Metochi Lodge and the Art of Disappearing Beautifully Above Falassarna Bay
Every season, another glossy list from Vogue or another glitzy magazine appears promising the best of Crete: the best hotels, the best beaches, the best villas, the best places to eat, the best villages to photograph before everyone else photographs them. Some are useful, some are elegant, and some are written by people who have clearly met the island through a windshield, a concierge, and three lunches arranged by somebody else. A serious local guide learns to read such lists with one eyebrow raised. “Really?” one thinks. “Let’s see.”
After browsing and finding an Airbnb list this morning, it occurred to me that as a top local adviser here on Crete, it’s my duty (sort of) to evaluate for travelers the various evaluations, as it were. So, it is the spirit behind In Search of the Perfect Crete Retreat that begins this journey with a place found which must top any list of best places for a sunset on Crete. My effort going forward is not a rejection of luxury, style, or international taste, but a slower local correction. Crete is too large, too layered, and too emotionally particular to be reduced to familiar names and predictable recommendations. The real gems are often found slightly off the polished circuit: a stone house above a bay, a restored hideaway at the end of a rough road, a family-run place with better silence than branding, or a retreat whose true value is not only where it is, but what kind of traveler it allows you to become.
Some places on Crete are built for convenience. Others are built for arrival. Metochi Lodge, set high above Falassarna Bay on the island’s wild western coast, belongs to the second category. This unique stone-built retreat where sea, mountain, olive trees, and silence seem to gather around the house rather than merely surround it, is a pleasant discovery even for me. This area of Crete is a favorite of mine, so to find such a sublime retreat was, well, a treat to say the least.
High on a rugged mountainside above Crete’s west coast, Metochi Lodge looks out across the Cretan Sea and the luminous sweep of Falassarna Bay. It is a place designed for unhurried days, long sunsets from the lodge or the beach (as below), and the kind of holiday where architecture, landscape, and stillness begin to feel inseparable. The view is not an amenity here so much as a daily condition. Morning light, afternoon heat, and evening gold all arrive differently across the terraces.
Built with rough local stone, the lodge settles into the land rather than standing apart from it. Around the house, old olive trees and wild Cretan terrain create a sense of privacy and belonging, while the structure itself avoids the sterile perfection that can make luxury properties feel airlifted from nowhere in particular. The best Cretan retreats do not merely provide comfort. They let the island remain present.
The villa accommodates up to 10 guests, making it well suited to two or three families, or a small group of friends seeking a private base in western Crete. There are four independent bedrooms: two double rooms with en-suite bathrooms, one additional double room, and one family room for four sharing a bathroom and toilet. Each bedroom enjoys a sea view and its own outdoor space, while the entire lodge is air-conditioned for comfort through the warmer months.
The living area is open and relaxed, with a fully equipped kitchen, oven, large hob, microwave, American-style refrigerator with filtered water and ice, and a lounge furnished with vintage design chairs. The house invites people to gather without crowding one another, which is one of the quiet tests of any good retreat property. A place can be beautiful and still fail if it does not understand how people actually live together for a week.
Outside, several terraces and seating areas allow the day to unfold slowly. Morning coffee, late lunches, shaded conversations, evening drinks, and quiet hours by the pool all find their own natural place. At the heart of the outdoor space is the infinity pool, surrounded by a broad terrace and open views. A shaded bamboo-covered terrace beside the kitchen creates a natural gathering point for meals, barbecues, and long conversations out of the sun.
Metochi Lodge combines bohemian ease with earthy refinement: grey, off-white, and sand tones, smooth cement floors, natural stone, rough plaster, and layered textures that echo the surrounding landscape. The result is elegant without becoming cold, stylish without becoming precious, and grounded enough to feel unmistakably Cretan.
The practical comforts are also well considered: air conditioning, underfloor heating, alarm system, barbecue, fully equipped kitchen, dishwasher, Nespresso machine, juicer, American fridge, private parking, washing machine, hairdryer, iron, Starlink Wi-Fi, bed linen, towels, beach towels, and quality skin and hair care products. An AED is also available on site for medical emergencies, a small but meaningful detail for a property set in a more secluded location.
Because the final approach to the lodge includes a gravel road, and because many of western Crete’s most beautiful beaches are reached by rougher routes, a higher-clearance SUV or similar vehicle is recommended. This is not a flaw. On Crete, the road often tells you what kind of place you are approaching. The easiest places are not always the ones worth remembering.
Falassarna itself is one of western Crete’s great coastal landscapes: wide, light-filled, and open to some of the island’s most memorable sunsets. From Metochi Lodge, guests are close enough to reach the beach, tavernas, and surrounding villages, yet far enough above the coast to feel removed from the usual summer movement below. That balance is the lodge’s quiet achievement. It offers privacy without isolation, design without theatricality, and comfort without erasing place.
This part of Crete also rewards those willing to move slowly. Falassarna is close, but the wider region opens toward Kissamos, Sfinari, Balos, Elafonisi, traditional villages, olive groves, coastal drives, and mountain roads that remind visitors how much of Crete still lies outside the resort imagination. A week here need not be filled with activities. The better itinerary may be simpler: beach, lunch, swim, sunset, sleep, repeat, with one or two excursions allowed to interrupt the spell.
Metochi Lodge is, above all, a place for those who want Crete with space around it: sea views, stone, olives, warm wind, good design, and the feeling that the island has not been staged, but simply allowed to speak. And that may be the real test of a perfect Crete retreat. Not whether it appears on a fashionable list, or photographs well from the expected angle, but whether it restores something visitors did not know they had lost: silence, horizon, slowness, and the rare sensation of arriving somewhere that still belongs first to the land.