Four Seasons Resort Sharm El Sheikh
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Review
Character and identity
Spread across 100 acres of hillside gardens above the Red Sea, this 200-room resort takes its cues from Mediterranean villages and Arabic and North African architecture, with whitewashed villas, palm-shaded courtyards, fountains and a funicular running down to the second pool and beach. The 2022 expansion doubled the footprint and added a two-floor gym, residential apartments and a new entertainment quarter. Twelve restaurants include the Reef Grill (memorable on Fish Market night) and poolside Waha and Luna. The spa blends indoor marble suites with an outdoor courtyard pool. Service is attentive but unfussy, anchored by the 24-hour Four Seasons chat app.
Who's it for
Best for:
Multigenerational families, particularly from Europe and the Gulf, who want a secure, sprawling reef-front base with a strong kids club, connecting suites, apartments with kitchens, babysitting and a famous house reef for snorkelling and diving. Also a graceful decompression stop after a heritage week in Cairo and Luxor.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone wanting walkable nightlife, a buzzy destination beyond the gates, or seamless wayfinding (signage is minimal, especially after dark on the expansion side). Travellers booking the original side should know the decor still feels dated pending renovation, and accessible rooms are limited to three.
Bottom line
What defines a stay here is scale: 100 acres, a kilometre of beachfront and the staff bandwidth to make a large family feel personally looked after. Book the expansion side for the newer suites, larger terraces and privacy, or the original side if walkability to amenities matters more. Pair it with a Cairo itinerary to justify the flight.
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Location
Nearby tracked hotels
10 nearest