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24 of the best overwater villas in the Maldives

24 of the best overwater villas in the Maldives

Times22-07-2025
There's something almost mythical about an overwater villa, a private deck strung above aquamarine shallows, sea breezes slipping through open doors and a staircase that leads straight into the warm embrace of the Indian Ocean. While these stilted bungalows were first dreamt up in Tahiti, it's among the Maldives symphony of blues that they've been elevated to an art form. Today's offerings range from rustic, palm-roofed hideaways to sleek, glass-floored suites with infinity pools, cut-outs so you can watch reef fish from bed and even cocktail butlers. Most are set on private islands, arranged like strands of pearls over turquoise lagoons so clear they seem lit from within. These are our pick of the 24 most spectacular.
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£££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 5
Kanuhura's largest overwater villa is a two-bedroom perched at the end of a long wooden pier with vast ocean views and a sizeable, ocean-facing infinity pool — what it doesn't say on the website is that it can be expanded to include a second one-bedroom pool villa making it ideal for larger groups. Both villas have soothing, chalky-coloured interiors, big netted beds and stand-alone bathtubs, but what really makes this one special are the neighbours: stingrays, eagle rays, reef sharks and shoals of triggerfish and parrotfish, all of whom swing by with delightful regularity.
• Discover our full guide to the Maldives££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 9
This stilted, semi-circular, two-storey residence sits at the end of the hotel's long overwater walkway, ensuring a feeling of complete privacy. The main bedroom is upstairs, flanked by two second bedrooms on the lower level; a large living room, with a dining table and oversized sofa, links the spaces. Outside, there's a vast terrace with loungers, a cabana and a crescent-shaped infinity pool, from where you can watch lemon sharks, blotched fantail stingrays and pods of dolphins frolicking in the morning light. £££ | POOL | Sleeps 3
There's a dreamlike quality to this airy one-bedroom villa with its cathedral-like proportions, undulating ceiling and pink and pistachio colour scheme. Like the rest of this Maldives wellness retreat, it's been designed to convey a sense of being at one with nature, something that's fully realised as you step outside onto an expansive wooden deck with a hanging sofa and huge infinity pool merging into the Indian Ocean. Make sure to take advantage of it in the evening — turn off all the lights and your sun lounger becomes a star lounger as you stare up in awe at the Milky Way.££ | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2-4
You know you're staying somewhere special when you need to hop on a pontoon and putter across an Indian Ocean lagoon to reach your room. While all of the villas at Gili Lankanfushi are overwater, there are seven special Robinson Crusoe residences completely cast out at sea. Everything about them feels like an adventure, be it the thatched roof and clapboard exteriors or the netted beds, indoor-outdoor bathrooms and split-level decks strung with catamaran nets.
Read our full review of Gili Lankanfushi
£ | Sleeps 2
Don't come here expecting the largest or grandest overwater villas in the Maldives — but do bank on being suitably charmed. Shaped like traditional Maldivian dhoni boats, these villas have wooden decks that descend straight into the Indian Ocean and loungers where you can curl up with a cocktail and watch the sun set. The interiors were revamped last year and echo the resort's easy-like-Sunday-morning vibes, with white tongue-and-groove walls, dark teak floors and huge bathtubs.
££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2
Check in at Patina Maldives if you like your island resorts cool and conceptualised — its sleek architecture and a fabulous art collection will quickly impress. Book ahead: of the 110 villas only 38 are overwater, and each has feathery grey walls, sofas and bedsheets, light-diffusing bamboo screens and glass walls that retract on three sides. Plunge pools share the deck space with stone bathtubs — just be careful not to flash any passing boats.
Read our full review of Patina Maldives
£££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 10
Set at the very end of the boardwalk and facing southwest, the three-bedroom John Jacob Astor Estate is one of the largest and most lavish private pool villas in the Maldives. You'll be surprised: for a heritage brand the interior design is surprisingly modern, with pentagon armchairs, plush rugs and abstract chandeliers that look like swooping birds. All eyes are likely to be drawn outside, towards the supersized wooden deck, the 92 sq m swimming pool and the seemingly never-ending expanse of turquoise water.
