Spa at Chewton Glen |
Italy
Grand Hotel Tremezzo, Lake Como
The hotel’s T-Spa features a heated indoor infinity pool with five hydro-massage areas and an attached outdoor whirlpool tub. The panoramic relaxation lounge with sunbeds has floor-to-ceiling windows commanding lovely lake views. It offers traditional Hammam treatments, pro-radiance facials and holistic foot and leg massages with hot stones. The private T Spa Suite is especially designed for couples or friends, with its own whirlpool tub, sauna and steam room.
Read the full review: Grand Hotel Tremezzo
Read more: the best hotels on the Italian Lakes
Four Seasons Firenze, Florence
The Four Seasons has the only hotel spa worthy of the name in central Florence. Housed in an ochre-yellow pavilion giving onto an 11-acre park, it has 10 treatment rooms – two of them doubles – and in a nice touch, uses the products of historic (but these days state-of-the-art) body care and beauty lab Officina Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella. Signature treatments include a Chianti wine massage, and a full-body treatment based on iris root powder.
Read the full review: Four Seasons Florence
Read more: the best hotels in Florence
Rome Cavalieri, Rome
The Cavalieri’s huge, opulent Ancient Rome-themed Grand Spa Club covers more than 25,000sqft of indoor and outdoor pools, Turkish baths and saunas, treatment rooms (there are 10, with exclusive La Prairie products used in the more high-end facials and body treatments) and fitness facilities, as well as pilates, yoga rooms and two clay tennis courts. The only downside to this cornucopia of riches is that even hotel guests have to pay for it – €31 (£22) a day for access to the whole Club, €20 (£14) to use the parts of the Club without the outside pools, and €18 (£13) to just use the outside pools – with a whole sun-lounger generously included. Be aware too that locals can also join the club – from 5pm to around 8pm, the gym in particular tends to be full of Romans working out after work.
Read the full review: Rome Cavalieri
Read more: the best hotels in Rome
Relais Borgo Santo Pietro, Tuscany
The Borgo’s lovely spa is basically a whole Tuscan farmhouse in the garden, with exposed stone walls and an exclusive, intimate feel, helped along by the fire which burns in the grate of the warmly elegant reception area on cooler days. There are only two individual treatment rooms, plus an al fresco ‘room’ on the terrace, but in this 15-room hotel there’s rarely a booking bind. They specialise in holistic treatments based on organic ingredients, including several Ayurvedic therapies. Spa manager Tracey Mallallieu is one of Tuscany’s top wellness professionals, and the Borgo has an Italian exclusive (so far) on products by UK firm Heaven Health & Beauty, as used in the spa’s signature ‘Bee Sting Facial’.
Read the full review: Relais Borgo Santo Pietro
Read more: the best hotels in Tuscany
Fonteverde Resort, Tuscany
The spa is what most people come for, and it certainly delivers. Many of the treatments revolve around the natural thermal waters, rich in sulphur, calcium and other essential elements, that have been known and appreciated since Etruscan times. They are recommended for a series of ailments, from skin complaints to respiratory problems, but in reality, given the elevated target of this luxury resort, Fonteverde is equally geared towards beauty treatments, indulgent massages, Ayurvedic therapies, fitness and other non-medical spa activities. In cooler weather (and this is very much an all-year resort) it’s a joy just to luxuriate in the main thermal pool, or massage and tone various body zones via the resort’s Bioaquam circuit.
Read the full review: Fonteverde Resort
Read more: the best hotels in Tuscany
Verdura Golf & Spa Resort, Sicily
Spreading over 4,000 coolly modernist metres, the Verdura’s standalone wellness centre is probably the top facility in the whole of Sicily, and well up there among Italy’s leading hotel spas. A child-free zone – all except the indoor spa pool, where kids are welcome from 8am to 2pm – it features no less than four outdoor thalassotherapy pools, and has a very distinct approach, following the Kneipp healing and fitness philosophy, which is based on the five pillars of water, plants, exercise, diet and balance. Massages, facials and all the usual treatments are on offer, but the spa, with its hand-picked international staff, specialises in programmes that spread over several days, from detox to slimming to anti-ageing.
Read the full review: Verdura Golf & Spa
Read more: the best hotels in Sicily
Hotel Adler Dolomiti Spa & Sport Resort, Alto Adige
Exploring the galaxy of Adler spa's indoor and outdoor pools, saunas, steam baths, grottoes, fitness areas, wellness and beauty zones, can take up the best part of a day. Treatments, from massages to facials, are not included in the hotel’s ‘all-inclusive’ room rates, but prices are competitive – more in the city day-spa bracket than the luxury resort category. There’s even a kids’ section on the menu, offering treatments like the ‘pampering spa with milk and chocolate’.
