Hotel in Marrakesh, Morocco
Royal Mansour
2,700ptsRiad-City Architecture

About Royal Mansour
Commissioned by King Mohammed VI and covering 6.2 hectares within Marrakesh's Medina walls, Royal Mansour operates as a self-contained city of 53 private riads, each with its own rooftop pool and 24-hour butler. Ranked 13th on the World's 50 Best Hotels list for 2025 and awarded Africa's Leading Luxury Hotel by the World Travel Awards, it sits at the top of the Moroccan luxury tier by most credible measures.
A City Inside the Medina
Entering Marrakesh's Medina through the gates of Royal Mansour, the street noise drops before the door closes behind you. The property extends across 6.2 hectares, enclosed entirely by its own perimeter wall, one side of which is the existing city wall. This is how the most loyal guests describe the arrival: not as checking into a hotel, but as crossing into a separate quarter of the city, one with the same winding alleyways and shaded courtyards as the Medina itself, but scaled and maintained to a different standard entirely. The spatial logic is that of a traditional Moroccan neighbourhood — riads arranged around pathways, fountains marking intersections, gardens between buildings — rather than the linear corridor-and-lobby structure that defines most luxury hotels.
That spatial authenticity is not incidental. Commissioned by King Mohammed VI specifically to document and preserve the finest expressions of Moroccan craft and architecture, the property took more than 1,200 artisans three years to build, working without a defined budget ceiling. The result placed Royal Mansour at number 13 on the World's 50 Best Hotels list in 2025, up from 23rd in 2023 and 38th in 2024 , a consistent upward trajectory that reflects continued reinvestment rather than a static reputation. The World Travel Awards named it both Africa's Leading Luxury Hotel and Morocco's Leading Boutique Hotel in 2025, and La Liste's Leading Hotels ranking placed it at 98.5 points in 2026.
What Returning Guests Come Back For
At this price tier in Marrakesh, the competitive field includes La Mamounia, Amanjena, and the Four Seasons Resort Marrakech. Each occupies a different position. La Mamounia trades on a century of heritage and a central Medina address with deep Moroccan cultural weight. Amanjena delivers the sparse, contemplative privacy that characterises the Aman network globally. The Four Seasons operates with the logistical consistency that chain loyalty demands. Royal Mansour's position within this set is the one most guests who return repeatedly describe in the same terms: it is the property that feels most like Morocco while operating at a service tier that matches or exceeds any international chain.
The riad format is central to that loyalty. All 53 riads, ranging from one to four bedrooms, are configured as independent residences rather than hotel rooms. Every ground-floor riad has an outdoor patio, living room, and bar. Every riad's roof terrace has its own pool, sun beds, and fireplace. The Grand Riad, winner of the World Travel Awards for Africa's Leading Luxury Hotel Villa in 2025, carries four bedrooms and dedicated dining and gallery spaces. Guests who return multiple times tend to request specific riads by name, a behaviour more associated with private villa rental than hotel stays. The 24-hour butler service , combined with 24-hour valet, maid service, and room service , means guests can structure days entirely around their own schedule rather than the hotel's operational rhythms. Each riad's rooftop is equipped with rain sensors that automatically close the terrace at the first sign of weather, a detail that regulars cite as emblematic of the property's operational discipline.
The Dining Architecture
Where most luxury hotels in the Medina category offer one headline restaurant alongside standard room service, Royal Mansour operates four distinct dining venues with clearly differentiated identities. La Grande Table Marocaine positions itself as the property's showcase for Moroccan gastronomy revisited at a haute cuisine register, associated with chef Yannick Alléno, whose restaurants in France have accumulated multiple Michelin stars. La Grande Brasserie applies classic French brasserie references through a contemporary lens. Le Jardin draws from Japanese, Thai, Peruvian, and Mediterranean influences in a garden setting, anchored by a 600-square-metre swimming pool and seven private pavilions. The most recent addition to the Le Jardin space is an alfresco sushi counter, introduced during the property's latest reinvestment phase. Sesamo completes the set with contemporary Italian cooking.
Guests who use the property repeatedly tend to rotate through these restaurants across a stay rather than returning to the same venue each evening, which suggests the kitchen programs are differentiated enough to sustain that rotation. The option to dine in-riad, either in the ground-floor living spaces or on the rooftop terrace, means that returning guests who value privacy over scene will often spend several evenings without leaving their own residence. The Lobby Bar and Lounge and the Cigar and Liquor Bar, which stocks aged spirits and cigars, complete the on-property drinking options for those who want to move through the grounds after dinner. For a broader sense of where this fits within Marrakesh's dining scene, our full Marrakesh restaurants guide covers the city's wider range.
