Need to know
Rooms
14 suites.
Check–Out
Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 4pm, also flexible where possible.
More details
Rates include all meals, transfers and excursions.
Also
The villas and their bathrooms are accessible for wheelchair users.
Hotel closed
1 May to 1 October every year.
At the hotel
Free WiFi in communal areas, private guides and 4WD vehicles. In rooms: minibars, hot tubs, iPod docks, Nespresso machines and L’Occitane bath products.
Our favourite rooms
Each of the 12 wooden villas is as spectacular in reality as they look in the pictures, with fireplaces, outdoor hot tubs and windows showcasing the Torres del Paine, as well as cosy sheepskin rugs, wool blankets and wood-burning stoves. Groups should book the Master Villa, which has two bedrooms and bathrooms. For the most privacy, opt for the cabin furthest away from the main lodge.
Packing tips
Bring alpaca-wool ponchos, straw chupalla hats and – depending how seriously you’re taking being in the land of the gauchos – a pair of bombacha trousers.
Also
There’s no spa, but in-room massages can be arranged and each suite has an outdoor hot tub.
Children
Over-10s are welcome; extra beds can be added for 50 per cent of the room rate (subject to availability).
Best for
Children must be 10-or-older to stay at Awasi Patagonia. Older children will appreciate the soaring natural beauty and enjoy the activities on offer.
Recommended rooms
The Master Villa, which has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and room for an extra bed.
Meals
Children aged 10-and-older are allowed in the restaurant at any time of day.
Sustainability efforts
As much locally sourced, seasonal food grown on-site is featured in the hotel restaurant’s menu. Everything that can be is recycled or composted, including grey water, and the hotel offsets its carbon emissions. The hotel's construction used local woods that match the surroundings and the hotel is officially carbon neutral – the forest areas protected and maintained by Awasi more than offset the emissions generated by the three lodges. Every lodge is also involved in conservation efforts through the Awasi Foundation. Since Awasi Patagonia borders the Torres del Paine National Park, the foundation established a ‘natural corridor’ by leasing land from neighbouring farms, effectively increasing the amount of protected land. Awasi guides help monitor the puma populations and keep hunters away – even during the off-season – and the foundation also works with scientists and researchers to gather information about the behavioural patterns of several native species.