Maxx Royal Belek Golf Resort
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Shaped like the crescent on Turkey's flag and stretched along nearly 1,000 feet of Mediterranean shore, this all-inclusive resort sits well clear of central Antalya's bustle. The scale is ambitious: multiple pools (two outdoor, one heated indoor), a dedicated waterpark, oceanfront cabanas, a beach club, an onsite chocolatier, and helicopter transfers on request. Golf anchors the identity, with a Colin Montgomerie course whose back nine is floodlit for evening play. The 25-room Maxx Wellbeing spa runs beyond the standard menu into Ayurvedic consultations, mandala workshops and breath therapy. Service register is high-touch and resort-style, with live music, DJs and Vegas-format shows feeding the evenings.
Who's it for
Best for:
Golfers who want a dawn tee time (or a floodlit twilight round), families who need serious kids' infrastructure (four age-graded playrooms, a children's waterpark, climbing wall, dinosaur hideaway), and couples happy to retreat to the adults-only infinity pool between spa visits. It suits travellers who want everything on one property and don't plan to leave.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone after a quiet, design-led boutique stay or an authentic Antalya city experience should skip this. The scale, the entertainment programme and the all-inclusive format mean lively, busy, family-heavy public areas rather than hushed seclusion.
Bottom line
The defining feature here is breadth: a championship golf course, a substantial spa, a full kids' world and a beachfront pool complex all under one roof, run at a polished level. Book it if you want a single-property holiday with golf or family logistics solved. Golfers should ask about packages tied to the lit back nine; families benefit most from suites near the kids' zone.