Nômade
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Set deep in the jungle on a resort-lined stretch of southern Tulum, Nômade is a 99-room bohemian retreat where Moroccan textiles, vintage trinkets, canvas walls, and a near-permanent waft of incense meet the Yucatán coastline. Dirt paths wind past Macondo, a beachy gathering space with live music and Middle Eastern cooking; La Popular, an open-air spot for ceviche and fish tacos; and Kuu Jū, a tiny Japanese counter doing serious omakase. The Yäan Spa runs a water circuit and treatments, while daily yoga, breathwork, sound healing, temazcal, and cacao ceremonies anchor the wellness programme. Service is intentionally hands-off.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-minded couples, friend groups, and wellness travellers who want a jungle-and-sand setting with a strong aesthetic, serious cooking, and a packed lineup of yoga, breathwork, and ceremony. Equally suited to guests who'll happily slide from a morning meditation to a late-night party without leaving the property.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone who wants attentive, hand-holding service, easy wayfinding, or full privacy: outdoor bathrooms mean mosquitoes and audible neighbours. Skip it if you need accessible paths, a quiet sleep (music runs late), or a structured kids' club outside summer.
Bottom line
The food is the headline here, with Kuu Jū's omakase genuinely outstanding and Macondo and La Popular both rooted in place. Book a Treehouse if you can stretch to it (the five jungle-canopy units are the property's best rooms), reserve Kuu Jū well ahead, and bring serious bug spray. Families do better in summer when programming expands.