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    Hotel in Punta Maroma, Mexico

    Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection

    1,465pts

    Mangrove-Canopy Luxury

    Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection, Hotel in Punta Maroma

    About Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection

    The first hotel inaugurated within the Kanai development on the Riviera Maya, Etéreo carries Michelin's two-key recognition and a 92.5-point score in La Liste's 2026 Top Hotels ranking. Seventy-five studios, suites, and penthouses connect to a protected white-sand beach via refined walkways above a mangrove forest, anchored by three restaurants and an Auberge spa program that defines the property's wellness identity.

    A Property Defined by What It Crosses, Not What It Occupies

    The Riviera Maya's premium hotel tier has split decisively in recent years. On one side sit the large resort complexes that dominate the Cancún-to-Tulum corridor, commanding scale and all-inclusive volume. On the other, a smaller cohort of design-led properties has emerged, positioning themselves through environmental restraint, low key-counts, and architecture that works with the ecosystem rather than over it. Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection, located within the new Kanai development at Paseo Kanai 16 in Solidaridad, belongs firmly to the second category. Its 75-room footprint, the protected mangrove forest beneath it, and the refined walkway system that connects the hotel body to the beach are all structural choices that signal a different competitive set than the coast's larger resort operators.

    That peer set includes properties like Maroma in Riviera Maya and Hotel Esencia in Tulum, both of which operate with similar philosophies: limited keys, site-specific design, and an amenity stack built around spa and dining rather than entertainment volume. Within that cohort, Etéreo is among the newest entrants, having received its Michelin two-key recognition in 2024 and earning a 92.5-point score in La Liste's 2026 Leading Hotels ranking. For a property that only began welcoming guests relatively recently, those credentials place it immediately at the front of the Riviera Maya's design-led tier.

    The Architecture of Arrival

    The physical experience of Etéreo is structured by a single design decision: you do not walk on the ground to reach the beach. The refined walkway system suspends guests above a dense mangrove forest, a protected ecosystem that would have been razed or degraded under conventional resort construction. That walkway is not merely a logistical solution. It is the defining architectural gesture of the property, and it shapes the sequence of sensory experience from the moment a guest moves through the hotel grounds. The canopy sits at eye level. The sounds and light filtering through the forest change with the time of day. The beach, white sand on the Caribbean, appears at the end of the walkway as an arrival rather than a given.

    Inside the hotel structures, the design approach leans on local materiality and a curatorial relationship with Mexican contemporary art. The collection includes work by Manuel Felguérez, a celebrated figure in Mexican geometric abstraction, whose pieces appear throughout the property. That choice is deliberate: rather than commissioning site-neutral art to populate blank walls, Etéreo grounds its interior identity in a specific cultural tradition. The result is a property whose aesthetic reads as regional without being folkloric, a distinction that design-led luxury hotels in Mexico have increasingly worked to establish. Properties like Chablé Yucatán in Merida and Casa de Sierra Nevada in San Miguel de Allende have pursued similar anchoring in regional craft and visual culture.

    Rooms: What the Tier Structure Offers

    Etéreo's 75 keys span studios, suites, and penthouses, all configured with sea views. Rate entry points begin around $4,999, which positions the property within Mexico's premium tier alongside comparisons like Las Ventanas al Paraíso, A Rosewood Resort in San José del Cabo, One&Only; Mandarina in Riviera Nayarit, and Zadun, A Ritz-Carlton Reserve in Los Cabos. At that rate level, the question is not whether the accommodations are comfortable but how they justify the specific premium over adjacent options. At Etéreo, the primary justification is spatial and material: rooms are described as extravagant in their comforts and grounded in the work of local artists and artisans, with the design vocabulary consistent from the public spaces through to the private quarters.

    Upper-tier categories add butler service and outdoor hot tubs. For guests whose priority is privacy and a high level of in-room support, those categories represent a meaningful step up from the studio configuration. For those whose interest centers on the property's environmental and culinary programming, the studio tier still delivers the full architectural experience, including mangrove and Caribbean views, access to the SANA spa, and the three-restaurant lineup. The room-category decision at Etéreo is less about what you gain and more about what level of in-room service density you want around the core experience.

    Dining as a Structural Pillar

    Auberge Resorts Collection has positioned cuisine as a defining credential across its portfolio, and Etéreo carries that emphasis through three distinct restaurant concepts. Itzam takes its reference from Maya culinary tradition, situating the hotel's dining identity within the region's pre-Columbian food culture rather than defaulting to generic Mexican resort fare. Che Che introduces Japanese-accented cooking to the roster, a format that has become more common in high-end Caribbean and Pacific coastal properties as operators compete for guests who arrive with exposure to the Tokyo and New York restaurant markets. El Changarro operates as the beachside bar and kitchen, the least formal of the three, and the most direct in connecting the dining experience to the property's coastal setting.

