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hotels
Patagonia hotels
Choosing the right hotel in Patagonia can be a minefield—service can be poor, prices exorbitant, and because getting around is a real challenge, you might have to sacrifice amenities for location (view our Fact Sheet for overall orientation). That said, choose wisely and you'll not only find many fine estancias and country lodges in rugged and beautiful locales, but you'll also get an unparalleled view of Patagonian culture, authentic country cuisine, and a chance to cast for huge fish or to ride on horseback through the mythical steppe. Urban centers, too, now offer a broadening selection of new and newly refurbished hotels, ranging from boutique properties to revamped classics.
The pretty Patagonian fishing village of Puerto Natalesskuas, petrels, and albatross whirling overheadis isolated from the rest of Chile by fjords,...more
see the Chilean Patagonia guide
A single night at Casa Los Sauces costs three times the average monthly wage of an Argentine workerironic, considering the hotel is owned by the country's...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide
No life list is complete without a visit to Torres del Paine National Park. The Explora Group's aim is exactly that: to make this inaccessible area...more
see the Chilean Patagonia guide
El Calafate is a dusty Patagonian steppe town on Lake Argentina, close to the three-mile-wide Perito Moreno glacier, one of 13 that flow into Argentina's...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide
It's difficult to conceive of a property more defined by desolation than Eolo, a rustic, 12,300-acre lodge in the windswept La Anita valley, 18 miles west of El...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide
Set atop the same fossil-striped cliffs that fascinated Charles Darwin 170 years ago, El Pedral Lodge boasts its own stretch of coastline, complete with an...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide
Much of Chile's southern coast looks like somebody crumbled up crackers and dropped them into the sea. Bahía Mala is situated among that fragmented...more
see the Chilean Patagonia guide
Many Patagonian lodges fall within the hard-to-get-to-but-utterly-worth-it category, including this one, set on the border of a national park named for the...more
see the Chilean Patagonia guide
Situated on the fir-lined banks of Lake Nahuel Huapi's north shore, Villa La Angostura is unashamedly twee, its main street lined with wooden boardwalks and...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide
There's nothing particularly Patagonian about El Casco Art Hotel, despite its privileged lakefront location near tourist hub Bariloche. This place sits beneath...more
see the Argentine Patagonia guide







