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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.
San Miguel's oldest B&B is centered around a lush courtyard of jacaranda trees, geraniums, and bougainvillea. Originally built in 1966 as a private home for...more
see the San Miguel de Allende guide
Fairways and palms surround golden arches and terra-cotta roofs at Casa Velas, a gracious tropical plantation that's only a stone skip from the beach. Egrets...more
see the Puerto Vallarta guide
The modest name—which literally means "old house"—doesn't do justice to this ten-suite boutique hotel near Bosque de Chapultepec. There's no subdued...more
see the Mexico City guide
In need of some peaceful pampering? Travel 20 minutes south of the Cancún airport to this serene hideaway where masseurs work magic on knotted muscles,...more
see the Riviera Maya guide
Jonathan Morr, the restaurateur (New York's BONDST) and hotelier (Miami Beach's Townhouse), knows what's hip. So it's no wonder that he was drawn to the...more
see the Mexico City guide
There's something about swinging in a hammock in your own living room that perfectly fulfills fantasies of living in the tropics—especially when you're...more
see the Cozumel guideAfter two sweeping makeovers (one before Hurricane Wilma and one after), the former Plaza las Glorias almost deserves its grand name. It's certainly a...more
see the Cozumel guide
Cuixmala was once the family retreat of Sir James Goldsmith, an Anglo-French financier who helped to develop the Costalegre coast in the 1980s. The Cuixmala...more
see the Puerto Vallarta guide
Children are neither seen nor heard at Deseo, chic older sister to the Hotel Básico. The 15 rooms here are super-hip white on white, wherein the only...more
see the Riviera Maya guide
Distrito Capital is the latest venture from the team behind two of Mexico City's hottest hotels, Habita and Condesa DF. Set in the emerging commercial district...more
see the Mexico City guide









