Skip to main content

    Hotel in Caldas De Malavella, Spain

    Hotel Camiral at Camiral Golf & Wellness

    150pts

    Championship Forest Resort

    Hotel Camiral at Camiral Golf & Wellness, Hotel in Caldas De Malavella

    About Hotel Camiral at Camiral Golf & Wellness

    Set within Catalan pine forest an hour from Barcelona, Camiral Golf & Wellness holds the title of Spain's No.1 Golf Resort and will host the 2031 Ryder Cup. The 138-room property pairs two championship courses, including the European Tour-tested Stadium Course, with a 1,000m² wellness centre and five dining options across a contemporary resort built for extended stays.

    Forest, Fairways, and a Design Built for the Long Stay

    The approach to Camiral along the N-II corridor through Girona province sets the tone before you reach reception. The Catalan forest thickens on either side of the road, the noise of the motorway drops away, and the resort's low-slung contemporary architecture appears as an extension of the landscape rather than an imposition on it. This is a recurring design strategy among Europe's destination golf resorts: keep the built environment horizontal, use local materials, and let the surrounding tree cover carry the visual weight. Camiral executes this more deliberately than most, with 138 rooms and suites distributed across structures that avoid stacking height in favour of ground-level spread.

    Within the broader category of Spanish resort hotels, the property sits in a specific competitive bracket: large-format, sport-led destinations with serious amenity depth, positioned against peers like La Residencia, A Belmond Hotel, Mallorca and Mandarin Oriental Barcelona not on cuisine or heritage alone, but on the breadth of a self-contained stay. Where urban properties like the Mandarin Oriental Ritz, Madrid sell access to a city, Camiral sells the case for not leaving the property at all.

    The Rooms: Configuration Over Spectacle

    The 138 rooms and suites reflect a planning intelligence more common in purpose-built resorts than converted properties. Multi-level designs, interconnecting configurations, and widespread balcony access across the inventory suggest a deliberate response to the group and family travel market, where a single room type rarely serves the whole party. The aesthetic runs contemporary rather than traditionally Catalan: clean lines, restrained palettes, and the kind of material quality that reads as considered rather than characterful.

    For comparison, design-led rural conversions in Spain, such as Abadía Retuerta LeDomaine or Terra Dominicata, draw heavily on historic architecture and local stone to shape atmosphere. Camiral's approach trades that patina for functional flexibility. The multi-level suite formats in particular suit guests arriving for multi-night golf packages, where the room becomes a base for recovery, planning, and equipment storage as much as sleep.

    Golf as the Structural Core

    The resort's golf credentials are documented rather than asserted. Camiral holds the ranking of No.1 Golf Resort in Spain and carries the distinction of hosting the 2031 Ryder Cup, a continental event with a selection process that scrutinises course quality, infrastructure capacity, and tournament-grade facilities over years of evaluation. The Stadium Course has appeared in Spain's European Tour calendar on three occasions, including multiple editions of the Spanish Open, placing it in a verifiable tier of tournament-level layouts on the continent.

    The practice infrastructure underlines the same intent. One of the largest practice facilities in Europe, equipped with Trackman ball-tracking and swing analysis technology, positions the resort as a performance destination rather than a leisure one. Guests arriving primarily to play will find club and buggy hire at the Clubhouse Pro Shop, and two full 18-hole championship courses to rotate between across a multi-day stay.

    For context on where Camiral sits in Spain's broader golf-resort picture: the country's golf tourism market concentrates heavily in the south, particularly around Marbella and the Costa del Sol corridor. A resort of Camiral's specification in Catalonia, within an hour of Barcelona and close to the Costa Brava, occupies a different catchment. It draws from the Barcelona weekend market, the Girona cultural circuit, and international travellers routing through El Prat who want forest rather than coast. Guests looking for a contrasting coastal Catalan alternative might consider Can Mascort Eco Hotel near Palafrugell or the medieval-conversion character of Mas de Torrent Hotel & Spa further up the Costa Brava.

