Our Habitas
Daily price line
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Review
Character and identity
Set on a quiet stretch of Tulum beach, this 32-tent property reimagines the jungle-meets-sand aesthetic with elevated wooden platforms, palapa roofs, and canvas walls hiding studio-sized interiors with king beds, kilim rugs, midcentury wood furniture, and serious air conditioning. The only permanent building is a three-storey glass and steel pavilion housing an ashtanga yoga studio and Moro, where chef Federico Cappi turns out wood-fired salmon, chicken tagine, and fish tacos. A holistic spa (try the Tierra Maya clay mask and honey facial), an infinity pool, beach bar, and bikes round out a barefoot, design-led programme. Service runs through WhatsApp and arrives instantly.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-literate couples and solo travellers who want Tulum's yoga-and-dancing rhythm without the bachelorette crush on the main strip. The crowd skews stylish, tattooed, and committed to both 3 a.m. sets and 7 a.m. sun salutations. Book one of the five oceanfront suites if the budget allows.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone uneasy about an outdoor bathroom (the toilet sits in a bamboo enclosure behind the tent), families wanting kids' programming, or travellers who expect minibars, in-room phones, and a polished resort footprint. Light sleepers sensitive to jungle sounds and canvas walls should also reconsider.
Bottom line
What you're paying for is the Tulum fantasy executed with genuine taste: tented rooms that feel considered rather than rustic, food that's actually good, and a beach without the spring-break overflow. Spend up for an oceanfront suite if you can, accept the al fresco loo as part of the deal, and aim for shoulder season to dodge both crowds and peak pricing.