Homes for Sale in Lasithi
List your Lasithi property
Eastern Crete has a small but serious pool of buyers who specifically want this corner of the island. List your property directly from €12.99 and reach them.
List your property →Why Buy in Lasithi?
Lasithi is the easternmost prefecture of Crete, and the one that feels furthest from the mass-tourism circuits. Here the pace is different — older, more rooted, more self-contained. Villages in the interior still thrash their wheat by hand at festival time; the Lasithi Plateau, a high-altitude agricultural plain ringed by mountains, has been farmed continuously since Minoan times. Windmills dot the plateau's edge, their white canvas sails turning in a wind that seems to blow from another century.
Agios Nikolaos — the regional capital — is built around a saltwater lake connected to the sea by a narrow channel, giving it a lakeside charm unusual on a Greek island. Cosmopolitan by Cretan standards, it has good restaurants, an archaeology museum housing the remarkable Goddess of Myrtos, and a lively harbour that attracts sailing yachts in summer. The town is significantly smaller than Heraklion or Chania, which is part of its appeal.
Eight kilometres north of Agios Nikolaos, Elounda commands one of the most photographed bays in Greece. Spinalonga island — the former Venetian fortress and leper colony made famous internationally by Victoria Hislop's novel The Island — sits just offshore. Elounda has become one of Europe's premier ultra-luxury resort destinations; the villas and residences along its bay are among the most expensive in Greece. Buyers here are not looking for a holiday bargain; they are investing in one of the Mediterranean's genuinely rarefied addresses.
Further east, the Sitia wine region has quietly been producing some of the best Liatiko and Vidiano wines in Greece. The town of Sitia — unhurried and largely untouched by international tourism — represents one of the last places in Crete where a buyer can find a genuinely affordable stone house in a functioning community at a price that feels like a discovery.
Key Areas in Lasithi
Buying Property in Lasithi
Is Elounda accessible to non-luxury buyers?
The Elounda Bay waterfront is firmly in the luxury segment. However, the surrounding hillside villages — Plaka, Mavrikiano, Vrouhas — offer considerably more accessible pricing with similar views and far more authentic living. These locations are often overlooked in favour of Elounda proper.
How does the Lasithi Plateau work as a place to live?
The plateau sits at around 840 metres elevation and is cold in winter. It functions primarily as an agricultural area, with the surrounding villages offering simple stone houses at low prices. A minority of buyers specifically seek the plateau for its extraordinary silence and visual drama — but practical amenities are limited to small village centres.
Is Sitia worth considering as an investment?
Possibly more so than it currently gets credit for. Wine tourism is growing steadily in this region, the Minoan Palace of Zakros draws specialist visitors, and the relative lack of development means prices remain low compared to western Crete. It is a long-term bet rather than a short-term rental yield play.
How long does it take to drive across Lasithi prefecture?
From Agios Nikolaos to Sitia on the northern coast road takes about 45 minutes. The south coast roads are slower and more dramatic. Heraklion airport is roughly 1 hour 15 minutes from Agios Nikolaos via the E75.
Selling in Lasithi?
There is a dedicated audience for eastern Crete. List your property directly — no agent, no commission. From €12.99.