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Puerto Rico hotels
Hotels in Puerto Rico offer options for every kind of traveler, from the weekend partyer to the family vacationer to the romantic couple looking for downtime. A recent flurry of renovations has brought many hotels in Puerto Rico up to a new level of spit and polish, not to mention style. One thing Puerto Ricans understand is clean, colorful, modern design; hotels here are downright chic, from the lobby to the pool to the decor of the guest rooms. Some downsides? Service on Puerto Rico is a bust. Expect to ask for ice and never receive it, to come back to your room and find the bed not yet made. Everyone is kind and courteous, but too overworked or undertrained to provide consistent help. If service is a real priority for you, book into the Ritz-Carlton or the Copamarina. On-site restaurants at the large resorts in Puerto Rico can also be lackluster. The offerings almost always feature 1) a "New Yorkstyle" steak house and 2) a generic Japanese sushi/noodle bar. Unless you're staying at La Concha, Numero Uno, Gran Meliá, or Villa Montana, book all your special meals at any of the terrific stand-alone restaurants in San Juan.
In Puerto Rico, hotels are mostly located in the Old San Juan neighborhood of the capital San Juan. You'll also find beach resorts in San Juan, out in the neighborhoods of Condado and Isla Verde. Puerto Rico's calmer, larger golf-and-beach resort options (like the Gran Meliá, El Conquistador, and the Wyndham Rio Mar) lie about an hour's drive east of the city. Much smaller, individually owned, sand-centric resorts can be found on the western side of the island in surfer-cool Rincón (the Horned Dorset) and Isabela (Villa Montaña), and to the south along the Caribbean Sea (the Copamarina).
Similar escapes from stress can be found on the tiny islands of Vieques and Culebra, a puddle-jumper flight east of Puerto Rico. Boho-glam Vieques is growing in popularity, as the vanguard Hix Island House and the W Retreat & Spa attest. Scene-averse travelers prefer Culebra, whose calling cards are its phenomenal deserted beaches like Flamingo, and its eclectic, tiny, casual hotels, like Club Seabourne.
This 1949 landmark just outside Old San Juan has 814 rooms done up with contemporary Caribbean flair. The hotel is divided into three different wings, each...more
see the San Juan guideOpened in February 2009, the Casablanca Hotel gives you a lot of style and convenience for a minimal investment. The 35-room inn sits right on the hottest...more
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Shades of mango and persimmon put you in a tropical mood at Casa de Amistad, a fun and funky seven-room lodging not far from Vieques's ferry terminal. The '60s...more
see the Vieques + Culebra guidePuerto Rico's best-known fashion designer, Nono Maldonado, has turned his exacting attention to this 12-suite boutique hotel in the heart of Old San Juan. The...more
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Nearly hidden among tropical foliage, this sanctuary of nine butter-yellow cottages sits high on stilts over Culebra's Fuldoza Bay, the better to enjoy views of...more
see the Vieques + Culebra guide
Expect to gasp upon entering the Conrad San Juan Condado Plaza. A $70 million renovation was completed in 2008—with the evident intention of transforming...more
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The Copamarina Beach Resort is about substance over sex appeal. Known island-wide as a "classic," this is where well-off Puerto Ricans spend their vacations....more
This hotel looks like a million bucks—$120 million, to be exact. That's how much Hilton Hotels put into renovating El Conquistador, one of the biggest...more
The El San Juan Hotel was designed to remind wealthy travelers of the pleasure palaces of Havana, and it's still turning heads. The mahogany-paneled lobby, with...more
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This place is for the birds—literally. You're greeted in the lobby by Campeche, a cockatoo who proffers a business card identifying him as the hotel's...more
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