The Top 10 Hotels Near LUX* Grand Baie
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A modernist resort unfolds across white sand in Grand Baie, where British design and Mauritian architecture create residential-style suites that blur indoors with tropical air. Bisou, the rooftop restaurant, commands views of the bay above an infinity pool—the kind of vantage point that makes you understand why someone built a five-star property here.
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Thatched pavilions and palms frame a private stretch of Grand Baie beach, where 69 suites face the Indian Ocean's turquoise expanse and the helipad admits arrivals in proper style. Chef William Girard commands three dining venues across a property built less for leisure than for the performance of arrival itself.
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A beachfront mansion nested in coconut palms, where thatch-roofed pavilions and wood-shuttered terraces frame sunset views across the water. Time feels suspended here—vintage boat cruises, a hidden-garden spa, and leather-appointed lounges invite you to surrender to island rhythms rather than resist them.
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A retro-styled resort on Mauritius's north coast wraps 186 rooms in Kelly Hoppen interiors and tropical gardens overlooking a topaz lagoon and dual beaches. Playful touches—a red British phone booth, three pools, a spa—give the property a creative personality beyond typical island luxury.
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Twenty acres of gardens slope toward Turtle Bay's white sand and a lagoon so turquoise it seems invented, with thatched villas and locally sourced wood reinforcing the island's presence at every turn. The resort reads as a private club transplanted to paradise, where oceanfront tables and recycled-paper art suggest that luxury here means restraint.
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A sprawling resort anchored in sixty acres of tropical gardens and mile-long beach, One&Only Le Saint Géran marries colonial architecture with contemporary design inspired by the island's plantation heritage. The property answers wanderlust with water sports, island excursions, and a subtle courtesy toward families—a place less concerned with exclusivity than with the rhythms of an actual escape.
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On Mauritius' east coast, this resort reopens after fire with a spare modern tropical aesthetic—white interiors touched with butter-yellow and coral, reclaimed-sand tables, coral-print wallpaper—all overlooking a protected turquoise lagoon. Nine restaurants and bars, a spa, and an ocean-facing pool serve the 174 suites and villas arrayed across coconut-fringed beach and manicured gardens.
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Palm-lined pathways and a thatched-roof lobby open onto 150 acres of gardens and private beach along Mauritius' northeastern shore, where overwater villas on stilts float above lagoon views. Dining comes courtesy of Le Barachois, the country's only floating seafood restaurant, while the spa offers treatments under open sky.
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A secluded resort on 64 acres of endemic gardens where contemporary villas dot the tropical landscape and bicycles replace cars as the primary passage through the property. Three restaurants span French sophistication to barefoot island cooking, while the spa's pillars rise directly above the Indian Ocean—a setting so deliberate it feels almost staged.
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On Mauritius's west coast, Maradiva arranges sixty-four private villas around tropical gardens and Tamarin Bay, each with its own plunge pool and the resort's signature blend of traditional architecture and contemporary restraint. The spa, three pools, and restaurants keep guests tethered to the grounds, though the island's excursions remain available for those willing to leave.