    Wellness at Scale

    The 1,000m² wellness centre represents a significant footprint for a resort of this size. European resort wellness has bifurcated in recent years between stripped-back thermal circuits aimed at relaxation and technology-augmented programmes aimed at measurable outcome. Camiral's offering sits in the latter camp: cryotherapy, Oxygen Chamber Therapy, and Photo Bio Modulation treatments form part of a menu built around specific protocols for immunity, detox, and anti-ageing.

    Tailor-made programmes with a team of in-house specialists mean the centre functions closer to a medical wellness model than a spa in the traditional hotel sense. Guests arriving for a golf trip and those arriving for a recovery programme are addressed by the same facility, which requires a broad depth of expertise to deliver both convincingly. The adjacent gym, tennis courts, padel courts, and running paths through the forest extend the active offer beyond the treatment rooms themselves.

    Among Spanish hotels with serious wellness infrastructure, Akelarre in San Sebastián and Cap Rocat in Cala Blava represent the smaller, more atmosphere-driven end. Camiral operates at the other end of the scale, where breadth of clinical offering and facility scale take precedence over intimacy.

    Dining Across Five Outlets

    Five on-property dining options position Camiral squarely within the full-service resort category where guests are expected and encouraged to eat in-house across a multi-night stay. Resort dining at this scale typically requires a range of format and register: a formal dining room, a clubhouse grill, a poolside or casual option, and lighter-touch alternatives for early starts before a round. Without confirmed details on specific restaurants, chefs, or menus, the structural logic of five outlets across a 138-room property suggests a similar distribution.

    For guests seeking destination dining as a counterpoint to the resort stay, Girona's Michelin-concentrated restaurant scene is within direct driving distance, and the Costa Brava coast adds further options. Our full Caldas de Malavella restaurants guide covers the local dining circuit in detail.

    Position and Practical Notes

    Camiral sits at kilometre marker 701 on the N-II, placing it around one hour from Barcelona by road and within reach of Girona-Costa Brava Airport for shorter transfers. The Costa Brava's beaches are accessible as day trips, though the resort's design as a contained destination means most guests will use that proximity selectively rather than as a daily programme. The forest location and resort format make this a property leading approached as a primary destination rather than a touring base.

    Guests whose priorities lean toward design-led boutique character over resort breadth might consider Atrio Restaurante Hotel in Cáceres, Torre del Marqués Hotel Spa & Winery, or, further afield, Pepe Vieira Restaurant & Hotel in Poio. Island alternatives with a similar resort scale include Bahia del Duque in Tenerife and BLESS Hotel Ibiza. For smaller Balearic character stays, Hotel Can Cera in Palma, Hotel Can Ferrereta in Santanyí, and Can Alberti 1740 in Mahón each offer a different register. Beyond Spain, A Quinta da Auga Hotel & Spa in Santiago de Compostela, Casa Beatnik in A Coruña, Canfranc Estación in the Pyrenees, Marbella Club Hotel, and international reference points like The Fifth Avenue Hotel, Aman New York, and Aman Venice each represent the broader competitive field of resort and urban luxury against which Camiral is usefully measured.

    FAQ

    What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Hotel Camiral?
    The atmosphere is resort-contemporary rather than rustic or heritage-driven. The Catalan forest setting creates natural quiet and green enclosure, while the architecture keeps sightlines low and open. If the resort is operating at strong occupancy, the golf courses and wellness centre will draw the majority of guest energy away from the rooms themselves, which means the property feels active during the day and noticeably quieter in the evenings. Guests arriving without a golf or wellness agenda may find the atmosphere less charged than at an urban property — that is precisely the point for those who book here.
    What is the most popular room type at Hotel Camiral?
    The resort's 138 rooms include multi-level suites with balconies and interconnecting configurations, which points toward the suite formats as the preferred choice for guests on longer stays or travelling in groups. Golf package guests typically favour rooms with strong outdoor access and adequate space for equipment, which the multi-level designs accommodate. Without booking data on hand, the interconnecting suite configurations appear leading matched to the resort's primary audience: families and small groups arriving for multi-night sports-and-wellness stays.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Hotel Camiral at Camiral Golf & Wellness on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.