Read the full review: Hotel Adler Dolomiti Spa & Sport Resort
Switzerland
The Chedi Andermatt, Andermatt
The Chedi Andermatt's spa is phenomenal and capacious. The mountain-facing 35-metre pool, sleek and streamlined in polished wood and stone, is incredibly alluring. The spa incorporates multiple baths and saunas, a hammam, impressively well-equipped gym and treatments which include bathing ceremonies and Asian massage therapies.
Read the full review: The Chedi Andermatt
La Reserve, Geneva
Encompassing cutting-edge medical treatments drawn from the expertise of the Nescens brand and the Centre for Ageing at the country’s Clinique de Genolier, you can expect results here, from figure shaping through Zeltiq CoolSculpting, to lipo massage, facial tissue regeneration, or help in radically changing your lifestyle for continued results. Beauty products come courtesy of La Prairie and their firming caviar treatments. A sauna, Hamman and hairdresser are on site.
Read the full review: La Reserve, Geneva
France
Cheval Blanc, Courcheval
All-white orchids against calming white walls, the spa mixes serious anti-ageing facials (ask for the Abeille Royale which plumps up wrinkles with youth serum) with restorative massages for aching muscles after a day on the slopes. A contrast of hot and cold sensations are used to reoxygenate the tissue, with a cold glass snowball used to massage the arches of your feet resulting in a new spring in your step. Skilled therapists and champagne by the glass complete the picture.
Read the full review: Cheval Blanc, Courchevel
Domaine de Manville, Provence
Beautifully designed to make the most of light filtering though the black and white mosaic spaces and over the large indoor pool, the spa is a haven which delivers results. Domaine de Manville’s own products consist of slimming treatments (caffeine and oil of pink peppercorns) and firming treatments (maritime pine, age-defying, stimulating Royal Jelly). You can also work out at in the kinesis technogym, or chose one of the outstanding Ivo Pintanguy treatments, legendary for their lifting and hydrating properties.
Read the full review: Domaine de Manville, Provence
Read more: the best hotels in Provence
Les Sources de Caudalie, Bordeaux-Martillac
Caudalie pioneered the notion of vinotherapy, with treatments combining the anti-ageing properties of polyphenols contained in grapeseeds and the spa's own natural hot-water spring. Occupying a wooden building inspired by the region's old tobacco drying sheds, there are 20 treatment rooms, a room for relaxing over tea and beamed indoor pool. Bubble away in a barrel of Grape Marc, before enjoying a crushed cabernet scrub. Other star treatments include the Pulp Friction massage and merlot, honey, wine and vine flower wraps.
Read the full review: Les Sources de Caudalie, Bordeaux-Martillac
Read more: the best hotels in Bordeaux
Hotel Molitor, Paris
With 13 treatment rooms, including two vast suites, and lounge-like reception with retro-style chairs and hotch-potch of floor tiles, the biggest hotel spa in Paris, with Art Deco motifs, is also perhaps the most fun. Its mood feels young and lively. And what could be more apt than the still-family-run Clarins group, which liked to claim it made its name by perfecting the women's silhouette to feel happy in the new bikini, launched at the Molitor swimming pool in 1946? The wide range of face and body treatments, using plant-perfumed oils, go from anti-age to dilettante and athlete, or even nail varnish and champagne sessions. The star turn is the Beyond the Water treatment devised especially for the Molitor for both men and women, complete with hot and cold foot treatment, aquatic cushions and watery soundtrack.
Read the full review: Hotel Molitor, Paris
Read more: the best hotels in Paris
Shangri-La Paris, Paris
There's something undoubtedly regal about the spa at the Shangri-La. As with many Paris spas, you go downstairs to enter, but in fact you reach ground level down the hill in what were once the stables. The big surprise is the soaring perspective of the colonnaded swimming pool, with its glazed day-lit façade and sun loungers along the side, while the spacious, candlelit treatment rooms of the Carita spa are geared for relaxing, complete with shower and hammam. The menu of Carita facials and massages includes the signature Expérience Précieuse, treating you from head to foot, and techniques that go from plant-based scrubs to decidedly high-tech electric probes, LED light therapy and ultrasound.
Read the full review: Shangri-La Paris
Read more: the best hotels in Paris
Turkey
Mandarin Oriental, Bodrum
The beautifully-designed, three-level spa and wellness complex offers sauna and Turkish bath experiences, and includes a full-sized indoor pool as well as a gym crammed with the very latest exercise machines. Oriental treatments include massages with precious stones or bamboo, and there's also a special 'gentleman's menu'.