Read our full review of St Regis Vommuli
££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 4
This two-bedroom overwater villa is made up of four conical buildings topped with chunky coconut thatch. Interiors pop with pretty oranges and yellow, which zing against the intense blues of the ocean, while the deck has a teardrop-shaped infinity pool with steps descending into the sea. From here, you're just a few strokes from the house reef, which teems with stripy sweetlips, orange clownfish and eagle rays.
Read our full review of the Nautilus££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2-10
The service, food and facilities are wonderful, as is the location in the northern Noonu Atoll, known for its to diamond-white beaches. But the clincher is the sensational overwater villas — think sun-bleached wooden decks, private pools, sunken bathtubs, glass panels in the ceiling so you can stare at the stars from your bed, and waterslides whooshing straight into the big blue. The 'Chapter Two' water reserves come with Soneva's version of all-inclusive, including dolphin cruises and unlimited spa treatments.
Read our full review of Soneva Jani
££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 6
Swoon over uninterrupted views of the Indian Ocean by day and the Milky Way by night from the deck of your two-bedroom overwater pool villa at Anantara Kihavah. Set at the end of a long wooden way, this plush pad feels deliciously cut off from the rest of the resort. As well as from a striking infinity pool and two spacious bedrooms, there's a private gym and a spa suite with glass panels below the treatment beds so you can gawp at butterflyfish while you have a massage.££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2
Venture 40 miles north of the equator and you'll happily stumble across one of the remotest resorts in the Maldives. Unsurprisingly, you'll find wide, empty horizons, bountiful turquoise waters and not a chink of light pollution at night. Here, overwater villas are separate from the island and set in an exclusive ring out at sea. Proportions are extravagant inside; the decor is cream and duck-egg blue; and they all have capacious wooden decks with macramé hammocks, glass-floor viewing panels and glorious private pools.£ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 22
The Crescent is a half-moon of five overwater villas that can be booked together as an exclusive hideout for up to 14 adults and eight children. Set on a secret strand of wooden walkway, a few dozen paces from an exclusive patch of white sands, each villa is paired with its own infinity pool and wooden deck with steps leading into the Indian Ocean. Book as a group and you'll qualify for some brag-worthy perks including a sunset dolphin cruise and an outdoor movie night with plenty of snacks.
• Best affordable hotels in the Maldives• Best island resorts in the Maldives
£££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 8
Surrounded by wide ribbons of white sand, and with a vibrant house reef and manta ray teeming Hanifaru Bay within easy reach, is Vakkaru — where Madonna chose to stay on a 2020 visit to the Maldives. The hip Four Bedroom Beach Pool Residence, with four en suite rooms, is ideal for superstars (and big family groups) who want to spend their days quietly dipping in the huge pool and the house reef — just a few strokes away from your wooden deck.
Read our full review of Vakkaru Maldives
£ | POOL | Sleeps 2
Thatched, sun-bleached and open to the breeze, the Laamu Water Villas with pools are every wannabe castaway's dream. Aside from instant access to your own patch of bath-warm Indian Ocean — thronging with enormous schools of jacks, wahoo and tuna — each has its own plunge pool, sunken glass-bottomed bathtub and rooftop terrace; ask the butler to make up a bed to sleep under the stars. Bag a villa on the sunrise side and it's likely you'll see large pods of spinner dolphins travelling from their deep-water feeding grounds to rest by the atoll for the day.££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 4
This luxury resort occupies a sizeable island in the Baa Atoll: the very spot where Sir David Attenborough once came to film the world's highest concentration of manta rays. It's also home to some of the most coveted overwater villas in the Maldives — all huge and exceptionally private, elegantly designed in grey and Wedgwood blue with lengthy private pools. Check in to one of the sunrise villas for views of the never-ending Indian Ocean.£ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2