The Spa and the Gardens
The spa has its own architectural identity: a latticed white structure described as a mashrabiya bubble, with a central atrium that looks down onto an indoor swimming pool under a glass roof. At 27,000 square feet, it contains two hammams, a Watsu bath area, a salon, and a tea lounge. The spa has received multiple international prizes and is frequently cited by returning guests as the primary reason for revisiting, particularly during the cooler months between October and March when Marrakesh is at its most comfortable for outdoor and treatment-based activity. Arriving in late autumn, when the Atlas Mountains are snow-capped and visible from rooftop terraces, is a version of the stay that loyal guests plan specifically. The gardens extend across 2.8 hectares within the Le Jardin zone, recently expanded and redesigned by Spanish landscape architect Luis Vallejo.
Planning a Stay
The property's Les Clefs d'Or concierge team handles arrangements that extend well beyond the property itself, including camel riding in the desert, dining in Bedouin tents, and hot-air balloon flights over the Sahara. The Yves Saint Laurent Museum is a 15-minute drive from the property, a detail that guests with an interest in the intersection of Moroccan visual culture and twentieth-century fashion tend to factor into their timing. The kids' club runs activity-based programming including chocolate-making classes, making the property more viable for families than the typical ultra-luxury Medina property. The property holds Leading Hotels of the World membership as of 2025. Royal Mansour sits at Rue Abou Abbas El Sebti in the Medina; the address is recognisable to most drivers and hotel staff who regularly transfer guests. For guests considering other Moroccan destinations, Hotel Sahrai in Fes and Dar Ahlam in Ouarzazate operate in comparable niche-luxury registers. Other notable Moroccan options include Dar Maya in Essaouira, Fairmont Tazi Palace Tangier, Banyan Tree Tamouda Bay in Fnideq, Hyatt Regency Casablanca, and Fairmont La Marina Rabat Salé. Within Marrakesh, guests comparing options should also consider El Fenn, Ksar Char-Bagh, La Sultana Marrakech, IZZA Marrakech, Fairmont Royal Palm Marrakech, and Jnane Tamsna. For those benchmarking against ultra-luxury city hotels internationally, Aman New York, The Fifth Avenue Hotel, and Aman Venice operate in a comparable private-riad or suite-format category with similarly condensed key counts.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What kind of setting is Royal Mansour?
- Royal Mansour is a self-contained property covering 6.2 hectares within Marrakesh's Medina, structured as a traditional Moroccan neighbourhood of private riads rather than a conventional hotel. It holds a 98.5-point score from La Liste's Leading Hotels ranking for 2026 and sits at number 13 on the World's 50 Best Hotels list for 2025. The address is in the heart of the historic city, with one perimeter wall shared with the existing Medina wall. It is a member of the Leading Hotels of the World.
- Which room offers the leading experience at Royal Mansour?
- The Grand Riad, a four-bedroom residence with dedicated gallery and dining spaces, received the World Travel Awards for Africa's Leading Luxury Hotel Villa in 2025 and is the property's most comprehensive accommodation. For guests travelling as a couple or solo, the single-bedroom riads deliver the full format, including private rooftop pool, fireplace, courtyard, and 24-hour butler, at the most concentrated scale. Guests returning multiple times tend to request specific riads based on view orientation, either toward the city or toward the Atlas Mountains.
- Why do people go to Royal Mansour?
- The combination of Medina location, riad-format accommodation, and a service structure that includes 24-hour butler and concierge draws guests who want the spatial character of a traditional Moroccan stay without compromise on operational consistency. The World's 50 Best Hotels ranking of 13th in 2025 reflects recognition from a peer set that evaluates hospitality across architecture, food, and service simultaneously. The four-restaurant dining program and 27,000-square-foot spa extend the reasons to stay on-property across a multi-day visit.
- Should I book Royal Mansour in advance?
- Given 53 riads at the leading of Marrakesh's luxury tier, availability is constrained year-round but particularly tight between October and March, when temperatures are at their most comfortable and international travel to Morocco peaks. Guests with specific riad preferences, particularly the Grand Riad or multi-bedroom configurations, should book several months ahead. The property's Les Clefs d'Or concierge team can handle itinerary arrangements outside the property, which often require their own lead time during peak season.
- Does Royal Mansour's dining program require reservations for non-guests?
- Royal Mansour operates four restaurants with distinct culinary identities, including La Grande Table Marocaine, associated with multi-Michelin-starred chef Yannick Alléno, which places it in a different competitive tier from standard hotel dining in Marrakesh. Given the property's position at number 13 on the World's 50 Best Hotels list for 2025 and its Africa's Leading Luxury Hotel designation, demand for the dining venues is consistent. Non-guest reservations at the flagship restaurant in particular are worth securing well in advance, especially during the October-to-March high season.
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