How to eat vegan in Greece
★★★★☆ One of Europe's easiest vegan countries thanks to Orthodox fasting (nistisimo) cuisine. Many traditional dishes are vegan by religious tradition; look for "nistisimo" on menus.
Greece is much easier than expected for vegans because of nistisimo - the Orthodox Christian fasting cuisine that excludes all animal products including dairy and eggs for ~180 days a year. Traditional lathera (vegetables cooked in olive oil), legume stews, fava, dolmades, and many starters are vegan by tradition. The phrase to know: "Eimai vegan, nistevo" (I am vegan, I fast).
Greek cuisine has a deep plant-based tradition because of **nistisimo** - the Orthodox Christian fasting practice that excludes meat, fish, dairy, and eggs for ~180 days a year (Lent, Wednesdays and Fridays year-round for the strict, and major fasts). Centuries of cooking vegan-friendly food for religious reasons mean traditional Greek menus have many naturally vegan dishes - often the best of the cuisine.
**Lathera** ("oily ones") are vegetable dishes braised in olive oil, tomatoes, and herbs - fasolakia (green beans), bamies (okra), arakas (peas), spanakorizo (spinach rice). **Legume stews** are everywhere: gigantes plaki (giant beans baked with tomato), fakes (lentil soup), revithia (chickpea soup). **Mezze starters** are often vegan: dolmades (stuffed vine leaves - check for meat), fava (split-pea purée), melitzanosalata (eggplant dip), htipiti without feta.
The traps are predictable. **Feta** is everywhere - on salads, in pies, sprinkled on top. **Yogurt** comes with many dishes by default. **Honey** is in baklava, loukoumades, and many sweets. **Egg** is in some moussaka versions and most baking. **Fish** is in salade niçoise-style starters and on most Aegean menus.
Greek waiters are generally familiar with vegans now (especially in tourist areas). The faster route is sometimes to invoke fasting: "Nistevo" (I am fasting) clicks instantly with older Greeks and gets you to the right menu items. Combining "Eimai vegan" (I am vegan) with "nistevo" covers both vocabulary gaps.
Major vegan-friendly cities: Athens (Veganaki, Avocado, Mama Tierra), Thessaloniki (Roots, Lola), Crete - especially Heraklion and Chania (Karavokyrhs, Salis), and the bigger islands (Mykonos, Santorini, Naxos all have at least one dedicated vegan spot).
Key phrases
| English | In Greece |
|---|---|
| I am vegan | Είμαι vegan / Είμαι βίγκαν |
| I fast (Orthodox) | Νηστεύω |
| Do you have fasting dishes? | Έχετε νηστίσιμα φαγητά; |
| Without cheese / feta | Χωρίς τυρί / φέτα |
| Without yogurt | Χωρίς γιαούρτι |
| Without honey | Χωρίς μέλι |
| Without egg | Χωρίς αυγό |
| Thank you | Ευχαριστώ |
Dish dictionary
Reliably vegan
Ask before ordering
Avoid (or ask for a swap)
Hidden ingredients to watch for
- Feta cheese - sprinkled on top of many "vegetable" dishes by default. Order "horis feta" to be safe.
- Yogurt (yiaourti) - in tzatziki, on top of moussaka and many baked dishes, in some salad dressings.
- Honey - in most Greek desserts, in some salad dressings, in marinades for greens.
- Egg - in some moussaka recipes, in pita and pastry doughs (phyllo is usually vegan; tsoureki and brioche-style breads are not).
- Fish - in some appetiser pastes (tarama) and in many island menus where seafood dominates.
- Olive oil note: NOT a concern - Greek olive oil is universally vegan and used generously. This is one of the joys of Greek food.
Practical tips
- **The magic word is "nistisimo"** (fasting / Lenten food). Many tavernas have a "nistisimo" section, especially during Lent (40 days before Easter), during the Dormition fast (mid-August), and on Wednesdays and Fridays year-round.
- "Eimai vegan, nistevo" (I am vegan, I fast) communicates the request in terms older Greeks immediately understand.
- Lathera dishes (oil-cooked vegetables) are essentially vegan by nature - look for the "lathera" section on traditional menus.
- Greek olive oil is incredible and used generously in vegan cooking - this is part of why Greek vegan food is so good.
- Loukoumades (Greek doughnuts) traditionally use honey syrup but some vegan-aware places offer them with sugar syrup or agave - ask before assuming.
- Greek coffee (ellinikos) is vegan; frappé is usually with milk powder unless ordered "sketos" (plain) or with plant milk in newer cafés.
- Island travel: Mediterranean islands are easier than expected because tomato, olive oil, beans, and herbs are the cuisine foundation. Smaller islands may have fewer options but the traditional ones are mostly vegan.
- PlantsPack covers the main Greek cities and tourist islands; check before booking accommodation in smaller spots.