This fashionable five-star resort dazzles with its array of accommodation — beach villas, treehouse villas, transparent bubble rooms tucked away in quiet coves — but it's the rambling overwater villas that steal the show. They're stylish, have their own infinity pools, and sit beside a technicolour house reef. Drop off your deck and into the turquoise water to meet a flock of parrotfish, a curious hawksbill turtle or a nurse shark; don't worry, they're toothless.££ | POOL | Sleeps 4
Of all the resorts in the Maldives, Finolhu might be the most fun — and nowhere is that playfulness more apparent than in the two-bedroom Rockstar Villa. You'll find it at the very end of a jetty, after arriving on your own personal buggy that looks like a tiny Bentley. Inside, the decor channels Missoni, with chevron stripes, macramé chandeliers and a disco ball hanging above the bar. You won't want to go outside, but you should: there's a spacious wooden deck and aquamarine infinity pool.£ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 4
If a far-flung location and bountiful marine life ranks higher than your desire for bling and designer digs, then pack your snorkel for this friendly island resort. Dhigurah's one-bedroom water villas are larger than average and simply furnished, with verandahs and big private pools that face the open ocean. As is common in this atoll, the island is long and large, offering up two and a half miles of cottony white sands and a sea turtle bonanza — you can hardly move without bumping into the critters.£ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 2
Spot stingrays, eagle rays, reef sharks, dolphins and turtles without even getting your feet wet when you stay in one of the bodacious overwater bungalows at Sirru Fen Fushi. They've got the usual irresistible wooden decks and infinity pools, plus a chic modern-Maldivian look that mixed vaulted ceilings and carved woods with black jute rugs and strings of macramé lights. When night falls your sun lounger will double up as a perch for stargazing; the night skies are phenomenal here.££ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 3
Joali's house reef isn't terribly impressive — it's small and a little bare — but the beach is brochure-worthy and the overwater villas wow with their gallery-like proportions and artistic design. Towering carved teak panels frame sumptuous sofas; swing chairs resemble bird's nests; manta rays fashioned from twigs hover overhead. Out on the deck, kick back in dusky pink peacock chairs and dip your toes into the infinity pool, or head to the lower deck — it's freckled with loungers and has stairs that drop into the lagoon.
Read our full review of Joali Maldives
£ | POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 4
Yes, getting to Malé is a pain, but these all-inclusive villas are just a 25-minute speedboat ride from the airport and don't have the almost unavoidable honeymoon vibe that pervades the Maldives. There are two types of overwater villas available: ocean pool suites, which are set on stilts along the shore, and ocean pool suites with slides, which offshoot a long wooden walkway. All are grand-sized with boho interiors and private pools, but the latter are larger and more private, and come with waterslides — which tends to seal the deal.££ | POOL | Sleeps 2
The Ritz-Carlton Maldives, which opened in the man-made Fari Islands complex in 2021, was designed by the late Kerry Hill, who made his name creating wondrous tropical resorts for Aman. The circular ocean pool villas are the highlight, with Zen-calm interiors and glass floor-to-ceiling sliding doors that open onto curvaceous wooden decks, plunge pools and the shimmering Indian Ocean. Do tear yourself away: there's a superb spa.£££ | POOL | Sleeps 6
The Conrad Rangali's showpiece suite, the Muraka, is an overwater villa and an underwater villa all at once. It's of the most overtly ostentatious abodes in the Maldives and has two ocean-view bedrooms upstairs, alongside an infinity pool and yoga pavilion, and a glass-encased master suite submerged 5m below the surface of the Indian Ocean. The suite is particularly beguiling at night when nocturnal creatures, including lobsters and octopus, come out to play. Neptune himself never had it this good.£££ | POOL | Sleeps 2
Big-name guests head to Velaa to keep a low profile — but you don't need to be a Russian oligarch or Middle Eastern royalty to join them. This is a private island in the truest sense: seclusion is a given in all of the villas, which are all cloaked in greenery and have private pools, but the Romantic Residence takes the splendid isolation factor to another level. It's only accessible by boat, so there's no pressure to explore; and you can while away your days flitting between the Indian Ocean, infinity pool, circular bathtub and dramatic master bedroom.