    That three-concept structure is a deliberate part of how Etéreo competes within its peer set. Properties like Montage Los Cabos in Cabo San Lucas and Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita similarly deploy multi-restaurant formats to reduce the incentive for guests to leave the property. At Etéreo, the combination of regional, international, and casual beachside formats covers enough variation that a week-long stay does not require repetition. For a property in a developing area like Kanai, that self-sufficiency is also a practical consideration: the surrounding dining infrastructure is still maturing.

    The Spa and Wellness Program

    Auberge Resorts Collection's wellness programs are among the most documented strengths of the brand across its global portfolio. At Etéreo, the SANA spa translates that emphasis through a framework rooted in Mayan philosophies of renewal and cyclical restoration. That conceptual grounding is consistent with how the property positions its broader identity: the Mayan reference is not decorative but structural, shaping how the spa program presents its treatments and rituals. For guests whose primary motivation is wellness, Etéreo's spa credential, combined with the mangrove forest setting and beach access, creates a more coherent environmental context than urban spa properties can offer. Comparisons within Mexico's wellness-focused hotel cohort include Palmaïa in Playa del Carmen and Xinalani in Quimixto, both of which operate with similarly concentrated wellness positioning.

    The Kanai Context

    Etéreo holds a specific position within the Kanai development as the first hotel to open there. Kanai is a planned luxury district on the Riviera Maya, and Etéreo's role as inaugural property means it has established the tone and design standard that subsequent phases of the development will work around or against. That pioneer status carries commercial weight: guests who book now are choosing a property that has arrived early in a district that has not yet reached its full density of amenities and supporting infrastructure. For some travelers, that is a reason to wait. For others, the relative quiet and the sense of being in a place before it fills in is precisely the appeal.

    The broader Riviera Maya luxury scene, from Maroma through to the properties around Tulum, is documented in our full Punta Maroma restaurants and hotels guide. For Mexico-wide comparisons across different resort typologies, the Auberge Collection's approach at Etéreo sits alongside distinct alternatives at properties like Cuixmala in La Huerta, Las Alamandas in Costalegre, and Bruma Valle de Guadalupe in Ensenada, each occupying a different niche within Mexico's high-end accommodation spectrum.

    Planning a Stay

    Etéreo is located at Paseo Kanai 16, Solidaridad, within the Quintana Roo municipality, accessible via Cancún International Airport, which serves the full Riviera Maya corridor. The property's 75-key scale means availability at peak periods, particularly winter months when Caribbean demand is highest, moves quickly. Given the La Liste and Michelin recognition received in 2024 and 2025, the property has moved into a discovery phase where its credentials are circulating widely in premium travel media. Booking well ahead of intended travel dates, particularly for the upper suite and penthouse categories, is advisable. The rate structure beginning at $4,999 places this firmly in planned-trip territory rather than spontaneous booking, and the immersive, self-contained nature of the property rewards stays of at least three nights to engage fully with the spa, multiple dining concepts, and the mangrove-to-beach sequence that defines the Etéreo experience.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the atmosphere like at Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection?
    Etéreo occupies the quieter, design-led end of the Riviera Maya's premium hotel spectrum. The property's 75-key scale and mangrove forest setting keep the atmosphere calm and spatially generous rather than resort-busy. The Kanai development is still in early stages, which means the surrounding area is less populated than more established stretches of the coast. Inside the hotel, the presence of Manuel Felguérez's geometric abstract works and materials rooted in regional craft traditions gives the public spaces a cultural specificity unusual for a coastal resort. The La Liste 92.5-point recognition in 2026 and the Michelin two-key award in 2024 signal where the property sits in its competitive set: this is a property that earns its credentials through design and program coherence rather than scale or entertainment volume.
    Which room category should I book at Etéreo, Auberge Resorts Collection?
    All 75 keys, from studios through to penthouses, carry sea views and access to the full property amenity stack, including the SANA spa, three restaurants, and the refined mangrove walkway to the beach. The studio tier is the entry point and delivers the core Etéreo spatial and design experience. Upper categories add butler service and outdoor hot tubs, which represent a meaningful upgrade for guests prioritizing in-room service depth or private outdoor soak access. Given the starting rate of $4,999, the decision between categories is primarily about how much of the stay you want to organize around in-room service versus property-wide programming. For first-time guests, the mid-tier suite configuration typically offers the most complete version of the Auberge design and comfort standard without requiring the full penthouse premium.

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