In Thessaloniki in Northern Greece, the Hyatt Regency Casino seeks to separate the visitors from their drachmas in an elegant environment. High stakes player? Ask about their "Regency Club", a more exclusive version of the casino.
Also in Northern Greece, Casino Xanthi in Xanthi offers abundant information on this casino, including available games, such as "American" roulettte. The website is in Greek only but this page on translating Greek to English should help.
Like Las Vegas or Atlantic City, most of the Greek casinos are combined with luxury hotels. The Corfu Holiday Palace, formerly a Hilton, offers relatively low prices (about $113 - 130) for luxurious accommodations moments from the tables. Since Corfu tends to be a jet set destination, the crowd here definitely has a sprinkling of glamour. For James Bond fans, a casino scene in "For Your Eyes Only" was filmed here.
The Porto Rio Hotel in Patras also has an associated casino, the Casino Rio.
The earliest Greek casino was established in 1928 at Loutraki, a spa and resort town at the gateway to the Peloponnese. Now a glittering new version of the casino awaits visitors. It claims to be the largest casino in Europe, and can be reached from Athens by train or car. [] In the Cycladic Islands, only Siros (Syros) is presently hosting a casino, though this will probably change soon. The Ermoupolis-based, British-run Aegean Casino gambling house is worth seeing if you find yourself on Siros. Entrance fee is less than $10. But if slot machines are your thing, they take coins.
So if sun, sea, and antiquities leave you with enough energy for nightlife, Greece's casinos may be worth the gamble.