velaaprivateisland.com
Additional reporting by Richard Mellor and Imogen Lepere
• Best hotels in the Maldives• Best family hotels in the Maldives
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Family holidays: what we got wrong — and right — by the experts
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Times

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It starts with such good intentions, writes Siobhan Grogan. When you first consider a family holiday, you might picture all the quality time spent together, long sunny days chatting and picnicking, perfectly built sandcastles on the beach, perhaps a glass of wine while your angelic child plays quietly nearby. But children have an uncanny knack of upending even the best-laid plans, whether you're in the Maldives or Margate. They get ill at the most inconvenient times, have screaming meltdowns on planes, won't eat anything but chicken nuggets or decide they're terrified of the sea. Yet we continue to live in hope for that rare time that everything goes perfectly to plan. Here are our writers' own tales of their best and worst family holidays to — hopefully — help you to avoid our mistakes this summer. The stylish Peligoni beach club and villa set-up in northern Zakynthos manages to be heaven for children and adults. The kids' club, open four hours a day, runs activities such as sailing, tennis, tie-dyeing classes and so on, which means parents can get coffee, go to the gym, even talk to each other. Samuel, my four-year-old, was at the club every minute he was allowed. When we went last October half-term, the weather was absolutely chef's kiss: low twenties, still-warm sea, blue skies. It made me realise my non-negotiable on all future holidays: childcare. Everything that could go wrong on holiday went wrong on our Barbados trip, when my son was 18 months old. We were all sick from unfiltered water; he didn't sleep and had severe nappy rash; it rained. We were tutted out of lovely linen-tablecloth restaurants when he lost interest in loud iPad videos. I had wanted to see the island so had booked us into five hotels in totally different places, and we spent most of our ten-day break travelling between them. Even nightly rum punches didn't cheer us up. It's the closest we've been to divorce. To top it off, we flew from Manchester. On a recent (child-free) trip to Marbella, I noticed a family on holiday with two nannies and one toddler. This, I have learnt, is a reasonable adult-to-small-child ratio. One of our best holidays so far has been to a Landmark Trust house in Lyme Regis, Dorset, with my sister and her young family plus our parents. No airports, no (quickly crushed) expectations of sunbathing with a book. The cousins played (largely) happily together, chasing chickens around the garden and hiding behind curtains. The grandparents covered bedtime stories and the domestic drudgery was divvied up. One night, to celebrate a special birthday, a caterer came to cook dinner for us. Champagne! Canapés! No washing up! The ultimate treat. City breaks, for me, mean walking for miles, dipping into shops, visiting galleries, sipping the odd overpriced drink in a hotel bar and dining out. None of which is suitable for young children. We took ours to Florence and, while they were doted on by the Italians, it was all a bit of a challenge. Narrow pavements, no playgrounds (at least that we could find), lots and lots of tourists, very late dinner times. Our eldest had a meltdown because I wouldn't let her hold the handmade marbled paper I'd bought. Even the chocolate gelato had to work hard to bring her round. One of the benefits of having kids is that they don't know anything. So when you say things like 'We're going to Belgium!' they might be excited. This was the case when my lad was 12 and we took the train to Bruges. I was aiming for some kind of culturally uplifting experience, full of art, canal rides and architecture. But what was I thinking? The plan went straight out the window and we basically just larked about, eating fancy chocolate for breakfast, racing up the steps at the bell tower and laughing like drains in a museum dedicated to French fries. Who needs plans? You know that feeling when you go camping and everything works out really well? No, me neither. But as a broke single dad, summers invariably used to involve at least one week sitting in a cheap tent somewhere in Yorkshire waiting for the rain to stop. The summer of 2014 was particularly memorable as my seven-year-old and I were joined in Robin Hood's Bay by, drum roll, Ex-Hurricane Bertha! Yes, I did eventually manage to catch up with the tent as it blew down the hill. No, I didn't notice the huge tear until I'd put the wretched thing up and unloaded the car. Yes, I had left the coolbox full of food at home on the kitchen table. No, I didn't cry that much. The cottage looked adorable online. Exactly the kind of place you would choose if this was your first trip to Sardinia and you really wanted to see the island at its best. Unfortunately, when we pulled up outside — in the middle of a rainstorm — it became apparent that the guy who'd photographed the place had carefully framed out the depressing agricultural complex that dominated the landscape and the inescapable air of dark gloom within. Three rooms didn't have windows, the 'garden' had a broken twin tub in it and, worst of all, there was no television. I'm not ashamed to say I wept. As did my two children. But, magically, this