Need to know
Rooms
21.
Check–Out
Noon, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 4pm.
More details
Rates usually include breakfast.
Also
Unsurprisingly for such a generous host, Cristine shares her busy calendar with guests, inviting them to join her for cocktail classes, soap-making workshops, film nights, tea parties with live music and charitable events.
Hotel closed
The hotel closes every year from around 10 January to 24 February.
At the hotel
Free WiFi throughout, gym, two boutiques. In rooms: tote bags, free bottled water, minibar stocked with island produce, air-conditioning and locally made bath products. Tablets can be borrowed on request.
Our favourite rooms
Character and charm are packed into every corner of Cristine’s place, but for maximum historic ambience, request a room in the oldest part of the hotel, building number 17, which houses the owner’s top-secret, sloping-ceilinged favourites.
Poolside
The as-stylish-as-everything-else stone-lined and turquoise pool is ready to refresh you from 8am until 8pm.
Spa
There’s no spa, but the hotel does have one treatment room.
Packing tips
Everyone loves a second wind around here – fit in with retro/vintage/pre-loved pieces.
Also
One room category is suitable for disabled guests. The communal areas have accessible bathrooms and there’s a lift to get to most floors.
Pet‐friendly
Dogs weighing less than 8kg are welcome in some of the rooms. Beds and water bowls are provided. See more pet-friendly hotels in Menorca.
Children
All ages are welcome – extra beds and cots can be added, and lots of the rooms can have twin beds on request. The restaurant has highchairs and babysitting can be organised.
Sustainability efforts
All of the (island-made) bath products are in refillable metal bottles, the carpets are created out of discarded plastic and the hotel works closely with the Menorca Preservation Fund to help local farmers adapt to more sustainable forms of agriculture. Cristine shuns new furniture in favour of giving old pieces a second life, and even the staff uniforms are formed from former fishing nets and plastic bottles.