Read the full review: Mandarin Oriental, Bodrum
Read more: the best hotels on the Turquoise Coast
D-Hotel Maris, Marmaris
D-Hotel Maris’s ESPA spa is vast and includes a vitality pool, sauna and steam room, adjacent well-equipped gym and multiple relaxation areas. The signature treatment is a sea salt and oil scrub followed by an Aegean sea shell massage, whereby therapists use a heated, smooth and fist-sized seashell to knead the most stubborn tangles of stress into remission.
Read the full review: D-Hotel Maris, Marmaris
Read more: the best hotels on the Turquoise Coast
England
Lime Wood, Hampshire
In the sybaritic Herb House Spa – airy, encased in glass and surrounded by greenery – there are private bathrooms with deep copper baths in the changing rooms; sensuous swimming, hydrotherapy and steam pools; a pioneering raw food café, Raw and Cured; a tempting shop, Curated; a mud house, relaxation rooms and state of the art gym leading to a beautiful rooftop garden, all with sylvan views. Spa treatments are by Bamford, Voya, Pai, Tri-Dosha and Aromatherapy Associates.
Read the full review: Lime Wood, Hampshire
Read more: the best hotels in Hampshire
Corinthia Hotel, London
Designed to reflect the flow of energy through the body, ESPA Life at the Corinthia hotel is a sinuous space where sharp edges are banished. Wave-style corridors hand-cast in resin lend a fluid, futuristic feel; in the relaxation room, sleep pods replace traditional daybeds. Facials are a forte here, and for immediate results an enzyme peel is recommended. Gentle enough to allow for a dinner date afterwards, but effective enough to show results, a deep cleanse and exfoliation is followed by a cooling mask of argan oil and menthol, leaving the complexion noticeably plumped and fresh.
Read the full review: Corinthia Hotel, London
Read more: the best hotels in London
The Gainsborough Bath Spa, Bath
Roman columns and a glass roof dominate the compact and exquisite Spa Village, which comprises three thermal pools, sauna, infrared sauna, steam room and 11 treatment rooms offering a range of massages and Asian-influenced and aquatic therapies. The Romanesque feel is enhanced by replica Roman mosaic (which lies above the preserved remains of the 4th-century original), while guests are encouraged to take the traditional and invigorating “Bath House Circuit” before their treatment, spending around an hour soaking in the three pools of varying temperatures, taking cold showers, rubbing the body with crushed lavender ice and having a sauna.
Read the full review: Gainsborough Bath Spa
Read more: the best hotels in London
Chewton Glen, Hampshire
Combining old school, classic elegance and impressive grandeur with a contemporary, holistic approach, Chewton Glen’s award-winning spa includes Europe’s largest hydrotherapy pool. There’s also a 17m ozone-treated indoor pool lined with blue mosaic tiles and surrounded by Grecian columns and outdoor hot tub (as well as outdoor swimming pool). There are aromatherapy saunas and crystal steam rooms in the changing rooms and treatments on offer include Ananda and Ila.
Read the full review: Chewton Glen, Hampshire
Read more: the best hotels in Hampshire
Dormy House Hotel, Cotswolds
Sprawling over several floors and in its own wing, the Scandinavian-chic House Spa leads directly off the reception lobby, so you are in no doubt that it’s centre stage at this ‘reinvented rustic’ country house hotel. There are gyms for work outs, classes and personal training session, as well as a thermal suite, salt- therapy room, rhassoul mud room, and outdoor hot tub. Treatments are by Temple Spa. Other impressive facilities include the fabulously comfy Greenhouse lounge with bar and floor-to-ceiling windows; a nail parlour lined with bottles of Veuve Clicquot (the idea is that you drink champagne through a straw while receiving a manicure); a 16m infinity pool with mood lighting; and a thermal suite with salt-infusion steam room and lavender sauna. The 10 therapists have been trained by Beata Aleksandrowicz whose company Pure Massage has been making waves in the spa world – the hour-long Face Pure Massage is said to have a better effect than Botox.
Read the full review: Dormy House Hotel, Cotswolds
Read more: the best hotels in the Cotswolds
The Scarlet, Cornwall
In the airy, multi-level Scarlet, the air is one of sybaritic relaxation. The womb-like spa specialises in Ayurvedic ‘journeys’, with tented treatment rooms and pods suspended in the dark for ‘deep relaxation’ and an all-glass sea-facing roof for ‘light relaxation’. The reed-fringed, rock-strewn outdoor pool extends from the indoor one, punctuated by two bright scarlet wood-fired hot tubs perched between boulders overlooking the sea.