then turned into … … the best holiday, because my husband — not normally one for bold decisions or reckless expenditure — simply took out his credit card, held it aloft in front of his weeping women-folk and said: 'Behold: the solution.' Twenty minutes later we were in a frankly magnificent hotel on a white-sand beach with swimming pools that the kids spent all day in. Everywhere reeked of jasmine, the hotel restaurant did a cocktail that became my main source of hydration, and the thrill of pulling off a good holiday, having glimpsed the prospect of a nightmare one, kept us buzzing all week. Best of all, there was a TV in our bathroom. One rainy morning me and both kids watched all of Mamma Mia! while up to our necks in hot bubbles. Money: is there nothing it can't do? • Read our full guide to Sardinia A week on the beach at Watergate Bay in Cornwall has been a fixture on our family calendar from the get-go, with Granny and Grandpa stalwart supporters for many of those years. Accommodation has ranged from hotels to cottages to campsites. Our beach buddies have included like-minded London families and, now, teenage friends from school. Every year is the same, but also different. We surf. It rains (heavily) twice. The kids grow ever more capable. At the end of it we always wish we could stay another week. We got our timing wrong with ski holidays. I'd heard loads of stories from the locals about how their children were skiing straight out of the cradle (well, almost) and so tried our son, Sam, in ski school in La Plagne, France, when he was three. When we picked him up later his face was white with dried tears and snot. He did one more day and then we gave up — and no one skied much after that. He loves it now, of course, but we should have waited until he was in reception year back home and not so freaked out by the company of strangers. • 16 of the best family adventure holidays Renting an out-of-season villa in the middle of nowhere in Umbria was risky. There was little close by for the kids to do, it was too early in the year to use the pool, and the nearest shop was half an hour's drive away if we ran out of milk (aka wine). In fact, we whiled away a surprisingly sunny week playing football and Frisbee in the garden, ate vats of no-frills pasta on the terrace, day-tripped to hilltop Assisi for great views and gelato, and discovered a vineyard within walking distance, where the owner lavished hunks of parmesan on the kids as we sampled the vino. It's the most relaxed I've ever felt on holiday. Everyone loves Cornwall, apparently. Well, everyone can't have spent the best part of a day stuck in a traffic jam en route listening to the chirpy Peppa Pig theme tune at the start of each new episode on the iPad. My two-year-old was sick several times on the journey — we later discovered she has chronic travel sickness — and our rented cottage had a death-trap staircase our daughter wanted to spend the entire day going up and down. Plus, the 'short drive' to the nearest beach was not so short once you'd factored in hours spent battling for a parking space. I still shudder when I see Peppa Pig. • 20 of the best family-friendly hotels in the UK Every summer between the ages of 5 and 15 with my parents and siblings, and now as an adult with my own children, I have spent a week on a narrowboat. It's always the highlight of our year — normal life fades away. Last year our route took us through Skipton and the Yorkshire Dales. On golden afternoons my niece lay on the roof reading Agatha Christie aloud to her cousins as emerald-green hills slipped by. True, there was a sticky spot when we ran out of water and no one could shower for two days. But that was all part of the fun. Once I had aspirations that we would become a 'van family'. We bought a second-hand VW when our sons were two and four and headed to a sprawling campsite behind Rhossili beach on the Gower peninsula. We spent an hour trying to get the van level and erect our awning, then it began to drizzle. When it stopped raining we collected driftwood from the beach and made a campfire, but got nothing but black smoke. We thought we'd go for a meal then realised we couldn't get anywhere without packing up again. The boys went back to their iPads in the van, while my husband and I sat silently outside in the cold and dark, watching other families happily barbecuing and drinking beers. Mum died. Not on the holiday, but before. Also before was the London Olympics, so the biggest month of my professional career. Bradley Wiggins had won Great Britain's first gold medal and I was waiting to speak with him when I got the call to say come home, quick. She went that night. I took one day off then carried on working. So there was no time to grieve, no time to process and when we finally got to our villa that was beginning to show, physically and mentally. Then I fell down the stairs. Speaking to the owners about an air-con issue, I must have dripped water on my way up, slipped on it coming down. Marble. Top to bottom. Not good. At least I wasn't hospitalised. Shame, because it was lovely, I'm told. Roberto ran the house and cooked for us — 'very fresh, very typical' — and one of my lads still says it's the best villa we've had. Pity I wasn't really around to enjoy it. Just came back from it, thanks for asking. Only ten days, but as the family gets older it's harder to be in one place together. But this was us — my three sons, all the girls, even our