Small and new. Two of your favorite things collide in this list with fourteen of the tiniest hotels added to our selection in 2024.
By Mark Fedeli
Marketing and Editorial Director, Tablet Hotels
I suppose it’s because when people think of hotels they envision large buildings with lots of rooms that the idea of tiny hotels with just a few rooms really grabs attention. We’ve got the data; whenever we talk about small hotels you’re likely to lend us an ear. As far as we’re concerned, that’s fabulous. Intimate hotels have a penchant for delivering the kind of hands-on, truly unique travel experiences we’ve built our whole identity around. Small but mighty, indeed.
We recently took the wrapping paper off our list of the highest-rated hotels in Italy, a subject you’re similarly passionate about. And the gifts keep on coming: we’re back to satisfy your insatiable curiosity with a list of the newest hotels in our selection that have the fewest number of rooms. It’s everything you’ve ever wanted all in a tight little package. Please try to contain yourself.
Taniya
Takayama, Japan
Staying overnight at Taniya, located in the historic castle town of Takayama, is akin to sleeping at Fallingwater or another architectural landmark. Positioned beside the Kusakabe Family Residence, an old merchant’s house designated an Important Cultural Property, the century-old two-room inn is an extension of its notable neighbor, both showcasing ancient Japanese techniques carried out by local craftsmen.
Nest & Nature
Inman Valley, Australia
An hour’s drive from Adelaide but seemingly a world apart, Nest & Nature is located on a remote hilltop at one of the highest points on South Australia’s Fleurieu Peninsula. This luxury retreat is made up of just two sustainably built and architecturally striking suites: Mist, tucked into a thicket of trees on the hillside, and Nest, positioned higher up on the hill with sweeping views of the Inman Valley below.
Souki Lodges & Spa
Cabrières, France
Souki Lodges & Spa feels a bit like a private discovery. In fact, despite its middle-of-nowhere location outside the village of Cabrières, it’s one of the most exclusive and sought-after places to stay in the region. The boutique hotel is the passion project of a pair of locally based designers who imagined a sleek, eco-friendly getaway built right into the landscape at the foot of the Pic de Vissou.
Kamakura COCON
Kamakura, Japan
What was formerly a private house in Kamakura, the so-called “home of the Samurai,” is now Kamakura Cocon, a guest house with a mere two units in a style that mixes elements of European and traditional Japanese hospitality. Comforts include micro bubble baths, Airweave bedding, yukata robes, and espresso machines; each suite comes with a Japanese-style tatami room alongside Western-style living rooms.
Hunum
Gordona, Italy
The typical Italian agriturismo makes its home in a place like Tuscany or Umbria, regions famous for food and wine production. But the modestly sized Hunum is anything but typical. Its owner and designer looked instead to the Alps, within sight of the Swiss border. Its scale is small and its style is singular: modern design meets rustic sensibility, all surrounded by ancient chestnut trees and a working farm.
WeSense Santorini
Santorini, Greece
WeSense contains a mere two units: a Cave Suite called Zest, and a Cave Villa by the name of Bliss. The former sleeps three guests, the latter four; it’s smaller than some vacation homes, and that’s part of its appeal. Privacy and tranquility are assured at this scale, and the interiors in both are clean-lined and modern, with plenty of island character but not a spot of kitsch.
Peliva Nature & Suites
Pinakátai, Greece
Situated in an ancient olive grove with stunning views of the Pagasitic Gulf, Peliva Nature & Suites is a sanctuary, a perfect retreat for those looking to escape the daily grind. The hotel’s architecture — which includes three exquisitely designed suites, each named after a legendary goddess (Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite) — blends seamlessly with the natural surroundings.
Casa9 Zocalo
Mexico City, Mexico
Casa9 Zocalo is a new boutique hotel located in one of Mexico City’s oldest houses, which itself stands on the grounds of an older ceremonial temple. The property has undergone a transformation, as a team of architects, blacksmiths, stonemasons, and carpenters has restored the house’s colonial grandeur. The result is striking. Passing through the entryway is like stepping back in time.
Can Tres Formentera
Playa Migjorn, Spain
Formentera’s crystal-clear water and sandy beaches are standouts, but Ibiza it isn’t. Instead, the island has retained its haute hippie spirit. Checking in means chilling out here, and no place captures that essence quite as well as Can Tres. This trio of apartments has the barefoot luxe look down pat, with sun-splashed spaces kitted out with hanging beds and pops of color.
Le Pavillon de Galon
Cucuron, France
Le Pavillon de Galon, just outside the Luberon village of Cucuron, is a lovingly restored 18th-century hunting lodge surrounded by 15 acres of orchards and gardens. It’s owned by the French photographer Guy Hervais and his wife Bibi Gex, a couple with a keen eye for interior design — the three suites are disparate in style but consistent in quality and full of surprising details.
Desierto Azul
Todos Santos, Mexico
First came the surfers, then the official distinction as one of Mexico’s Pueblos Mágicos, and finally, a wave of designers, chefs, and hoteliers, turning the once-quiet beach village of Todos Santos into a hip getaway on the Baja California peninsula. Among the numerous style-conscious lodgings on offer is Desierto Azul, a petite boutique hotel on a sun-baked stretch of land a few blocks back from the coastline.
La Maison sur la Sorgue
LʼIsle-sur-la-Sorgue, France
L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue is named somewhat literally for its unique setting; the river Sorgue flows around the outside of the town’s old fortifications. And La Maison sur la Sorgue is a similarly straightforward description of this four-room family-owned boutique hotel, whose spaces, public and private, are decorated with souvenirs from its proprietors’ global travels.
Casa Yahri
Barichara, Colombia
Located in Barichara, an impossibly picturesque Colombian village that feels frozen in time, Casa Yahri is a gorgeous colonial villa set amid lush greenery and tropical flowers, its sun-drenched terraces overlooking the vast Chicamocha Canyon. But what’s truly exceptional about Casa Yahri is the extent to which every detail is considered, every need anticipated.
Hotel Puntagrande
Frontera, Spain
The Guinness Book of World Records officially designated Hotel Puntagrande as the world’s smallest hotel in 1984. But what’s especially notable about this “hotelito” is its spectacular location on a piece of lava rock jutting out into the Atlantic Ocean. The original building, a cultural site protected by the Canary Islands government, dates back to 1830. Inside, the hotel looks something like a small nautical museum.
Mark Fedeli is the hotel marketing and editorial director for Tablet and Michelin Guide. He’s been with Tablet since 2006, and he thinks you should subscribe to our newsletter.