Read the full review: The Scarlet, Cornwall
Read more: the best hotels in Cornwall
Scotland
Gleneagles, Perthshire
Possibly the best spa in Scotland; a sublime haven of sybaritic delights with an added health dimension, offering alternative therapies delivered by professional practitioners and therapists. The range of ESPA offerings cover every conceivable face and body treatment. For sheer blissed-out, all-over well-being, indulge in one of the signature treatments. With saunas, steam rooms, a hydrotherapy ‘vitality’ pool and superb relaxation areas, you may never want to leave.
Read the full review: Gleneagles, Perthshire
Read more: the best hotels in Edinburgh
Portugal
Vila Vita Parc, Algarve
Straddling the divide between health and beauty, Vila Vita Parc’s recently renovated spa offers a multitude of treatments including an airy, light-filled, Hypoxi Studio where machines efficiently target stubborn fat. There are specialists in osteopathy, cranio-sacral therapy, reflexology and physiotherapy. Beauticians use Kanebo and La Sultane de Saba products for facials and body treatments. Margaret Dabbs manicures and pedicures are the cherry on the cake.
Read the full review: Vila Vita Parc, Algarve
Read more: the best hotels in the Algarve
Conrad Algarve, Algarve
Undoubtedly the sleekest spa in the south of Portugal, a visit here guarantees you will leave looking younger, brighter and lighter. This is due to the brilliant Australian Intraceuticals brand, with their oxygen-infused facials, and to the uplifting Aromatherapy Associate oils with which you are massaged by the impressive team of therapists. Outside the treatment rooms lie cabanas, ice fountains, experience showers, infinity pools and a world of natural sunshine.
Read the full review: Conrad Algarve
Read more: the best hotels in the Algarve
Four Seasons Hotel Ritz Lisbon, Lisbon
The spa is undoubtedly the best in Lisbon, with an 18-metre lap pool as its centrepiece. Products are from Sodashi, Swiss Perfection and ESPA; manicures use Spa Ritual’s vegan nail care products. Four treatments rooms offer treatments such as honey and almond scrub, the four-handed “Symphony massage” and facials from Swiss Perfection, which deliver effective anti-ageing treatments. 700 square-metres of fitness facilities at the top of the hotel include pilates studios, resistance training and treadmills alongside the unique, rooftop running track. Excellent opening hours of 6.30am – 10.30 pm.
Read the full review: The Ritz Four Seasons Lisbon
Read more: the best hotels in Lisbon
Six Senses Douro Valley, Douro Valley
The 10 treatment rooms overlook the gardens. Signature treatments include a hot stone and almond oil massage, or an orange and lemon wrap with fruit from the gardens. There’s also a gym, nail bar and a pavilion for yoga and pilates (head into the woods to be suspended from the trees by ribbons for aerial yoga).
Read the full review: Six Senses Douro Valley
Read more: the best hotels in Lisbon
Greece
Amanzoe, Peloponnese
The very stylish spa offers treatments based on the healing philosophy of Greek medicine (such as facials with a liberal application of local organic honey) and a range of holistic therapies, including Pilates, yoga and aquatic bodywork. The latter, a combination of Watsu (water shiatsu), Alexander Technique, Craniosacral Therapy and sound therapy devised by a genius called Steve Karle, has been known to make grown men weep like babies. The spa also offers a number of excellent wellness retreats led by experts in their field. This is a spa to make Asklepios, the Greek god of medicine, proud.
Read the full review: Amazoe, Pelopnnese
Read more: Hydra travel guide
Germany
Waldorf Astoria Berlin, Berlin
The first – and only – Guerlain Spa in Germany is located on the fifth floor of the hotel, and is almost certainly one of the best in town. Spanning a whopping 1,000 square-metres, this ‘beauty universe’ features no less than eight therapy rooms, a pool shaped like a cloud (of course), sauna, steam room and Vichy shower. There's also a 24-hour fitness centre. Naturally, there are also lots of lovely Guerlain products for sale.
Read the full review: Waldorf Astoria Berlin
Read more: the best hotels in Berlin
Spain
Urso Hotel & Spa, Madrid
The Natura Bissé spa at the Urso is everything an urban spa should be, with no fussy nonsense. Wood walls and floors create a cosseting vibe. You need a lot of energy in Madrid so pep yourself up with a citrus scrub or a bitter orange mask. For something really special, try the magnetic mud treatment with diamond dust. Lolling in the seven-metre hydromassage pool feels good after shopping, while the sauna comes in handy for a quick detox the morning after the night before.
