Cabo has a secret it doesn’t like to reveal: it’s tough to swim at most of its beaches. While dramatically beautiful, this stretch of the Pacific is rough and rowdy with sneaky undertows and crashing beach breaks that keep even lifeguard-strong swimmers landbound. Not a big deal if you’re more of a pool person, but when the honeyed, late-afternoon sunlight hits the cobalt-blue water just so and it looks like a thousand little diamonds are winking, there will be a primordial pull to set down the frosty drink and leap, giddily, greedily, into the sea. The lack of wade-in-worthy property has never stopped hotels from building here, in fact the area is having a boom right now, with big-name openings lined up like relay runners. Which makes it all the more magical when a great hotel has access to a dive-right-in section of sea. Montage Los Cabos, the first international property from the Orange County-based brand, is said unicorn. Located on 39 quiet acres of beachfront between the overdeveloped hotel zones of Cabo San Lucas and San José del Cabo, Montage looks out on the serene, divinely swimmable waters of Santa Maria Bay. Just as impressive is the fact that all of the 122 guest rooms, suites and casas (not just top-tier rooms) have ocean views, expansive terraces with daybeds and dining areas, and outdoor showers – just the sort of breezy indoor/outdoor set-up you want on a beach holiday. And in a town where things can go from place-defining to cliché very quickly, Montage gets it right. Interiors have a Mexican 2.0 aesthetic that favours local materials, executed in a sophisticated desert palette (lots of native wood, creamy sandstone, earth-toned woven throws and hanging tapestries), while landscaping embraces native, drought-resistant plants such as agave, flowering desert figs and saguaros. The food at fine-dining Mezcal and casual beachfront Marea is traditional in flavour and ingredients but executed with a light touch and an eye on health (Marea has a separate vegan menu) and seafood – lobster ceviche, scallop tiradito, grilled Baja prawns – is always the way to go. The real treat, though, is to sit by the pool with a book and Michelada, knowing that the Pacific is there waiting when you’re ready for your plunge. Find out more at our Montage Los Cabos, Mexico hotel review.
Conrad Tulum Riviera Maya, Tulum
Featured on our 2022 Hot List of the best new hotels in the world
The most distinctive part of Hilton’s luxury debut on Mexico’s Riviera Maya is its chameleon-like approach to hospitality. Yes, with its 349 rooms, acres of pools, 11 restaurants, and kids’ and (soon) teens’ clubs, the Conrad is the type of resort whose (large bronze) gates a traveler would be content to pass through only twice: right before check-in and right after checkout. Spiritually, though, it aligns more closely with the smaller-scale properties 30 minutes north in Tulum that seek to connect guests with the surrounding destination. Honoring the Mayan cultures that have occupied this stretch of Caribbean coast for centuries, a traditional sacbe, or “white road”—the name of the ancient roadways Mayans created to travel by moonlight—cuts through the jungled grounds. In the lobby, a soaring art installation takes a cue from Mayan macramé. And at the cenote-inspired spa, a traditional four-hands massage is second only to a jalapeño margarita in the open-air bar as a way to immediately shed any lingering real-life stress remaining after a dip in the sea. Erin Florio