Hotel in Marrakesh, Morocco
Palais Ronsard
650ptsPalmeraïe Colonial Scale

About Palais Ronsard
Set within Marrakesh's Palmeraïe palm grove, Palais Ronsard is an expansive colonial-style palace of 27 rooms and suites organised around pools and gardens, with interiors by Gil Dez. Two restaurants, a hammam spa, and private-pavilion Grand Suites position it among the Palmeraïe's more substantial luxury properties, with rates from US$380 per night and a 4.7 Google rating across 701 reviews.
The Palmeraïe Context: A Different Kind of Marrakesh Stay
Marrakesh accommodates two distinct categories of luxury lodging. The first is the medina riad, typically compact, inward-looking, and built around the rhythms of the old city. The second is the Palmeraïe property, spread across the palm grove that stretches north of the city, trading the medina's density for space, gardens, and the particular quiet that comes with distance from the souks. Palais Ronsard belongs firmly to the second tradition. Set on a generous plot within the Palmeraïe, its architecture faces outward rather than inward, wrapping gardens and pools in a manner closer to a colonial-era palace than a Moroccan courtyard house. Guests choosing between the two formats are essentially choosing between immersion in the city's historic fabric and retreat into a more expansive, grounds-focused experience. Palais Ronsard is designed for the latter.
That position within the Palmeraïe places it in a peer set that includes Amanjena, Fairmont Royal Palm Marrakech, and Jnane Tamsna in Marrakech, each offering a version of the grove's calm but at different scales and price points. For the city's medina-based flagships, see La Mamounia or Royal Mansour, where the architecture and address are inseparable from the experience.
Arriving at a Palace That Earns the Name
Approaching Palais Ronsard through the Palmeraïe, the surroundings shift gradually: the city's noise recedes, the road narrows, and the density of palm canopy increases before the property opens into its own grounds. The scale is notable from the outset. At 27 rooms, this is not a boutique riad with a handful of keys but an estate-scale property with enough volume to support two dining venues, a full spa, and multiple pool areas without any of them feeling crowded. The interiors, designed by Gil Dez, work within the palace's colonial idiom rather than against it: the rooms maintain a classicism that would read as theatrical in a smaller property but suits the architecture's proportions here.
Rooms are organised in tiers, beginning with Prestige Rooms and ascending to the Grand Pavilions, which come with private gardens and pools. Rates begin at US$380 per night, with the overall price point listed at US$1,079, reflecting the spread across room categories and seasons. Google reviewers give it 4.7 from 701 ratings, a signal of consistent guest satisfaction rather than occasional peak-experience scores.
The Ritual of Dining Across Two Restaurants
In Moroccan hospitality tradition, the meal is rarely incidental. The structure of a Moroccan dinner, from the preliminary mint tea ritual through the progression of salads, pastilla, and tagine to the sweetness of pastries, imposes its own pacing. That pacing is something Palais Ronsard accommodates through two distinct dining formats rather than a single all-purpose restaurant.
The Jardin d'Hiver operates as the gastronomic option, offering a more structured, indoor dining experience suited to the kind of meal where setting and service are part of the proposition. The al fresco Le Verger du Poète shifts the register: outdoor dining in a Moroccan garden setting invites a different rhythm entirely, one where the meal extends as the evening light changes and the air cools. The choice between them on any given evening is itself a small act of curation that regular guests seem to make deliberately, matching restaurant to mood. An elegant cocktail bar and a daytime Pool House round out the food and beverage offering, covering the full arc from morning to late evening without requiring guests to leave the property.
For those who do venture into the city to eat, our full Marrakesh restaurants guide maps the broader dining scene.
Spa Ronsard and the Hammam Tradition
The Moroccan hammam is one of the more deeply embedded social and wellness rituals in North African culture: not simply a bath but a structured sequence of heat, exfoliation, and recovery that has been practised in communal bathhouses across Morocco for centuries. Spa Ronsard situates that tradition within a contemporary hotel context, pairing the hammam format with modern treatments and Sothys skincare products. The result is a spa that references local custom without reducing it to decor.
