After a week at Zélia Halkidiki, my impression is fairly clear: this adults-only resort gets the setting, design and atmosphere beautifully right, but the service is not yet at the level the property is aiming for. If you arrive expecting polished, frictionless luxury, you may notice the gaps. If you come for quiet pools, Aegean views and a stylish base on the Kassandra Peninsula, there is a lot to like.
That tension is what makes this Zélia Halkidiki review interesting. The hotel has the bones of a standout Greek resort, but it still feels like a property growing into itself.

Overview and first impression
Zélia Halkidiki is an adults-only resort above Nea Potidea on the Kassandra Peninsula in Halkidiki. It now operates in partnership with Hyatt under the Destination by Hyatt umbrella, after a slightly confusing opening phase that included earlier Hyatt plans and a short Zoëtry chapter before the Zélia branding settled in.
The first impression is strong. Low, minimalist buildings sit between olive trees and open terraces, with the Aegean Sea doing most of the visual work. The design is restrained rather than flashy: pale stone, natural textures, soft lighting and a relaxed soundtrack around the pool. It is the kind of hotel that photographs well, but more importantly, it also feels calm when the daybeds are not fully taken.

Location and access
Zélia sits roughly 50 to 60 minutes from Thessaloniki Airport, depending on traffic. The location gives the resort real privacy and beautiful sea views, but it also means you will want a rental car if you plan to explore beaches, villages or restaurants beyond the property.
The least glamorous part of the arrival is the final access road. It is rough, dusty and not the kind of road most rental agreements make you feel good about. There is also an area nearby that feels more like a rubbish heap than the approach to a luxury resort. Once you are inside the property, the contrast is sharp: the resort itself is polished, quiet and visually considered.

Rooms and comfort
Rooms range from Deluxe Rooms with terraces or balconies to sea-view categories, swim-up rooms and larger suites. My room followed the same boho-minimalist language as the rest of the resort: warm neutrals, woven textures, clean lines and enough space to feel comfortable without being oversized.



The basics were handled well: a comfortable bed, Smart TV, Nespresso machine, rain shower and Le Labo Bergamote 22 bath products. Housekeeping was reliable, and turndown service was a nice touch.
What genuinely impressed me: the air conditioning was exceptionally quiet. That sounds minor, but in a warm climate it makes a real difference, especially at night.
The small frustrations: the minibar was replenished, but there was no bottle opener in the room. The Nespresso setup came without milk, so I had to collect some from the lobby bar in the afternoon for morning coffee. More importantly, the room information was too sparse: no clear resort map, restaurant menus, opening hours or practical arrival details.
Dining and bars
The resort has three main dining venues: Mesogeia for Mediterranean and Greek dishes, Shizen for Japanese-Peruvian cooking, and Zest by the pool for casual Greek-inspired food and drinks. On paper that is a good setup for a week-long stay, and the quality was mostly solid.

The cocktails were one of the better parts of the experience. The bartenders knew what they were doing, and the drinks felt properly made rather than like an afterthought in an all-inclusive package.
Where the dining could improve is variety. For a short stay, the menus are fine. After several days, repetition starts to show. A rotating weekly menu would make a big difference, especially for guests staying longer than three or four nights.
Pools, gym and spa
The pools are the reason many people will book Zélia Halkidiki. The upper pool has the strongest view, with comfortable loungers, low music and a setting that suits the adults-only concept. When the pool area is calm, it is exactly the kind of Mediterranean resort scene you hope for.



The gym is compact but better equipped than many resort gyms. There are proper cardio machines, free weights, functional equipment and enough space for a decent workout. It is not a destination fitness studio, but it is more than a token hotel gym.



The spa area continues the same quiet design language as the rest of the hotel. The indoor pool and loungers give you a useful alternative when the outdoor pool area is busy or the weather is less predictable.
WiFi was excellent. At around 200/150 Mbps, it was the fastest resort WiFi I have experienced so far. If you need to work while travelling, that is a real advantage.
Beach access
The beach is the most complicated part of the stay. The water itself is clear and beautiful, but the beach experience does not fully match the resort’s luxury positioning. It is about a five-minute walk or golf cart ride away, with steep steps through the olive groves.

Facilities at the beach are minimal. During my stay there was essentially a cooler with soft drinks, but not the kind of full beach service you might expect from a premium resort. The previous direct beach setup was apparently damaged by a landslide, so guests now use the alternative beach area.

The bigger issue was seaweed. It washed ashore repeatedly, and the collected seaweed was left in large white bags on the beach. That may be a practical operational issue, but visually it takes away from what could otherwise be one of the resort’s strongest assets.
Service
Service was the main area where Zélia felt unfinished. Staff members were generally friendly, but the operation often seemed understaffed. Check-in was minimal: no real orientation, no luggage assistance and no useful introduction to the resort layout. We were simply brought toward our room building and left to figure out the rest.
Around the pool, the staffing issue became more visible. At one point the same attendant seemed responsible for both the main pool and Zest restaurant, which are not exactly next to each other. He remained professional, but it was obvious that the setup made good service difficult.
Some expected luxury touches were missing: no proactive towel setup at the loungers, no regular water or ice service, and no meaningful enforcement of the no-reservation policy for sunbeds. Loungers were reserved early in the morning and sometimes stayed unused for hours.
The guest mix also affected the atmosphere. Most guests were there to relax, but the combination of influencer-style photo sessions, early lounger reservations and smoking around pools and restaurants did not always match the wellness-focused image the hotel projects.
To the hotel’s credit, feedback was handled constructively. When I mentioned the later breakfast start and the missing milk for morning coffee, staff immediately offered room milk service. That kind of response shows that the team is trying; the structure just needs to catch up.
Final verdict
Zélia Halkidiki is not a flawless luxury resort yet, but it is a very promising one. The setting is excellent, the design is genuinely attractive, the pools are beautiful, the rooms are comfortable and the WiFi is outstanding. The weaker points are mostly operational: staffing, communication, beach setup and consistency of service.
I would return, but with the right expectations. This is a resort for travellers who care about design, views and a peaceful adults-only atmosphere more than perfectly choreographed service. If Zélia fixes the operational gaps, it could become one of the more compelling luxury hotel options in Halkidiki.

Perfect for: couples, design-focused travellers and anyone looking for a quiet Greek resort with strong pool and sea views.
Skip if: you expect polished five-star service from arrival to departure, or if easy beach access is a priority.
Zélia Halkidiki
📍 Kassandra Peninsula, Halkidiki, Greece
✈️ About 50-60 minutes from Thessaloniki Airport
🌐 Adults-only resort in partnership with Destination by Hyatt