The Top 26 Hotels Near La Punta Grill & Lounge
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A Forbes Four Star resort on the Caribbean coast where the water is genuinely, absurdly blue. Kempinski does luxury the way it should be done, meaning you'll spend most of your stay on the beach, swaying in a private cabana while someone brings you cocktails made from fresh local coconuts. Families and couples both feel at home here, which sounds impossible but somehow works.
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A Forbes Five Star resort at the quieter end of Cancún's hotel zone, where the rooms actually earn their views instead of just promising them. The design leans into Mayan history without going theme-park about it, and the open architecture means the ocean breeze finds you whether you're at the pool, the spa, or your balcony. The crowd here came to properly unwind, not to be seen doing it.
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An all-inclusive resort that actually earns the "luxury" label, sitting right at the tip of Punta Cancun where the Hotel Zone gets interesting. The beach, the shopping, and the clubs across the boulevard are all within stumbling distance, yet somehow the property stays genuinely calm. You'll find families who've been coming for years and couples who figured out that "all-inclusive" doesn't have to mean chaos, just ocean views and a drink already in hand.
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Adults-only all-inclusive on the Cancún hotel strip, and it actually looks the part, with a lobby full of water features and floor-to-ceiling views straight out to the ocean. The whole place is designed to pamper you without feeling tacky about it, from the spa and pools to the restaurants. The aromatherapy piped through different zones is either genius or a lot, depending on your mood, but the beach makes up for everything.
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Maroma is a Belmond luxury resort tucked into the jungle between Cancún and Tulum, which means you get genuine seclusion without sacrificing a single comfort. The entrance is so low-key you'd almost miss it, and that's the whole point. You wind through tropical canopy and arrive at a colonial hacienda with manicured gardens, a pool, and one of the prettier stretches of white-sand beach on the Riviera Maya. The crowd skews honeymoon and anniversary, quietly pleased with themselves.
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A Forbes-recommended all-beachfront resort tucked into a private Caribbean cove, about 15 minutes from Tulum proper. Every room faces the jungle and sea, and even the ground-floor rooms have a splash pool. The design leans into Mexican craft and Mayan history without feeling like a theme park. Five pools, a proper mixology bar, and enough space that you can genuinely disappear when you want to, which is the whole point of coming here.
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A Forbes four-star resort tucked into 100 acres of mangrove jungle right on the Caribbean, with the kind of infinity pools that make it genuinely hard to leave. Three restaurants, two cocktail bars, a full spa with outdoor treatment rooms, and a private beach means you barely need a plan. Rooms are bright and modern with balconies and Aesop toiletries, which is the resort equivalent of a firm handshake. The crowd tends toward couples and anyone who booked early and feels very good about it.
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A boutique luxury resort in Cancun that actually feels calm, mostly because only 45 suites share the building with private residences, so it never turns into a spring break situation. The rooms are sleek and Italian-designed, with deep blues that mirror the Caribbean right outside. There's a private marina and beach club, which means the crowd here came to unwind quietly, not to be seen doing it.
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A big beachfront resort on the Hotel Zone strip that actually delivers on the promise: white sand, turquoise water, four pools including an infinity pool and an adults-only swim-up bar, a spa, and a lobby bar running 150 different margaritas. The crowd is couples and families who want the full Cancun package without roughing it. Room service through an app is a nice touch when you've had too much sun.
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A jungle resort built around a serious waterpark, which means it works equally well for families who want all-day chaos and honeymooners who want a plunge pool and a cocktail. The suites are genuinely spacious with floor-to-ceiling jungle views, the spa and golf are there when you need a break, and the dining runs deep enough that you won't eat at the same spot twice all week.
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An adults-only all-inclusive in Cancun's Hotel Zone that actually earns the price tag. You're greeted with cold towels and coconut milk, which sets the tone nicely. Swim-up bars, a proper spa, and a white-sand beach keep the crowd, mostly couples who've earned a real vacation, thoroughly occupied. Dining ranges from casual wood-fired pizza on the terrace to proper multi-course French meals, which is a wider range than most resorts bother with.
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All-inclusive gets a bad rap, and Atelier Playa Mujeres has decided to make that everyone else's problem. This adults-only resort north of Cancun trades the usual buffet-and-beach-chair formula for marble floors, serious art, and staff who actually seem happy to see you. The water is genuinely that blue. It draws honeymooners and couples who want to feel pampered without feeling processed, and it delivers on both counts.
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Adults-only, all-inclusive on a gorgeous stretch of Costa Mujeres beach, twenty minutes north of Cancún. Think swim-up suites, multiple pools, and enough restaurant options to eat a different cuisine every night without leaving the property. The vibe is breezy and upscale without being stuffy, and yes, it's the resort from Love Is Blind season two, so couples here are either very romantic or quietly doing research.