Compared to the spa formats at medina properties, where treatment rooms are often physically constrained by riad architecture, Palmeraïe hotels generally have room to build larger, more purpose-designed spa facilities. Palais Ronsard's layout benefits from that spatial advantage.
Where It Sits in the Marrakesh Luxury Market
The Marrakesh luxury hotel market operates across several price tiers. At the summit sit properties like Royal Mansour and La Mamounia, which carry both historical weight and rates to match. Below them, a wide middle tier encompasses everything from large international-brand resorts such as the Four Seasons Resort Marrakech to design-led independents like El Fenn. Palais Ronsard occupies a position where the colonial-palace scale and Palmeraïe address create a distinct identity, without the brand infrastructure or historical cachet of the city's most prominent names.
For travellers building a broader Morocco itinerary, the country's luxury hotel options extend well beyond Marrakesh. Notable alternatives include Dar Ahlam in Ouarzazate, Hotel Sahrai, an SLH Hotel in Fes, Dar Maya in Essaouira, Dar al Hossoun in Taroudant, Fairmont Tazi Palace Tangier in Tangier, Banyan Tree Tamouda Bay in Fnideq, Hilton Taghazout Bay Beach Resort & Spa in Taghazout, Fairmont La Marina Rabat Salé Hotel And Residences in Salé, Fes Marriott Jnan Palace in Fès, Hotel Sahrai in Fez, Hyatt Regency Casablanca in Casablanca, and Château Roslane in Icr Iqaddar. Travellers comparing Marrakesh's Palmeraïe properties against other luxury formats, say Aman's urban approach as seen at Aman New York or Aman Venice, will find the Palmeraïe format distinctly grounds-and-garden in character, less city-engaged but more spatially generous.
For those comparing Marrakesh options in a similar price bracket with different aesthetics, Ksar Char-Bagh and IZZA Marrakech offer reference points, as does the self-contained scale of The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City for readers calibrating against international palace-hotel standards.
Planning a Stay
Palais Ronsard sits at Propriété Salah 7 ABYAD, Marrakech 40016, within the Palmeraïe. The nearest airport is Marrakech-Ménara International, approximately 16 kilometres away; Marrakech train station is around 11 kilometres from the property. The GPS coordinates 31.6795, -7.9341 are useful for navigation through the Palmeraïe's less clearly signposted roads. Rates begin at US$380 per night. The property has earned a member score of 4.6 out of 5 alongside a 4.7 Google rating from 701 reviewers, which should give prospective guests a reasonable basis for expectation-setting before arrival.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the leading suite at Palais Ronsard?
The Grand Pavilions represent the highest accommodation tier at Palais Ronsard. These are standalone pavilion-format suites with private gardens and private pools, placing them in a category where space and seclusion are the primary differentiators from the entry-level Prestige Rooms. The overall property rate is listed at US$1,079, reflecting the upper end of the room range. Interior design throughout is by Gil Dez, working within the property's colonial-palace aesthetic.
Why do people stay at Palais Ronsard?
The Palmeraïe address is the primary draw for a specific type of Marrakesh visitor: someone who wants the city within reach but prefers to be removed from medina density. Palais Ronsard adds to the grove's spatial advantages a colonial-scale palace format, two restaurants, a hammam spa, and private-pavilion options that are not available at smaller Palmeraïe properties. The 4.7 Google score across 701 reviews, combined with a member rating of 4.6 out of 5, suggests the property delivers reliably on that premise. Rates from US$380 per night position it accessibly within the Marrakesh luxury tier.
Does Palais Ronsard accept walk-in guests?
No phone number or website is listed in the EP Club database for Palais Ronsard, which makes it difficult to confirm walk-in availability directly. For a property at this price point and with 27 rooms, advance reservation is strongly advisable, particularly during Marrakesh's high seasons in spring and autumn when Palmeraïe properties fill well ahead of arrival. Travellers without a confirmed booking should contact the property directly before making the journey from the city, given the Palmeraïe's distance from central Marrakesh.
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