Read the full review: Urso Hotel & Spa, Madrid
Read more: the best hotels in Madrid
Hotel Hesperia Lanzarote, Lanzarote
It’s all about the volcanoes on Lanzarote, and you can harness a bit of that energy rumbling away underground at the Hesperia’s luxurious spa with a vibration massage with Tibetan bowls, or a lava ritual to get your skin ready for tanning. Try the volcanic stone treatment followed by a slathering in the rich local aloe vera lotion too – followed by a brisk walk along the coast path, breathing in the Atlantic air.
Read the full review: Hotel Hesperia Lanzarote
Read more: the best hotels in Lanzarote
Jumeirah Port Soller, Majorca
With its clifftop hydrotherapy pool, simply stupendous views of the deep-turquoise sea below, the Talise spa is quite an experience. From the sauna, you gaze at the Tramuntana mountains. Traditional Mallorcan produce such as oranges, almonds and olive oil feature in a lot of the treatments, which use Natura Bissé products. The sports massage with ginger, rosemary and lavender is very popular with the cyclists who base themselves here while tackling the hairpin bends of the Serra Tramuntana.
Read the full review: Jumeirah Port Soller, Majorca
Read more: the best hotels in Majorca
Hotel Barceló Hamilton, Menorca
Up on the roof, there are six whirlpool tubs with views of the Mediterranean, where you can bubble away while sipping a refreshing pomada made with the local gin. Downstairs, things get more serious in the sensual U Spa, where the Menorcan wine experience includes a scrub with grape products. Male guests discreetly freshen up their complexions with an algae facial before a sports massage. Ayurvedic treatments include the shirodara ritual, where essential oils are trickled onto the forehead.
Read the full review: Hotel Barceló Hamilton, Menorca
Read more: the best hotels in Menorca
Ibiza Gran Hotel, Ibiza
The large yet serene Open Spa is a bit of a magnet for high-profile visitors to the island, who are after the very best treatments and facilities. The After Party Detox – with mineral mud treatment and an orange and mimosa oil massage – is unsurprisingly very popular. If it has been a particularly long night, you might want to consider a rejuvenating eye treatment with diamond dust or even submit yourself to the Cinetic Lift Expert technique, which uses microcurrents to tone the skin.
Read the full review: Ibiza Gran Hotel
Read more: the best hotels in Ibiza
Abadía Retuerta LeDomaine hotel, Valladolid
When a spa is surrounded by vineyards, it is only logical to introduce the concept of a spa sommelier, isn’t it? At the sumptuous, 10,000sqft Santuario, which opened in July 2015, the vinotherapy treatments are inspired by the winemaking traditions of the Ribera del Duero. The sommelier gives you wines to taste and oils to sniff then decides on the best course of action for you based on your preferences. With large indoor and outdoor pools and a glass of superb wine never far away, the Santuario is Spain’s most interesting new spa.
Read the full review: Abadía Retuerta LeDomaine hotel, Valladolid
Las Arenas Balneario Resort, Valencia
Las Arenas started life as a glamorous spa more than a century ago, when taking the waters was all the rage. The facilities have come on a bit since then, but the spa has lost none of the luxe factor and you can breathe in that healthy sea air as you work your way around the thermal pools. Sisley products are used for treatments, which include a Hanakasumi massage with a cherry blossom and rice powder exfoliation procedure.
Read the full review: Las Arenas Balneario Resort, Valencia
Read more: the best hotels in Valencia
Puente Romano Beach Resort hotel, Marbella
The Andalusian tiles, arches and columns lend a Moorish look to the Six Senses spa, which opened in July 2015. You can have a treatment using local herbs with sea salt and olive oil in the sensual setting of a canopied cabana, or have a manicure at the outdoor nail bar as you gaze at the Mediterranean. Ice-experience showers zing you back to life in the wet area, where the light filters through woven screens onto limestone tiles. Products are by The Organic Pharmacy and QMS Medicosmetics.
Read the full review: Puente Romano Beach Resort, Marbella
Iceland
Hotel Ion Luxury Adventure, Nesjavellir
The Lava Spa, located underneath the Northern Lights bar, offers extraordinary views overlooking the Icelandic lava fields. Changing rooms lead out into the biting Icelandic air to a shallow, 10-metre hot pool. Guests can also admire outstanding views from within the warmth of a glass-fronted sauna, and then retreat into the tranquillity room after the remedial water works its magic. Treatments, which use local ingredients, are from £57.
Read the full review: Hotel Ion Luxury Adventure, Nesjavellir
This article was from The Daily Telegraph and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.