Due to Greece's financial crisis, investors from Europe, Middle East and Asia are in-search for great deals in the country's island villas located in Mykonos, Santorini, and Port Heli.
Algean Property managing partner, George Eliades told CNN that inquiries have dramatically increased since the news broke about the Greeks' Eurozone exit.
"We have people that are in a hurry to buy," he said. "They are looking for a quick turnaround."
With international investors calling in, the global property firm associate Savills Alexandros Monlas told CNN that "good deals" are found in the market.
According to Eliades, prices of island properties fell down to 30% since four years ago. In 2008, prices in Athens have fallen down to 50%.
Island real estate prices in Mykonos, Santorini, and the popular "Hamptons of Greece," Port Heli, a three-bedroom Greek vacation villa with a pool facing the ocean view have fallen to about €500,000 ($552,000) to €1 million ($1.1 million).
Eliades added that properties in remote islands like Patmos apparently have better deals saying these estates "might have a greater need to sell."
He also advises people to look for properties in remote islands like Patmos for much less expensive prices and traveling practicality.
Hellenic property federation president, Stratos Paradias, who told CNN that Greece is currently a "buyer's market" warned people to wait for better deals - referring to the time Eurozone has finally decided to whether or not keep the Greek country in their currency union.
Starting a new currency and money devaluation will bring in much greater deals for buyers in Greece, he added.
"You never know when the bottom is," Paradias said. "You find out where the bottom is when it's gone."
In the European Union summit on Sunday, Greece must present a strategic economic plan to save itself from economic meltdown to discard "Grexit"