Peninsula Resort & Spa

Peninsula Resort & Spa sits on one of the most genuinely unusual pieces of ground in Cretan hospitality: an actual peninsula. The headland divides two bays — Mononaftis and Psaromoura — and the resort follows its shape, built amphitheatrically so that the sea is present from almost every vantage point. Direct access to three separate beaches is a rarer feature than the marketing usually suggests. The property has been in continuous operation for over four decades under the same family. The main building and a network of bungalows hold 270 rooms in total, ranging from double rooms with sea or mountain views to suites with private plunge pools or jacuzzis. Interiors follow a consistent logic: white-washed walls, earthy Cretan stone tones, and the kind of restrained local craft that avoids the worst excesses of Aegean pastiche. The all-inclusive structure here is more considered than most. Three restaurants operate on-site — the beachside Tsimento, the à la carte Parasia, and Meremeti, which focuses on Cretan and Mediterranean cooking — alongside four bars. The Anasa Spa occupies its own building with treatment rooms and an indoor pool. Three outdoor pools are spread across the resort grounds. Heraklion and its airport sit 25 kilometres east, which means the Palace of Knossos, the Archaeological Museum, and the old city are all within a straightforward half-day excursion from the resort’s front desk.