Daily life at Nea Styra can be imagined through the intimate traces left behind: cooking hearths, chipped tools, and the broken rims of storage jars. Archaeological data indicates households practiced mixed farming—barley, pulses, and domestic animals—supplemented by coastal fishing. Craft activities, including simple metalworking and coarse pottery production, point to local skill sets rather than large-scale workshop economies.
Settlement patterns suggest small, nucleated hamlets rather than dense urban centers. Burials are modest; grave goods are few, implying social difference but not extreme inequality. The sea shaped lifeways — craft exchange and seasonal mobility likely connected Nea Styra to neighboring Euboean and mainland communities.
Because preservation varies and the sample of human remains is small, reconstructions of kinship structures and social hierarchy remain provisional. Nevertheless, the archaeological picture is of a resilient coastal community: adaptive, networked, and engaged with the broader currents of the Early Bronze Aegean.