The One Thing You Need to Know
The drive to Manna is the first sign that this stay will feel entirely different from the Greece most people imagine. Leaving Athens is ordinary enough, but once you exit the motorway and commit to the mountain road, everything changes. Fir forests rise on both sides, dense and ancient. Small villages appear with stone houses built centuries ago and locals drinking coffee outside traditional cafés. The air smells cleaner with every kilometre, carrying the scent of pine and wild herbs. The road winds deeper into Arcadia, revealing valleys with no buildings in sight and slopes so pristine you find yourself slowing the car without thinking.
Approaching the hotel feels cinematic. The former sanatorium reveals itself quietly between the trees, stone and timber blending into the landscape as if it grew there naturally. You step out and the silence hits first, warm and layered rather than empty. Inside, the welcome is personal and calm. There's no desk, no performance. You sit down in a space that smells of mountain botanicals and burning wood, and you check in as if arriving at a private home. It immediately sets the rhythm for everything that follows. This is not a place where you rush. This is a place where you finally exhale.
The Design and Architecture
Manna's transformation from sanatorium to luxury retreat is one of the most thoughtful renovations we've encountered. The building's history remains visible and honoured rather than erased. Original stone walls stand exposed in the public spaces, their texture telling decades of mountain stories. High ceilings create a sense of space that feels generous without being cavernous. Wooden beams bring warmth to rooms that could otherwise feel institutional.
The design language speaks to Arcadia specifically. Stone quarried from the region forms walls and accent features. Wood comes from local forests, shaped by craftsmen who understand this landscape. The colour palette draws from the surrounding mountains, warm earth tones and deep greens that shift with natural light. Copper appears throughout, the bar wrapped in it, light fixtures crafted from it, that famous bathtub formed from it.
Public spaces flow naturally. The lounge with its oversized fireplace invites you to settle in. The dining room balances intimacy and openness. The library offers floor-to-ceiling shelves filled with books about Greek history and mountain ecology. Details reveal themselves slowly. Hand-forged door handles. Locally woven textiles. Pottery made by artisans from nearby villages. Everything connects to this specific place.
The Rooms and Accommodations
The Mountain Superior room became one of the most memorable parts of the trip. Positioned on the fourth floor, it overlooks a valley that feels untouched, a sweep of green that changes colour throughout the day. Early morning brings soft gold. Midday turns everything sharp and vivid. Late afternoon bathes the valley in amber. By evening, the mountains turn dark blue against a sky holding more stars than you've seen in years.
The bed is exceptional. Soft without sinking, supportive without feeling firm, with linens that feel fresh and cool. You sleep deeply here. The kind of sleep where you wake without an alarm and realize hours have passed without interruption.
The copper bathtub is the centrepiece. It sits perfectly positioned to frame the forest as you soak, turning an ordinary bath into something you genuinely look forward to each day. The tub holds heat beautifully. The bathroom products are made locally with mountain botanicals, bergamot and wild sage, and the scent lingers subtly. The shower has strong pressure and the fixtures feel solid, crafted rather than commercial.
The terrace became our favourite spot. Large enough for two loungers and a small table, it offers complete privacy despite overlooking open wilderness. We stayed out there longer than planned every day, watching the valley fill with evening mist, listening to sounds we couldn't identify. Even the minibar reflects the area, stocked with local wines from small Peloponnese vineyards, herbal teas blended with plants from these slopes, and small-batch spirits made for the hotel.
You slow down naturally here. You stay on the terrace longer. You run another bath just because it feels right. This is quiet luxury at its purest.
The Experiences and Activities
The experiences surrounding Manna are what turn the stay into something unforgettable. Truffle hunting with Panagiotis was one of the highlights. He led us deep into the forest with his dog, showing us how truffles grow, how the soil changes and why Arcadia produces such distinct varieties. We found truffles, mushrooms and plants he explained with the ease of someone who's spent a lifetime in these woods.
Horse riding the next day added a different kind of magic. We rode through forest trails, crossed quiet clearings and met a newborn foal only a few days old. It was peaceful, grounding and full of moments you simply can't stage.
The electric bikes were another way to explore the mountain. They make the terrain accessible while keeping the ride quiet enough that you hear nothing but the wind and the trees.
The nearby villages are beautiful and worth visiting. Dimitsana with its shops and cafés. Stemnitsa with its handmade jewellery. Vytina with its bakeries and local goods. They add depth and texture to the stay. You can drive to the coast if you want variety, but once you settle into the mountains, leaving feels unnecessary.
The Spa and Wellness
The spa at Manna is compact, calm and exactly right for the hotel. The hydrotherapy pool has a deep, soothing quality after a day outdoors. The outdoor sauna looks into the forest and stepping out between sessions feels refreshing and pure. The massage used oils made with local herbs, and the therapist moved with a confident, natural rhythm that made the treatment deeply restorative.
This isn't a spa built for spectacle. It's one built for genuine restoration.
