The Top 14 Hotels Near Amilla Maldives
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A whitewashed archipelago of villas sprawls across Baa Atoll—overwater, beachfront, and nestled in palms—where minimalist design meets turquoise seclusion. The resort's dining spans Japanese precision at Feeling Koi to Indian spice at East, anchored by a spa whose treatment rooms promise the island's central purpose: stillness.
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A seaplane descent into the Baa Atoll delivers you to fifty villas of thatched tropical design, each with private infinity pools and butler service, on a UNESCO-protected island stripped of pretense. Ba'theli, a restaurant carved from traditional Maldivian boats, serves island cuisine while overwater treatment rooms and a stargazing observatory complete the barefoot-luxury dream.
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On a UNESCO-protected atoll, this sprawling resort pairs private villas and submarine excursions with serious marine conservation work and accredited yoga therapy programs. Al Barakat serves Arabian cuisine over water while Blu commands the beach with Italian cooking, though the ocean views alone may prove hard to leave.
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On an island within a UNESCO biosphere reserve, this resort pairs Thai and Maldivian design across overwater villas with private pools and outdoor bathtubs. Scuba diving, starlit cinema, and underwater dining define a place built for the kind of return visit that erases the boundary between luxury and necessity.
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Driftwood bungalows dissolve into jungle canopy at this private island retreat, where treehouse architecture and 24/7 butler service define barefoot luxury without apology. A "no news, no shoes" ethos and stargazing observatory frame the Maldives' original eco-resort as a place designed for those who can afford to disappear entirely.
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This Maldives wellness resort designs personalized immersion programs around four pillars—mind, microbiome, skin, energy—using health assessments and a team of naturopaths and movement experts. Beyond spa treatments, guests hike a forest sound path, snorkel, and retreat to private villas while following tailored nutrition and fitness regimens.
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A private island resort where coconut palms reclaim what was once a plantation, Vakkaru offers the rare luxury of isolation in the Maldives' protected Baa Atoll. Villas hover between reef and jungle, and the nearby manta ray grounds at Hanifaru Bay reward those willing to venture beyond the white sand.
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Joali preserves a thousand island trees within villas of teak and terrazzo, creating a fairytale landscape that feels wild yet meticulously tended. The resort's name—meaning "chair" in Dhivehi—captures its philosophy of unhurried comfort, where service feels warm rather than ceremonial.
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Fifteen overwater residences arranged in a private ring on the Lhaviyani Atoll, each designed by Yamazaki with decks that step onto coral-rich reef, offer absolute seclusion without sacrifice. A fully inclusive philosophy—dining across five venues, unlimited spa, diving, and a dedicated butler—suggests that escape need not mean deprivation.
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Hurawalhi Island Resort—an adults-only sanctuary in the Lhaviyani Atoll—arranges ninety villas on stilts and sand where aquamarine water meets wooden interiors and the view dominates every room. The snorkeling is immediate, the solitude genuine, the aesthetic one of restraint that lets the surrounding reef and sky do the real decorating.
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A forty-three-acre private island in the Raa Atoll with one hundred villas scattered across pristine shore, Cora Cora Maldives traffics in the luxury of genuine solitude and frictionless hospitality. The all-inclusive model dissolves the usual resort calculus—you drift between island, ocean, and dining venues with the ease of someone who has already decided to surrender to comfort.
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A French luxury hotel on a Maldivian island where Belgian architect Jean-Michel Gathy has married European refinement with tropical minimalism, all whitewashed villas and cathedral ceilings. The signature restaurant carries that distinctly Parisian sensibility, though the real luxury is how the architecture—all fluid spaces and dramatic vistas—seems to dissolve into the lagoon itself.
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Velaa Private Island floats in the northern Maldives as a owner's fever dream realized—Czech visionaries built it from Borneo wood and Jordan stone, forty-seven villas each with private pools facing turquoise atoll. The place asks nothing of you but arrival; everything else unfolds within your own stretch of sand and sea.
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Overwater villas on a private atoll in the Noonu offer the kind of isolation that justifies the journey, each with its own walkway and the lagoon as moat. Ten-plus restaurants and bars—from casual to health-focused to refined—anchor a resort that treats the Maldives itself as amenity rather than backdrop.