The Best Hotels in Mauritius — A Guide by Coast and Budget
From barefoot-luxury beachfront resorts to affordable guesthouses, here's how to choose the right hotel in Mauritius — by location, vibe, and budget.
The Best Hotels in Mauritius — A Guide by Coast and Budget
Mauritius punches well above its weight in the hotel stakes. For an island of just 1.3 million people and 2,040 km², it hosts some of the finest resort properties in the world — alongside a growing range of affordable boutique hotels, guesthouses, and Airbnbs that make the island accessible at every budget.
The key to choosing where to stay in Mauritius isn't just price — it's which coast suits you.
Understanding the Coasts
Mauritius is roughly 65km long and 45km wide. Each coast has a distinct character:
The North (Grand Baie, Trou aux Biches, Mont Choisy) The most developed tourist area. Calm, turquoise lagoon. Good for families. Closest beach strip to the airport (about 35 minutes). Most social — Grand Baie has restaurants, bars, and nightlife. Hotels here range from mid-range guesthouses to five-star resorts.
The West (Flic en Flac, Tamarin, La Gaulette, Le Morne) Arguably the most beautiful sunsets on the island. Flic en Flac has a long public beach strip with a mix of apartments and hotels. Le Morne Peninsula — at the southwest tip — is home to the most iconic luxury resorts (St. Regis, Dinarobin, LUX*). Also the world's premier kitesurfing destination. More secluded and less commercial than the north.
The East (Belle Mare, Trou d'Eau Douce, Palmar) The longest stretch of white-sand beach on the island. Very calm, shallow lagoon — perfect for children. Home to a string of five-star resorts (Constance Belle Mare Plage, Heritage Le Telfair, One&Only Le Saint Géran). Less nightlife, more serenity.
The South (Blue Bay, Mahébourg, Bel Ombre) The least developed for tourism. Blue Bay has the best snorkelling on the island — a Marine Park with pristine coral. Bel Ombre is home to Heritage Resorts. Wilder, windier, and more authentic. Good for travellers who want to see the real Mauritius.
Central Highlands (Moka, Curepipe, Floréal) Not a beach destination, but cooler, greener, and surrounded by mountains and tea plantations. Some excellent boutique properties. Good base for golfers (Gymkhana is nearby).
Luxury Hotels (MUR 20,000+ / night)
LUX* Le Morne
One of the most design-forward resorts on the island. Set on the Le Morne Peninsula with views of the iconic basalt peak. Famous for its food (5 restaurants), spa, and creative touches — hammocks over the water, bikes to borrow, a cinema on the beach. Not the biggest pool on the island, but the atmosphere is unmatched.
Best for: Honeymooners, design enthusiasts, foodies.
St. Regis Mauritius (Le Morne)
The most consistently five-star resort experience on the island. Impeccable service (the butler tradition is legendary), gorgeous beach, and excellent F&B. More formal than LUX* but arguably the best all-rounder at the top end.
Best for: Couples and honeymooners wanting proper luxury.
Constance Belle Mare Plage (East)
The east coast's flagship property. Vast — two beaches, two golf courses (one of the best in the Indian Ocean), 12 restaurants, sprawling pools. The beach itself is some of the finest on the island.
Best for: Families, golfers, groups wanting space and variety.
One&Only Le Saint Géran (East)
The grande dame of Mauritius resorts — opened in 1975, consistently ranked among the world's best. Understated elegance rather than flash. Famously good service. One of the best spas in the Indian Ocean.
Best for: Returning visitors, older couples, those who prefer quality over novelty.
Four Seasons Resort Mauritius at Anahita (East)
Villa-based resort on its own private peninsula with water villas over the lagoon. The most exclusive layout on the island. Golf course designed by Ernie Els.
Best for: Absolute privacy, honeymoons, villa-style luxury.
Mid-Range Hotels (MUR 5,000–20,000 / night)
Veranda Grand Baie (North)
Consistently good mid-range option in the north. Well-managed, good beach, adult-only pool, solid F&B. Popular with European package travellers but not package-hotel in feel.
Best for: Couples wanting value in the north without sacrificing quality.
Sands Resort & Spa (Flic en Flac, West)
Good west coast option at a sensible price. Decent beach access, pool, spa, and reasonable dining. Flic en Flac's location makes it easy to explore the island.
Best for: First-timers wanting a proper resort experience at a reasonable price.
The Ravenala Attitude (Turtle Bay, North)
A newer property from the Attitude group, Mauritius's most successful mid-range hotel brand. Beachfront, good pools, high-quality F&B for the price. Attitude hotels consistently over-deliver at their price point.
Best for: Value-seekers who don't want to compromise on location or beach quality.
Budget & Guesthouses (Under MUR 5,000 / night)
The north — especially Grand Baie and Trou aux Biches — has the highest density of affordable guesthouses. Many are family-run, excellent value, and far more characterful than big resorts.
Look for listings in:
- Péreybère (just north of Grand Baie) — beach village, relaxed, good for budget travellers
- Flic en Flac — long beach strip, mix of guesthouses and self-catering apartments
- Mahébourg (south) — most authentic Mauritian town, excellent local restaurants, very affordable
Practical Booking Tips
Book direct when possible. Mauritius hotels typically offer better rates direct than via OTAs, and often include extras (spa credits, room upgrades, dinner inclusions).
Avoid July–August unless you want the energy. This is the peak season — school holidays for French, British, and South African families. Prices are highest and beaches most crowded. The shoulder seasons (April–June, September–November) offer the best value.
Half board is usually worth it. Mauritius has excellent hotel dining — especially at the top resorts. All-inclusive is rarely the best option (the food quality drops); half board (breakfast + dinner) is the sweet spot at most properties.
Don't overlook the east for families. Belle Mare's lagoon is impossibly calm and shallow — perfect for children. The east is quieter, has less nightlife, but for a family beach holiday it's arguably the best coast on the island.
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La Gaulette is a quiet fishing village on the south-west coast of Mauritius that offers dramatic scenery, world-class kitesurfing, and an authentic slice of island life away from the tourist crowds.
Baie du Cap is a breathtaking coastal village at the southernmost tip of Mauritius, where rugged cliffs, turquoise bays, and a deeply local atmosphere make it one of the island's most rewarding destinations.
Cari poisson is a cornerstone of Mauritian home cooking — a fragrant, lightly spiced fish curry enriched with aubergine and tomato that captures the essence of the island's Creole culinary tradition.
One Eye is one of the most powerful and respected surf breaks in the Indian Ocean — a heavy, fast-breaking left-hander off the Le Morne peninsula that attracts elite surfers and big-wave riders from around the world.
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