Hotel in San Sebastián, Spain
Hotel Villa Favorita
750pts19th-Century Villa, Two-Star Kitchen

About Hotel Villa Favorita
The last 19th-century villa standing on La Concha beachfront, Hotel Villa Favorita occupies a singular position in San Sebastián's hotel scene: 25 rooms, Michelin-recognised architecture of calm, and a two-Michelin-star restaurant in Amelia by Paulo Airaudo. Rates from $431 place it firmly in the city's premium tier, alongside a Michelin 1 Key designation awarded in 2024.
A Beachfront Villa at the Edge of La Concha
San Sebastián's La Concha promenade is one of the most photographed stretches of coastline in the Basque Country, and the buildings that line it have, over a century, largely been converted, demolished, or absorbed into larger hotel chains. Hotel Villa Favorita survives as the exception: a 19th-century villa that has been meticulously restored and returned to use as a 25-room boutique property at Zubieta Kalea, 26. Walking towards it along the promenade, you register the scale before anything else. Where neighbouring facades present flat, institutional frontage, the villa reads as a private residence that simply decided to open its doors. That sense of measured restraint carries inside.
The interiors work in Atlantic blues against a palette of neutrals, a combination that references the bay without resorting to nautical kitsch. Contemporary furniture sits against preserved architectural detail in a way that feels considered rather than forced. The hotel describes itself as a hotel singular, a designation that points less to marketing and more to the actual rarity of its position: there is no comparable 19th-century beachfront villa operating at this level anywhere else in the city. That scarcity has a practical effect on how the property fits into San Sebastián's accommodation picture, which we'll come to.
The Retreat Logic of 25 Rooms
San Sebastián's premium accommodation splits between grand-scale landmarks and smaller, design-specific properties. Hotel Maria Cristina and Nobu Hotel San Sebastián operate in the former category; Villa Favorita belongs to the latter. At 25 rooms, the property functions closer to a private house than a conventional hotel, and that scale has a direct effect on the rhythm of a stay. Corridors are quieter. Check-in is less transactional. The ratio of staff attention to guest volume is, by structural necessity, higher.
This is the operative logic of a retreat-format property. It isn't marketed as a wellness hotel in the spa-and-treatment sense, but the conditions it creates, small scale, beachfront position, restorative architecture, function in a similar way. The kind of traveller drawn here is typically not optimising for a conference centre or a rooftop bar. They are optimising for stillness adjacent to one of Europe's great beaches, with two Michelin stars served at the same address.
Room choice at Villa Favorita is a meaningful decision. Some rooms face the city; others face the bay directly, with full-length windows and, in some cases, private terraces. For guests whose primary purpose is restorative time by the water, a sea-facing room with terrace access changes the texture of the stay in concrete ways. At rates from $431 per night, the property prices against San Sebastián's upper tier rather than its mid-market. Within that bracket, the room type differential is worth examining at the time of booking. Comparable boutique coastal properties across Spain, from Cap Rocat in Cala Blava to Mas de Torrent Hotel & Spa in Torrent, show that the gap between a standard room and a preferred outlook at boutique properties of this scale tends to be proportionally smaller than at larger hotels, making the upgrade easier to justify.
Amelia by Paulo Airaudo: Dining as an Anchor, Not an Add-On
San Sebastián's restaurant density is among the highest of any city its size in Europe. The Basque Country as a whole holds more Michelin stars per capita than virtually any other region on the continent, which means that a hotel restaurant here competes against a field that includes standalone destinations drawing diners from across Spain and beyond. Akelarre, for context, is a hotel-restaurant property that has long anchored the upper end of that conversation.
Amelia by Paulo Airaudo holds two Michelin stars, placing it among a small group of in-hotel dining rooms in Spain that function as independent culinary destinations. The chef brings Argentine provenance filtered through Italian training to the Atlantic coast, a combination that creates a reference point outside the established Basque canon. In a city where the dominant culinary tradition is precisely defined and fiercely protected, that outside perspective carries a distinct editorial weight. The hotel earned a Michelin 1 Key designation in 2024, which reflects the overall accommodation experience rather than the restaurant alone, and which places it in a peer group of Spanish properties that includes Atrio Restaurante Hotel in Cáceres and Abadía Retuerta LeDomaine.
Airaudo also oversees breakfast and room service at Villa Favorita. In practical terms, this means that the culinary standard applied to the signature restaurant extends to morning service, an arrangement that is less common than hotel marketing would suggest, and one that materially changes the rhythm of a slow morning in a sea-view room. For guests who prioritise meals as part of the restorative logic of a stay, that continuity across service periods is a meaningful operational detail.
