The Top 18 Hotels Near Tenoch By Paradero Todos Santos
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Seven miles west of El Arco, Nobu Hotel Los Cabos sits in remote scrubland where Japanese minimalism meets Baja's raw edge, its spare rooms and five restaurants preserving the house style with local conviction. The kitchen moves between sushi and seafood cooked over fire, while spa and water views sustain the sense that tranquility here is earned, not merely bought.
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Perched on fifty-five cliffside acres above the Sea of Cortez, One&Only Palmilla wraps guests in Old World Mexican elegance and near-total seclusion. Four restaurants and a vast spa anchor the property, though the real draw is the rare swimmable beach and the sense of having escaped into something genuinely remote.
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A beachfront resort sculpted to evoke a luxury yacht frozen mid-sail, Grand Velas Los Cabos channels the company's nautical namesake through striking architecture that frames the Sea of Cortéz. The all-inclusive property brings the family's signature style—refined comfort without the whimsy of movement—to Cabo's tourist corridor.
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A desert resort overlooking the Sea of Cortez, Las Ventanas sends private cars to collect guests and reconstructs itself faithfully after each catastrophe, down to the landscaping. The hand-blown glass hearts distributed at checkout feel less like souvenirs than small proofs that excess, when executed with discipline, can approach grace.
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Chileno Bay sits on one of Los Cabos' rare swimmable beaches, its 92 rooms and villas split between minimalist desert modernism and poolside indulgence. The resort calibrates effortlessly between action and repose, whether you're seeking romance or a family reprieve halfway between San Jose del Cabo's culture and Cabo San Lucas's nightlife.
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A torch-lit tunnel carved into Pedregal Mountain announces arrival at this 119-room clifftop resort, where every room frames the Pacific below. The spa's moon-phase treatments and beachfront bar serve as bookends to a stay engineered for uninterrupted luxury.
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Perched on Punta Ballena's cliffs above Los Cabos' only private beach, this fifty-seven-room hotel stages celebrity leisure through tiered pools and a spa rooted in traditional medicine. Cocina del Mar, its oceanfront restaurant, commands the view with the ease of a property that has perfected the business of escape.
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Montage Los Cabos sits on a protected cove where the Pacific arrives in theatrical swells against golden sand, its 122 rooms and residences draped in understated Mexican modernism that dissolves into the landscape. The resort anchors itself with the peninsula's largest spa and a Couples-designed golf course, luxury pitched as a conversation with place rather than conquest of it.
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An adults-only enclave on Los Cabos's Tourist Corridor, Grand Velas Boutique pairs minimalist architecture with butler service and a private beach, the kind of deliberate restraint that whispers rather than shouts. The gourmet dining and spa facilities anchor an all-inclusive model that feels less like a resort than a very comfortable secret.
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The adults-only resort sprawls across desert meeting sea, its oceanfront pools and butler service erasing the line between indulgence and ease. Mexican hospitality suffuses every encounter—from round-the-clock attendants to smiling staff—making the all-inclusive model feel less like transaction than genuine welcome.
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A cliff-side resort between Cabo and San José del Cabo, Solaz wraps itself in endemic desert plants and indigenous Baja aesthetics, its rooms each opening onto private terraces above the Sea of Cortez. The spa, restaurants, and quarried-stone architecture speak to a property that treats seclusion and regional character as inseparable from luxury.
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A beachfront fortress of air-conditioned ease overlooking the Sea of Cortez, this recently renovated Hilton fields seven restaurants and eight pools with the practiced efficiency of a resort that has mastered the business of leisure. The rooms are competent and the kids club comprehensive, but the place succeeds through sheer scale and service rather than distinction.
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A Thompson Hotel perched above Monuments Beach, where modernist angles frame 30-million-year-old granite formations and the Pacific beyond; every room, bar, and terrace commands the same unobstructed view. The architecture defers to the landscape rather than dominating it, letting you drink in both the hotel's design and the peninsula's geological drama at once.
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Every room at this Ritz-Carlton Reserve outpost opens to its own plunge pool and sea-facing deck, where butlers attend to the kind of unhurried luxury that draws repeat guests to Los Cabos. The 115-room property balances boutique intimacy with resort polish, serving families and couples equally well along the Sea of Cortez.
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On the Baja Peninsula's edge, this 2024 resort arranges Riviera-inspired villas and three dining venues around sea views that dominate every sightline. The barefoot luxury feels less imposed than discovered—natural materials and Mexican handicrafts settle into the landscape as if the place grew there.
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A renovated adults-only resort where nightlife and beach lounging coexist on Cabo San Lucas's swimmable shore, steps from downtown. Four dining venues by Rosa Negra, a rooftop lounge, and views of desert and ocean make the location—not the amenities—the point.
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Viceroy Los Cabos is a study in restraint: Miguel Ángel Aragonés's architecture eschews the region's expected vernacular for clean lines, reflecting pools, and glass expanses that read as sculpture. The serenity extends to its curated amenities—a Harley Pasternak gym, screening room, rotating shops—each detail pitched toward the traveler who prizes design as deeply as comfort.
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The resort sits where Baja's desert spine meets the Sea of Cortez, its minimalist architecture dissolving into floor-to-ceiling views and a two-mile beach that feels entirely yours. Fresh seafood at Milos and inventive Mexican cooking at Casa de Brasa anchor a property built equally for deep-sea fishing and spa-induced stillness.