoon explorations.
The sea temperature of 16.5°C means swimming is on the cool side for most people, though committed swimmers and snorkellers will find it perfectly manageable. The beaches are uncrowded, the volcanic sand holds the spring warmth well, and the water is clear in a way that July cannot match. For the complete month-by-month breakdown of every weather statistic on the island, including temperature charts, rainfall data, and sea conditions for all twelve months, see our Santorini weather guide by season.
Greek Orthodox Easter is not a long weekend. It is the event that defines the entire year for people on this island. If you happen to be in Santorini during Holy Week in 2026, you are visiting at a time that very few tourists ever witness, and it is something that stays with you.
Good Friday (10 April) is the most moving evening. The Epitaphios procession moves slowly through the streets of the villages after nightfall, carried by candlelight and accompanied by the deep sound of church bells. Pyrgos is particularly atmospheric for this. The village climbs the hill in silence and the whole thing feels completely removed from tourist Santorini.
Holy Saturday midnight (11 April) is the resurrection service. Churches fill to capacity and at midnight the priest announces the resurrection, the lights go out, and a single flame is passed from person to person through the congregation until the whole church glows. People carry their lit candles home through the streets, shielding the flame with their hand.
Easter Sunday (12 April) is for feasting. Whole lambs are roasted outdoors on spits from early morning. If you are staying in one of the villages, you will smell it before you see it. Locals are genuinely welcoming to visitors who show curiosity about the celebration, and sharing a table on Easter Sunday is an experience that no tour can replicate.
One practical note: accommodation books quickly in the days around Easter. If you are planning a proposal, a romantic surprise, or a honeymoon stay during this period, book well in advance.
April's mild temperatures and quieter island make certain experiences significantly better than they are in peak season. Here is what the month does best.
This is the walk that defines Santorini for most people, and April is genuinely the finest month to do it. The temperature is right, somewhere between 15°C and 19°C depending on the time of day, which means you are not setting off at dawn to beat the heat. The path is not yet crowded. You can stop and look at the view without someone stepping around you.
The caldera rim walk takes roughly two to three hours at a relaxed pace and finishes in Oia. The volcanic rock layers along the way show shades of red, yellow, and black. In April the surrounding hillsides still carry the green of late winter, which disappears entirely by July.
Oia's sunset lives up to its reputation, but only when you are not three people deep at the castle battling for a view. In April the famous sunset point has breathing room. You can take your time finding a terrace, order a glass of local Assyrtiko, and watch the light move across the caldera without the August relay race.
Sunset in April falls around 7:45 to 8:00pm. The colours tend to be warmer and more layered than the stark summer sunsets. This is also one of the finest settings for a romantic surprise or a caldera proposal, with the intimacy that only the shoulder season provides.
Pyrgos, Megalochori, Emporio, Akrotiri village. These are the parts of Santorini that most August visitors never reach, and in April they are unhurried and genuinely local. Pyrgos in particular is worth a morning: a hilltop village with a ruined Venetian kastro at the top and views over the whole island. On Good Friday during Easter week it becomes the most atmospheric spot on the island.
Renting a car or a scooter in April is straightforward because parking actually exists. You can drive the full southern loop, stopping at Vlychada Beach, the Akrotiri lighthouse, and the red and black volcanic beaches without any of the high-season chaos.
The Minoan settlement at Akrotiri is one of the most remarkable archaeological sites in Europe and is completely undervisited by people who come to Santorini for the sunsets. The city was buried by the volcanic eruption around 1600 BC and preserved in extraordinary detail: multi-storey buildings, frescoes, clay pipes, storage vessels.
In April you visit in total comfort. The site is covered so the weather is irrelevant, but arriving without queues and without the pressed-together crowd of August makes the whole experience completely different. Allow at least two hours.
The volcanic islet of Nea Kameni in the middle of the caldera is one of the few active volcanoes in Europe that you can actually walk on. Boat trips run throughout the shoulder season and the lack of peak-season demand means you are not boarding a vessel built to hold as many people as possible.
Most tours include the hot springs at Palea Kameni where the water turns orange-yellow from the sulphur. The sea at 16.5°C is cold for a long swim but the springs are considerably warmer, which makes a dip worthwhile. Wear old swimwear as the minerals stain fabric.
April is one of the months we recommend most often for proposals, anniversary celebrations, and honeymoon experiences. The island is intimate in a way it simply cannot be in July. Restaurant terraces are yours. The caldera is quiet at dusk.
A private setup on the caldera edge, with roses arranged around the moment and the Aegean going from blue to deep gold behind you, lands differently when you are not surrounded by fifty other couples doing the same thing. That is what April gives you: the island without the noise. We also design birthday celebrations that make full use of the quieter spring calendar.
A straightforward look at what April does and does not offer, so you can decide if it suits what you are looking for.
April requires a little more thought than summer. The days are warm but mornings, evenings, and any wind off the caldera can be genuinely cool.
The mornings in April still carry a coolness that makes the first coffee of the day feel like it means something. You sit on a terrace in Fira or Firostefani, the caldera is in front of you, and the light is doing something extraordinary with the white walls. There is nobody asking you to move for a photo. There is no queue for anything.
By midday the temperature has risen to somewhere around 17 or 18°C and the jacket comes off. The Fira to Oia walk, which in August is a sweating procession of people in unsuitable shoes, is in April a genuinely meditative experience. You walk at your own pace. The volcanic landscape shifts colour in the changing light, drops away to the sea on one side, and occasionally surprises you with a view that reminds you why this island has accumulated the reputation it has.
Evenings cool quickly once the sun is down. A restaurant terrace overlooking the caldera at 9pm in April requires that medium jacket, but the stillness of the island at that hour more than compensates. The summer buzz has not arrived. The places that are open are cooking for the people actually in front of them rather than for the 400 covers they need to turn in a single evening. This quietness is exactly what makes April ideal for a honeymoon or a birthday celebration that actually feels personal.
If you are here for Easter, the mood of the island shifts in a way that is completely separate from the tourist calendar. On Good Friday evening the streets of Pyrgos fill with candlelight and the sound of bells and something ancient and unhurried takes over. It is one of those experiences that is very difficult to explain and very easy to remember. For a deeper understanding of how the island behaves across all twelve months, our Santorini weather guide by season is the most complete reference we have published.
Whether it is a proposal during Easter week, a romantic surprise at golden hour, or simply the island at its most unhurried, we create experiences that make the most of what April here actually offers.