Australian exiles. The villa in Zakynthos was superb, again — 'I reckon better than that one in Sardinia where you fell down the stairs,' said Art — we swam in the Ionian Sea, Rob fanned the barbecue and Will cooked some nights, so we dined like gods. And Art has a new Australian hip now, so is getting his life back. No crutches any more. I could have whiled away hours just watching him walk. Had it rained every day — and, no, not a drop — it would still have felt perfect. • 18 of the best family hotels in Greece I was a weird teenager because I really enjoyed hanging out with my family. Which was just as well because in the summer of 1997 we crammed into our car, drove to Hull, caught the ferry to Zeebrugge and then spent the next fortnight on the road. The Black Forest! The Swiss Alps! Austria! The shores of Lake Garda! I was 15, had made an incredible mix tape — which I made everyone listen to constantly — I read The Secret History by Donna Tartt and my parents even let me have the occasional beer. From watching Aida staged in Verona's Roman arena to guzzling sausages at a Bavarian village fête run by drunken firemen, I loved every single minute of it and still think about it weekly. Our first holiday as a family should have been great: a pretty little villa not far from the south coast of Mallorca where we could decompress after successfully completing our first 12 months of parenthood — ie alternate between nailing cold cans of Mahou Cinco Estrellas, paddling in the sea and taking nap after nap after nap. Unfortunately our son decided to run an explode-the-thermometer temperature and have a violent febrile seizure. Cue an ambulance ride to the hospital, where we all spent the next four days sharing a stuffy, windowless hospital room. On the plus side the hospital canteen had a wine list — quite good, actually — but I've never wanted to be home while on holiday quite so badly. • 15 of the best family holiday destinations for 2025 In 2008 we decided to take no risks on our first holiday as a family of four — just a cosy Dartmoor cottage in late September. Where better to be sleep-deprived and out of our parenting depth? Alas, the cottage was not as described: one tiny broken bed, several broken windows and a swamp for a driveway. Which would have been fine except it was raining, from the minute we arrived to the minute we left (three days early). Which would have been fine except the farmer who rented it lived right next door. He was a lonely old man who tried to whittle wooden animals but always ended up with wooden mushrooms. He liked to come into our kitchen to make himself a brew. We left with two mushrooms and three colds — and a renewed gratitude for our own cosy home. In 2010 we decided to take some risks on our third and final family holiday before Child A started school. We set off on a four-week camper van trip across France feeling like expert parents. For the first three weeks and two days it rained, and we were worn down by the damp, the drudgery, the fermé signs in every restaurant window. Then, for the first and probably last time, I decided to hang the expense. I booked us into the most expensive luxury château I could find in Bordeaux. We arrived and a team of valets unpacked all our waterlogged equipment. They hung our bell tent in the wine cave to dry while we sat on the terrace ordering lunch. The sun came out and I don't think I've ever been happier. Even though I grew up a few hours away, I'd shamefully never taken the family to Montreal. Last October we stepped out of the Gare Centrale just as the autumn leaves were peaking and summer was heaving a final sigh. Obviously we headed straight out for poutine at La Banquise. Then we hit Saint Laurent Boulevard, which is rammed with vintage boutiques, and relaxed on Larrys café patio just as the Halloween revelry was getting into gear — children in zoo animal onesies on the early shift, sexy nurses and Village People on the late one. My eldest was so charmed she decided to go to university there. • Canada's most fun city break — with a French twist Living in Shanghai with two toddlers was intense, so we booked a week in Yunnan, the mountainous province in China's west, for some fresh air and exercise. Right off the bat we realised how badly we'd planned, showing up in historic Lijiang during a high-traffic public holiday with a double buggy and a hotel reservation at the top of a steep, cobbled hill. The girls, with their white-blonde hair, endured constant curiosity from crowds reaching out to touch them. After dinner in the old town, two of us got food poisoning from a misguided bowl of yak curry and spent the night on the floor of the lavatory. We gave it another day but ended up quitting after two nights. Share your own family holiday highs and lows in the comments

World's best hotel revealed with swim-up bars and private plunge pools – and it can be booked with TUI
World's best hotel revealed with swim-up bars and private plunge pools – and it can be booked with TUI

Scottish Sun

time9 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

World's best hotel revealed with swim-up bars and private plunge pools – and it can be booked with TUI