The Service and Hospitality
The staff at Manna are what give the hotel its soul. Nothing feels rehearsed. Nothing feels performed. The warmth is real. One moment in particular captured the spirit of the place. An older gentleman who welcomed us said quietly that this was the best job he'd ever had. In his previous work he would arrive happy and go home tired. Here, he arrives happy and leaves happy. You could feel the truth in his voice. It explained everything without needing to say more.
The entire team carries the same sincerity. They remember your preferences, anticipate quietly, and create a sense of care that's rare even in high-end hospitality.
The Final Verdict
Manna isn't just a hotel. It's a retreat into a part of Greece that still feels wild, sincere and untouched. The food is exceptional. The rooms are thoughtful and grounding. The experiences are meaningful. The staff make you feel held from the moment you arrive. It's the kind of place that stays with you long after you leave, and one you return to not for luxury in the conventional sense, but for something far better.
The Food and Dining Experience
Food at Manna isn't simply good, it's memorable. It's grounded in place and season. The philosophy is simple: nothing should travel far and everything should reflect Arcadia. The menu changes constantly depending on what's available, and we tried almost everything over four days.
Breakfast became a ritual. Fresh fruit from nearby farms. Thick Greek yogurt with a texture like silk. Honey that tasted alive, floral and complex. Local cheeses from small producers. Eggs cooked perfectly. And the cappuccino quickly became a highlight of every morning. The beans are roasted in Athens but the milk comes from the mountain, and you taste the difference immediately.
Lunch was simple and perfect. Charcoal-grilled chicken skewers with smokiness. Crisp salads with herbs picked that morning. Local sausages seasoned by instinct rather than recipe. Vegetables so fresh they barely needed seasoning.
Dinner was where the kitchen revealed its full strength. The wild boar was extraordinary, slow-cooked until impossibly tender but still full of flavour. The pancetta was even better, melting the moment it touched your tongue. Nothing was overworked. Everything tasted of the land itself. The mushrooms and truffles come from the same forager who works these mountains year-round, and you could taste the specificity. One evening we had pasta dressed simply with shaved truffle, butter, and Parmesan, and it was one of the best things we ate all year.
The wine selection stayed entirely Greek, with a focus on small Peloponnese producers. The sommelier knew every bottle personally, could tell you about the winemaker, the vintage, the specific vineyard plot. Each pairing matched the food and the altitude perfectly.
The Evening Atmosphere
Evenings at Manna move in a slow, comforting rhythm. As the sun drops behind the mountains, fireplaces are lit throughout the hotel and the glow reflects off the old stone walls and the copper bar. The atmosphere becomes warm, intimate and unhurried. Cocktails are made with local ingredients, spirits infused with mountain herbs, syrups made from seasonal fruit, and the bar team mixes them with real skill. It's the kind of place where you stay longer than planned, talking softly, letting the fire burn down.
There's no loud music. No background noise. Just the crackle of burning wood, quiet conversation, and the feeling that the day is ending exactly as it should.
The Spa and Wellness
The spa at Manna is compact, calm and exactly right for the hotel. This isn't a sprawling wellness complex. It's a focused space designed for genuine restoration rather than spectacle. The hydrotherapy pool has a deep, soothing quality after a day outdoors, the jets positioned perfectly to work tension out of muscles you didn't realize were tight.
The outdoor sauna looks directly into the forest, floor-to-ceiling windows framing ancient trees. Sitting inside as the heat builds, watching mist move through the branches outside, creates a connection between the treatment and the landscape. Stepping out between sessions, the mountain air hits your skin sharp and clean.
The massage used oils made with local herbs, blended specifically for the spa with botanicals that grow on these slopes. The therapist moved with a confident, natural rhythm that made the treatment deeply restorative. It was one of the best massages either of us has had, memorable because of genuine skill and attention.
The Service and Hospitality
The staff at Manna are what give the hotel its soul. Nothing feels rehearsed. Nothing feels performed. The warmth is real. One moment captured the spirit of the place perfectly. An older gentleman who welcomed us said quietly that this was the best job he'd ever had. In his previous work he would arrive happy and go home tired. Here, he arrives happy and leaves happy. You could hear the truth in his voice. It explained everything without needing to say more.
The entire team carries the same sincerity. They remember your name by the second day. They remember your preferences without making a show of it. They anticipate quietly, appearing when needed and disappearing when you want privacy, creating a sense of care that's rare even in high-end hospitality.
The Final Verdict
Manna isn't just a hotel. It's a retreat into a part of Greece that still feels wild, sincere and untouched. The food is exceptional, rooted in place and executed with skill that never announces itself. The rooms are thoughtful and grounding. The design honours the building's history while creating spaces that feel contemporary and comfortable. The spa offers genuine restoration. The staff make you feel held from the moment you arrive.
It's the kind of place that stays with you long after you've returned home, appearing in conversations when you're trying to explain what hospitality can be when it's done with real integrity. And it's a place you return to not for luxury in the conventional sense, but for something far better. For silence that feels nourishing. For food that tastes of the land. For service that comes from genuine care. For the reminder that slowing down isn't a luxury, it's a necessity, and places like Manna exist to make that possible.