San Sebastián as a Backdrop for Slower Travel
The city operates on a pace that rewards slower itineraries. La Concha beach is functional year-round, though summer months bring higher density along the promenade and on the sand. The old town, a short walk from Zubieta Kalea, concentrates pintxos bars at a density that makes structured crawling unnecessary; the streets themselves supply the sequence. For guests using Villa Favorita as a base for day travel into the wider Basque Country, the location is practical: the French border is accessible within the hour, and the wine country of Rioja Alavesa lies to the south.
The boutique properties that work leading as retreat bases in Spain tend to combine address specificity with low operational friction. Hotel Arima & Spa pitches itself explicitly at the wellness market within San Sebastián; Villa Favorita achieves something adjacent through different means, trading dedicated programming for an architecture of calm and a dining offer that removes the need to plan every meal outside the building. The two properties serve different temperaments, and both are worth knowing about.
Other options in the city's hotel market, including Lasala Plaza Hotel, Hotel Catalonia Donosti, and Hotel de Londres y de Inglaterra, serve distinct price points and formats. For a broader look at how the accommodation picture maps to dining and neighbourhood character, our full San Sebastián guide is the reference point. Across Spain more widely, boutique properties with serious culinary anchors include Pepe Vieira Restaurant & Hotel in Poio and Terra Dominicata in Escaladei, both of which operate in the same conceptual space of small-scale lodging built around a dining identity.
Planning a Stay
Hotel Villa Favorita sits at Zubieta Kalea, 26, directly on the La Concha promenade. With 25 rooms and a two-Michelin-star restaurant on site, availability compresses quickly during the summer season and around the San Sebastián Film Festival in September. Rates start from $431, positioning the property at the upper end of the city's boutique market. Guests travelling to Spain for a wider cultural circuit might consider it alongside Mandarin Oriental Ritz in Madrid or Mandarin Oriental Barcelona as part of a multi-city itinerary, though the scale and format of Villa Favorita are deliberately different from both. Booking in advance, particularly for sea-facing rooms with terrace access, is the operative recommendation for high-demand dates.
Frequently Asked Questions
How would you describe the overall feel of Hotel Villa Favorita?
The property functions as a boutique retreat rather than a full-service hotel in the conventional sense. The 19th-century villa architecture creates an atmosphere of measured calm that larger San Sebastián hotels cannot replicate, and the 25-room scale keeps the experience low-friction. The two-Michelin-star restaurant on site, Amelia by Paulo Airaudo, and the 2024 Michelin 1 Key designation for the hotel itself confirm that the experience is calibrated to the upper tier of the city's accommodation market, with rates from $431 reflecting that positioning.
What room should I choose at Hotel Villa Favorita?
Sea-facing rooms with direct bay views and terrace access represent the clearest argument for staying at this address rather than a property set back from the water. City-facing rooms offer a quieter perspective at the same Michelin-recognised standard. Given the boutique scale and the price point, clarifying room outlook at the time of booking is worth doing directly. The hotel's 2024 Michelin 1 Key recognition applies to the property overall, not to specific room types, but the physical experience of a terrace over La Concha is the detail that differentiates Villa Favorita from comparable design-led Spanish hotels such as Hotel Can Cera in Palma or La Residencia in Mallorca.
Why do people go to Hotel Villa Favorita?
San Sebastián is already a destination for serious dining, and Villa Favorita concentrates two Michelin stars, a Michelin 1 Key hotel designation, and a beachfront 19th-century villa address into a single 25-room package. Guests come primarily for the combination of location and culinary access: a morning on La Concha followed by dinner at Amelia by Paulo Airaudo covers two of the city's most specific pleasures without requiring significant logistical effort. The $431 entry price places it above the mid-market but below the rate of international luxury brands entering the city, making it a specific value proposition for travellers whose priority is place and food rather than brand affiliation.
What's the leading way to book Hotel Villa Favorita?
The hotel's website and phone details are not confirmed in our current data. Given the 25-room capacity and the profile of the on-site restaurant, direct inquiry via the property's official channels is the approach most likely to secure preferred room types and any dining reservations at Amelia. For guests comparing the city's options at this price point before committing, Apartamentua represents a different format at the lower end of the boutique tier, while international alternatives such as Aman New York and The Fifth Avenue Hotel illustrate how the small-luxury model scales in a different context.
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