Plus, the best time to visit Mexico BEACH PLEASE World's best hotel revealed with swim-up bars and private plunge pools – and it can be booked with TUI SURROUNDED by a jungle and sat right on the beach, a stunning hotel has been named the best in the world by Tripadvisor. Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya can be found in Akumal, Mexico, and is home to 434 rooms and suites. Advertisement 6 Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya in Akuma, Mexico, ahs been named the best hotel in the world Credit: Supplied 6 At the resort, there are three expansive pools, nine restaurants and seven bars Credit: Hyatt 6 Plus, it is all inclusive so guests can enjoy everything at the resort included in the price Credit: Hyatt Just 150 metres offshore from the adults-only resort is the second largest barrier reef in the world, while the historical Mayan sites of Tulum are nearby. Inside the all-inclusive hotel are natural interiors inspired by the surrounding jungle. Some of the suites even come with a private plunge pool. Depending on the room or suite you choose, there are also hot tubs, rainfall showers, private balconies and even swim-out access from the terrace. Advertisement Other amenities include bath robes, Nespresso coffee machines and air conditioning. Heading outside, guests can enjoy three pools, including an infinity pool with panoramic views of the surrounding landscape and a swim up bar called Manatees. Alternatively, head to the spa for a bit of self-indulgence, including a hydrotherapy circuit with a sauna and steam room, a reflexology pool, and different treatments. The fitness suite also offers guests the opportunity to get their workout in, with cardio and strength training equipment as well as group classes. Advertisement For those who love an adventure, there are many activities to embark on such as kayaking, snorkelling with turtles, paddle-boarding and beach volleyball. For those who don't like sporty activities, the resort also offers culinary classes, such as wine and tequila tastings and dance classes as well. The beautiful lake an hour from London with overwater bungalows like the Maldives In total, the resort has nine restaurants (none of which you have to reserve ahead of time) and seven bars. And each offers something different, so everyone will have something they like. Advertisement There is traditional Mexican cuisine at El Patio, French dishes at Bordeaux, authentic Italian staples at Portofino and Pan-Asian specialties at Himitsu, for example. Or you could head to Coco Cafe, which offers snacks and late-night bites. And if you don't fancy these options, the 'Sip, Savor, and See' programme allows guests to dine and enjoy entertainment at nearby sister resorts. At night, head to one of the bars as the resort comes alive with live music, themed nights and beach parties. Advertisement Even skilled performers demonstrate their skills there. 6 Some rooms even have swim-out access and plunge pools Credit: Hyatt 6 And there are a number of activities to do at the resort including snorkelling Credit: Hyatt Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya is just an hour's drive from Cancun Airport making it easy to get to. Advertisement The Travellers' Choice Awards Best of the Best title awards the destination with the highest level of excellence in travel, which means it goes above and beyond for its guests. Out of eight million listings on Tripadvisor, less than one per cent of hotels achieve the award. For Secrets Akumal Riviera Maya in the number one spot, it has over 14,000 reviews on Tripadvisor, averaging an impressive 4.8 out of five. One visitor said: "This resort exceeded all expectations — beautiful beach, crystal-clear water, and top-notch service." Advertisement Another added: "The walking paths are surrounded by lush trees, flowers and plants that provide shade while walking around and gives it a cozy, romantic feel." A third stated: "This place is immaculate, pristine, gorgeous. Like pinch me, is this place paradise? Heaven on earth?" Prices vary depending on the season but a holiday package can be booked with TUI. For example, through TUI, you could head there in November for £1,997 per person for the week. Advertisement When is the best time to visit Mexico? MEXICO is a fantastic year-round destination, but it truly shines as a winter escape. With its magnificent sandy beaches, delicious cuisine, and rich historical sites, this tropical treasure offers an incredible getaway. The best time to travel to Mexico is during the dry season, which runs from December to April. This period offers high temperatures of up to 32C with almost no chance of rain, guaranteeing sunny days for your holiday. While the dry season is generally warm, it's worth noting that the coldest months are from late December to early February. However, temperatures still comfortably fluctuate between 24C and 28C, so you'll still enjoy plenty of warmth. Conversely, the wet season lasts from the end of May until October. If you prefer to avoid rain and enjoy continuous sunshine, this is the time to steer clear of. For those wanting a cultural experience, consider planning your trip around one of Mexico's vibrant events. Cinco De Mayo on May 5 celebrates a key Mexican victory and features lively street food, parties, and parades. Meanwhile, surfers should take note of the regional seasons. The busiest surfing season in Los Cabos is from November to April, while Cancun's surf season runs from June to November. A popular resort has also been named among UK's best seaside towns with stunning castle and Tudor streets. Plus, the little-known seaside resort town with one of the cleanest beaches in the world.

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