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Overwater bungalows in Mexico sounds like a fever dream, but Palafitos makes it real. These 30 palapa-style villas sit right above the Caribbean off Playa Maroma, and the deck-over-water setup means you'll spend most of your trip debating whether to actually do anything at all. The all-inclusive package covers everything from airport pickups to private cenote cruises, so the couples here mostly just look very relaxed and very tan.
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A Forbes Five Star resort on the Riviera Maya where you arrive by boat, which already tells you everything you need to know. Every room is a standalone villa with a private plunge pool, and the whole property sits inside a network of canals cut through mangroves. The staff has a reputation for being almost eerily attentive, the kind that remembers things before you ask. Guests are the "we upgraded to the overwater villa" crowd and they were right to.
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A Forbes Four Star resort where mangrove canals wind right through the property, giving the whole place a slightly surreal, jungle-meets-Caribbean feel. There are nine pools, including an adults-only infinity pool that floats above the mangroves like a fever dream. Complimentary activities run from paddleboarding to tequila tastings, which means the guests are either very zen or very loose by sundown. Both are valid.
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A Forbes Four Star jungle hideaway on the Riviera Maya where every villa comes with its own pool and the neighbors are crocodiles. The vibe is calm, lush, and genuinely secluded, with a spa, a beach club with a swim-up bar, and enough activities to fill a week without trying. It's the kind of resort where you forget what day it is by Tuesday, which is entirely the point.
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If the wall-to-wall all-inclusives are making you twitch, this boutique beachfront resort is the antidote. A shaman blesses you on arrival, spider monkeys lurk in the jungle paths between your palapa villa and the beach, and the spa uses copal mud that smells like the forest outside. Yoga on the pier, a temazcal sweat lodge, guacamole classes: the crowd here came to actually unwind, not collect a wristband.
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An adults-only, all-inclusive resort just down the coast from Playa del Carmen, Paradisus La Perla sits on a private bay with mangroves on one side and calm turquoise water on the other. The rooms are genuinely nice, with deep soaking tubs and rain showers that make you forget Tulum ruins exist, until you actually go, because they're close enough to make a day of it. The crowd is couples and solo travelers who've earned some quiet.
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This adults-only boutique resort on the Riviera Maya earns its Forbes Five Star by going all-in on Mexico, not just the beach-vacation version of it. Every suite faces the Caribbean, the spa leans into Mayan wellness traditions, and dinner at a cenote is a real thing you can do here. The design feels like the jungle was invited in rather than pushed back. The crowd skews couples who upgraded their honeymoon budget and have no regrets.
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A sprawling all-inclusive resort tucked into actual jungle on the Caribbean, Grand Velas does the all-inclusive thing without making you feel like you're at a buffet convention. Three separate areas each have their own pool, from a jungle-wrapped tiered situation to an adults-only oceanfront escape. Cenotes on the property, white sand beach out front, and enough greenery that you'll forget there's a highway nearby.
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A luxury resort that looks like a spaceship landed in ancient Mayan territory, which is exactly as cool as it sounds. Three circular buildings float above a wild red mangrove, and the whole place fans out toward a private beach cove next to a UNESCO reserve. Rooms all have balconies and soaking tubs, ground-floor ones get plunge pools, and suites go full hammock-and-outdoor-shower. The crowd here did not come to rough it.
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An adults-only all-inclusive resort on the Riviera Maya that actually has a concept worth caring about: the whole place is a tribute to Mexican art and craft, organized around themed "casas" where you can take hands-on workshops in textiles, painting, or cooking. The crowd is grown-ups who want something more than a swim-up bar, and access to the Xcaret park group is included. Think lush, stylish, and genuinely immersive.
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Etéreo is a resort where the intention-setting shaman at the entrance is not a bit, it's just how check-in works. Built from regional stone and wood above the mangroves on the Riviera Maya, every room faces the sea and nothing feels crowded or frantic. You can walk everywhere on the property, which sounds minor until you're on your third pool of the day. The crowd skews couples doing a lot of meaningful staring into the ocean, which is fair.
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A luxury resort where the architecture actually earns its price tag, rippling outward from a bamboo yoga deck like something fell from the sky here, which, apparently, it did. The design pulls from local cenotes and jungle roots without leaning into the thatched-hut clichés the region loves. Barefoot-but-make-it-chic is the vibe, and the crowd knows it, linen everything, no one in a hurry.
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An all-inclusive resort on the Caribbean coast that actually earns its square footage. Swim-up casitas, hammock balconies, a spa carved into the rock, and scarlet macaws wandering around like they own the place. Rates cover entry to a string of eco-parks, cenote kayaking, and ruins trips, so you're not nickeled-and-dimed for every excursion. It's big, it's lush, and it skews toward families who want a vacation that keeps everyone busy.