Current Time
Currency
hotels
Mexico hotels
Mexico hotels stay on the cutting edge of international trends with over-the-top beach amenities and sprawling luxury resort developments. The major luxury hotel chains—Four Seasons and Fairmont, Rosewood and Ritz—are ubiquitous on Mexico's beaches, but so are one-of-a kind, family-run inns and ultralavish hideaways. Most luxury hotels in Mexico are clustered in Los Cabos and the Riviera Maya, many of them combining beach resorts with multimillion-dollar vacation villas. In the cities, you'll find high-end properties catering to business travelers, as well as boutique chains such as Grupo Habita that emphasize clever architecture and hopping nightclubs (be sure to check out the Hotel Habita and Condesa DF in Mexico City). In San Miguel de Allende, Mérida, Puebla, Oaxaca, and other colonial cities, you'll find hotels in restored mansions, convents, and houses. The Web site Mexico Boutique Hotels (011-52-322-221-2227, www.mexicoboutiquehotels.com) lists small lodging options throughout the country, from jungle eco-lodges to historic hotels.
Mexico isn't the budget destination it once was, but you can still find relatively inexpensive lodging in posadas and hostelerías in most cities, even on the coast. Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco, Cozumel, and Tulum are all good choices for travelers on a budget. No matter the genre, however, all hotels in Mexico have distinct quirks and characteristics. Porters, front-desk clerks, and concierges at most high-end hotels are usually bilingual or better, but a smattering of Spanish comes in handy at less expensive hotels and in less touristed regions. Everywhere, housekeepers, waiters, and other service personnel may speak extremely limited English. Patience and courtesy come in handy; the maņana spirit is one of Mexico's charms and challenges.
The fountain-flanked entrance and courtyard of this adults-only resort make it feel "like an old Mexican plantation." White-and-red buildings with palapa roofs...more
see the Riviera Maya guide
Though guests at Ventanas tend to turn in early, those awake around midnight can watch meteor showers flash through the sky or witness the heart-wrenching...more
see the Cozumel guide
Verana makes you work for its gorgeous views: You reach its aeries by climbing a steep hill or riding up with your luggage on a burro. But the solitude, the...more
see the Puerto Vallarta guideFor the exercising of colonial fantasies, this white-colonnaded tomato-red 19th-century nobleman's estate just outside the historic barrio de Santiago is just...more
Surfers and recluses have been trying to keep Sayulita a secret for decades; the small village, just 45 minutes north of Puerto Vallarta, has been a magnet for...more
see the Puerto Vallarta guideAggressive branding (Heavenly Bed, Heavenly Spa, and so on) doesn't diminish the distinctive modern architecture at this 379-room Starwood property in the quiet...more
see the Cancún guide
Forget the various shades of gray that distinguish many of this chain's locations. To remind you that you're in Latin America, the W Mexico City is splashed...more
see the Mexico City guide
The enormous, adults-only Paraíso has become a Zoëtry Wellness & Spa Resort, the first in a new brand from the company that owns the region's many...more
see the Riviera Maya guide









