Wynn Palace
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Wynn Palace plants Steve Wynn's maximalist signature on the Cotai Strip: extra-wide corridors, soaring ceilings, mirrored walls, and a floral motif that runs from carpet patterns to the seven live arrangements built from hundreds of thousands of fresh stems. The property doubles as a gallery, with 18th-century tapestries, Pop Art, and a quartet of Qing Dynasty Buccleuch vases. Outside, an eight-acre Performance Lake stages a choreographed light-and-water show every 20 to 30 minutes, circled by a SkyCab gondola. Expect 14 restaurants and cafés, including Sichuan Moon, Wing Lei Palace, Mizumi, and SW Steakhouse, plus the largest spa in Macau at over 48,000 square feet.
Who's it for
Best for:
Couples and design-literate travellers who want full-throttle Wynn theatre, serious Chinese and Japanese dining, and a properly large spa programme. Also strong for shoppers (the Esplanade runs to Hermès, Bottega Veneta, Saint Laurent) and anyone who wants the lake show, gondola ride, and casino energy on tap.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers chasing quiet, restraint, or a beach. The Cotai location means ongoing construction noise around the property, and the aesthetic is unapologetically opulent rather than understated. Families seeking a dedicated kids' programme will find the focus tilted toward adult entertainment and gaming.
Bottom line
The defining reason to book is the combination: a genuinely top-tier restaurant roster, Macau's largest spa, and the Performance Lake spectacle, all wrapped in Wynn's florid design language. Spend up for a north-facing room to get the lake views (and dodge construction sightlines), and time a stay around an evening arrival so the first show lands on day one.