By Gilly Gwilliams, Founder — Retreats In Greece | 28 May 2026
There is something that happens when you arrive in Greece.
It is not just the light — though the light here is extraordinary. It is not just the sea, or the scent of wild thyme threading through the afternoon heat, or the sound of cicadas in the olive trees. It is something harder to name. A feeling. A deep, quiet recognition that says: I am supposed to be here.
I live in Kos. I have lived here since 2018, and I want to tell you something that still surprises me: I wake up in wonder of this place every single day.
Eight years in, and I still pause at the sight of the morning light stretching across the water. And then I look up — to the small mountain that sits quietly behind the town — and something in me settles completely. I am a mountain girl at heart. The sea moves me, but the mountain soothes me. Both of them together, on this one island, is why I never want to leave. I still feel it — that sense of belonging, that pull, that quiet certainty that this is exactly where I am meant to be. Kos is my safe space. It is home in the fullest, most felt sense of the word.
And I know I am not alone in this. Because almost every guest I have ever spoken with — every person who has booked a retreat in Greece — has described a version of that same feeling.
Here is what I have come to understand over years of living here, travelling across the country, and working with people who come to find themselves on a retreat in Greece:
Greece does not have one feeling. It has thousands.
The feeling of Kos is not the feeling of Santorini. The wildness of the Pelion Peninsula is not the same as the spiritual stillness of Meteora. Corfu, with its lush green hills and Venetian architecture, holds a completely different energy to the raw, volcanic drama of Milos. Crete carries the weight and warmth of an entire civilisation. Koufonisia is small and unhurried and feels like a secret the sea has been keeping.
Every island, every mountain village, every stretch of coastline offers something distinct — and yet, somehow, all of it is unmistakably, undeniably Greek.
What I notice, when I speak to guests who are looking for wellness retreats in Greece, is that the feeling they are drawn to is deeply personal. One person feels most themselves on a hillside in the Peloponnese. Another steps off a ferry onto a small Cycladic island and simply knows — this is it. Someone else finds their version of peace walking the gorges of Crete.
Sometimes it is connected to a memory — a childhood holiday, a moment years ago when everything slowed down and felt right. Sometimes it is a first visit that imprints itself like a homecoming, as though the landscape had been waiting for them all along.
There is a reason that people have been coming to Greece to seek transformation for thousands of years. The ancient Greeks understood the deep connection between environment and healing — between landscape and the inner life. Hippocrates, who shaped the foundations of medicine on the island of Kos, believed that where you are has everything to do with how you heal.
That wisdom still lives here.
When people come on a yoga retreat in Greece, or a mindfulness retreat, a fitness retreat, a walking retreat — the landscape participates. The quality of the light, the rhythm of the sea, the warmth of the air, the silence of early morning — all of it creates conditions for the kind of stillness that real inner work requires. Guests consistently describe feeling more open here, more willing to let go, more capable of rest.
Greece does not just host retreats. It holds them.
I speak to retreat hosts regularly. Across all the retreats I have worked with — different locations, different styles, different durations — there is one thing that is almost universally true:
They have guests who return.
Not just once. Some guests have attended the same retreat in Greece three, four, five years in a row. And when I ask the hosts about it, they rarely seem surprised. Because they feel it too — that particular magic that forms when a group of people gather in a specific place, with a specific person, in Greece, and something opens up.
It is a combination of things that are difficult to separate:
A skilled, genuine retreat host creates a container — a safe, nourishing space — that guests step into and feel held by. The relationship that forms between a host and their returning guests is quietly extraordinary. It is built on trust, on being seen, on knowing that the person guiding you genuinely cares about your experience and your growth.
When you find a host who truly gets you, you do not let go of them easily.
Each retreat has its own rhythm and energy. When that rhythm resonates with who you are — or who you are becoming — it is hard to leave behind. You carry it home with you. And then, six months later, you find yourself thinking about it again. Counting down.
Greece has a way of participating in the retreat experience. The landscape is not just a backdrop — it is an active presence. Guests describe feeling a connection to place here that is unlike anywhere else they have travelled. There is ancient wisdom in this soil, and people feel it, often without being able to explain why.
Perhaps this is the most important one. For many people — especially those who arrive solo, or who have never quite felt at home anywhere — a retreat in Greece offers something they did not know they were looking for. A place. A community. A version of themselves that feels right.
That feeling of belonging is not something you forget. It is something you return to.
I am one of them. I came to Kos and I stayed — because I could not imagine waking up somewhere that did not feel like this. That did not hold me the way this island holds me.
But I have also watched guests discover their own version of that feeling. A woman who has returned to the same retreat in the Peloponnese every spring for four years, because something about that particular hillside, that particular teacher, that particular morning light through the olive trees — it resets her. It reminds her of who she is.
A couple who booked a wellness retreat in Crete almost on a whim and now plan their entire year around going back.
A solo traveller who was nervous about her first retreat and is now on her third — different island each time, different host, but the same unmistakable thread running through all of it: this is where I come back to myself.
A retreat, at its best, is not just a programme of classes and meals and scheduled activities. It is an invitation to feel something. To pause long enough for the place to reach you.
Greece is extraordinarily good at this.
It has always drawn people seeking something beyond the ordinary. Philosophers came here to think. Pilgrims came to be healed. Artists came to see the light. And now, people come on yoga retreats, wellness retreats, fitness retreats, spiritual retreats — to rest, to reconnect, to move their bodies, to grieve, to celebrate, to begin again.
Whatever brings you here, Greece meets you.
And for many people, once Greece has met them in that way — truly met them — they find they keep coming back.
Not because they need to escape. But because they have found something here that feels like home.
Whether you are drawn to a particular island, or completely open to discovering your place, I would love to help you find it. At Retreats In Greece, we match people to retreats based not just on dates and budgets, but on who you are and what you need right now.
Browse our curated retreats or get in touch to start a conversation. Let’s find the retreat that feels like it was made for you.
— Gilly, Retreats In Greece
Greece offers a unique combination of ancient landscape, Mediterranean climate, and deeply personal atmosphere that many guests describe as transformative. The setting actively supports the retreat experience — the light, the sea, the stillness — in a way that is difficult to replicate elsewhere.
Most returning guests cite the relationship with their host, the specific atmosphere of the retreat, and the feeling of belonging to a place as the key reasons they come back year after year. Greece has a way of connecting people to themselves — and once that connection is made, it is hard to walk away from.
Absolutely. Greece is one of the most welcoming destinations for solo travellers, particularly women travelling alone. Many retreat hosts specifically design their programmes for solo guests, and the communal nature of retreat life means you are rarely without company unless you choose to be.
Greece offers an exceptional range — yoga retreats, wellness retreats, mindfulness retreats, hiking retreats, fitness retreats, sailing retreats, creative retreats, and more. Retreats are available across the islands and mainland, from Crete and the Cyclades to the Peloponnese and northern Greece.
We offer a holistic approach to wellness, blending traditional Windom with modern techniques.
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